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Conference vaxcat::ef97

Title:EF97:A place for the mass debater
Notice:We're DOOMED! We're all DOOMED"our tea?
Moderator:VAXCAT::LAURIEN
Created:Thu Dec 05 1996
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:45
Total number of notes:3786

7.0. "And That Is The End Of The World News." by IJSAPL::ANDERSON (Like to help me avoid an ulcer?) Thu Jan 02 1997 15:54

T.RTitleUserPersonal
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7.1IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:45122
7.2IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4593
7.3IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4546
7.4IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4630
7.5IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4645
7.6IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4683
7.7IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:46124
7.8IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4645
7.9IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4640
7.10IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4615
7.11IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4623
7.12IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4631
7.13IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4635
7.14IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4624
7.15IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4667
7.16IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4627
7.17IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4641
7.18IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:47112
7.19IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4760
7.20IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 09:4740
7.21IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3195
7.22IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3281
7.23IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3480
7.24IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3433
7.25IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3640
7.26IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3670
7.27IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3761
7.28IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3882
7.29IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:3923
7.30IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:4049
7.31IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:4188
7.32IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:4234
7.33IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:4261
7.34IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 03 1997 12:4327
7.35IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:53110
7.36IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5483
7.37IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:54116
7.38IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5453
7.39IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5441
7.40IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:54130
7.41IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5451
7.42IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5425
7.43IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5561
7.44IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5522
7.45IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5535
7.46IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5536
7.47IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5537
7.48IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5551
7.49IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 10:5526
7.50IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:2693
7.51IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:2664
7.52IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:2730
7.53IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:2748
7.54IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:2836
7.55IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:2939
7.56IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 06 1997 16:3028
7.57IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:38112
7.58IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3899
7.59IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:38158
7.60IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3975
7.61IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3945
7.62IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3926
7.63IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:39113
7.64IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3985
7.65IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3979
7.66IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3935
7.67IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:3983
7.68IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:4076
7.69IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:40105
7.70IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:4068
7.71IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:40114
7.72IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:4049
7.73IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 14 1997 10:4099
7.74IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:21111
7.75IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2173
7.76IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2157
7.77IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2127
7.78IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2230
7.79IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2254
7.80IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2230
7.81IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2237
7.82IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2291
7.83IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2240
7.84IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:22130
7.85IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2225
7.86IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2239
7.87IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2262
7.88IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2263
7.89IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2370
7.90IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:23100
7.91IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2387
7.92IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2340
7.93IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:23100
7.94IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2362
7.95IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2365
7.96IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2330
7.97IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2363
7.98IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2345
7.99IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2454
7.100IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2437
7.101IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2490
7.102IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 16 1997 10:2455
7.103IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2393
7.104IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:23103
7.105IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:24147
7.106IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2459
7.107IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2529
7.108IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2538
7.109IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2548
7.110IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:25100
7.111IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:26132
7.112IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2662
7.113IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2656
7.114IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:26114
7.115IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2744
7.116IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2772
7.117IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2778
7.118IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2769
7.119IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2874
7.120IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2842
7.121IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:28154
7.122IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2882
7.123IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2871
7.124IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2839
7.125IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:2874
7.126IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 17 1997 10:28104
7.127IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:18110
7.128IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:1944
7.129IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:1938
7.130IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:1991
7.131IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:1963
7.132IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:1962
7.133IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:1946
7.134IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:20135
7.135IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2065
7.136IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:20101
7.137IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2072
7.138IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2042
7.139IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2066
7.140IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2043
7.141IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2066
7.142IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2025
7.143IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2140
7.144IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:21127
7.145IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2175
7.146IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2179
7.147IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2248
7.148IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 20 1997 10:2247
7.149IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:18107
7.150IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1873
7.151IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1927
7.152IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:19115
7.153IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1948
7.154IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1970
7.155IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1963
7.156IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1936
7.157IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1939
7.158IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1943
7.159IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1980
7.160IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:19108
7.161IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1997
7.162IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1930
7.163IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:19126
7.164IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:1988
7.165IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2075
7.166IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2035
7.167IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2025
7.168IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2074
7.169IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2054
7.170IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2057
7.171IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 21 1997 10:2042
7.172IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:45116
7.173IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4568
7.174IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:45104
7.175IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:45100
7.176IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4588
7.177IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4533
7.178IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4536
7.179IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4558
7.180IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:45110
7.181IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4647
7.182IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4630
7.183IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4629
7.184IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4620
7.185IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4671
7.186IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4685
7.187IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4676
7.188IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4652
7.189IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4627
7.190IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4675
7.191IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4677
7.192IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 10:4695
7.193IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:1263
7.194IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:1238
7.195IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:1483
7.196IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:1677
7.197IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:1767
7.198IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:1854
7.199IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:2386
7.200IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:4359
7.201IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:4635
7.202IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:4870
7.203IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:4929
7.204IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5071
7.205IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5123
7.206IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5245
7.207IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5338
7.208IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5339
7.209IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5940
7.210IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 22 1997 16:5931
7.211IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:45111
7.212IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4585
7.213IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4667
7.214IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4645
7.215IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4634
7.216IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4631
7.217IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4626
7.218IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4660
7.219IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4661
7.220IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:46120
7.221IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4676
7.222IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4678
7.223IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4669
7.224IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4745
7.225IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4728
7.226IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4781
7.227IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4787
7.228IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4729
7.229IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4771
7.230IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4759
7.231IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4760
7.232IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 23 1997 09:4730
7.233IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:39105
    AP 24-Jan-1997 1:07 EST   REF5926

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, Jan. 24, 1997
   
    HAWAII-GAY MARRIAGE 

    HONOLULU (AP) -- Hawaii lawmakers are trying to undo state court
    rulings that would allow same-sex marriages. A proposed state
    constitutional amendment to ban such marriages won swift approval
    Thursday in the state House, and now goes to the Hawaiian state Senate.
    Hawaii's Supreme Court in 1993 ruled that denying marriage licenses to
    same-sex couples violates the state Constitution's equal protection
    clause. Last month, a Hawaii judge ruled the state failed to show a
    compelling reason to ban same-sex marriages, but held off his order to
    license them pending the state's appeal. 
   
    MAMMOGRAMS 

    BETHESDA, Md. (AP) -- Cancer experts cannot agree on whether women
    should start having mammograms at age 40 or 50. A panel of experts set
    up to study the issue says patients should decide for themselves. But
    the government's top cancer expert backed mammograms for women in their
    40s in a bid to cut breast cancer deaths. 
   
    TEACHER-REINSTATED 

    DENVER (AP) -- A high school English teacher who was fired for showing
    an R-rated movie to his students was ordered reinstated Thursday by an
    appeals court that said the district had violated his right to free
    expression. The Colorado Court of Appeals also said the school board
    must return Al Wilder to his job at with back pay and benefits and no
    loss in seniority. Wilder was fired in April after showing the movie
    "1900" without the school's permission. Italian director Bernardo
    Bertolucci, who made the 1976 epic about life and social conflict in
    his homeland, testified over a speaker phone on Wilder's behalf. 
   
    UNITED NATIONS-IRAQ 

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The United Nations Thursday approved the first
    sales of food to Iraq since agreeing to allow Saddam Hussein to sell
    limited amounts of oil in exchange for humanitarian supplies.
    Australian farmers will be permitted to sell $50 million worth of wheat
    and Thailand may sell $20 million worth of rice. Iraq last month was
    permitted to sell $2 billion worth of oil to lessen effects of U.N.
    sanctions. 
   
    SIMPSON 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- A defense lawyer told jurors Thursday that
    photos of O.J. Simpson wearing a killer's shoes are fakes. Plaintiff
    lawyers submitted photos of Simpson they say show him wearing the same
    style Bruno Magli shoes that left bloody footprints near the bodies of
    Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. The case is expected to go to
    the jury Monday. 
   
    CONFEDERATE FLAG 

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- The Republican-dominated House turned on GOP
    Gov. David Beasley Thursday, spurning his call to remove the
    Confederate flag from the Statehouse dome. Republicans, joined by
    several Democrats, voted to kill the governor's proposal 72-45. The
    House then voted 85-32 to let citizens decide the flag's fate in a
    special election in November. 
   
    PEPSICO 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- PepsiCo Inc. says it plans to spin off its sluggish
    restaurant business, which includes the KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell
    fast-food chains, into a separate company. The company said it would
    give shares in the new fast-food concern to PepsiCo shareholders and
    focus on its faster growing Pepsi soft drink and Frito-Lay snacks
    operations. 
   
    HIJACK-STING 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Forty-seven people -- including the reputed new boss
    of the Gambino organized crime family -- were charged Thursday in a $6
    million scheme to sell computers, VCRs, designer gowns, perfume and
    feather beds stolen in truck hijackings along the East Coast. The
    indictments followed a three-year sting operation in which an
    undercover FBI agent infiltrated a social club in Brooklyn where
    defendants were caught on tape allegedly discussing criminal activity.
    The defendants are charged with extortion, racketeering, trafficking
    stolen property, drug sales and gun charges. Thirty-four people were
    arrested; 13 were either jailed or being sought. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The Nikkei dropped 265.22 points to 17,644.24 Friday. The
    dollar traded at 119.09 yen, up 0.08. 
   
    AUSTRALIAN OPEN 

    MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) -- Martina Hingis won her first Australian
    Open title on Friday, even before playing her singles final. Hingis
    contributed her usually reliable groundstrokes and a solid volley to
    the attack as she and Natasha Zvereva of Belarus beat Americans Lindsay
    Davenport and Lisa Raymond 6-2, 6-2 in the women's doubles final. "I
    hope to have a good day tomorrow too," Hingis said in a center court
    victory speech. The match lasted less than an hour, putting little
    strain on Hingis on the eve of her singles final against Mary Pierce. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by LISA M. COLLINS 
7.234IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:3986
    RTw  23-Jan-97 11:04    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    SEOUL - South Korean Labour Minister Jin Nyum said the government would
    not tolerate any more illegal strikes over a controversial labour law.
    South Korea's ruling party called the opposition shameless for
    rejecting an offer to reopen parliamentary debate over the law, which
    sparked more than three weeks of industrial strife. 

    - - - - 

    KABUL - Afghanistan's Islamic Taleban militia said it was thrusting up
    the Salang Pass and towards the Panjsher Valley after capturing two key
    towns from opposition forces north of Kabul.  A senior officer said
    Taleban forces had captured Jabal-os-Siraj, a garrison town 70 km (44
    miles) north of Kabul, and Gulbahar, about 15 km (nine miles) to the
    northeast. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - A string of car bomb attacks which has claimed at least 50
    lives in a week has plunged Algiers into a sea of fear as Islamist
    guerrillas step up their campaign against the government. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin said he expected President
    Boris Yeltsin, who is recovering from pneumonia in his country home, to
    return to work in the next few days, Itar-Tass news agency said. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israel stepped up calls for resumption of peace talks with
    Syria. Damascus, still wary of Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu,
    demanded the Jewish state first guarantee it will hand back all of the
    Golan Heights. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peru stepped up pressure on Marxist gunmen holding 73 hostages
    at the Japanese ambassador's home and refused to start talks to end the
    37-day crisis unless the rebels dropped demands for the release of
    jailed comrades. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Non-stop protests by Serbian students stretched into a fifth
    day as Belgrade citizens baffled police with a hide-and-seek strategy
    to evade a ban on marches. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Bulgaria's new president starts work in a country overwhelmed
    by political and economic crisis. Petar Stoyanov took office on
    Wednesday as the Socialist Party threatened to counter opposition
    protests with mass marches of its own unless it is allowed to form a
    new cabinet. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - China hit out at Britain, saying London's protests against
    Beijing's proposed amendments to Hong Kong laws after this year's
    handover of sovereignty were unacceptable, unreasonable and unwise. 

    - - - - 

    HANOI - Vietnam's biggest corruption trial opened in Ho Chi Minh City,
    with 20 defendants in the dock on charges of siphoning tens of millions
    of dollars from a company linked to the ruling Communist Party. 

    - - - - 

    ATHENS - Greek seamen ended a crippling 10-day strike that stranded
    hundreds of lorries at ports around the country and caused food and
    fuel shortages on Aegean islands. 

    - - - - 

    OSLO - Two members of a Norwegian motorcycle gang were wounded by
    gunshots, one of them seriously, in the latest incident involving biker
    gangs in the Nordic region, police said. 

    REUTER
7.235IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4099
    RTw  24-Jan-97 04:34    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Brazilian offers $500 reward for lost chicken 

    BRASILIA - A Brazilian woman is offering a $500 reward for information
    leading to the return of her lost pet Scratchy, a chicken that drinks
    milk and sleeps in a bed, the Globo newspaper reported. 

    It said Irene Azevedo, 41, of Belo Horizonte, was distraught and unable
    to sleep after Scratchy disappeared. 

    "She could be in somebody's pot by now," the newspaper quoted Azevedo
    as saying. "But she's not just a chicken. She's a loving companion, a
    jewel." 

    She has hired a private detective and placed advertisements in local
    newspapers offering a $500 reward. 

    Azevedo said she would easily recognise her chicken. Scratchy drinks a
    saucer of milk every night before retiring to a special cot. 

    - - - - 

    Man takes joy-ride in Siberian train 

    MOSCOW - Russian police are looking for a man who took a locomotive for
    a joy-ride on a major Siberian railway, Interfax news agency reported. 

    It said an unidentified person had introduced himself as a train driver
    to a duty officer on Wednesday at Tynda station on the Baikal-Amur line
    that runs from Lake Baikal to Russia's Far East. He then drove the
    locomotive away. 

    It was found abandoned late at night not far from the station, but
    there are no clues to the identity of the driver. 

    - - - - 

    Burglar caught by footprints in snow 

    SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. - An ex-convict who allegedly stole office
    equipment not only left a trail of footprints in the snow but walked
    into a restaurant filled with police officers, authorities said. 

    Saratoga Springs police officer Gregory Santos discovered the burglary
    at an insurance company office on Sunday night, tracked the footprints
    into the woods behind the building and found a coat, hat and tape
    recorders lying in the snow. 

    The trail then took him to the door of a restaurant where hundreds of
    local and state police officers were attending a retirement party for a
    New York State police sergeant. 

    "He tracked him down like a Mountie," police spokesman Robert Flanagan
    said. "When Santos came into the party he asked whether anyone had come
    in without a coat and about 12 officers pointed to a man using a pay
    phone. 

    "Santos tapped him on the shoulder and arrested him." 

    The suspect, Jude Clairmont, was being held without bail on third
    degree burglary charges in Saratoga County jail. 

    - - - - 

    Our brains as big as they'll get, scientists say 

    LONDON - Science-fiction films that depict our descendants as
    big-brained geniuses are off the mark, British scientists said. They
    say our brains are as big as they can be. 

    Chris Winter and fellow researchers at British Telecommunications Plc's
    BT Laboratories say the brain has just about reached top capacity. At
    best, it is within 20 percent of the maximum, they told New Scientist
    magazine. 

    The human brain -- and those of other higher mammals -- packs a lot of
    power into a small area because of the convoluted way it folds up
    inside the skull. 

    Human brains are about three times the size of that of our nearest
    relative -- the chimpanzee. Dolphins and whales have brains of
    comparable size to ours. 

    Scientists say the human skull could not grow any bigger because, as
    any mother can attest, it is already almost too big to go through the
    birth canal. This is one reason human babies are born so early and
    helpless -- any later and their heads would be too big.

    REUTER 
7.236IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4034
    AP 24-Jan-1997 0:00 EST   REF5868

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Deaf Boy 'Signs' Fire Alert

    AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- A 10-year-old deaf boy cried "Fi! Yah!" and used
    sign language Thursday to alert others to a house fire, helping to save
    a man inside the burning home. 

    Carlos Manor was riding on a school bus when he saw the flames shooting
    from the windows of a house shortly before 7 a.m. 

    He nudged a classmate and used sign language to say, "Tell them, fire,
    fire!" His cries also alarmed the driver, Dot Benson, who stopped the
    bus and saw the fire. 

    The driver's assistant, Judy Lively, jumped off and raced into the
    burning home while Carlos and three other special education students
    stayed on the bus. 

    Ms. Lively's shouts alerted Alfred Hardwick, 85, who was rescued
    unharmed by firefighters. Moments later, the windows exploded. 

    "The fire was awful. It was a hard fire and the glass blew up and went
    everywhere," Carlos said through teacher Beverly Turbyfill, who
    translated his sign language. "The glass almost came on the bus." 

    An electrical short in a bedroom appliance caused the blaze, fire Capt.
    Tommy Cox said. The home did not have smoke detectors, he said. 

    "He has no idea the magnitude of what he did," Ms. Turbyfill said. "He
    notices everything. This a child who is truly a nosy child -- and this
    time it paid off." 
7.237IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4039
    AP 23-Jan-1997 23:41 EST   REF5772

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Nixon Was Urged To Blackmail LBJ

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Richard Nixon wanted files he believed were at the
    Brookings Institution in order to pressure his predecessor, Lyndon
    Johnson, to support Nixon's policy in Vietnam, according to a recently
    released tape of Nixon's White House Oval office conversations. 

    Nixon and his aides, H.R. Haldeman and Henry Kissinger, in 1971 were
    seeking files regarding Johnson's halting of bombings in North Vietnam
    a few days before the 1968 election, according to the tapes, excerpts
    of which were published Friday in The Washington Post. 

    Republicans considered the suspension of the bombing in 1968 to be a
    political ploy which boosted the candidacy of Democrat Hubert Humphrey.
    Nevertheless, Nixon won the presidential election that year. 

    In his memoirs, Nixon conceded he wanted the Brookings files for
    leverage against Johnson administration officials at odds with his war
    policy. In a recently released Oval Office tape, Nixon discussed an
    illegal break-in to seize the files from the think tank. 

    The new recording reviewed by the Post -- a tape of a June 17, 1971,
    conversation in the midst of the Pentagon Papers controversy -- sheds
    light on why Nixon and his aides wanted the files. 

    "You can blackmail Johnson on this stuff," Haldeman says. 

    "How?" asks Nixon. 

    "The bombing halt file is all in the same file," Haldeman says. 

    "Do we have it?" Nixon asked. "... I asked for it. I said I needed it." 

    Officials working at Brookings at the time said no such files were kept
    there, and that no break-in took place. 
7.238IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4039
    AP 23-Jan-1997 23:02 EST   REF5480

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    47 Charged in Hijack Sting

    By PAT MILTON

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Forty-seven people -- including the reputed new boss
    of the Gambino organized crime family -- were charged Thursday in a $6
    million scheme to sell computers, VCRs, designer gowns, perfume and
    feather beds stolen in truck hijackings along the East Coast. 

    The indictments followed a three-year sting operation in which an
    undercover FBI agent infiltrated a social club in Brooklyn where
    defendants were caught on tape discussing criminal activity. 

    The defendants are charged with extortion, racketeering, trafficking
    stolen property, drug sales and gun charges. Thirty-four people were
    arrested; 13 were either jailed or being sought. 

    The ring took in $5 million in electronics, foot massagers and feather
    beds from truck hijackings and another $1 million in designer dresses,
    including some by Donna Karan, in a robbery, FBI Assistant Director
    James Kallstrom said. 

    "The rule was if it had value, they stole it," he said. 

    Details on the robbery were not released. 

    Among those indicted was Nicholas "The Little Guy" Corozzo, 55, who
    authorities believe recently took over the Gambino organized crime
    family from John Gotti, who's serving a life term in prison. 

    Last month, Corozzo was arrested in Florida on federal racketeering
    charges that included allegations of running a South Florida
    loansharking operation. He was being held without bail in Miami. 
7.239IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4029
    AP 23-Jan-1997 22:29 EST   REF5128

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fla. Group Won't Push CyberTax

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -- Web surfers and e-mailers in Florida can
    breathe a sigh of relief: A task force appointed by the governor is
    recommending that access to the Internet remained untaxed. 

    Instead, the task force is proposing that the existing hodgepodge of
    state and local taxes on the telecommunication industry be replaced
    with a single, unified tax levied on all telephone, cellular and cable
    television providers -- but not Internet access providers. 

    The task force was created after business groups objected to a plan
    announced more than year ago by the state Department of Revenue to
    begin collecting taxes on Internet access. 

    After seven months, the 19-member group decided Florida would be
    perceived as "anti-business" if it became only the sixth state to try
    to tax access to computer networks. 

    "The task force believed that taxing anything to do with the Internet
    is premature," said Larry Fuchs, executive director of the Revenue
    Department and a task force member. 

    The exact amount of the unified tax and which industries will be
    subject to it remains to be decided by the Legislature. 
7.240IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4054
    AP 23-Jan-1997 21:50 EST   REF6071

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cadet Contests Rape Accusation

    By HOLLY CORYELL

    Associated Press Writer

    WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) -- A West Point cadet accused of raping a female
    classmate testified Thursday that she initiated sex with him, and that
    when he asked afterward if she was upset, she answered no. 

    James Engelbrecht said he went to sleep relatively early while the
    party continued in another room of a New Jersey home. 

    "I felt like I was asleep for a while, and then I felt like there was
    somebody on top of me," Engelbrecht said. "She kissed me, and I kissed
    her back." 

    After fumbling with their clothes, Englebrecht said they briefly had
    consensual sex, which he said ended quickly because he did not want her
    to get pregnant. 

    "The best way to describe it was she was aloof," Engelbrecht said of
    the woman's mood just after the encounter. "I asked her specifically if
    she was upset with me and she said no. We started kissing again." 

    Another cadet, Charles Estes, then entered the room and Engelbrecht
    testified that he asked Estes for a condom, which he didn't have. When
    Estes left, Engelbrecht said he and the woman went to sleep. 

    The next day, Engelbrecht said he helped her find her clothes, and she
    did not appear upset then either, he said. 

    The woman testified that she woke up in pain after Engelbrecht raped
    her during a night of drinking at the Memorial Day weekend party. 

    Engelbrecht, 22, is charged with assaulting and raping the woman on May
    24, 1996, and faces life in prison and dismissal from the Army if
    convicted. 

    Estes testified that when he entered the room to get his things, he saw
    the woman on top of Engelbrecht but didn't see them engaging in sexual
    activity. 

    "As soon as the light hit her, she rolled off to the wall side of the
    bed in an attempt to hide from the light," Estes said. "He was lying
    down flat on his back ... she was just on top of him, straddling him." 

    The defense rested after Engelbrecht's testimony. The military judge
    said deliberations by the seven male officers on the jury could begin
    as early as Friday morning. 
7.241IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4059
    AP 23-Jan-1997 22:17 EST   REF5083

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Red Cross Murder Link Denied

    MOSCOW (AP) -- A successor to the Soviet KGB denied Chechnya's claims
    that it was behind last month's killing of six Red Cross workers,
    suggesting Thursday that the republic's own separatist authorities
    might be to blame. 

    Masked men using guns with silencers killed the aid workers while they
    slept in a Red Cross hospital compound in the Chechen town of Noviye
    Atagi on Dec. 17. 

    Russia's Federal Security Service said the town was a "carefully
    guarded domain of the militants" and so it was "difficult to believe
    that somebody from the outside could infiltrate so easily." 

    Chechnya's security chief, Abu Movsayev, said earlier this week the
    secret police agency, known by the acronym FSB, was behind the killings
    and that the main suspect was a colonel in the Russian army. 

    "Movsayev and some of the republic's other leaders are literally
    competing to find an 'FSB hand' everywhere," the agency said in a
    statement reported by the ITAR-Tass and Interfax news agencies. 

    The rebels say Moscow wants to discredit the separatist government that
    won control of Chechnya after 20 months of bitter fighting with Russian
    troops. 

    Prompted by the massacre, the International Committee of the Red Cross
    on Thursday took steps to improve its protection of workers. 

    In an unprecedented move, the humanitarian organization recalled all 55
    heads of delegation from conflict zones around the globe for an
    emergency meeting in Geneva, where the delegates agreed on a
    comprehensive overhaul of security procedures. Full analysis of the
    political environment in conflict zones would be undertaken so as to
    better understand the risks from combatants, the group said. 

    The war in Chechnya ended last summer and elections for a president and
    parliament are on Monday. 

    On Thursday, Russia criticized European support for the elections, and
    Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov complained to the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe about election funding. 

    The Interfax news agency quoted a ministry spokesman as saying Russia
    does not object to the OSCE providing ballot boxes or bringing in
    observers, but it never agreed to the sums the OSCE is spending. 

    Spokesman Gennady Tarasov said the OSCE might wear out its welcome with
    Moscow. "An understanding was reached that after the elections, the
    future of the OSCE mission in Chechnya should be discussed," he said. 

    Russian news agencies say the OSCE is spending more than $300,000 to
    help organize the election and send in teams of international
    observers. 
7.242IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4027
    AP 23-Jan-1997 21:59 EST   REF5019

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. OK's Food Sales to Iraq

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The United Nations on Thursday approved the
    first sales of food to Iraq since agreeing to allow Saddam Hussein to
    sell limited amounts of oil in exchange for humanitarian supplies. 

    Australian farmers will be permitted to sell $50 million worth of wheat
    and Thailand may sell $20 million worth of rice, the U.N. sanctions
    committee on Iraq decided. 

    The United Nations last month decided to permit Iraq to sell $2 billion
    worth of oil to soften the devastating effects of U.N. sanctions --
    imposed on Saddam Hussein for his 1990 invasion of Kuwait -- on
    ordinary Iraqis. 

    The sanctions committee on Thursday also decided to postpone a decision
    on whether to allow Turkey to resume its once fruitful trade relations
    with Iraq. 

    Turkey will be allowed to sell Iraq spare parts to repair an oil
    pipeline needed to implement the first part of the oil-for-food deal,
    committee chairman Antonio Monteiro of Portugal said at a U.N. press
    conference. 
7.243IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:40106
    AP 23-Jan-1997 21:48 EST   REF6069

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Serbian Police Beat Protesters

    By ALISON SMALE

    Associated Press Writer

    KRAGUJEVAC, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Riot police clubbed protesters who tried
    to blockade this city and opposition activists attempted to block key
    roads throughout Yugoslavia on Thursday in a sign that President
    Slobodan Milosevic and his opponents were headed for a showdown. 

    Minor clashes occurred in Belgrade Thursday night when police prevented
    protesters from marching to the city center. 

    The pro-democracy demonstrations have been largely peaceful, but new
    opposition actions, such as blocking of roads and Milosevic's media
    outlets, could trigger wider police action and violence. 

    As the crisis deepens with no solution in sight, both sides have shown
    increasing signs of nervousness. 

    "Kragujevac is boiling and I don't know what could be the solution,"
    said Borivoje Radic, the new head of city government. 

    Hundreds of policemen barricaded themselves inside the radio and
    television station to prevent its takeover by new city officials in
    Kragujevac, an industrial city about 90 miles south of Belgrade. 

    Thousands of Milosevic's opponents surrounded them and threatened to
    use force to enter. Someone posted a sign on the building: "This is a
    police station, not a radio station." 

    Police prevented an angry crowd of several thousand demonstrators from
    surging into a Kragujevac police station. At least 16 people were
    injured in clashes with police in the city. 

    "Tensions are extremely high," Radic said. "The television has done us
    a lot of harm, and now it can lead us to open clashes with the police." 

    Police detained at least eight opposition activists who attempted to
    block roads in protests all over the country. 

    Police wielding batons beat protesters who parked their cars on the
    main road between Kragujevac and Belgrade. Two people were clubbed to
    the ground and at least one opposition leader was detained. 

    Police hit an Associated Press Television crewman in the stomach as he
    was videotaping the blockade. He and another crewman were detained
    briefly and their footage was confiscated. 

    Kragujevac's new mayor, Veroljub Stevanovic, said residents were
    furious because local policemen had beaten up their own people. 

    "They are like robots: When they get an order they fulfill it," he
    said. "It doesn't matter if the person out there is their brother or
    not." 

    Kragujevac is one of 14 communities won by opposition candidates in
    Nov. 17 elections. Protests, now in their 10th week, erupted when the
    government annulled the vote results, and Milosevic since has allowed
    his opponents to take power in Kragujevac and a few other towns. 

    But he refuses to give up a key tool: the local media he has used to
    criticize his opponents and censor the flow of information throughout
    the country. 

    Milosevic needs to keep control of the media because Serbia will hold
    presidential and parliamentary elections later this year. 

    Police first barricaded themselves inside the Kragujevac station on
    Wednesday, saying they were protecting the studios while a court
    considers an appeal by official Serbian media challenging its handover.

    Ljuba Tadic, a Belgrade actor, urged protesters outside the station to
    remain patient. 

    " We will get the TV station even if it takes two, three or even six
    months," he said. 

    Local opposition leader Aleksandar Radosavljevic said daylong talks to
    negotiate a compromise had failed and protests against the occupation
    would continue. 

    "Obviously, they don't want any agreement and are determined to keep
    control of the media," Radosavljevic said. 

    A statement from the new Kragujevac government accused police of trying
    to provoke clashes and demanded that officers vacate the station. 

    Later, the city's new radio director, Vidosav Stevanovic, said he and
    the new mayor had been invited for talks in Belgrade with the general
    manager of official Serbian TV. 

    The radio director said they would consult the protesters before
    deciding whether to go. "We are their representatives and they are our
    only law," he said. 

    In Belgrade on Thursday, opposition leader Zoran Djindjic urged a crowd
    of about 20,000 protesters to hold their ground. 

    "The whole of Serbia has risen," he said. "We must not lose at any
    front, in Belgrade or anywhere else in Serbia." 
7.244IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4042
    AP 23-Jan-1997 19:45 EST   REF6008

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Moscow Mafia Chief Gunned Down

    MOSCOW (AP) -- In one of the capital's most daring mob attacks, a mafia
    chief was gunned down Thursday night as he sat in his sports car in
    front of police headquarters. 

    "Moscow gangsters seem to be mocking the police," Russian Public
    Television ORT said. 

    Vasily Naumov, head of a notorious Moscow crime group, the Koptevo
    gang, died of multiple gunshot wounds only feet from the Moscow
    Interior Department. His bodyguard was wounded in the hail of assault
    rifle fire, ORT reported. 

    The gunmen opened fire on Naumov as an awards ceremony for police
    officers was under way inside the ministry building, they said. 

    Naumov's slaying appeared to be part of a long-standing gang war
    between two rival criminal clans, ORT said. 

    Naumov's brother was killed a year ago. Police last month found the
    bodies of three of the gang members cemented into a sauna floor.
    Television on Thursday showed police extracting the bodies from the
    floor. 

    Russian mobsters wage fierce, public wars. Businessmen and bankers are
    often victims in their turf battles. 

    Earlier this week, a gunman killed the owner of a popular strip club in
    Moscow. Last week, a businessman was killed by a powerful bomb in his
    office in the same Moscow building as a local police precinct. 

    American businessman Paul Tatum was gunned down in November near one of
    the city's most expensive hotels. 

    Moscow police chief Nikolai Kulikov said Wednesday that the capital had
    68 contract murders last year. Nationwide, there were 450 last year.
    Few are ever solved. 
7.245IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4028
    AP 23-Jan-1997 19:41 EST   REF6005

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Egypt: Alleged Satanists Charged

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Forty-five students suspected of drinking one
    other's blood and worshiping the devil were charged Thursday with
    scorning religion -- a criminal offense in Egypt. 

    "It's a pity. They are well educated and from good families," Interior
    Minister Hassan el-Alfy was quoted as telling the Middle East News
    Agency. 

    Police detained the students Wednesday, saying they had frequently
    staged orgies in the desert where drugs were taken freely. Police said
    the women in the group wore their nails long and were fond of black
    lipstick. 

    El-Alfy said they drank each other's blood in their rituals. 

    Police released 31 of the youths Thursday, but said they were still
    looking for 20 others. The students, aged between 16 and 20, face up to
    three years in prison if convicted. 

    Some of the students were Coptic Christians, who account for nearly 10
    percent of Egypt's 60 million people. The rest were Muslims, the
    overwhelming majority in Egypt. 
7.246IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4051
    AP 23-Jan-1997 22:00 EST   REF5022

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Herpes Linked to Alzheimer's

    LONDON (AP) -- The virus that causes cold sores might be associated
    with a higher risk of Alzheimer's disease, British researchers said
    Thursday. 

    If this tentative finding is confirmed in larger studies, then it could
    be possible to reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease by suppressing
    the herpes simplex virus with medication, said the report published in
    The Lancet, a British medical journal. 

    The link between Alzheimer's and a gene known as apolipoprotein E, or
    apo E, had been discovered by Dr. Allen D. Roses of Duke University in
    the United States. 

    The gene comes in three varieties -- apo E-2, E-3 and E-4. The E-2
    version is associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer's, while E-4 is
    associated with an early onset of the degenerative disease. 

    But, researchers have found that E-4 is neither a sufficient nor
    necessary factor in the development of Alzheimer's disease, so "there
    has to be some other environmental or genetic factor," said Dr. Warren
    Strittmatter, professor of medicine and a colleague of Roses at Duke. 

    Strittmatter said the possible connection between herpes and
    apolipoprotein E-4 was "an exciting idea" worthy of further research,
    "but it is not convincingly or compellingly demonstrated in this
    paper." 

    The report in the Jan. 25 edition of The Lancet was by Dr. Ruth Itzhaki
    of the Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory, Department of Optometry and
    Vision Sciences at the University of Manchester in England. It was
    billed as an "early report," emphasizing that the findings were
    tentative. 

    She and her colleagues extracted DNA samples from the brains of 46
    Alzheimer's patients and 44 elderly people who did not have the
    disease. 

    The found that E-4 was much more frequently found in Alzheimer's
    patients who also had the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1). 

    The virus usually infects the skin, causing a cold sore, and then works
    its way into the nerves of the face where it remains for life. 

    The virus is widespread, infecting between 50 percent and 90 percent of
    the population. 
7.247IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4136
    AP 23-Jan-1997 20:37 EST   REF6042

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Dinosaur Species Discovered

    LONDON (AP) -- Geologists uncovered the skeleton of a new species of a
    carnivorous dinosaur that roamed southern England 120 million years
    ago, museum officials said Thursday. 

    The 26-foot-long creature, weighing more than 1,000 pounds and armed
    with razor-sharp teeth and claws 5 inches long, fed on a diet of small
    animals, Steve Hutt, curator of the Museum of Isle of Wight Geology,
    said Thursday. The skeleton is 70 percent complete. 

    "This is the first flesh-eating dinosaur to come out of Europe for the
    last 10 to 15 years," he said. 

    David Norman, director of the Sedgwick Museum of Geology at Cambridge
    University, confirmed it was a new species. 

    Officials said the dinosaur was larger than the velociraptors -- the
    carnivores featured in the film "Jurassic Park" -- but smaller than
    tyrannosaurus rex. 

    "It probably brought its prey down with its feet and hands, and let its
    head behave like a vulture's, disemboweling things," Hutt said. 

    Hutt said dinosaur had a tail more than half the length of its body to
    act as a counterbalance. 

    The dinosaur's remains were found in the eroding cliffs on the Isle of
    Wight, four miles off the southern coast of England. 

    The skeleton will be displayed in a new dinosaur museum being built on
    the island. 
7.248IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4178
    AP 23-Jan-1997 20:33 EST   REF6039

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Smog Creeps Into U.S. Desert

    By MICHELLE BOORSTEIN

    Associated Press Writer

    PHOENIX (AP) -- From atop Squaw Peak Mountain, Gayle McCann checked out
    her new hometown. With buildings and mountain peaks obscured by a
    cafe-au-lait-colored cloud, it was not the crisp desert vista she
    expected. 

    "We grew up hearing about Arizona and the air and how people would come
    here to get over illnesses," said the 29-year-old who moved from
    Minneapolis last fall. "It kills me to think how much worse the air has
    gotten out here." 

    The days of Phoenix as a clean air haven ended long ago, doomed by the
    booming development that began after World War II which brought
    pollution from smelters, cars and trucks. 

    Still, while the air in Phoenix will never be the same, scientists say
    it is far cleaner today than it was in the 1960s, when doctors in the
    East and Midwest began sending patients with arthritis, asthma and
    other respiratory illnesses to desert cities for the clean, dry air. 

    Air quality records date only to the 1960s, when 500,000 people called
    Phoenix home and the air was considered unhealthful more than 100 days
    each year. Today, there are 2.5 million people, and the bad-air days
    number in the single digits. 

    "A lot of air quality is getting better, yet this is a period of
    incredible growth," said Dr. Robert Balling, director of climatology at
    Arizona State University, who headed a study in the mid-1980s showing
    that, contrary to popular belief, humidity in Phoenix had actually
    decreased since 1960, because buildings and homes have displaced
    irrigated fields. 

    Improving air quality is the trend as well in other fast-growing
    Western cities, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
    Technological advances in cars and fuels have meant cities like Los
    Angeles, Phoenix, Albuquerque, Las Vegas and Denver now experience only
    a fraction of the "bad air" days they did in the 1960s and 1970s. 

    But some air experts say the ability of technology to rein in pollution
    could be waning. Decades of improvements in the amounts of carbon
    monoxide, ozone and other pollutants in the air are leveling off, and
    the air is even getting worse in some cities. 

    "Areas like San Francisco and L.A. and Phoenix are continuing to grow
    and sprawl, and we're concerned that technological improvements may be
    bottoming out and that the curve is starting to go up again," said
    David Howekamp, director of the EPA's air division for California,
    Arizona, Nevada and Hawaii. 

    Ozone readings have shot up 11 percent in Phoenix in the last 10 years,
    and they have either gone up or continued to violate standards in
    cities like San Diego, Las Vegas and Salem, Ore. 

    Even if cities are meeting the EPA's health standards, many
    environmental and health groups -- including the American Lung
    Association -- wonder whether those yardsticks tell the real story. 

    "The standards EPA has adopted do not reflect real air quality
    conditions," said David Baron, assistant director of the Arizona Center
    for Law in the Public Interest. "In many cases in Phoenix, you'll go
    outside on a day when the air is visibly filthy and according to the
    EPA, we're in compliance." 

    The focus of the debate on air quality has shifted to growth management
    to hold down the burgeoning population in the West. 

    "A lot of those newcomers are the ones pushing the body politic, saying
    'This is not the quality of life I came here for,"' said David
    Feuerherd, program director of the Arizona Lung Association. 
7.249IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4198
    AP 23-Jan-1997 18:57 EST   REF5953

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Researchers KO Tumors in Mice

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- University of Texas scientists are destroying
    cancerous tumors in mice by engineering blood clots that starve the
    tumors to death, an advance that could be tested in people within two
    years. 

    The therapy, much like killing a plant by cutting its roots, caused
    rapid cancer-cell death within 24 hours, Dr. Philip Thorpe of UT's
    Southwestern Medical Center reports Friday in the journal Science. 

    Two weeks later, tumors had disappeared in 38 percent of the mice and
    had shrunk by more than half in another 24 percent. 

    Much work is needed to prove the treatment could work in people. But it
    could one day offer doctors a less-toxic alternative to chemotherapy
    for breast, lung, ovarian and other cancers. 

    "It would be wonderful," said Dr. James Pluda, a National Cancer
    Institute senior drug investigator. "What this paper demonstrates is
    proof of the concept that ... this kind of therapy can be effective." 

    Said Harvard University professor Dr. Judah Folkman, whose research
    into blood vessels that feed tumors formed a foundation for the
    discovery: "This is very promising and very elegant work." 

    Solid tumors, which represent most major cancers, depend on blood for
    oxygen and nutrients. Blood vessels grow rampantly through the cancer
    mass, often making surgery difficult because of heavy bleeding. The
    vessels eventually snake into other organs and spread the malignancy. 

    Thorpe theorized that by clogging vessels deep inside a tumor would
    make it die from the inside out. The question was how to avoid
    life-threatening blood clots in arteries throughout the body. 

    To create an intravenous drug, Thorpe used a human protein called
    tissue factor, or TF, that is vital in helping people's blood clot. So
    the TF in this drug dose wouldn't coagulate on the way through the
    bloodstream to the tumor, he removed the molecule that would allow it
    to latch onto normal cells. 

    Then Thorpe attached a homing device, an antibody that recognizes a
    substance found only inside the tumor's blood vessels. And once that
    substance hooks TF to these tumor vessels, the TF starts creating blood
    clots inside the tumor. 

    Clogged vessels appeared throughout mice tumors in 30 minutes and
    caused rapid cancer-cell death within 24 hours. Two weeks later, tumors
    large enough to be the equivalent of 2-5 pounds in a person had died in
    38 percent of the mice. 

    Key to making the process work in people is finding the right homing
    device to direct TF to a tumor's blood vessels. Thorpe already has
    engineered drugs that would target one substance, called vascular
    endothelial cell growth factor. 

    A biotechnology firm, Techniclone Corp. of Tustine, Calif., is
    licensing the therapy and plans to begin testing it in people within
    two years. 

    "We give the tumor a stroke," Thorpe said. "We can envision making a
    single drug for treating all types of solid tumors, whereas previously
    we had to tailor to each disease." 

    Before Thorpe's work, scientists were trying to stop the runaway growth
    of new blood vessels that allows cancer to spread, a field pioneered by
    Folkman called "anti-angiogenesis" that recently yielded potential
    drugs to fight metastasis. 

    Thorpe's approach severs the cancer's original blood vessels, using the
    body's own clotting mechanisms instead of a chemical. 

    The two methods are complementary, the cancer institute's Pluda said,
    and it is unclear which would prove best for certain tumors. 

    But unlike chemotherapy, the risk of serious side effects from Thorpe's
    method is low, as is the chance of tumors mutating to resist the
    treatment, Pluda said. 

    The therapy is not a cure-all. Not all the mice responded. And those
    whose tumors shrank, even by huge magnitudes, eventually relapsed
    because cells on the cancer's outer edge got sufficient nourishment
    from neighboring blood vessels to cling to life. 

    Thus, if the therapy works in people, it likely would be used to shrink
    a tumor to make it easier to remove surgically or to require a lower
    dose of chemotherapy, Harvard's Folkman said. 

    "These are speculations," he cautioned, "but that's why I think it is
    an exciting advance." 
7.250IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4186
    RTw  24-Jan-97 07:08    

    China crackdown on HK civil rights sparks protests

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Peter Humphrey 

    HONG KONG, Jan 24 (Reuter) - Hong Kong's democracy movement on Friday
    likened Beijing's plans to curb civil liberties in the territory to the
    brutal purges of China's radical 1966-76 Cultural Revolution. 

    The pro-democracy camp staged a small but noisy protest on Friday
    morning at the office of post-colonial leader Tung Chee-hwa, who will
    succeed British Governor Chris Patten after the handover at midnight on
    June 30. 

    "Protect freedom of assembly. Protect freedom of association," they
    shouted. "Human rights cannot be infringed upon." 

    A handful wore tall hats and hung labels around their necks, harking
    back to the Cultural Revolution when those who were politically
    persecuted were forced to wear dunce caps and hang boards around their
    necks with their names crossed out. They were paraded through the
    streets and beaten. Many died. 

    Pro-democracy activists are campaigning against plans to scrap or amend
    25 Hong Kong laws, some of them crucial to civil liberties, on July 1. 

    Laws facing the axe include parts of the Bill of Rights and laws
    allowing freedom of assembly and association. 

    The Hong Kong group called for an all-night sit-down protest outside
    China's de facto embassy, the Xinhua News Agency branch office,
    opposite the Happy Valley race course. Other protests were planned for
    Sunday. 

    "I don't think we can be masters of our own house," Yeung Sum, deputy
    leader of the Democratic Party, told reporters when asked what the
    latest developments boded for the autonomy that China has promised Hong
    Kong after the handover. 

    "The Chinese Communist Party is master of the house, and Mr Tung is the
    servant of the Chinese Communist party," he said. 

    Democratic Party leader Martin Lee called a news conference for later
    in the day and was due to set off on an eight-nation tour of Europe on
    Sunday to lobby for support for human rights, freedom and democracy in
    post-handover Hong Kong. 

    The reduction of civil liberties was proposed by a China-controlled
    committee last Sunday and would be implemented by a provisional
    legislature that China is installing in July to replace the elected
    Legislative Council. 

    The provisional body was to convene for its first sitting across the
    border in the Chinese city of Shenzhen on Saturday, when it is to elect
    its president and set rules of procedure. 

    Britain is handing Hong Kong back to China, after more than 150 years
    of colonial rule, under a 1984 treaty in which China promised to
    preserve the territory's capitalist system and freewheeling way of life
    for a further half century. 

    Hong Kong's leading English-language newspaper, the South China Morning
    Post, voiced concern that the changes would scrap a habeas corpus law
    that curbs police rights to detain people. 

    "It prevents people from being arbitrarily arrested and held without
    trial, or detained without good reason," the newspaper said. "Habeas
    corpus is one of the greatest safeguards to individual liberty in the
    canon of law." 

    Tung and Patten duelled verbally on Thursday. Tung defended the
    changes, saying they were necessary to strike "the right balance
    between individual rights and social order." 

    Tung said other states required permits for demonstrations and set
    limits on the overseas links of political groups, two of the changes
    that are worrying the pro-democracy camp. 

    Patten heaped scorn on the proposals, which have drawn Britain and the
    United States into a new diplomatic quarrel with Beijing. China has
    rejected their protests as "unwise." 

    REUTER
7.251IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4173
    RTos 24-Jan-97 05:37    

    Senate Mulls Black English as Teaching Aid

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - The bitter debate over whether Ebonics, the
    speech of inner city blacks, is a language that should be used to teach
    urban black children reached the Senate on Thursday. 

    Members of the Oakland, California, school system testified in defense
    of their decision last month to embrace Ebonics as a distinct language
    for teaching purposes, which one senator at an appropriations
    subcommittee hearing called an example of political correctness run
    amok. 

    The decision set off a firestorm that has kept radio talk show hosts
    fuming and editorial writers grappling with cliches to denounce it as
    nonsense. 

    Michael Lampkins, a 17-year-old Oakland student and member of the
    school board, told the panel "teachers must be trained to recognize the
    language patterns students bring into the classroom." 

    "While those language patterns are different than standard English,
    they are not deficient," he said. 

    But Sen. Lauch Faircloth of North Carolina said ebonics was just one
    more foolish plan by educators who should know better. "It's political
    correctness that has gone out of control," the Republican said. 

    Oakland School Superintendent Carolyn Getridge defended Ebonics as a
    way to help black students achieve in school by speaking their
    language. She said she welcomed the attention the controversy has drawn
    to the problems of educating the urban poor but she told the panel that
    instead of debating Ebonics the government should address funding
    longer school years and days, expand pre-school programs for young
    children and provide money to train teachers better. 

    "The media focus on Ebonics diverts our attention from the more
    substantive concerns of English language development and the more
    fundamental issue of minority student achievement in urban school
    systems," she said. 

    A resolution has been introduced in the House of Representatives to
    deny federal funds for Ebonics programs, which the Council of Great
    City Schools, a lobby group, says are also offered in several other
    school districts. 

    Sen. Arlen Specter, a Pennsylvania Republican who chairs the
    subcommittee, was more open-minded. He recalled how he grew up in a
    Yiddish-speaking home, adding "and I have been trying to lose my Kansas
    accent all my life." 

    Some linguists trace the speech patterns of inner city blacks to
    languages spoken in West Africa, others to English and Irish dialects
    and others to Caribbean or Creole dialects. 

    Linguists also differ on whether these patterns are a distinct language
    or merely a dialect. For example, some urban blacks use the verb "to
    be" in a unique way, as in "I be gone," or say they want to "ax" a
    question rather than "ask." 

    University of Pennsylvania linguist William Labov told the panel this
    was an African American vernacular English. 

    "Many leaders of the African American community believe that there is
    no distinctive African American English and that dialect described by
    linguists is simply the same bad English spoken by uneducated people
    anywhere," Labov said. But he said he believed Ebonics deserved a fair
    trial as a teaching tool. 

    REUTER
7.252IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 24 1997 10:4182
    RTw  23-Jan-97 18:07    

    British Ford (F.N) workers plan strike vote

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Giles Elgood 

    LONDON, Jan 23 (Reuter) - Car workers at Ford's British factories will
    be balloted on whether to strike in protest at the motor giant's plans
    to axe 1,300 jobs, a union official said on Thursday. 

    Ford agreed to hold more talks between unions and a senior company
    official, but union leaders made clear they would go ahead with plans
    for a ballot of 30,000 workers. 

    "This is the most serious dispute we have seen in our industry for two
    decades," said Tony Woodley, national officer of the Transport and
    General Workers Union. 

    "We are in dispute with the Ford motor company unless and until they
    reverse their quite disgraceful decision to close partially, if not at
    this juncture totally, the Halewood plant." 

    Ford said last week it planned to axe one in three jobs at its Halewood
    plant in northwest England, raising fears for the future of 20 Ford
    plants across Britain. 

    After closed-door talks with union chiefs, Ford said it was sticking to
    its plans to cut jobs at Halewood. 

    It said Halewood would continue to build the company's Escort model
    until the year 2000, after which it would produce a new, Escort-based
    vehicle. 

    "The actions we have announced for Halewood Assembly Operations give
    the plant a realistic future with an exciting new Escort-based vehicle
    in the medium term, subject to approvals and to performance objectives
    being reached," said Ford's European Vehicle Operations manager, David
    Gorman. 

    Outside the talks, Ford workers from across Britain cheered and waved
    banners in support of strikes, once a regular feature of the British
    landscape but largely stamped out during two decades of Conservative
    rule. 

    Woodley said the unions would act as quickly as possible on the ballot
    but the process might take five or six weeks. "We will be moving to a
    ballot as soon as humanly possible," he said to rousing cheers from the
    crowd. 

    "Our jobs are all we've got," said one angry Ford worker. "And even now
    they've turned the place into a sweat-shop." 

    Mass meetings of Ford workers this week won overwhelming support for
    the unions' position in opposing the company's plans, Woodley said. 

    The ballot paper is expected to ask workers whether they favour a
    strike or industrial action short of a walkout. 

    Ford agreed to the unions' request to hold talks with Jac Nasser,
    president of Ford Automotive Operations and Chairman of Ford of Europe,
    to discuss the situation at Halewood. 

    Unions say the decision to scale back Halewood may threaten the jobs of
    10,000 other workers. They believe Halewood faces closure even though
    Ford says a new car will be built there. 

    "The attack on Halewood is viewed as an attack on all Ford workers in
    Britain. There is no justification whatever for what the company's
    trying to do. We have a plant that is very productive, very efficient
    that is producing cars in a cost-effective manner," said Woodley. 

    The dispute, as politicians gear up for a general election, could prove
    embarrassing for the opposition Labour Party, traditionally considered
    the friend of the worker. 

    Labour is 20 points ahead in the polls but the Conservative government,
    which must hold an election by May 22, may use the Ford dispute to
    awaken old fears of a Labour-ruled nation riven by industrial disputes. 

    REUTER
7.253IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:24107
    AP 27-Jan-1997 0:58 EST   REF5581

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, Jan. 27, 1997
   
    SUPER BOWL 

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The Lombardi Trophy is coming back to Titletown.
    The Green Bay Packers' 35-21 Super Bowl victory over the New England
    Patriots Sunday featured a high-powered Pack making big plays,
    especially MVP Desmond Howard. Brett Favre threw for two touchdowns and
    ran for another. Antonio Freeman and Desmond Howard set Super Bowl
    records to highlight the victory. Freeman hooked up with Favre on an
    81-yard scoring play in the first half. Howard highlighted the third
    quarter with a 99-yard kick return for a touchdown after the Patriots
    pulled within six points 17 seconds earlier. 
   
    SUPERBOWL ADS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Fox network said 30 advertisers paid an average of
    $1.2 million for 30 seconds of commercial time in Super Bowl XXXI, in
    which Green Bay defeated New England 35-21 for the National Football
    League championship. Among those companies who ponied up for the ads
    were Holiday Inn, National Pork Producers Council, Budweiser, Nissan
    and Visa. Supermodels Cindy Crawford, Tyra Banks and Bridget Hall
    joined former Sen. Bob Dole in the highly-anticipated spots. 
   
    WESTERN STORMS 

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Mudslides blocked roads Sunday as another storm
    drenched Southern California. Saturated ground gave way in Malibu,
    blocking all four lanes of the Pacific Coast Highway for much of the
    day. In northern California, rain pushed creeks over their banks,
    leaving 2 feet of water on a highway and flooding homes. 
   
    COSBY-INTERVIEW 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bill Cosby said his son's slaying won't change who he
    is. "We have to laugh -- we've got to laugh," Cosby told CBS's Dan
    Rather on Sunday. It was the comedian's first interview since Ennis
    Cosby was slain. Ennis Cosby was shot early Jan. 16 in an apparent
    robbery attempt while changing a tire on a Los Angeles freeway. Police
    say they have good leads, but there have been no arrests. Bill Cosby is
    expected to return to work Monday on his situation comedy on CBS. The
    CBS interview is set to broadcast on Monday. 
   
    OLYMPIC-BOMBING 

    SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -- The focus of the Olympic bombing probe has
    reportedly shifted to the Pacific Northwest. Three men charged with
    several bombings and bank robberies there also are being investigated
    for possible links to the Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta, a newspaper
    reports. Justice Department and FBI officials told The Spokesman-Review
    that the suspects are being investigated in the Atlanta case, but
    cautioned that they have other leads and no solid suspects. 
   
    STRANDED ON ICE 

    BARRIE, Ontario (AP) -- Helicopters ferried 83 fishermen off a Canadian
    lake with unstable ice Sunday, but dozens of others refused to leave
    despite a gaping crack that separated them from shore. Some anglers
    even went out on the ice, apparently ignoring news of the rescue of
    some 300 fishermen the night before. There have been no reports of
    serious injury since hundreds of anglers became stranded on Lake Simcoe
    when a crack opened quickly during a fishing contest yesterday
    afternoon. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Members of Israel's Likud and Labor parties have
    agreed on a formula for a final peace settlement with the Palestinians.
    The plan foresees Israel annexing West Bank areas where most Jewish
    settlers live and -- although it would have restrictions -- does not
    rule out defining the final Palestinian entity as an independent state.
    Palestinian officials rejected the proposal, and Israeli Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu says he is not bound to anything in it. 
   
    FRANCE-JEWISH PROPERTY 

    PARIS (AP) -- France will search for Jewish property seized under the
    pro-Nazi Vichy regime and determine the "scope of pillaging" during
    World War II, Premier Alain Juppe said. Juppe told the Representative
    Council of Jewish Institutions in France on Saturday that a group would
    be set up to establish an inventory of confiscated goods that remain in
    France's possession. Documents recently made public show that the Vichy
    government and occupying German forces systematically confiscated the
    belongings of 75,000 Jews deported from France to Nazi death camps.
    Only 2,500 survived. 
   
    YUGOSLAVIA 

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Police beat back pro-democracy
    demonstrators Sunday as tens of thousands marched through Belgrade. The
    10 weeks of protest were sparked when the government of President
    Slobodan Milosevic ignored the opposition's victories in several local
    elections. Violence broke out for the third straight night when
    demonstrators tried to enter the center of the capital to reach
    students who have been facing down police. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was traded at 119.14 yen on the Tokyo foreign
    exchange market at 9 a.m. Monday, down 0.82 yen. The Tokyo Stock
    Average shed 116.39 points to 17,572.97. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.254IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2474
    RTw  26-Jan-97 11:02    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LIMA - Marxist guerrillas holding VIP hostages in the Japanese
    ambassador's residence freed a sick police chief, but his release did
    little to reduce tensions in the 40-day standoff. The Red Cross
    identified the freed hostage as National Police General Jose Rivas
    Rodriguez, who was wheeled out of the compound on a stretcher flanked
    by Red Cross officials and Bishop Juan Luis Cipriani. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - The leader of South Korea's outlawed union group, addressing
    the largest protest rally yet against a new labour law, vowed to
    advance the date of fresh strikes unless the bill was scrapped. 

    - - - - 

    LUSHNJE, Albania - Albanian President Sali Berisha called for calm as
    fiery protests against collapsing pyramid investment schemes swept the
    nation and the opposition Socialists vowed to press ahead with a
    protest rally. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli justice officials ordered police to probe
    allegations of high-level corruption which politicians have said could
    bring down Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - Governor Chris Patten warned that Beijing's proposals to
    water down civil liberties could sow legal confusion in the post-1997
    Hong Kong government. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - Fire inspectors sifted through the debris at a Hong Kong
    karaoke club gutted by fire, killing 15 people, and police said they
    were investigating a possible organised crime link to the suspected
    arson attack. 

    - - - - 

    KHARTOUM - Sudan said it had attacked a rebel base near its southern
    border with Uganda and had killed or wounded many opposition fighters. 

    - - - - 

    ANTANANARIVO - Madagascar authorities mounted a rescue operation after
    100 were feared dead or missing and up to 30,000 homeless after a
    powerful tropical cyclone hit the Indian Ocean island's southern tip. 

    - - - - 

    BOMBAY - Twenty-two illegal immigrants, survivors of a shipwreck in the
    Mediterranean in which around 280 of their companions drowned, arrived
    back in India. 

    - - - - 

    AMMAN - King Hussein of Jordan went into hospital for treatment to a
    painful knee, a palace official said. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - An off-duty British soldier was wounded in a suspected IRA
    booby-trap bomb attack in the country town of Ballynahinch in Northern
    Ireland. 

    REUTER 
7.255IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2473
    RTw  27-Jan-97 05:20    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    Tough 10 Commandments fox British vicars 

    LONDON (Reuter) - British church officials leapt to the defence of
    priests who cannot rattle off all 10 Commandments, saying it was
    substance not words that counted. 

    A poll by the Sunday Times found only 34 percent of 200 Anglican
    priests polled could recite all 10 without help. 

    "When people are put on the spot like this of course they can't
    remember," a Church of England spokesman said. "Given time they would
    recall them." 

    The poll found that most clergy knew the commandments prohibiting
    adultery and coveting one's neighbour's wife, but got a little fuzzy on
    the details of some of the other eight. 

    John Redwood, an outspoken Conservative Member of Parliament, said he
    was amazed at the clergy's ignorance. "It's their job to remind us of
    the laws of Christianity," he said. 

    - - - - 

    Germans faithful to unflattering surnames 

    BONN (Reuter) - Thousands of Germans are keeping unfortunate surnames
    such as Kotz (Vomit), Moerder (Murder), Brathuhn (Roast chicken) and
    even Hitler, even though they could legally change them, a magazine
    reported. 

    The German phonebook lists hundreds of people with the surname Faul
    (Lazy), Fett (Fat), Dreckmann (Filth-man), Dumm (Stupid) and Schwein
    (Pig), the weekly Focus magazine said in an advance release ahead of
    publication. 

    Unflatteringly named Germans said that they mainly had problems with
    their names as children and that later in life they had decided not to
    bow to social pressure to change them. 

    "Why should I have a different name from my father and grandfather?"
    said one Herr Schwein. 

    - - - - 

    Mexican family takes out ad asking not to be robbed 

    LEON, Mexico (Reuter) - A Mexican family took out a newspaper
    advertisement asking crooks to please stop robbing the family. 

    "Mister robbers, you have cleaned us out ... please do not visit us
    anymore, it's not worth your while," the Robles family wrote in a
    newspaper ad in the central Mexican state of Guanajuato. 

    The ad recounts how the Robles family was held up in a local restaurant
    on December 27, losing their money and jewels. A month later, two armed
    robbers held up the family again in their home, taking nearly
    everything of value. 

    "The only things we have left is our refrigerator, our television set
    and a VCR," the family said. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER
7.256IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2527
    AP 26-Jan-1997 23:56 EST   REF5571

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    State Dept. To Criticize Germany

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The State Department in its annual worldwide survey
    of human rights violations, will criticize Germany for its restrictions
    on the Church of Scientology, the Washington Post reported Monday. 

    The newspaper said that the report, due out Wednesday, will chastise
    Germany for an administration official characterized as "a campaign of
    harassment and intimidation" against the controversial church. 

    The United States has expressed concern about Germany's policies toward
    the church and its members, but also has been told by the German
    government through diplomatic channels not to interfere. 

    Emotions have been raised over the issue because the Scientologists
    have likened Germany's treatment of the church to the Nazis'
    persecution of the Jews. The German government has said it is trying to
    rein in what it considers a subversive cult organization . 

    The church, founded in the 1950s by L. Ron Hubbard, claims 8 million
    members worldwide including about 30,000 members in Germany. It has
    fought for years to be accepted as a church. It has had legal status as
    a church in the United States since 1993. 
7.257IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2535
    AP 26-Jan-1997 23:38 EST   REF5556

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bill Cosby: 'We Have to Laugh'

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bill Cosby said his son's slaying won't change who he
    is. "We have to laugh -- we've got to laugh," Cosby said Sunday. 

    In his first interview since Ennis Cosby was slain, Cosby told CBS that
    his wife, Camille, can't accept that her son's killer hasn't been
    found. 

    "She wants him now. She refuses to accept the fact that this "thing" is
    still out there." Cosby said in an interview with Dan Rather. "She
    doesn't accept the fact that nobody comes forward to help with the
    truth." 

    Ennis Cosby was shot early Jan. 16 in an apparent robbery attempt while
    changing a flat tire on a deserted freeway access road in Los Angeles.
    Police say they have good leads, but there have been no arrests. 

    Bill Cosby was expected to return to work Monday on his situation
    comedy on CBS. Last Monday night's episode opened and closed with a
    tribute to Cosby's 27-year-old son. A picture of Ennis Cosby flashed at
    the end with the message, "my hero, my son." 

    The Cosbys also have four daughters. 

    CBS released a few excerpts of the interview, set for broadcast Monday. 

    "I think it's time for me to tell the people that we have to laugh --
    we've got to laugh," Cosby said. "But I just want the people to know -
    those who watch me, those who are with me -- it's over for looking at
    me to do anything but go back to that which I am." 
7.258IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:26119
    AP 26-Jan-1997 22:44 EST   REF5079

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    3 Probed in Olympic Bomb Case

    SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -- Three men charged with several bombings and bank
    robberies in the Pacific Northwest also are being investigated for
    possible links to the Olympic park bombing in Atlanta, a newspaper
    reported Sunday. 

    However, while anonymous Justice Department and FBI officials told The
    Spokesman-Review that the Spokane bombing suspects are being
    investigated in the Atlanta case, they cautioned that they have other
    leads and no solid suspects. 

    "At this point, they are our strongest lead in the Olympics bombing,"
    one Justice Department official told the newspaper. "But there's a lot
    more work to do, and it's really early on in the investigation." 

    The three men are being held without bail on charges of robbing banks
    and bombing one of the banks, an abortion clinic and an office of The
    Spokesman-Review. 

    FBI spokesman Ray Lauer said it was logical to investigate the men for
    the Olympic park bombing. 

    "If you are looking for a bomber, you look at known suspected bombers,"
    Lauer said from Seattle. "To label them as suspects (in the Olympic
    park bombing) would be too harsh of a step at this time." 

    They were arrested Oct. 8 near Yakima, Wash., after a military surplus
    dealer, encouraged by a $130,000 reward, reported that he recognized a
    parka worn by a masked gunmen in a bank surveillance photo. 

    The dealer, from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, told the FBI he sold two of the
    men a military backpack and spoke with them about time-delay
    detonators, and also told them how to wash fingerprints off the
    backpack, the newspaper said. 

    The Olympic bomb -- which killed a woman and injured 111 people on July
    27 -- was hidden in a military backpack and triggered by a
    battery-operated timer. 

    The bombs in Spokane and Atlanta have some similarities: They were made
    with galvanized steel pipe and, apparently, black powder. But while the
    Atlanta bomb used a timer, the Spokane bombs were set off by fuses lit
    by matches, the newspaper said. No one was injured by the three Spokane
    pipe bombs. 

    Telephone records may place one of the Spokane suspects, Charles Barbee
    of Sandpoint, Idaho, near Atlanta about the time of the Olympic
    bombing, the newspaper reported. 

    One federal official said there are "some real interesting" connections
    between the Atlanta bombing and the Spokane suspects, the newspaper
    said. 

    "They certainly haven't been eliminated," the official said. 

    Officially, the 100-member task force investigating the Olympics
    bombing would not talk about any possible connection to the Spokane
    bombings. 

    On Sunday, Justice Department spokesman Bill Brooks in Washington,
    D.C., told The Associated Press he could not comment. 

    After the Olympic bombing, unidentified federal sources wrongly named
    Olympics security guard Richard Jewell as a suspect, subjecting him to
    a media frenzy that ended when officials formally said he was no longer
    under investigation. 

    The other suspects in the Spokane bombings are Robert S. Berry, 42, and
    Verne Jay Merrell, 51, also from Sandpoint. They have been linked to
    anti-government, white separatist sects based in northern Idaho. 

    Agents say the men fit one theory of the bombing: that it was committed
    by a domestic terrorist, most likely someone involved in militia-style
    or hate groups, the newspaper said. According to sources, the FBI also
    is investigating such groups in the South and Southwest. 

    Other theories about the Olympics bomber include a disgruntled employee
    or a lone sociopath. 

    The Atlanta bomb exploded in the AT&T Global Village, part of the
    Centennial Olympic Park. 

    Barbee, 42, worked for AT&T in Georgia, Florida and Idaho. In a 1995
    interview with The Spokesman-Review, he called AT&T an immoral
    corporation that mistreated Christian white men. 

    "Half the people I worked with were women," Barbee said. "They were
    working instead of being helpmates to their husbands, as God requires."

    The three men are scheduled to stand trial Feb. 10 in federal court in
    Spokane. 

    They are charged with the bombings of a suburban office of The
    Spokesman-Review and a nearby U.S. Bank branch, which also was robbed.
    They are also charged with bombing a Planned Parenthood clinic and
    robbing the same bank branch two weeks before the Olympics bombing. 

    They face 12 counts involving bank robberies, use of pipe bombs, auto
    theft and conspiracy. If convicted of all charges, they face life
    imprisonment without the possibility of parole. 

    In Atlanta, meanwhile, federal investigators said they have narrowed
    the time frame when the bomb was planted in Centennial Olympic Park. 

    FBI spokesman Jay Spadafore told The Associated Press that the time
    frame was less than 20 minutes, but he would not specify any further. 

    The time frame was pinpointed after investigators painstakingly pieced
    together and synchronized more than 4,600 still photographs and nearly
    1,000 videotapes taken by spectators in the park more than two hours
    before the 1:20 a.m. blast until just after the explosion, said Woody
    Johnson, the agent in charge of the Atlanta FBI office. 

    The photos were correlated with the videotapes and timed, he said. 
7.259IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2633
    AP 26-Jan-1997 21:33 EST   REF5531

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Carter: Helms Burton is Mistake

    KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) -- Former President Jimmy Carter lambasted a
    U.S. law tightening the economic embargo on Cuba, saying it allows
    Fidel Castro to play the martyr while doing little to enhance democracy
    in Cuba. 

    "The Helms-Burton Act is one of the worst mistakes my country has ever
    made," Carter said during a news conference Saturday night in Kingston. 

    The law is designed to deter foreign investment in Cuba. With
    governments worldwide condemning it, President Clinton has suspended at
    least until July a provision that would allow Americans to sue
    foreigners doing business in Cuba on property confiscated from
    Americans during Castro's rule. 

    Carter said Helms-Burton, intended to foster opposition to Castro
    within Cuba, gives the Cuban president "an undeserved excuse for his
    own economic and political failures and for his inability and
    unwillingness to grant the Cuban people the freedom and democracy that
    they deserve." 

    Carter also criticized the U.S. trade embargo imposed after the 1959
    revolution, saying it makes Castro appear to be a hero to some people. 

    During his four years in office, Carter established limited diplomatic
    ties with Castro and lifted the ban on Americans traveling to Cuba.
    Carter met with Jamaican Prime Minister P.J. Patterson as part of his
    trip through the Caribbean and South America. 
7.260IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2646
    AP 26-Jan-1997 21:00 EST   REF5519

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Filings: Suit Didn't Stop Pranks

    TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Executives at Publix Super Markets tried to
    discredit a sex discrimination lawsuit before they agreed to an $81.5
    million settlement, according to court records. 

    The Lakeland-based grocer admitted no wrongdoing Friday in settling the
    lawsuit. Publix is Florida's largest private employer with stores also
    in Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama. 

    Court documents show problems allegedly continued and even intensified
    after the lawsuit was filed in 1995 by 12 former and current female
    employees. The case became a class action involving about 150,000
    women. 

    Plaintiff filings contend that managers and co-workers openly chided
    and harassed women affiliated with the case. One Publix executive
    distributed a parody of two Christmas poems mocking the lawsuit. 

    "How the Grinch (Almost) Stole Christmas" was distributed widely on the
    company's electronic mail system and was posted in many stores after
    the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission intervened in the lawsuit
    in 1995. 

    "They're just too darn happy, too happy for me, moaned the Miami office
    of EEOC," the poem said in part. 

    Clayton Hollis, Publix' vice president of public affairs and the son of
    the company's former president, said he regrets distributing the poem. 

    "Looking back, it wasn't the right thing to do," he said. "We needed a
    light moment. It was a light poem." 

    A company videotape took a more serious tone, featuring company
    spokeswoman Jennifer Bush talking about small cash settlements in
    another sex bias case and implying it would not pay to be a member of
    the class action. 

    When plaintiffs' attorneys brought such actions to the attention of
    U.S. District Judge Henry Lee Adams Jr, he ordered the chain to
    distribute a notice he wrote about the case. Publix settled the lawsuit
    before the deadline for distributing the notice. 
7.261IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2744
    AP 26-Jan-1997 20:09 EST   REF5489

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- More freshmen at The Citadel have quit already
    this academic year than during all of last year, one of the highest
    dropout rates at the military academy in the past decade. 

    "I wish I could put my finger on the reasons why," interim President
    Clifton Poole said. "Whatever it is, we need to do something to turn
    that around." 

    Four women were among the 581 freshmen who enrolled in August, the
    first female cadets ever at the 153-year-old school. Since then, 113
    cadets have dropped out, including two of the women who said they were
    leaving because of sexual harassment and hazing. 

    Last year's freshman class lost 102 students by May, or 16.2 percent. 

    So far this year, 19.4 percent of freshman have left, the
    second-highest dropout rate by January in the past 10 years. The
    highest was 20 percent in the 1994-1995 school year. 

    The rate is "very high," said James Bradin, a former Citadel commandant
    and school board member. "My guess is that there's something that
    caused that. It's something in the barracks." 

    The female cadets who quit, Jeanie Mentavlos and Kim Messer, said male
    cadets set their clothes on fire and washed out their mouths with
    cleanser. Two male cadets were suspended, and 11 face disciplinary
    action. 

    The women were admitted following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year
    that a similar all-male policy at Virginia Military Institute was
    unconstitutional. The first woman to enroll at The Citadel, Shannon
    Faulkner, dropped out after less than a week, citing stress and
    isolation. 

    In the past 10 years, the academy's dropout rate at the end of the
    first year has ranged from 17 percent to 24 percent. 

    "Maybe what we're seeing now is that times have really changed," Poole
    said. "Kids are just different today. Maybe the fact it's a coed corps,
    the culture needs to change and will change even more." 
7.262IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2789
    AP 26-Jan-1997 19:45 EST   REF5471

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Attorney Questions Rape Trial

    By HOLLY CORYELL

    Associated Press Writer

    WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) -- Defense attorneys contend West Point ordered a
    court-martial for a cadet accused of raping a drunken classmate with a
    shaky memory because they feared accusations of a cover-up. 

    Attorney James Fitzgerald said the case never should have gone to trial
    because there were so many inconsistencies in the 20-year-old woman's
    story. 

    "When your case consists of a person who says 'I don't recall what I
    didn't recall,' you've got problems," Fitzgerald said. 

    Cadet James Engelbrecht, 22, of Conroe, Texas, was acquitted Friday of
    raping the cadet at a Memorial Day weekend party. He is expected back
    in class on Monday and is scheduled to graduate this spring. 

    His accuser, a junior, has been on medical leave since December. She
    was the first to bring rape charges against a classmate since women
    were admitted to West Point 20 years ago. 

    The prosecutor had said the charges were warranted by the evidence, and
    a West Point spokesman stood by that decision Sunday. 

    "The idea that (the decision was based on) the political climate or
    political correctness or those other things is not true," said Capt.
    John Cornelio, a West Point spokesman. 

    But attorney Michael Diederich Jr. said leaders at the U.S. Military
    Academy were primarily concerned about the reputation of West Point and
    the Army when they pursued the case last fall. 

    "Engelbrecht and the woman were secondary," said Diederich, who
    represented Engelbrecht before the trial. "It was clear to everybody
    that they didn't want to be seen as covering up anything." 

    The academy's superintendent, Lt. Gen. Daniel Christman, ordered the
    trial, even though a West Point investigator recommended that the rape
    charge be dropped. The investigator had determined there was sufficient
    evidence to support only a lesser indecent act charge; he recommended
    that it be handled administratively. 

    "Through a more extensive review of the evidence and through a more
    thorough investigation of the charges, the superintendent determined
    that a court-martial was warranted," Cornelio said. 

    Diederich likened the decision to a district attorney prosecuting a
    case without a grand jury's indictment. "It's not impartial," he said. 

    But Cornelio said the investigator is an Army officer who has no
    professional background in investigations, and his recommendation is
    only part of the process. 

    "He's a fact finder," Cornelio said. "The superintendent is the
    ultimate decision maker." 

    The seven-member, all-male jury of U.S. Army officers acquitted
    Engelbrecht of rape and committing an indecent act. The senior cadet
    could have faced life in prison and a dishonorable discharge from the
    Army if he had been convicted of the charges. 

    The female cadet testified during the trial that she became "highly
    intoxicated" and later awoke to the pain of Engelbrecht having sex with
    her in a bunk bed. He claimed the woman climbed into the top bunk where
    he was sleeping and initiated sex. 

    West Point prosecutors said the woman was too intoxicated to consent. 

    Engelbrecht will become an Army officer after graduation. 

    "Only James Engelbrecht will impact his promotion," Cornelio said. "As
    far as the trial goes, the book is closed... That's the way the Army
    system works: You are judged by performance and potential." 

    Other cadets said the incident has resulted in more attention to the
    dangers of drinking. 

    "They've been having classes about binge drinking and alcohol abuse
    because a lot of people, they sometimes tend to get a little carried
    away, and it happens at every school," said Alan Parson, 19, of
    Fremont, Calif. 
7.263IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2838
    AP 26-Jan-1997 16:59 EST   REF5131

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bomb Damages Teller Machines

    VALLEJO, Calif. (AP) -- An explosion outside a bank damaged three
    automated teller machines early Sunday, the second bomb found in this
    northern California city in as many days. No one was injured. 

    No money was taken from the ATMs at the Wells Fargo Bank after the
    explosion at about 3 a.m., police said. They offered no possible
    motive, but said robbery was a possibility. 

    "If that was the intent -- to get the money -- he failed to do so," Lt.
    Reggie Garcia said. 

    Police said the device was powerful enough to have caused injuries. 

    "It was loud ... one big thump," one unidentified neighbor told KCBS
    radio. "I woke my wife up and I told her, 'That's a bomb."' 

    On Saturday, children playing near a library three miles from the bank
    found 30 sticks of dynamite and some wires. Authorities evacuated a
    post office and restaurant and briefly closed a highway before
    dismantling the device. 

    Had it gone off, the bomb would have heavily damaged the library and
    restaurant and injured those inside, a police statement said. 

    The motive was unclear, but authorities said the lower floor of the
    library is also the evidence section for the police department in
    Vallejo, a city of 112,000 about 25 miles east of San Francisco. 

    Also Saturday, a man who said his truck was packed with 5,000 pounds of
    dynamite forced workers to evacuate Paramount Studios in Los Angeles
    for nearly near the library was found, 4 1/2 hours. No explosives were
    found. 
7.264IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2857
    AP 26-Jan-1997 22:45 EST   REF5099

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ice Fishers Rescued From Ice

    BARRIE, Ontario (AP) -- Helicopters ferried 83 fishermen off a Canadian
    lake with unstable ice Sunday, but dozens of others refused to leave
    despite a gaping crack that separated them from shore. 

    Some anglers even went out on the ice Sunday, apparently ignoring news
    of the rescue of some 300 fishermen the night before. 

    "We still have people heading back out on the lake," Sgt. Dan Yoisten
    of the Ontario provincial police said Sunday. "They're determined ice
    fishers." 

    There have been no reports of serious injury since hundreds of anglers
    became stranded on Lake Simcoe when a crack opened quickly during a
    fishing contest Saturday afternoon. 

    The crack left an open-water rift as wide as 320 feet at some points
    and stretching about 20 miles across the lake, located about 30 miles
    north of Toronto. 

    Six military helicopters, a hovercraft and several boats rescued about
    300 people Saturday, but were forced to suspend operations at nightfall
    due blinding snow and winds reaching 55 mph. 

    Some 200 people remaining on the ice sought shelter in heated fishing
    huts as temperatures plunged to 11 degrees below zero. 

    The rescue resumed Sunday and officials brought 83 people to shore, but
    the others decided to stay and continue fishing, authorities said. 

    "A lot of these people didn't know they were in any danger," military
    spokesman Capt. Robert Frank said Sunday. 

    Fisherman Tom Slade said he and his party were about 1 1/2 miles from
    shore when they heard about the crack. His group decided it was best to
    stay in their fishing hut. 

    "We saw the helicopter fly over. We saw the news report about the ice
    floe. We figured we are safer where we are," Slade said. 

    Many enthusiastic fishermen ignored authorities warnings on Sunday not
    to go out on the frozen lake to fish. A thin sheet of ice had formed
    over some gaps overnight creating a false appearance of security. 

    One group even used a minivan, the front of which crashed through the
    ice and forced its six passengers to scramble out the back door. 

    Yoisten said there was no law stopping people from going out on the
    ice. 

    "There's nothing to protect people from themselves," he said. "We can
    only pick them up when they do something stupid to themselves." 
7.265IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2844
    AP 26-Jan-1997 22:34 EST   REF5049

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Egypt Warns Against Intervention

    RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -- Egypt will "not stand idle" if foreign
    powers intervene in the conflict in Sudan, Egyptian Foreign Minister
    Amr Moussa warned Sunday. 

    Sudanese rebels said Sunday that Iran supplied Sudan's Islamic
    government with tanks and warplanes. They also reported rebel forces
    made gains in the east and southeast of the country. 

    "Reports that Sudan has sought help from Iran have not yet been
    substantiated," Moussa told The Associated Press after meeting with
    Saudi King Fahd. 

    Moussa did not elaborate on his threat that Egypt "will not stand idle
    in case of any foreign interference in Sudan." 

    The Sudanese government has called a general mobilization to fight the
    rebels and is pressing Islamic countries for help. 

    Earlier this month, Egypt said it would not help Sudan's government
    stem the rebel advance. 

    Last year, Sudan's National Democratic Alliance joined forces with the
    Sudan People's Liberation Army -- a rebel group fighting successive
    Khartoum governments in south Sudan since 1983. 

    The alliance has made gains in eastern and southeastern Sudan during
    the past two weeks. 

    On Saturday, the official Sudanese news agency SUNA reported from
    Khartoum, Sudan, that Sudanese warplanes bombed rebel positions near
    the eastern border with Ethiopia. 

    Also, the Sudanese government's official newspaper reported that
    government soldiers killed 17 rebels and destroyed a number of vehicles
    in clashes in the east. It did not say when the fighting took place. 

    The warplanes bombed areas where rebels of the National Democratic
    Alliance have been fighting government soldiers since Jan. 12. 
7.266IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2816
    AP 26-Jan-1997 22:17 EST   REF5044

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tokyo Runway Closes Temporarily

    TOKYO (AP) -- A Northwest Airlines jumbo jet carrying 363 people
    aborted takeoff after developing engine trouble, forcing Narita
    international airport to temporarily close its runway, officials said
    Monday. 

    One of the jet's four engines ruptured Sunday, blowing off its external
    cover and scattering other parts across the runway, airport officials
    said. 

    There were no reports of injury. 
7.267IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:2833
    RTw  27-Jan-97 04:48    

    Selfish instincts build economy - Ugandan leader

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 27 (Reuter) - Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said on
    Monday he had found the best way to build a strong economy was to
    appeal to people's selfish instincts. 

    "We looked at central planning and found its limitations -- the absence
    of motivation," Museveni told the Financial Times in an interview. 

    "That leads us to understanding human nature -- are they selfish or
    altruistic? We came to the conclusion that they are selfish. So we let
    loose their selfish instincts to work day and night to fulfil their
    selfish interests -- and in that way they build our economy." 

    Uganda has been trying to resuscitate its economy after 20 years of
    dictatorships and war, partly by exploiting its rich natural resources
    and by offering tax holidays to foreign investors.

    But it still faces a war with Christian fundamentalist rebels in the
    north and regular trouble along its borders, notably with Rwanda and
    from Zaire-based Ugandan rebels. 

    Museveni, who has ruled Uganda since 1986, said he did not believe his
    country was ready for full democracy. 

    Societies were like butterflies and African societies were still in the
    caterpillar stage, he said. 

    REUTER
7.268IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Jan 27 1997 10:28130
    RTw  27-Jan-97 03:34    

    FEATURE - Northern Ireland literary terrorist ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Northern Ireland literary terrorist runs riot 

    By Andrew Hill 

    BELFAST, Jan 27 (Reuter) - In a small room near Belfast, a fanatic
    reared on cider and the Sex Pistols is assembling Northern Ireland's
    latest explosive device. 

    The target is a province at war with itself for nearly 30 years. The
    warhead is black humour. And the effect, say respected international
    authorites, is devastating. 

    Meet literary terrorist Colin Bateman, a 34-year-old writer with three
    wildly funny and fast-selling books behind him, two more in the works
    and two feature films in the offing. 

    The background to his work is Northern Ireland's 27-year conflict
    between pro-Irish Catholics and pro-British Protestants. The "Troubles"
    have killed 3,200 and created a unique black humour on the province's
    battered streets. 

    The Sunday Times said of "Divorcing Jack," his 1995 first novel: "As
    sharp as a pint of snakebite...manages to say more about the Troubles
    in 280 vivid pages than reams of earnest reportage ever could." 

    It is a typically crazy Bateman plot: journalist Dan Starkey and his
    wife Patricia love alcohol a lot but their partnership is strained.
    Then Dan kisses a beautiful young student, Margaret at a party. She
    gets murdered, his wife gets kidnapped. 

    AS SHARP AS SNAKEBITE 

    The rest is mayhem. The cast includes a smooth, self-styled
    middle-of-the-road politician called Brinn and thugs of both Protestant
    and Catholic persuasions with names like Cow Pat Coogan and Mad Dog. 

    No-one is spared Bateman's satire. He uses humour to debunk the pompous
    and the pretentious but most of all to ridicule the bigots whose
    attitudes hold the province a hostage to war. 

    The Irish Republican Army (IRA), the Catholic-backed guerrilla force
    fighting to end British rule, and its Protestant Loyalist adversaries,
    such as the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), are set up and then
    demolished. 

    "Sorry to hear that three IRA men died earlier today," says one
    character in Divorcing Jack. "Their car left the road and hit a tree.
    The UVF said they planted it." 

    "Cycle of Violence," his second novel, is set in a border village
    called Crossmaheart to which a young journalist known only as Miller is
    sent from to replace a reporter who has disappeared. Lots of people
    disappear here, the reader learns. 

    Miller has no driving licence because of a drunk-driving offence. "His
    bike was known in the newsroom as the Cycle of Violence. When Miller
    fell into a drinking spree and failed to return, the bike was known as
    the Endless Cycle of Violence." 

    Bateman's literary training ground was the so-called Gold Coast of
    Northern Ireland, a seaside strip outside Belfast which is home to some
    of the province's wealthier Protestants. 

    He worked from the age of 17 as a junior reporter, "doing everything,"
    on the County Down Spectator, a small weekly paper, of which he was
    deputy editor until about six months ago. 

    NEVER MIND THE B........... 

    The defining moment which transformed him from newspaperman to novelist
    was the banning in the United Kingdom of an album by Britain's
    foul-mouthed punk rock pioneers the Sex Pistols. 

    The album was called "Never Mind the Bollocks." Six months after its
    banning, it started to appear in record shops as soon as the initial
    row over its title had faded. 

    Bateman wrote a column about the album's re-emergence. It was headlined
    "Never Mind the B......." The offending word was not spelled out in
    deference to the newspaper's middle class, Protestant readership. 

    But his editor, "a prim, school-mistress, Sunday School teacher type
    called Annie Raycroft asked me what the headline meant," says Bateman.
    "I told her why I couldn't use the full word. She told me I could," he
    told Reuters in an interview. 

    "That unchained me. From that moment on I started writing a column. I
    wrote anything that came into my head. Satire was too good a word for
    it. I was just taking the piss," Bateman said. 

    "I was a cider-swilling punk rocker. Once I wrote that I had been to
    the United States to buy weapons for the Boys Brigade and that they
    were going to have paramilitary coffee mornings with armalites in one
    hand, jaffa cakes in the other. There were three libel actions against
    the paper for that one....." 

    ENDLESS CYCLE OF VIOLENCE 

    He began writing books. He hasn't stopped. Divorcing Jack was refused
    by every small publishing house so he sent it to a big one, Harper
    Collins. It sent "a very bad photocopy" to the panel of London's Betty
    Trask prize for first novels. It won. 

    "Of Wee Sweetie Mice and Men," his third book, stars a no-hope
    Protestant boxer, his Catholic wife, his opponent for the world title
    Mike Tyson, promoter Don King, the IRA, the UVF and a fanatical Moslem
    group called the Sons of Mohammed. 

    Bateman is in Belfast, watching the filming of a television sreenplay
    he has written called "Jumpers." "It's about three people who meet on
    the window ledge where they are about to commit suicide. One of them is
    Father Christmas." 

    It is a typically grim, dank Belfast day. Police in flak jackets
    carrying automatic rifles are patrolling the streets outside the office
    where the film is being made. Shoppers are hurrying from the New Year
    sales under umbrellas. 

    The scene feels like the opening paragraph of Bateman's third book.
    "Peace had settled over the city like the skin on a rancid custard.
    Everbody wanted it, just not in that form. The forecast remained for
    rain, with widespread terrorism.

    REUTER
7.269IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:25105
    AP 28-Jan-1997 1:00 EST   REF5766

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, Jan. 28, 1997
   
    AMERICAN AIRLINES PILOT 

    DALLAS (AP) -- Members of the Allied Pilots Association are scheduled
    to start walking picket lines Tuesday at airports in Dallas-Fort Worth,
    Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, San Francisco, Washington D.C.,
    Newark, N.J., and Seattle, a union spokesman said. The union has vowed
    to strike if American Airlines' parent company AMR Corp. doesn't come
    up with a contract offering job security and better wages. Earlier this
    month, 61 percent of the union's members rejected a four-year deal
    offered by AMR. Soon after, the two sides entered a cooling-off period
    that expires Feb. 15. No negotiations are scheduled until Feb. 10 in
    Washington. 
   
    SIMPSON 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- The jury in the O.J. Simpson civil trial
    is likely to get the case Tuesday after plaintiff attorneys wrap up
    their rebuttal arguments and the jury receives instructions from the
    judge. Simpson's lawyer, Robert Baker, urged jurors Monday to embrace
    Simpson as an innocent man. Baker said there was neither a motive nor
    time for Simpson to slash Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman to
    death on June 12, 1994. Plaintiff attorney Daniel Petrocelli said it is
    beyond belief that police officers and scientific investigators would
    conspire to frame Simpson. 
   
    COSBY-SON 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bill Cosby denies he is the father of a 22-year-old
    woman who is accused of trying to extort money from him. But in an
    interview with CBS' Dan Rather, Cosby admits to having had an affair
    with Autumn Jackson's mother. Cosby said: "On the birth certificate,
    it's not my name." Prosecutors charge that on the day Cosby's son
    Ennis, 27, was shot and killed, Ms. Jackson and Jose Medina, 51, sent a
    fax to Cosby's representative demanding money. She and Medina were
    arrested. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Yasser Arafat has said he will not declare a
    Palestinian state ahead of a final peace agreement with Israel, a
    newspaper reported Monday. Last week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
    said he had a contingency plan if Arafat unilaterally declared
    statehood. Israeli news media said that plan includes Israeli troops
    resuming their occupation of West Bank rural areas, leaving Arafat with
    control over seven West Bank cities. But Arafat said he would not move
    on statehood until a final accord wraps up years of Israel-Palestinian
    peacemaking. 
   
    AOL REFUNDS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Faced with frustrated cyberspacers who have trouble
    signing on, America Online says it is selectively offering refunds to
    customers who call complaining they can't get the service they paid
    for. America Online is facing criticism from customers and
    consumer-protection officials who say it oversold a product that it
    couldn't reliably deliver. With users swamping the service's lines in
    response to the new pricing plan, subscribers trying to log on during
    high-use periods often get busy signals. 
   
    COLOMBIA-KIDNAPPING 

    BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- The president of the Bogota Stock Exchange was
    kidnapped by gunmen at his country home outside the capital, a police
    source said Monday. Several armed men kidnapped Carlos Caballero Argaez
    in the town of Granada on Saturday, a source in the anti-kidnapping
    police said. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the largest
    and oldest guerrilla group fighting the government, was believed
    responsible, but so far there had been no claim of responsibility for
    the kidnapping, the police source said. 
   
    AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Four months after he was gunned down, Tupac Shakur
    was named favorite rap-hip hop artist at the American Music Awards.
    Alanis Morissette and Toni Braxton were double winners but Mariah
    Carey, nominated for five awards, went home empty-handed. Shania Twain
    was country's favorite female artist and Brooks & Dunn were honored as
    country's top band, duo or group. New Edition returned to the winner's
    podium for the first time in 10 years, claiming the favorite soul-R&B
    honor. Newcomer Jewel was named favorite new pop-rock artist and
    teen-ager LeAnn Rimes was rewarded as country's favorite new artist.
    Metallica won hard rock-heavy metal artist. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was traded at 119.76 yen on the Tokyo foreign
    exchange market Tuesday, up 0.52 yen. The Nikkei Average rose 32.64 to
    1,7367.54. In New York, the Dow industrials closed at 6660.69, down
    35.79. NYSE decliners led advancers 1,655-811. The Nasdaq was at
    1352.81, down 11.02. 
   
    MIGHTY DUCKS-BLUES 

    ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Teemu Selanne scored two goals and Guy Hebert made 38
    saves to lead the Anaheim Mighty Ducks to a 4-1 win over the St. Louis
    Blues Monday night. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak for the
    Blues, 6-3 since Joel Quenneville was named coach on Jan. 6. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.270IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2596
    RTw  28-Jan-97 03:15    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LIMA - Guerrillas holding 72 hostages for a 41st day fired at police
    for the first time as security forces circled the besieged Japanese
    ambassador's residence in a display of strength designed to weaken
    rebel resolve. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Serbia's opposition, vowing to keep up protests against
    election fraud, headed for a confrontation with ruling Socialists as
    both sides prepared to form rival councils in a provincial town. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States is considering participating in a
    commando-type international police force to capture accused Bosnia war
    criminals and bring them to trial, the White House said. 

    - - - - 

    GROZNY, Russia - Chechnya's war-weary voters waited to find out who had
    won presidential and parliamentary elections as ballots were collected
    and counted across the mountainous Moslem region. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania's ruling right-wing Democrats, seeking to deflate
    public anger over the collapse of hugely popular pyramid investment
    schemes, called a rally for Tuesday to denounce rioting which has swept
    the country. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Bulgarian President Petar Stoyanov has called on the ruling
    Socialists to accept demands for quick elections by returning the
    mandate he will give them on Tuesday to try to form a new government. 

    - - - - 

    BUCHAREST - Romania, seeking to boost its chances of early admission to
    NATO, wants to develop a new partnership with Hungary and Poland and
    has put improved ties with Ukraine at the top of its foreign policy
    agenda. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - An embarrassed Switzerland sent a special envoy to reassure
    Jews that it will set up a multimillion dollar fund for Holocaust
    victims despite comments by a top Swiss diplomat that his country was
    in a public relations "war" with Jews. 

    - - - - 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif - A plaintiffs' attorney in O.J. Simpson's civil
    trial implored jurors to find him responsible for the deaths of his
    ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, saying, "One blood drop
    is enough; one shoeprint is enough." 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - A briefing for North Korea on proposed Korean peninsula
    peace talks has been postponed one week to Feb. 5 while Pyongyang tries
    to complete a grain deal with a U.S. firm to feed its famished people,
    the State Department said. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean police raided offices of the troubled Hanbo Group
    following allegations of misconduct in a loan scandal centred on the
    company's failed steel unit, state radio said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency taught torture
    techniques in the early 1980s, including ways to break a prisoner's
    will through sensory deprivation and inducing strong fear, a newly
    declassifed CIA training manual showed. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The International Monetary Fund's executive board agreed
    to establish a $48 billion war-chest to help the lending agency fight
    economic crises so serious they threatened the global monetary system. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Prime Minister John Major won the backing of his cabinet to
    delay an election until May 1, the last practical date on which he can
    face the voters. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER 
7.271IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2565
    RTw  28-Jan-97 06:46    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    Workers facing layoffs win $46 million in lottery 

    JACKSON, Michigan (Reuter) - A group of Michigan factory workers who
    were preparing for impending layoffs reported to work as usual on
    Monday, even after a lottery ticket they bought won a $46 million
    jackpot on Friday. 

    Shirley Johnson said she and her 16 previously unlucky co-workers would
    continue "to work until we get our pink slip." 

    Kellogg Industries Co, a surgical and orthopedic supplies plant in
    Jackson, Michigan, that was scheduled to close in June, notified its 85
    workers last November that it would close the 90-year-old factory and
    transfer production to a newer plant in California. 

    Two weeks ago, some of the workers formed a lottery club and bought 19
    tickets for Friday's "Big Game" multi-state lottery. 

    - - - - 

    Menem wants powerboat champion Scioli in Congress 

    BUENOS AIRES (Reuter) - Argentine President Carlos Menem said he was
    proposing world powerboat champion Daniel Scioli to stand for Congress
    for the ruling Peronist Party in mid-term elections in October. 

    Menem described Scioli as "a sportsman who has triumphed at home and
    abroad and made the Argentine flag fly proudly." 

    The 39-year-old Argentine has won six world titles in 11 years' racing,
    despite having to compete with one false arm since 1989, when he lost
    his right arm in a race. 

    Menem said the party was free to accept or not his choice to head the
    list of candidates for the Chamber of Deputies for Buenos Aires. 

    - - - - 

    Conservatives plan to privatise UK taxmen - paper 

    LONDON (Reuter) - Britain's ruling Conservatives are drawing up plans
    for the privatisation of the tax-raising Inland Revenue, the Guardian
    newspaper said. 

    The Guardian said the plan, which would involve the sale of 450 tax
    offices and the introduction of private contractors to assess tax
    returns, was being prepared for the Conservative election manifesto.
    Prime Minister John Major wants to hold the election on May 1. 

    The privatisation is aimed at raising 250 million sterling ($402
    million) a year, the paper said. 

    The Guardian said the plan would mean job losses at the Inland Revenue,
    which employs 60,000 people. 

    REUTER
7.272IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2540
    AP 28-Jan-1997 0:32 EST   REF5760

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Paper: FBI Probing Fake Art

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Some prominent art dealers charge a Florida auctioneer
    plans to sell dozens of fakes that are attributed to such well-known
    artists as Piet Mondrian, Georgia O'Keeffe and others, The New York
    Times reported. 

    "It looks like virtually nothing in the catalog is authentic," said
    Robert C. Graham Jr., president of James Graham & Sons, a Manhattan
    gallery. 

    Law enforcement officials told the Times they are investigating, but
    the auctioneer insists all 294 works he plans to offer Sunday are
    authentic. 

    "We are looking into allegations to determine if there are any that are
    criminal in nature," said Scott Dressler, a Florida assistant state
    attorney who is head of Broward County's Economic Crimes Division. "We
    are coordinating our efforts with the FBI." 

    Florida's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services is also
    investigating, Dressler said. 

    The auctioneer, C.B. Charles, said all the works are authentic and the
    sale will go on. The 70-year-old auctioneer, who has a gallery in
    Pompano Beach, Fla., is known for having handled auctions of furniture,
    clothing, jewelry and other items belonging to such departed
    celebrities as Mary Pickford, Orson Welles, Mae West and Audrey
    Meadows. 

    Charles said he has heard complaints from some art dealers about some
    of the paintings he is to offer on Sunday. But he said those dealers
    were simply upset because his offerings are estimated to sell at much
    lower prices than paintings in their inventories. 

    "It's like putting my hand in their pocket," Charles said. 
7.273IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2651
    AP 28-Jan-1997 0:28 EST   REF5759

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Child Pornography Law Disputed

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A new law aimed at child pornography could result
    in prison terms for people who own videotapes of "The Exorcist" or
    "Dirty Dancing," according to plaintiffs who sued the federal
    government on Monday. 

    The law, introduced last year by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is so badly
    written that it converts hundreds of mainstream movies into "child
    pornography," said Jeffrey J. Douglas, a criminal defense attorney and
    chairman of the Los Angeles-based Free Speech Coalition. 

    The group asked for a federal injunction against enforcing parts of the
    law which make it illegal to film adults pretending to be minors
    depicting sexual intimacy on film. 

    The Child Pornography Prevention Act, signed by President Clinton on
    Oct. 1, provides penalties of 10 years to life in prison for people who
    possess such material. 

    Its definition of child pornography makes unknowing criminals of
    thousands of people, Douglas claimed. 

    "If you have a 27-year-old appearing to be 17, that is now exactly the
    same, criminally, as filming the rape of a 17-year-old. It's not only
    unconstitutional, it's insane. It's horrible," Douglas said. "It
    demeans the actual crime of child rape." 

    A spokeswoman for Hatch called the lawsuit "a red herring," since the
    law specifically allows producers to defend themselves by proving that
    the person portraying a minor in the film is an adult. 

    "It's ludicrous to suggest that legitimate mainstream movies are at
    risk under the law if an adult plays a 14-year-old," said Jeanne
    Lopatto in Washington. 

    The coalition cited these films as now criminal to own: "Sleepers," "A
    Clockwork Orange," "Halloween," "Big," "Fast Times at Ridgemont High,"
    "Blue Lagoon," "If," "Risky Business," "Bull Durham," "Blow-Up" and
    "Dirty Dancing." 

    But Hatch's spokeswoman said it was unlikely that legitimate movies
    would face legal action. 

    "Federal prosecutors in the past have not pursued such movies as "Romeo
    and Juliet' and "Lolita" and there's no reason to believe they will do
    so now," Lopatto said. 
7.274IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2625
    AP 27-Jan-1997 22:56 EST   REF5368

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Jet Crew Threatened Over Cigarette

    MIAMI (AP) -- A passenger on a no-smoking flight from Europe claimed to
    be a terrorist and threatened to blow up the airplane when she wasn't
    allowed to smoke, investigators said. 

    An American Airlines crew told the FBI that the passenger requested and
    was denied permission to smoke during an eight-hour flight from Madrid,
    Spain, to Miami on Friday. 

    The passenger became abusive, shoving or pushing two attendants and the
    captain, a criminal complaint said. She allegedly said "that she was a
    'terrorist,' that she was 'going to blow up the plane,' that she was
    going to 'gun' one of them 'down."' She called the attendants "American
    fascists." 

    The passenger, Sally Ann Stein, 57, an American who lives in Seville,
    Spain, was arrested and charged with interfering with the duties of a
    flight attendant and flight engineer. She made no comment when she
    appeared before a federal magistrate Monday and was freed on personal
    bond. 
7.275IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2632
    AP 27-Jan-1997 22:36 EST   REF5178

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ohio Man: Bank Robbery a Joke

    AKRON, Ohio (AP) -- A man who said he jokingly asked a bank teller for
    all her money was arraigned Monday on a robbery charge. 

    Michael W. Johnson, a 33-year-old freshman at the University of Akron,
    said the trouble began at the campus branch of the FirstMerit First
    National Bank on Friday. 

    "When the teller asked if she could help me, I said, 'Yeah, give me all
    of your money,' and I laughed," he said. "Then I handed her my MAC card
    and said, 'I need to take $10 out of my account.' I got my money. She
    gave me a receipt. And I went on my way." 

    But university spokesman Paul Herold said the police report says
    Johnson demanded all the teller's money in small bills before asking
    for his $10. "She told police that she was sure it was a stickup,"
    Herold said. 

    Johnson faces up to five years in jail and a $10,000 fine if convicted. 

    Johnson's appearance might have something to do with his arrest, said
    his sister, Deborah Loudin. 

    "His right side is paralyzed. He walks with a limp and he carries his
    arm in front of him, upright and bent," she said. "He has a big shaggy
    beard and sometimes looks unkempt. I guess you could think he is a
    weirdo, if you don't know him." 
7.276IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2684
    AP 27-Jan-1997 21:39 EST   REF5730

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cosby Admits To Affair

    By VERENA DOBNIK

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bill Cosby, TV's most beloved family man, acknowledged
    in a television interview Monday night that he had an affair with the
    mother of a 22-year-old who claims to be his illegitimate daughter. 

    Cosby denied to Dan Rather on "The CBS Evening News" that he is the
    father of the young woman, Autumn Jackson. But in a portion airing
    Sunday on "60 Minutes," Rather asked if there was a possibility he
    could be. 

    "There is a possibility," Cosby said in a transcript. "If you said,
    'Did you make love to the woman?' the answer is yes. 'Are you the
    father?' No." 

    "On the birth certificate, it's not my name," Cosby explained in part
    of the interview aired Monday night. "I had not spoken to the mother
    during her pregnancy nor her delivery nor some 14 months until we
    finally spoke." 

    "Never -- she never called me and then one day when I called her for a
    second rendezvous, she came and she made the announcement." 

    Cosby, who has been married to his wife, Camille, for 33 years, went
    back to work Monday on his CBS show "Cosby" for the first time since
    the Jan. 16 slaying of his 27-year-old son Ennis. He entered the Queens
    studio by a back door and made no comment. 

    Federal prosecutors charge that on the day Ennis Cosby was shot to
    death changing a flat tire in Los Angeles, Ms. Jackson and Jose Medina,
    51, sent a fax to Cosby's representative demanding money. She and
    Medina were arrested in Cosby's lawyer's office after allegedly trying
    to negotiate a $24 million payoff. 

    Ms. Jackson was freed from jail Monday evening, after two Californians
    guaranteed the $250,000 bond that Magistrate Andrew Peck set as a
    condition for her release. 

    "It's nice," were the only words she spoke as she left U.S. District
    Court in Manhattan, dressed in a light blue sweater and black trousers.

    Her lawyer, Robert Baum, described the people who guaranteed Ms.
    Jackson's bond, Richard Jesperson and Lois Mayfield, as "two people who
    care about her, believe in her and trust in her." 

    He called Cosby's acknowledgement of an affair with Ms. Jackson's
    mother a "substantial change from critical comments that came from
    Cosby representatives earlier." 

    In the past, Cosby representatives have denied that he was Ms.
    Jackson's father and described her as merely one of several young
    people who have received tuition aid from Cosby. 

    In his first interview since Ennis Cosby was slain, Cosby told Rather
    his life must return to normal. 

    "I think it's time for me to tell the people that we have to laugh --
    we've got to laugh," Cosby said. "But I just want the people to know --
    those who watch me, those who are with me -- it's over for looking at
    me to do anything but go back to that which I am." 

    Cosby, who got his start as a comedian by humorously describing his
    life as a child, continued to gather material for his stand-up stories
    from his wife, son and four daughters. Through his former television
    alter ego Cliff Huxtable and in the real-life depictions that filled
    his best-selling book "Fatherhood," Cosby seemed the ultimate family
    man. 

    Outside the studio in Queens, a Bronx teacher, Lonnie Tait, said that
    despite Cosby's admission he had an affair, he is still "a great role
    model for black children." She delivered a large, hand-decorated
    sympathy card from 12 children enrolled in an after-school program. One
    child wrote: "You're our hero." 

    No arrests have been made in the slaying. Los Angeles police said they
    were fielding hundreds of tips. 
7.277IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2626
    AP 27-Jan-1997 21:19 EST   REF5726

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Calif. Teacher Asks Kids for Pot

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- A high school teacher who asked a student to
    bring some marijuana to school for a science experiment with a goldfish
    was charged Monday with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. 

    Authorities caught wind of the incident when some of science teacher
    Norrita Barrios' students decided there was something fishy about the
    request. 

    Police spokeswoman Pam Alejandre said science teacher Norrita Barrios
    asked a class at Hiram Johnson High School if anyone could bring in
    marijuana for an experiment in which THC extracted from the pot would
    be placed in a bowl with a goldfish so the class could study the
    effects on the fish. 

    Alejandre said Barrios later paid $30 to one of her students who
    brought in two small bags of marijuana. 

    "It appears that the experiment was never conducted and the incident
    was brought to the attention of the principal by some students,"
    Alejandre said. 
7.278IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:27120
    AP 27-Jan-1997 21:07 EST   REF5714

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FBI Removes Crime Lab Workers

    By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The FBI has suspended a scientist-agent whose
    charges led to a still-secret Justice Department report critical of the
    FBI crime laboratory. Three other lab workers were removed from their
    positions because of the report. 

    A Republican senator said Monday the suspension of whistleblower
    Frederic Whitehurst "appears to be a reprisal." An FBI statement
    released Monday night denied the actions were taken "in retaliation for
    the actions of any employee." 

    The FBI statement did not identify any of the employees by name and
    said only that, based on the inspector general's findings, four lab
    employees "who had major responsibilities in explosives investigations
    have been removed from their positions." They continue to receive pay
    and benefits while the bureau decided whether or not they engaged in
    misconduct. 

    The three employees, other than Whitehurst, were transferred out of the
    FBI lab but not suspended, according to several officials, who
    requested anonymity. 

    The FBI said it "does not believe any of the problems cited by the
    inspector general will preclude anyone from receiving a fair trial" and
    disputes those who say the problems "have compromised any past, present
    or future prosecutions." 

    Whitehurst, once an FBI crime lab supervisor, was placed on
    administrative leave with pay Friday afternoon and barred from entering
    any FBI building, even as a guest, according to a letter from acting
    lab Director Donald W. Thompson Jr. The FBI took Whitehurst's badge and
    gun, said his lawyer, Stephen Kohn. 

    The action came just days after FBI Director Louis J. Freeh received a
    report from the Justice Department's inspector general that officials
    said criticizes the work of some FBI lab employees and a report from a
    special investigative counsel who looked into an alleged press leak by
    Whitehurst. 

    Thompson's letter said only that Whitehurst was suspended "pending our
    review of information in the possession of the Department of Justice"
    and added that the move "does not indicate that you have engaged in any
    inappropriate conduct." 

    Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of a Judiciary subcommittee on
    administrative oversight, wrote Freeh on Monday to demand that FBI
    officials appear Tuesday in his office to justify the action against
    Whitehurst. 

    "Recently, a Department of Justice official knowledgeable about the
    IG's investigation told me privately that Dr. Whitehurst had done a
    service for his country in bringing forth his information," Grassley
    wrote. 

    "The action taken by the FBI implies that he is being punished for
    'committing truth.' It appears to be a reprisal for his disclosures,"
    Grassley wrote. 

    Kohn said that after Whitehurst's allegation about lab misconduct
    became known "he became a lighting rod for other employees to funnel
    information to the inspector general." Kohn said FBI officials became
    "very, very angry" when they received the inspector general's report
    and learned that "Whitehurst funneled information directly from other
    FBI employees to the inspector general and the investigation mushroomed
    beyond what they had expected." 

    Kohn said that was why Whitehurst, once rated by the FBI as its top
    expert on bomb residues, was barred from entering FBI buildings and
    from getting information from other employees. 

    The still-secret inspector general's report is being reviewed by FBI
    officials to determine whether any lab employees will be disciplined. 

    The inspector general hired a panel of outside scientists to evaluate
    the work of the lab after Whitehurst alleged in late 1995 that a
    pro-prosecution bias and mishandling of evidence may have tainted crime
    lab work or testimony on several high-profile federal cases. These
    include the World Trade Center bombing, the mail-bomb killing of a
    federal judge and a civil rights lawyer, and the Oklahoma City federal
    building bombing. 

    Prosecutors have decided not to use at least one lab employee as a
    witness in the Oklahoma City bombing case and in a bank robbery case in
    Ohio, sources said Monday, apparently to prevent defense attorneys from
    using the inspector general report to undermine any testimony by the
    employee. 

    Stephen Jones, counsel for Timothy McVeigh, who is charged in the
    Oklahoma City case, has deposed Whitehurst and indicated he may be
    called as a defense witness. 

    Nearly a year ago, Whitehurst was called to an interview by Special
    Investigative Counsel Joseph C. Hutchison, who was brought here from
    the Connecticut U.S. attorney's office to conduct the leak
    investigation. 

    Hutchison wrote Whitehurst's lawyers that "there is substantial reason
    to believe that your client ... is responsible for the unauthorized
    release of work-related information to Jeff Stein," a freelance writer
    who produced an article intended for publication in Playboy magazine. 

    At that time, Carl Stern, then Justice Department spokesman, said
    Playboy wrote the department to check the article's facts, which
    allowed officials to learn that the article would contain information
    and allegations about FBI employees that are protected from public
    release by the Privacy Act. 

    Stern said, "There is no criminal investigation looking into the
    conduct of Frederic Whitehurst. There's an administrative inquiry in
    connection with the leak of Whitehurst's communications with the
    department to a writer from Playboy magazine." 
7.279IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2786
    AP 27-Jan-1997 20:50 EST   REF5707

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Du Pont Was Insane, Lawyer Says

    By MARIA PANARITIS

    Associated Press Writer

    MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -- John E. du Pont was living in "the abyss of
    insanity" on the day he fired three shots into an Olympic wrestler, his
    lawyer told jurors Monday in the opening of the millionaire's murder
    trial. 

    "This case is about a killing, for no reason whatsoever, at the hands
    of a man with a mental disease that took away his ability to know what
    he did was wrong," said defense attorney Thomas Bergstrom. He
    maintained du Pont suffered from paranoid schizophrenia for three years
    prior to the slaying. 

    On Jan. 26, 1996, the day of the shooting, the defense lawyer said,
    "John du Pont drove his car out of the front gates of his estate and
    into the abyss of insanity." 

    But prosecutors said the 58-year-old chemical heir knew exactly what he
    was doing and was motivated by fear, anger and envy the day he fatally
    shot David Schultz in his driveway. 

    Prosecutor Joseph McGettigan told jurors du Pont was deliberate in all
    his actions that day, going so far as to place the murder weapon on a
    high shelf in his mansion during the two-day standoff that followed the
    shooting. 

    Du Pont asked police negotiators more than 100 times to get his
    personal lawyer and made repeated demands -- including a request for a
    presidential pardon, the prosecutor said. 

    On the day he was killed, Schultz, 38, was tinkering with his car radio
    in the driveway of a home where he, his wife and their two children
    lived on du Pont's Newtown Square estate the day he was killed.
    Schultz, who won a gold medal in the 1984 Olympics, had been training
    at du Pont's elaborate Foxcatcher amateur center. 

    The wrestler's widow, Nancy, choked back tears as she told jurors she
    was washing dishes when she heard the first shot. She ran to her front
    door, heard a second shot and looked outside to see du Pont pointing a
    gun at her husband. 

    Du Pont turned the gun toward her, Mrs. Schultz testified, and she took
    a step back inside her front door. Then, du Pont fired a third and
    final bullet into her husband's back, she said. 

    "I remember thinking that he must be dead already because his hands
    didn't move and his feet didn't move," said Mrs. Schultz, the first
    person to testify. "I could see his body shake from the impact, but
    nothing else moved." 

    Du Pont then drove away in his Town Car and holed up in his mansion,
    starting the two-day standoff that ended when police captured him on
    his estate. 

    Defense lawyers asked Mrs. Schultz about a 911 call she made shortly
    after the shooting in which she said du Pont had killed her husband
    because "He's insane." 

    They also asked her to read back a statement she gave at police
    headquarters two hours after the shooting. 

    "John du Pont is about 55 years old, silver hair, cut short, very thin,
    he's mentally insane, he hallucinates, he talks about things that he
    hears and sees," Mrs. Schultz read. "He thinks he's the 'dalai lama,'
    but the last year, he's been consistently under the impression that he
    is the 'dalai lama,' and usually dresses in all red." 

    On cross-examination, Mrs. Schultz told prosecutors she had never heard
    du Pont say or do any of those things but had been told many stories by
    many people. 

    Du Pont is in Norristown State Hospital, where he has been taking
    anti-psychotic drugs since September. His hair is now long and scruffy
    and he has grown a beard. 

    Du Pont arrived in court in a wheelchair. Common Pleas Court Judge
    Patricia Jenkins said du Pont's left leg was in a brace because he hurt
    his knee at the psychiatric hospital where he is imprisoned. 
7.280IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2737
    AP 27-Jan-1997 23:35 EST   REF5483

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Indian Bribery Scandal Widens

    NEW DELHI, India (AP) -- Reopening a scandal that brought down India's
    government in 1989, Switzerland has turned over confidential banking
    documents that may reveal more about alleged payoffs to high officials. 

    India's Central Bureau of Investigation is expected to keep the Swiss
    bank documents confidential for several days as it examines them for
    clues in the scandal involving the Congress Party and the now-defunct
    Swedish arms manufacturer Bofors. 

    The head of the investigation bureau met with Prime Minister H.D. Deve
    Gowda over the weekend to discuss the case, newspapers reported. 

    The three folders of banking documents were unsealed Friday in a New
    Delhi judge's chambers. Their arrival comes as Congress is trying to
    present itself as reformed and amid indications its leaders are
    preparing to challenge the prime minister's governing coalition. 

    Any bid to lead the country is sure to be damaged by renewed interest
    in the Bofors affair. Newspapers in recent days have been filled with
    speculation as to what the bank documents will reveal, and
    recapitulations of allegations that Bofors paid more than $50 million
    in bribes to several officials, businessmen and Indian politicians in
    1986 to close the sale of 155-mm artillery guns. 

    The Bofors investigation brought down the Congress government of the
    late Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1989, but has since bogged down. 

    An official Swedish inquiry said in 1987 that commissions in the sale
    of the guns were deposited in secret Swiss accounts. Indian request to
    examine Swiss bank accounts are only now being met after years of
    wrangling in court. 
7.281IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2894
    AP 27-Jan-1997 22:30 EST   REF5085

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Policemen Admit Killing Biko

    By ALEXANDRA ZAVIS

    Associated Press Writer

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) -- Five former police officers plan to
    seek amnesty for the 1977 killing of activist Steve Biko, whose death
    galvanized apartheid's opponents and revealed to the world the
    brutality of the white-led government. 

    The officers will petition South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation
    Commission, the panel led by retired Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu
    and charged with investigating apartheid-era crimes. 

    Reports that five men planned to file an amnesty petition were
    published Monday in The Port Elizabeth Herald. Truth Commission
    spokeswoman Christelle Terreblanche confirmed that the panel was
    expecting amnesty applications related to Biko's killing. 

    Biko, 30, died of untreated head injuries in a Pretoria prison on Sept.
    12, 1977. The death -- the apparent result of a beating by police,
    although they denied it -- impassioned the anti-apartheid movement
    inside and outside South Africa, giving the cause its best-known
    rallying point after then-imprisoned activist Nelson Mandela. 

    A source close to the five former police officers, speaking on
    condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press that the amnesty
    applications would assert that Biko was "handled robustly," but that
    there never was any intention to kill him. 

    The Herald identified the former officers as Col. Harold Snyman, who
    led the team that interrogated Biko; Lt. Col. Gideon Niewoudt, a
    detective sergeant at the time; Ruben Marx, a warrant officer; Daantjie
    Siebert, a captain; and Johan Beneke, a warrant officer. 

    Detained without charge as a terrorist in Port Elizabeth on the Indian
    Ocean coast, Biko suffered head injuries there that left him frothing
    at the mouth and speechless. Despite his wounds, he was denied medical
    care and driven in the back of a police van nearly 700 miles to
    Pretoria, where he died three weeks after his arrest. 

    The charismatic black leader had developed a wide following during the
    early 1970s, urging South African blacks to take pride in their culture
    and to fight for control of their country. 

    At his funeral, pictures of his battered body were widely distributed
    and later published around the world. 

    "He was very broad-minded and working to unify all the black
    organizations," said Donald Woods, a white former newspaper editor
    whose friendship with Biko was depicted in the 1987 British film "Cry
    Freedom." 

    "It was a great tragedy that he was killed, but his death had enormous
    impact overseas," Woods said. 

    Soon after, the United States imposed an oil and arms embargo on South
    Africa. 

    The Truth Commission will investigate the death and decide whether to
    grant amnesty to the former police officers. The panel was given the
    power to grant amnesty in order to promote reconciliation after decades
    of white-minority rule, which ended in 1994 with all-race elections
    that made Mandela president. 

    Biko's widow wants justice for her husband's killers, not forgiveness.
    Last year, she and the families of two other apartheid victims went to
    South Africa's highest court to challenge the commission's right to
    forgive certain crimes. 

    The court rejected their application, saying amnesty was essential to
    learning the full truth about apartheid. 

    Former members of the police and army were reluctant to come forward
    with what they knew until last year, when the Truth Commission pardoned
    a white former police officer convicted in a criminal court of 11
    political murders and sentenced to 30 years in prison. 

    The commission since has been inundated with new amnesty applications. 

    "In the absence of evidence that would enable a prosecution, I prefer
    to see the truth come out at the Truth Commission," Woods said. 

    No one was convicted in Biko's death, although an inquest concluded he
    probably had received fatal head injuries while being questioned by
    police. 

    Woods, who accompanied Biko's widow to identify the body, recalled that
    it was covered with cuts and bruises. "It was awful," he said. 
7.282IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:28104
    AP 27-Jan-1997 21:10 EST   REF5719

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Protesters Flood Belgrade Streets

    By DUSAN STOJANOVIC

    Associated Press Writer

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- In solemn silence that contrasted with
    months of raucous political protests, more than 100,000 people marched
    Monday in a religious procession with strong anti-government overtones.

    Riot police quietly withdrew to allow the head of the Serbian Orthodox
    Church, Patriarch Pavle, to lead the early morning procession through
    Belgrade's frost-topped streets. 

    Pavle has supported demonstrations against President Slobodan Milosevic
    and wanted to see if his procession could pass through a police cordon
    that has blocked students from marching in the center of the capital
    for a week. 

    It succeeded, and students joined the group chanting "Victory,
    Victory!" 

    The outpouring of national and religious sentiment followed 10 weeks of
    protest against Milosevic for annulling Nov. 17 opposition victories in
    local elections in 14 cities. 

    The Orthodox Church is closely linked to Serb identity, and the
    procession -- marking the holiday of St. Sava, the Serbian church's
    founding father -- was the Serbian capital's largest religious
    procession since World War II. 

    Later in the day, a Belgrade district court for the second time
    overturned an electoral commission ruling that the opposition won an
    overwhelming majority on the capital's city council. Serbian courts are
    believed to be controlled by Milosevic. 

    "The ruling represents another game played by Milosevic with Serbian
    citizens and the international community," said opposition spokesman
    Slobodan Vuksanovic. No appeal is possible. 

    In Washington, State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns called the
    ruling "a step in the wrong direction." Burns said the U.S. Embassy in
    Belgrade has lodged a protest with the Serbian government against the
    court's decision and the use of force against demonstrators over the
    weekend. 

    "The Serbian government made a pledge that it would not use force
    against the people who are demonstrating peacefully," Burns said. "It
    has now reneged on that pledge." 

    Through most of Monday's procession, the only sounds were the chanting
    of St. Sava's liturgy by dozens of Orthodox priests in flowing black
    and gold-embroidered robes and bursts of applause for the aged
    patriarch. 

    In St. Sava Cathedral, the biggest Orthodox church in the Balkans,
    Pavle praised demonstrators' "democratic expression of their will." 

    "Today, eyes are watching us from the sky and ground and telling us to
    endure on the holy and righteous road," he said. 

    Pavle has urged modern democratic reforms. He has blessed students
    during their rallies, reinforcing the message that the church has
    broken with tradition to side with the opposition. 

    The demonstrations, which have spread to some 50 towns across Serbia,
    constitute the biggest challenge to Milosevic since he took power in
    1987. 

    The authoritarian president has conceded Serbia's second-largest city
    of Nis and five other towns to the opposition Zajedno coalition, but he
    refuses to give up Belgrade and the rest. 

    In Nis, non-Communists took power Monday for the first time in 50
    years. A traditional Serb anthem, "God Give Us Justice" -- never played
    under the Communists or Milosevic -- opened the ceremony. 

    Zoran Zivkovic, the new mayor, accused Milosevic's Socialist Party of
    leaving him "a totally ruined city." 

    Zoran Djindjic, a Zajedno leader, said the industrial city was a bright
    point in the struggle for democracy. 

    "But problems will deepen elsewhere in Serbia, especially in Belgrade,
    because (Milosevic's) government has cornered itself," Djindjic said.
    "Either it will impose total dictatorship, or it will climb down from
    power. We'll do everything to break its teeth." 

    Many Serbs joining Monday's procession saw the St. Sava march as a way
    to express national unity. 

    "These are difficult times," said Mirjana Baltic, 61. "And this is
    where we can find spiritual strength." 

    Later Monday, tens of thousands of opposition supporters gathered for
    their 69th daily protest against Milosevic. Riot police were back on
    the streets, preventing the demonstrators from marching. 

    Police have intervened in the protests in the past three days, clubbing
    demonstrators and injuring at least 25 protesters. 
7.283IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2846
    AP 27-Jan-1997 18:14 EST   REF5590

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Survey: Patients Unhappy With Care

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- About one-third of hospital patients feel poorly
    prepared to go home, have trouble getting questions answered or feel
    they don't have enough input on their treatment, according to a survey
    released Monday. 

    "This report is a resounding cry for help from patients who feel
    uninvolved in the decisions about their care and feel lost in a health
    care maze," said a statement from Susan Edgman-Levitan, director of the
    Boston-based Picker Institute, which conducted the study. 

    Picker, a health care consumer research firm, surveyed 23,763 hospital
    patients and 13,363 patients in clinics or doctors' offices around the
    country in 1996. 

    Its findings were echoed by focus groups conducted by the American
    Hospital Association, which the results at its annual meeting here. 

    The focus groups, including 300 people from 12 states, showed patients
    find the health care system "confusing, expensive, unreliable and often
    impersonal," the association said. 

    While patients may tell pollsters they are satisfied with their care,
    their concerns emerge when they are asked to discuss their experiences,
    according to the report, "Eye on Patients." 

    "Few people ... perceive there to be a planned system of health care
    that operates in their behalf," the report concluded. "If a system is
    in operation at all, it is seen as one designed to block access, reduce
    quality and limit spending for care at the expense of patients." 

    The Picker survey found: 

    --30 percent of hospital patients said they were not told about "danger
    signals" to watch for after they went home. 

    --21 percent of clinic patients said they were not as involved in
    decisions as they wanted to be. 

    --36 percent of hospital patients said they did not have enough say
    about their treatment. 
7.284IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2886
    AP 27-Jan-1997 17:10 EST   REF5328

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Snacking Teens Face Heart Disease

    By JAMES ROWLEY

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Teen-agers may increase their risk of heart disease
    later in life by smoking or eating fatty foods, according to a study of
    autopsy results that found artery blockage in young people who died
    accidentally. 

    The study found dramatic differences in the severity of fatty deposits
    on the arteries of teen-agers and other young people, depending on
    whether they smoked or ate diets rich in fat. 

    Fatty deposits and lesions were found in the major arteries of young
    people with high levels of cholesterol in their blood, according to the
    autopsies performed on 1,079 men and 364 women between the ages of 15
    and 34. 

    The amount of fatty deposits increased with age, and the difference
    between subjects with high and low cholesterol showed up as early as
    age 15, according to the study published in the January issue of
    Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology. 

    Although studies based on autopsies of American soldiers killed during
    the Korean and Vietnam wars found similar results, this is first large
    sample of data from young women, said Dr. Basil Rifkind, of the
    National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, which sponsored the research.

    The researchers said their study disproves the notion that women, who
    generally have heart attacks 10 years later then men, do not have to
    alter their diets as early in life as men. 

    "It pretty firmly adds another large piece to the jigsaw puzzle and
    says the problems of diet and heart disease is something that starts
    off early in life," Rifkind said. 

    A childhood diet rich in fatty foods can begin the progression toward
    heart disease later in life, the researchers concluded. 

    Children who eat a lot of cheeseburgers and milkshakes increase their
    risk of heart attacks if they do not change their dietary habits by
    young adulthood, researchers said. 

    "The saturated fat intake and the calories a single meal of that sort
    provides is tremendous and make you use up your daily rations in one
    meal," Rifkind said. 

    The heart institute's National Cholesterol Education Program recommends
    that all children over the age of 2 keep fat consumption under 30
    percent of daily calories and saturated fat under 10 percent. 

    But there has been a debate among scientists about how early dietary
    changes are needed to reduce the risk of heart disease later in life. 

    Begun in 1985, the study's findings were extended for the first time to
    women. 

    The study found a high correlation between cholesterol levels and fatty
    deposits in girls and young women as well as boys and men. The same
    patterns were found in whites and blacks. 

    Blood-serum cholesterol tests were performed during the autopsies,
    which also tested for the presence of the chemical thiocyanate, an
    indicator of smoking. 

    Subjects with high levels of low-density (LDL) cholesterol, the bad
    cholesterol, also had streaks of fat or raised lesions on the inner
    surfaces of the aorta and the right coronary artery. 

    Fewer deposits of fat were found among subjects with high levels of
    high-density (HDL) cholesterol, which is credited with helping clear
    the arteries, and low levels of LDL cholesterol, the study found. 

    As fat deposits build up in the arteries, the risk of blockage and
    heart attack increases. 

    Fifteen centers around the country collected data from autopsies
    performed on young people who were victims of homicide, suicide or
    accidental deaths. Tissue samples and blood were analyzed at the
    Louisiana State University Medical Center in New Orleans. 
7.285IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2977
    AP 27-Jan-1997 1:57 EST   REF5589

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    World's 1st Atom Laser Created

    By MATT CRENSON

    AP Science Editor

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Physicists have achieved a long-sought goal by
    creating the world's first atom laser, a pulse of matter analogous to
    the concentrated light beams that illuminate rock concerts, scan
    supermarket bar codes and play compact disks. 

    At 3 a.m. on Nov. 16, physicists at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology saw definite signs that their experimental apparatus had
    emitted a confined beam of atoms in a single quantum state -- the
    matter equivalent of a laser. 

    "It's just the ultimate control you can have over atoms," said Michael
    Andrews, a graduate student in the Cambridge, Mass., lab where the feat
    was accomplished. 

    Because control over the physical world is what technology is all
    about, physicists are optimistic about the practical possibilities of
    atom lasers. Atom lasers could revolutionize atomic clocks and other
    precision measuring devices, and be used to construct ultrasmall
    machines made of just a few atoms. 

    "It's fantastic. It's really one of the most exciting things in atomic
    physics that I've seen in the last 10 years," said John Doyle, a
    professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. 

    Progress toward an atom laser began in July 1995, when Colorado
    researchers announced that they'd produced a bizarre substance that had
    never existed before in the history of the universe. The Bose-Einstein
    condensate was sort of a superatom, an agglomeration of individual
    particles that had lost their separate physical identities. 

    After playing with the new material for more than a year, the MIT
    physicists found they could create an atom laser by allowing
    million-atom chunks of Bose-Einstein condensate to fall in pulses from
    a larger clump of the material. 

    "It's just sort of atoms dripping out of a faucet," Andrews said. 

    The MIT team, led by professor Wolfgang Ketterle, reports its
    achievement in a pair of articles being published this week. A paper in
    the Jan. 27 issue of Physical Review Letters describes the atom laser
    device, and a second paper in the Jan. 31 issue of Science explains why
    the researchers believe their experiment represents the first atom
    laser. 

    An image produced in the Nov. 16 experiment, which shows two atom laser
    beams interfering with one another to form a regular light-dark
    pattern, is a brilliant demonstration of the subatomic realm of quantum
    physics, Doyle said. It shows that in some sense the atoms are
    propagating through space like a single wave, just as laser light does.

    "It implies the property that the atoms are marching in lockstep,"
    Ketterle said. 

    One of the most promising future applications of atom lasers might be
    in atomic clocks, where the devices could provide an even more precise
    way of counting time than current methods. The superprecise clocks are
    already used in aircraft navigation devices, the tracking of financial
    transactions and other realms where microseconds count. 

    Such promise has kept physicists pursuing the atom lasers for decades.
    And although the MIT experiment shows that the anticipated benefits of
    the technology are realistic, the technology still needs many
    improvements. 

    "You would have to have more atoms if you were going to do anything
    serious with it," Andrews said. "I think it will be a long time before
    people will start to even think about using it practically." 
7.286IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2996
    RTw  28-Jan-97 06:26    

    Dark clouds hang over South Korean industrial city

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Andrew Browne 

    ULSAN, South Korea, Jan 28 (Reuter) - In his grand vision for Ulsan,
    general-turned-president Park Chung-hee spoke dreamily of a polluted
    city, of "black smoke belching into the sky to end South Korea's
    famine." 

    That was back in 1962 when memories of wartime famine and destruction
    were still fresh, and Ulsan was being transformed from a sleepy whaling
    port into an industrial hub. 

    A haze of pollution now lingers over the world's biggest petrochemical
    plant, the grandest shipyard of all time and the nation's largest
    autoworks. 

    But darker clouds lie on the horizon. 

    The industries that make Ulsan the country's premier industrial city
    are in trouble, and their armies of workers face an uncertain future. 

    With cities such as Ulsan in mind, the South Korean government last
    month tried to force through parliament a new labour law that would
    give firms greater power to hire and fire, making it easier for them to
    shed sunset industries and embrace new technologies. 

    Unions in Ulsan and elsewhere were furious and launched almost four
    weeks of strikes that helped persuade President Kim Young-sam to send
    the bill back to parliament for revision. 

    Ulsan Mayor Shim Wan Gu is one of Kim's closest political associates,
    and is related to the president through marrriage. 

    "I worry that Ulsan could walk down the same road as Pittsburgh in the
    U.S., or Glasgow or Newcastle in Britain," said Shim, ticking off
    several cradles of the Industrial Revolution that slid into decline. 

    Shim boasts that when factory whistles blow in Ulsan to signal the end
    of the working day, more workers pass through factory gates than in any
    Asian city bar those in China. 

    Hyundai Heavy Industries employs 27,000 workers at its shipyard that
    operates a million-tonne capacity dry dock and is able to build 23
    ships of various sizes simultaneously. 

    Its sister company, Hyundai Motor, has 29,000 workers on production
    lines. 

    Down the coast, Yukong Ltd daily spurts out 800,000 barrels of oil
    products with 4,000 workers. 

    But prices of ships are plummeting, South Korea's car market is
    saturated and Asian petrochemical markets are swamped with excess
    capacity. Other Asian producers with cheaper labour costs are quickly
    catching up with South Korea. 

    As he maps out plans for Ulsan into the next century, Shim sees
    manufacturing industry in decline. In its place will rise new
    industries in information, telecommunications and electronics. 

    "We hope Ulsan will emerge as the centre of the Pacific Rim in the 21st
    century," said Shim. 

    Ahead lies wrenching industrial restructuring. 

    "We have already started to move some workers in shipbuilding to other
    departments in the company," said Chung Jae-hun a spokesman for Hyundai
    Heavy, which is moving into higher-technology production in areas such
    as engine turbines where its skilled workforce can create more value. 

    "Since 1993 shipbuilding has been suffering as orders for tankers have
    gone down," Chung said. 

    None of Ulsan's large companies will admit to any plans to trim their
    workforces. 

    "We're short of staff as it is," said Chung Jae-hun, a Hyundai Heavy
    management official. "We can move workers around within the company." 

    Ulsan workers profess not to be worried. "The company had ways to lay
    off workers even before the new law," said Hyundai Motor Co union
    leader Kim Ki-hyuk. 

    But such complacency may be misplaced. 

    Last week, South Korea's second largest steelmaker collapsed under a
    mountain of debt. Thousands of jobs are now in the balance at Hanbo
    Steel and its suppliers as banks desperately put together a rescue
    package. 

    REUTER
7.287IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:29155
    RTw  28-Jan-97 03:40    

    FEATURE - Soviet Army deserters in Germany fear ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Soviet Army deserters in Germany fear for future 

    By Kevin Liffey 

    BONN, Jan 28 (Reuter) - During the Cold War, Vladimir Nedovinchanny
    would probably have been welcomed with open arms in the West as a
    defector with information on Soviet nuclear technology and electronic
    communications. 

    In Germany in 1997, the former Soviet Army officer says he does not
    know from one week to the next whether he might soon be standing in
    front of a Ukrainian military prosecutor on treason charges, and facing
    a sentence in a penal camp. 

    Nedovinchanny is one of around 600 officers who deserted after 1991
    from the Soviet garrison of 340,000 men gradually pulling out of former
    East Germany after German unification. 

    He and others like him say Western intelligence officers interrogated
    them at the Federal Office for Asylum Applications in Nuremberg, when
    they were applying for political asylum, and told them it would improve
    their chances of success. 

    "The German official at the asylum office told me to go to each of
    three rooms. She said without a rubber stamp from each one, my asylum
    request wouldn't go forward," Nedovinchanny said. 

    The rooms were occupied by U.S., German and British intelligence
    officers respectively. 

    "No one told me intelligence services were going to ask for military
    information. The American said: "This is your future'." 

    Nedovinchanny's asylum application was rejected last year, and he was
    told last week that his latest monthly leave to stay was not being
    extended. 

    "I feel like I'm just being thrown away," he said. 

    DESERTERS SAY RUSSIA VIEWS WESTERN CONTACTS AS TREASON 

    It is unlikely that the deserters were able to provide much valuable
    information to Western intelligence. 

    But they say any such contact will be seen at home as treason, and that
    under the Russian military justice system they will be tried behind
    closed doors without a civilian lawyer. 

    Russian law prescribes a sentence of up to 10 years for desertion and
    up to 20 years for treason. 

    "They're going to tear me to pieces," said Rif Akhmetganeyev, the
    47-year-old Russian ex-commander of a tank unit near the Polish border
    who also served at the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site in Central Asia. 

    The Frankfurt-based International Society for Human Rights (IGFM),
    campaigning to help the deserters, says two have already been deported,
    and that there is ample evidence that both Russia and Ukraine will
    prosecute them. 

    It says at least 12 deserters were abducted from German territory by
    KGB snatch squads before the troops pulled out, and that some are now
    serving time in the Perm-35 penal camp. 

    BONN SAYS NO EVIDENCE OF RUSSIAN MEASURES AGAINST DESERTERS 

    But for the German government, desertion alone is not a reason for
    political asylum to be given, nor is mere contact with Western
    intelligence services. 

    In a statement this month, it said deserters were told who was
    questioning them, that they were free not to cooperate, and that their
    answers would not influence their asylum requests. 

    It also says it has no evidence that any measures have been taken in
    Russia against deserters. 

    It says 63 deserters and 55 family members have been given asylum, and
    1,025 rejected, and that each application is assessed for likely
    persecution at home or the threat of inhumane treatment, execution or
    torture. 

    All this is little comfort for Nedovinchanny, who commanded an
    electronic communications and intelligence station of the 20th division
    of the Western Group of Forces in Grimma near Leipzig, and led a
    commission on the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. 

    His parents wrote saying they had been interrogated several times by
    Ukrainian security services. 

    "They told us you would be placed before a military tribunal in Ukraine
    and then extradited to Russia...which accuses you of treason, espionage
    and stealing secret documents... 

    "They told us if we didn't help to catch you, we would be convicted for
    complicity and cooperating with Western intelligence services." 

    IGFM cites letters from Ukrainian prosecutors to the parents or lawyers
    of two former Soviet army officers, Oleg Chabanov and Andrei Adamenko,
    who have both been refused asylum in Germany. 

    UKRAINE SAYS IT NOT LOOKING FOR DEFECTORS 

    The top Ukrainian military prosecutor's office told Reuters that
    Ukraine had not prosecuted any officers for deserting, and they were
    not even being looked for. 

    But the letters say Chabanov, former deputy commander of an air
    reconnaissance and electronic intelligence battalion outside Berlin, is
    being sought by Dnepropetrovsk's military prosecutor for desertion and
    treason, and Adamenko is being sought by the Ukrainian state
    prosecutor's office for passing state secrets. 

    The deserters cite a variety of reasons for defecting. Nedovinchanny
    says he was being persecuted for having refused to support the
    hard-line Moscow coup in 1991 and for attacking corruption among his
    superiors. 

    Akhmetganeyev, who served at the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site in
    Central Asia, says he deserted in 1991 with his wife and three children
    because he was under pressure from the KGB for refusing to recruit
    Western military friends as informants. 

    He says U.S. and German intelligence officials in Nuremberg told him he
    would get asylum if he cooperated, and he did. 

    "I made a terrible mistake," he said. "The Americans told me they would
    take me in, but I said I wanted to stay in Germany." 

    Akhmetganeyev has founded an association called Nadezhda -- "hope' in
    Russian -- to help the deserters. He also believes many may have
    received shelter in the United States, Spain, France or the
    Netherlands, or joined the French Foreign Legion. 

    His own asylum application was turned down last year but he has leave
    to stay until May while a court rules on his appeal. 

    To Wanda Wahnscheider of the IGFM, the uncertain fate of the deserters
    is a reflection of the new post-Cold War world. 

    "They're the flotsam and jetsam of big power politics," she said. "Bonn
    doesn't want them to get in the way of its new-found good relations
    with Russia, NATO doesn't want them to be an issue as it argues with
    Russia about eastward expansion." 

    Cold War veteran Akhmetganeyev put it another way: "I don't understand
    the West at all." 

    REUTER
7.288IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:2997
    RTos 28-Jan-97 02:44    

    U.S. Slams Swiss Diplomat on Holocaust Funds

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - U.S. officials sharply criticized the Swiss
    ambassador Monday over remarks that his country should wage a public
    relations "war" against Jewish groups and others seeking compensation
    for Holocaust victims. 

    State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns and Senate Banking Committee
    Chairman Alfonse D'Amato, a flag-bearer for holocaust victims in the
    case, denounced the comments as wrong-headed and a disservice to the
    people of Switzerland. 

    Ambassador Carlo Jagmetti resigned after a Swiss newspaper published
    the remarks Monday. They were in a confidential strategy paper he sent
    to Berne last month on how to handle a dispute over dormant accounts of
    Nazi victims in Swiss banks. 

    "If it's true the Swiss ambassador made these remarks it betrays a
    fundamental lack of understanding of the commitment the United States
    government has to its own citizens and of the search for justice for
    people who had their human rights fundamentally violated during the
    Second World War. It is very troubling," Burns told reporters. 

    He said he hoped the quotes were not accurate "because any ambassador
    in Washington who advocates waging a public relations campaign against
    American Jewish groups and against Holocaust survivors is just
    wrong-headed." 

    D'Amato called on the Swiss government to repudiate the remarks and, in
    an apparent reference to the Nazi era, said, "We have heard this
    language and sentiment all too often in the not so distant past. It is
    frightening." 

    But the World Jewish Congress, which has been negotiating with the
    Swiss and was the group Jagmetti's comments seemed  directly aimed at,
    did not join in the chorus of criticism. 

    WJC executive director Elan Steinberg called the remarks an
    "unfortunate incident." He added, "We chose to look forward now and
    seek to build upon the expressions of good faith that have been uttered
    in recent days." 

    One Jewish leader close to the controversy called Jagmetti's comments
    "foolish" but added that in negotiations, there had been no sense the
    ambassador was anti-Semitic, a charge that the ambassador himself was
    at pains to deny. 

    D'Amato and others had called on Switzerland to create a fund to help
    Holocaust victims while a historical commission determined whether the
    country's banks held on to the dormant accounts deposited there by
    Holocaust victims. 

    But while Jagmetti favored a payment to silence his country's critics,
    he wrote in the strategy paper: "This is a war that Switzerland must
    wage and win on the foreign and domestic front ... You cannot trust
    most of the adversaries." 

    Burns vigorously defended D'Amato, saying he was "doing the Lord's
    work" and that the Clinton administration fully supported his efforts
    to "get to the bottom of this question." 

    The spokesman said he did not believe the United States applied
    pressure to have the ambassador resign, adding: "I think it's a
    unilateral Swiss decision." 

    After months of international criticism, Switzerland last week agreed
    in principle to establish a compensation fund for Holocaust victims.
    Burns welcomed this move as "an important first step in coming to terms
    with the past." 

    The State Department has undertaken its own study to establish what the
    U.S. government knew or did not know in the years following the war.
    Burns said this review would be completed in a couple of weeks. 

    Meanwhile, there was growing anger among Jewish leaders at
    Switzerland's turning over of what it said were 53 dormant and heirless
    accounts of mostly Jewish Polish citizens to Poland in 1975, worth
    about 500,000 Swiss francs. 

    The anger came because many of the names on the accounts -- finally
    made public last week -- listed heirs. 

    Kalman Sultanik, a WJC vice president, said one heir was located in
    Britain within 10 minutes of receiving the person's name and address.
    "You didn't need to be Sherlock Holmes to find the heir. You needed a
    London phone book," he said. 

    The account, worth about 3,500 Swiss Francs in 1946, belonged to a
    Danzig resident Walter Loevy. He listed a Hilda Sorkin of north London
    as his heir. Now 83 years old, Mrs. Sorkin said Loevy was her uncle and
    she never knew about his account. 

    REUTER
7.289IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:3033
    RTw  28-Jan-97 02:28    

    Britons object to paying for new royal yacht-poll

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 28 (Reuter) - Britons oppose by a margin of three to one
    the government's plan to fund a new royal yacht from taxpayers' money,
    according to an opinion poll published on Tuesday. 

    An ICM poll in the Guardian newspaper asked members of the public if
    they approved or disapproved of the government's decision to spend 60
    million pounds ($100 million) of public money on a replacement for the
    present royal yacht, Britannia. 

    In reply, 72 percent said they disapproved, with only 24 percent
    approving. 

    Queen Elizabeth was said on Monday to be dismayed at being dragged into
    party political squabbling over the new yacht. 

    Britannia is on its last voyage before being taken out of service after
    44 years. 

    The government had put off for two years a decision over whether it
    would be replaced before a surprise announcement last week -- widely
    seen as an election ploy. 

    Labour, which has a 20 point lead ahead of elections that must be held
    by May, said on Sunday it would not finance a new yacht when health and
    education badly needed public funds. 

    REUTER
7.290IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:3028
    RTw  28-Jan-97 01:43    

    Conservatives to privatise UK taxmen - paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 28 (Reuter) - Britain's ruling Conservatives are drawing up
    plans for the privatisation of the tax-raising Inland Revenue, the
    Guardian newspaper said on Tuesday. 

    The Guardian said the plan, which would involve the sale of 450 tax
    offices and the introduction of private contractors to assess tax
    returns, was being prepared for the Conservative election manifesto. 

    The privatisation is aimed at raising 250 million pounds a year, the
    paper said. 

    Major and cabinet ministers held talks on Wednesday to thrash out
    details of the Conserative Party's election manifesto. Major wants to
    hold the election on May 1. 

    The Guardian the plan would mean job losses at the Inland Revenue,
    which employs 60,000 people. 

    The new proposals were revealed in a confidential letter dated this
    month, the Guardian said. 

    REUTER
7.291IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:30138
    RTw  28-Jan-97 03:28    

    FEATURE - Austria fetes 200 years of Schubert's genius

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Elizabeth Fullerton 

    VIENNA, Jan 28 (Reuter) - "My brightest hopes have come to nothing,
    love and friendship have nothing to offer," a desperate Franz Schubert
    wrote to a friend in 1824 as he battled with the debilitating effects
    of syphilis. 

    Four years later, at the age of 31, it destroyed him. 

    Two hundred years after his birth, Schubert, who composed 1,000 works
    in just 19 years, including 600 songs, is credited with works of genius
    for chamber music, full orchestra and especially voice. 

    Vienna is gearing up for a year-long string of concerts and exhibitions
    and even a Schubert singing contest to celebrate the composer's
    bicentenary. 

    "He was probably the greatest melodist ever in classical music," said
    Schubert scholar Nicholas Rast of Britain. "His contributions to lieder
    (songs) are probably unchallenged." 

    Beethoven, whom Schubert adored, is said to have described the
    precocious genius as "touched with a divine spark." 

    The conventional image of Schubert was of an easy-going popular
    composer who wrote light-hearted, frothy songs for Viennese
    aristocratic salons. 

    DARKER SIDE OF PERSONALITY 

    But scholars say he was also a manic depressive, who drank and smoked
    heavily, and frequented brothels in the louche quarters of Vienna. 

    Elizabeth McKay, who has written a biography of the composer, says
    Schubert inherited a cyclical form of manic depression, which sent his
    morale plummeting every six months. 

    "His lifestyle, the fact he was inclined to smoke heavily and drink
    when he got ill, worsened the depression," she says. 

    Vienna was a haven for musical stars in the 18th century, home to
    German-born Beethoven, and Austrians Haydn and Mozart for a time.
    Schubert only left the city for short spells. 

    Schubert, author of such melancholic masterpieces as "The Trout" and
    "The Unfinished Symphony," "Death and the Maiden" and the "Winterreise"
    songs, was not blessed with an easy life. 

    Scholars say he was a Jekyll and Hyde figure. 

    "That soft veneer is toughened by the fierce intellect of a man who
    could express volcanic eruptions in his music," says Rast. "The
    "Winterreise' song-cycle reveals the tragedy and darkness of genuine
    emotion." 

    Schubert was born on January 31, 1797, in a cramped two-room apartment
    in Vienna, then capital of the huge Austro-Hungarian empire. The son of
    a schoolmaster, he was one of 12 children, of whom only five survived. 

    At the age of 11 he won a scholarship that gained him a place in the
    choir of the imperial court chapel and at the Imperial and Royal City
    College, where he was taught by the composer Antonio Salieri, a
    contemporary of Mozart. 

    By 14, Schubert was already exhibiting an extraordinary talent and had
    composed his first song, several orchestral overtures and three string
    quartets. 

    Schubert's songs became enormously popular, thanks to his friends, who
    commissioned his works and paid for them to be printed when no
    publishers were interested. 

    It became fashionable for wealthy families to hold concert parties,
    known as Schubertiaden, entirely devoted to them. 

    However, Schubert failed to gain the sort of lucrative aristocratic
    patronage Beethoven enjoyed because he would often arrive drunk at
    playing engagements or forget to turn up. 

    He only ever gave one public concert in 1828 and had to haggle with
    publishers to print his work, although his career was beginning to take
    off shortly before his premature death. 

    "He felt very much in Beethoven's shadow, but had a fierce belief in
    his own worth," Rast says. 

    SCHUBERT PAVED WAY FOR LATE ROMANTICISM 

    Schubert has mistakenly been regarded as shy and self-effacing, but
    scholars suggest he was in fact arrogant. 

    Rast tells of an occasion when members of the Vienna Philharmonic
    Orchestra asked Schubert to write a piece for them. "You're just
    blowers and scrapers. I'm Franz Schubert," he is supposed to have told
    them. 

    Less than five foot tall, plump, with curly unkempt hair and delicate
    steel-framed glasses, Schubert was unremarkable to look at. But in his
    dynamic circle of friends, which comprised artists, playwrights and
    musicians, he shone. 

    Reams have been written on his ambiguous sexuality and visits to
    prostitutes, but there is little concrete evidence. 

    The consensus is he was probably bisexual, although Schubert's
    unrequited adolescent love for a woman called Therese Grob, was no
    secret. 

    "It was a great disappointment in his life. His songs are obsessed with
    jilted lovers," says scholar Nicholas Toller. 

    Schubert's syphilis, contracted in 1822 when he was 25, cast a pall
    over his life. 

    But he continued to write with obsessive zeal, rising daily at dawn,
    clearly aware his was a race against time. Schubert's prolific output
    is still a source of wonder to scholars. 

    He died in 1828 at the home of his older brother Ferdinand. His total
    effects amounted to 63 gulden ($2,000), substantially less than the
    cost of his funeral, medical bills and debts. 

    But his legacy is monumental. 

    "I think he prepared the way for late romanticism," says Britain's
    Rast. "The experiments he made with form and his whole approach to
    tonality changed the shape of music." 

    His epitaph by Austrian playwright Franz Grillparzer reads: "The art of
    music here entombed a rich possession, but even fairer hopes.

    REUTER
7.292IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:3061
    RTos 27-Jan-97 23:17    

    Balloonist to Try Round-the-World Trip Again

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Steve Fossett said Monday he plans to try again
    to circle the earth in a "low tech" balloon that carried him a record
    10,000 miles in six days, eight hours before a bumpy landing dropped
    him in India last week. 

    "It certainly was an uplifting experience," Fossett told a news
    conference at the National Geographic Society, saying he was encouraged
    by his voyage even though his around-the-world attempt ended in
    failure. 

    He said that next time he would carry more propane fuel to steer his
    balloon and heat his cabin when he lifts off sometime in November from
    a yet-to-be decided U.S. takeoff point. Balloons fly best in winter
    when the wind currents are strongest and thunderstorms are less likely,
    he said. 

    "It was encouraging to me and my team but also to my competitors,"
    Fossett said of the attempt in his balloon named "Solo Spirit" that
    left St. Louis, Missouri and ended in India, bettering his own world
    record for distance travelled. 

    "We can now see some confirmation that these distances can be
    approached," the 52-year-old former Chicago commodities broker said.

    He is in a friendly competition with British billionaire Richard
    Branson and the Swiss-Belgian team of Bertrand Piccard and Wim
    Verstraeten to become the first round-the-world balloonists. Both their
    attempts this year also ended in failure. 

    "Richard Branson set the standard for sportsmanship in this
    competition," Fossett said of his rival, flying to St. Louis to see him
    off and helping him win permission to fly over Libya. 

    Fossett flew his $300,000 balloon beyond its supposed altitude ceiling
    of 18,000 feet, pushing it as high as 26,300 feet to catch faster winds
    in the jetstream. At times, the balloon reached speeds over 100 miles
    per hour. 

    But flying higher meant it was bone-chilling cold in his cramped,
    unpressurized gondola, especially at night when the sun set. 

    Fossett said he was not too bothered by the cold. "I had plenty of warm
    weather gear from my Iditarod days," he said, recalling his 1992 entry
    into the 1,165 mile dogsled race from Anchorage to Nome. 

    He said the greatest fear he had came when he was passing over the
    Sahara and he saw "sand dunes like a French Foreign Legion movie." 

    "I thought that if I had to land there in one of the most remote parts
    of the world, there would be no hope of recovering my equipment," he
    said. "It would be all they could do to recover me." 

    He is having his damaged balloon shipped back from India. 

    REUTER
7.293IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:3060
    RTos 27-Jan-97 23:15    

    British Ministers Look to May 1 Election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Prime Minister John Major won the backing of his
    cabinet Monday to delay an election until May 1, the last practical
    date on which he can face the voters. 

    Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell confirmed the decision to reporters as
    a day-long cabinet meeting at Major's official country home, Chequers,
    broke up. 

    "We have a five-year mandate and we intend to plan on the basis of
    completing that mandate," he said. The Conservatives won a fourth
    consecutive general election victory in April 1992, but are allowed to
    delay a poll until May this year. 

    But as ministers returned to London, the Conservatives lost a vote in
    the House of Commons by 273 to 272 on an amendment to the Education
    Bill. 

    The issue was not of a kind that would prompt a vote of confidence,
    which could push the government out of power if the Conservatives lost. 

    But it proved how difficult Labor can make it for the Conservatives to
    keep the upper hand in the House of Commons. 

    Recent polls have shown the Conservatives trailing some 20 points
    behind the opposition Labor Party but the media have speculated that
    Major could set an election date in April or even March. 

    A May date would allow time for a by-election in late February or early
    March in Wirral South, near the north-western port of Liverpool.
    Opinion polls suggest Labor will win the seat, which would put the
    Conservatives in a minority of one in the House of Commons, and send
    their opponents into the election fray with their tails up. 

    Critics say the Conservatives have run out of ideas after almost 18
    years in power. 

    But Dorrell said ministers had agreed an election manifesto "that will
    build on 18 years of reform." This, he said, would involve continuing
    with economic and social reforms intended to increase opportunities for
    all. 

    Dorrell said the Conservatives would expand ownership, choice and
    opportunity by, for example, improving the National Health Service. 

    He said the cabinet had also discussed parts of the public sector which
    might be earmarked for future privatization and the next stage of the
    Conservatives' agenda to deregulate British business. 

    On economic policy, he said ministers had reaffirmed the twin goal of
    reducing public spending to below 40 percent of gross domestic product
    and moving toward a basic income tax rate of 20 percent, from the
    current 23 percent. 

    REUTER
7.294IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Tue Jan 28 1997 10:3137
    RTw  27-Jan-97 19:36    

    Scottish food poison outbreak claims 18th victim

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    GLASGOW, Scotland, Jan 27 (Reuter) - A food poisoning outbreak in
    Scotland, one of the worst caused by the E coli bacteria, has now
    claimed 18 lives, health officials said on Monday. 

    The deadliest outbreak was in Canada in 1985 when 19 old people died. 

    Scotland's latest victim, an 86-year-old woman, died in a hospital in
    the town of Airdrie, near Glasgow. E coli infecton was found to be a
    contributory factor in her death. 

    Since the outbreak started in November, more than 400 victims have been
    treated for poisoning by E coli, a normally harmless digestive bacteria
    that has developed a virulent form identified 15 years ago. 

    It gets into food via improper slaughtering and hygiene techniques or
    when manure is used as fertiliser. 

    Most of the Scottish cases have been traced to a prizewinning butcher's
    shop. 

    E coli can make a healthy adult ill but small children and the elderly
    can succumb to kidney failure and brain damage. 

    There have been hundreds of cases of E coli infection in the United
    States and Canada, linked to apple juice, but few deaths. 

    The British government said earlier this month it would back urgent
    research into the causes of E coli and would check whether food
    handling and licensing laws needed tightening. 

    REUTER
7.295IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:05114
    AP 29-Jan-1997 0:59 EST   REF5608

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, Jan. 29, 1997
   
    RICHARDSON-CONFIRMATION HEARING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. Rep. Bill Richardson will face the
    Republican-led Senate Wednesday for his nomination as U.S. ambassador
    to the United Nations. A speedy confirmation is expected for the
    seven-term New Mexico Democrat despite running afoul of Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee chairman Jesse Helms on key votes concerning Cuba.
    Senate aides say they expect the confirmation hearing to focus on U.N.
    reform strategies rather than differences over Cuba. Richardson was one
    of just 86 House members who voted last March against Cuba sanctions
    legislation co-authored by Helms. The measure won overwhelming approval
    in both houses and was signed by President Clinton. 
   
    SIMPSON TRIAL 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- In possible anticipation of victory,
    plaintiffs in the O.J. Simpson civil trial have filed documents asking
    for an update on Simpson's financial status. Jurors got the case
    Tuesday afternoon after a highly emotional plaintiff rebuttal argument
    and about 40 minutes of instructions from the judge. But they adjourned
    for the night without reaching a verdict after about two hours of
    deliberations. 
   
    COSBY-EXTORTION 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The boyfriend of a woman who says she is Bill Cosby's
    illegitimate daughter has pleaded guilty to aiding in the attempted
    extortion of the TV star. Prosecutors had not previously revealed
    Antonay Williams' arrest. He pleaded guilty as part of a plea bargain
    in which he promised to testify in court. His girlfriend, Autumn
    Jackson, and another man have also been charged in the case. The
    alleged extortion involved a $40 million threat to take the
    illegitimacy story to the tabloids unless Cosby paid. 
   
    CLINTON 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton says Republicans and Democrats
    alike have to fix a campaign finance system that has not been updated
    since Watergate-era reforms 20 years ago. At a news conference, Clinton
    said the huge costs of campaigns have produced an inevitable race for
    cash. He called on Congress to support his campaign spending reforms.
    Also, Clinton admitted, "in retrospect," it was a mistake to have had
    the top federal banking regulator at one of his White House sessions
    with major bankers. 
   
    IRAQ-FOOD 

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Iraq complains that extra rations of flour, rice
    and sugar will not reach Iraqis until April under the U.N.'s
    "oil-for-food" plan. The Iraqi trade minister complained U.N.
    bureaucracy was to blame. "We can't distribute food for the people
    unless there is at least one commodity sufficient for the whole
    population," Mohammed Mehdi Saleh told The AP. 
   
    OLYMPIC BOMBING 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Richard Jewell sued The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    and the college where he once worked as a security guard, accusing them
    of libeling him in the Olympic bombing probe. Jewell's lawsuit seeks
    unspecified damages. "Noticeably lacking is any explanation of what is
    false about what we reported," said Journal-Constitution publisher
    Roger Kintzel. 
   
    BOULDER-SLAYING 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A former FBI agent hired by the parents of JonBenet
    Ramsey says he doesn't think they killed their 6-year-old daughter. In
    a "Dateline NBC" interview, John Douglas said he spent about four or
    five hours with John and Patricia Ramsey and visited their home in
    Boulder, Colo., where their daughter was found dead on Dec. 26. Douglas
    is the former head of the FBI's behavioral science unit. 
   
    ORACLE CASE 

    REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) -- A former Oracle Corp. employee was
    convicted of forging an e-mail message to support her claim that she
    was fired for breaking off a relationship with the company's chairman.
    Larry Ellison, Oracle's CEO and one of America's richest people with an
    estimated net worth of $4.2 billion, praised the verdict as "a sign of
    great progress in our society." Adelyn Lee, 33, could spend up to six
    years in prison. 
   
    FLU-DRUG 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A new compound that taken as a pill could be used as
    a preventative or treatment for influenza infections has been developed
    by California researchers. The compound, known as a neuraminidase
    inhibitor, blocks an enzyme necessary for replication of the flu virus
    and may decrease the length and severity of flu systems and prevent the
    disease in people exposed to it, the researchers said Tuesday. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar rose steadily against the yen on Wednesday in
    Japan. The dollar was at 121.23 yen, up 0.87. The Nikkei fell 67.68 to
    17,728.89. In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average closed at
    6,656.08, down 4.61, its fifth straight loss. The Nasdaq was at
    1,354.37, up 1.56. 
   
    CELTICS-KNICKS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Chris Childs made a 3-pointer with 8.4 seconds left
    for his only basket of the game as the New York Knicks beat the Boston
    Celtics for the 18th straight time, 109-107. For the Knicks, Allan
    Houston scored 25 points, Charles Oakley had a season-high 20 and
    Patrick Ewing had 18. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.296IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0646
    Updated at Tuesday, January 28, 1997, at 8:00 pm Pacific time.

    Reuters World News Highlights 

    GROZNY, Russia - Aslan Maskhadov, who has claimed victory in Chechnya's
    presidential election, wants Russia and the world to recognise his
    nation's independence and help rebuild it after two years of war. 

    WASHINGTON - U.S. President Bill Clinton said he expects to meet in
    March with Russian President Boris Yeltsin as planned, although
    officials said the summit might be in a third country due to the
    Kremlin leader's health. 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton defended U.S. policy toward China
    and predicted the ``spread of liberty'' will grow in the communist
    state, saying: ``I just think it's inevitable, just as the Berlin Wall
    fell.'' 

    WASHINGTON - A U.S. delegation is in Beijing seeking concessions on
    human rights that could make it unneccessary this year for the United
    States to sponsor a U.N. resolution faulting China's policy, officials
    said. 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton said ``mistakes were made'' in
    raising money for his re-election campaign, but insisted contributors
    did not buy influence with him and the system is not corrupt. 

    WASHINGTON - Iraq's President Saddam Hussein has put his wife under
    house arrest and his son, wounded in a Dec. 12 shooting in Baghdad, may
    lose a leg to gangrene, a senior U.S. military official said. 

    PARIS - In a defiant challenge to Algerian President Liamine Zeroual,
    gunmen shot dead one of his main political backers, trade union chief
    Abdelhak Benhamouda. 

    BELGRADE - Triumphant Serbian demonstrators said they had won back the
    streets of the capital Belgrade after riot police apparently gave up
    pushing them onto pavements to enforce a ban on marches. 

    SOFIA - Bulgaria's ruling Socialists start efforts to form a new
    government on Wednesday, rejecting calls by President Petar Stoyanov
    for immediate elections to help pull the country from a deep economic
    crisis. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.297IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0887
    RTw  29-Jan-97 06:33    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    New Zealander wrestles shark on a whim 

    WELLINGTON - New Zealand has produced its own answer to Australia's
    "Crocodile Dundee." 

    Newspapers and radio said that a man jumped off a boat to wrestle a
    four-metre (12-foot) shark in the popular South Island tourist spot of
    Milford Sound. 

    Grant Lightfoot leaped in, tussled with the large thresher shark and
    killed it with a knife. 

    "I don't know why I did it. It was a spur-of-the-moment thing," said
    Lightfoot, who added that he had previously wrestled conger eels and
    octopuses. 

    The incident on Tuesday matched the feat of Crocodile Dundee, the
    fictional crocodile-wrestling Australian outback hero played by Paul
    Hogan in the film of the same name. 

    - - - - 

    Princess Diana plans gala dress sale for charity 

    LONDON (Reuter) - Princess Diana is planning to donate her wedding
    dress to a British museum and to sell 65 evening dresses for charity, a
    newspaper said. 

    The Daily Telegraph said the ex-wife of heir-to-the-throne Prince
    Charles is determined to redefine her image and "pursue a new role
    outside the conventional royal mould." 

    "Next month, she will announce that she intends to give the dress which
    stunned the world in 1981 to the Victoria & Albert Museum for permanent
    public display," the newspaper said. 

    "At the same time, she will announce the most glamourous second-hand
    clothes sale in history with a proposed auction of 65 evening dresses
    in June." 

    The charity sale, expected to be held at Christie's auction house,
    could make more than one million sterling ($1.61 million) for her
    favourite charities. 

    - - - - 

    Youth robbers use chewing gum as tool to loot cars 

    MEXICO CITY (Reuter) - Young robbers in a Mexico City suburb are using
    chewing gum as their main tool to plunder cars at stoplights. 

    Dozens of hapless drivers waiting for the lights to turn green in
    Nezahualcoyotl have been robbed after chewing gum has been stuck to
    their windows, effectively making them marked cars, TV reports and
    authorities said. 

    Young gang members wander around idling cars and mark those with booty
    inside. At following lights, older members look out for the tell-tale
    gum sign and carry out smash and grab robberies. 

    - - - - 

    Virginia to "retire" racially offensive state song 

    RICHMOND, Virginia (Reuter) - The Virginia Senate has voted to retire
    the official state song after charges that its references to "darkey"
    and "old massa" were racially offensive. 

    The Senate voted 24-15 to make "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny" the
    "official state song emeritus," a compromise for those who wanted the
    song junked entirely. It also voted to set up a committee to find a new
    state song. 

    Debate over the song has raged for several years and blacks and whites
    bridled at lines like: "There's where the old darkey's heart am longed
    to go. That's where I laboured so hard for old massa." 

    REUTER
7.298IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0841
    AP 28-Jan-1997 23:56 EST   REF5589

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Kidnapped Baby Returns Home

    LYNWOOD, Calif. (AP) -- A newborn baby abducted by a woman masquerading
    as a hospital volunteer was returned to her parents Tuesday after
    deputies found the alleged kidnapper and the infant. 

    Maria Guadalupe Ramos, 22, was videotaped by a hospital security camera
    and tracked to a home in Lynwood, where she was arrested for
    investigation of kidnapping, said Los Angeles Sheriff Sherman Block.
    The baby was unharmed. 

    The one-week-old infant, Cindy, was taken from her parents Monday
    afternoon by a woman who persuaded them to go to Kaiser Foundation
    Hospital-Bellflower under the guise of getting them a crib and some
    coupons for "baby needs." 

    The woman told the baby's father to drive his car to the front of the
    hospital and then asked the mother if she could take the baby to show
    some friends inside, Block said. 

    She never returned, and the parents contacted police about two hours
    later. The suspect had no connection with the hospital, authorities
    said, and the baby's mother said she didn't know her either. 

    The baby's mother, Fabiola Ramos, and father, Roberto Arciga, attended
    a news conference with their baby. Mrs. Ramos said she "had faith all
    the way" that she would be reunited with her child. 

    In fact, the accused kidnapper called the couple's home several times
    after the child was taken and said the infant was safe and well, she
    said. 

    "I asked her if the baby was OK and she said, 'yes,"' Mrs. Ramos said. 

    Maria Ramos has other children and had told the baby's mother she was
    seven months pregnant, Block said. He said he did not know if the
    suspect actually was pregnant. She was ordered held on $500,000 bail. 
7.299IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0837
    AP 28-Jan-1997 23:38 EST   REF5581

    2 Toddlers Tossed Out Window

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -- Two toddlers were hurled out a third-floor
    apartment window as police responded to a domestic dispute. The infants
    landed on the hood of a car, but were expected to survive, police said
    Tuesday. 

    The children's father, the subject of several domestic violence
    complaints, has been arrested for investigation of two counts of
    assault, spokeswoman Corina Hopkins said. 

    The 2-year-old girl was in critical condition with head and internal
    injuries; her 1-year-old brother was in serious condition with bruises
    and minor internal injuries, said hospital spokesman Todd Kelly said. 

    Apartment manager Pat Hutson said another tenant saw it happen. 

    "They thought someone was throwing trash out of the window at first,
    and then the one baby landed on the car and bounced off," she said.
    While the tenant was comforting the child "the other baby came out the
    window." 

    Ms. Hutson said two homeless people stripped from the waist up and used
    their clothing to keep the children warm until help arrived. 

    The police spokeswoman said officers responding to a domestic dispute
    early Tuesday were met by a 21-year-old woman who said her 28-year-old
    husband had tried to kill her with a hammer. 

    When the officers arrived, the man disappeared into a bedroom and came
    out seconds later. An officer looked out an open bedroom window and saw
    the children on the hood of a parked car. They arrested him and
    confiscated a hammer. 
7.300IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0857
    AP 28-Jan-1997 23:37 EST   REF5580

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-FBI Man: Family Not Guilty

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A former FBI agent hired by the parents of JonBenet
    Ramsey says he doesn't think they killed their 6-year-old daughter. 

    In a "Dateline NBC" interview, John Douglas said he spent about four or
    five hours with John and Patricia Ramsey and visited their home in
    Boulder, Colo., where their daughter was found dead on Dec. 26. 

    He also saw a limited amount of evidence, including a photocopy of a
    purported ransom note, and he was briefed on the autopsy report, NBC
    said. 

    "What I've seen and experienced, I'd say they were not involved," said
    Douglas, according to a transcript of the interview released in advance
    of the Tuesday night broadcast. 

    Douglas is the former head of the FBI's behavioral science unit. He was
    the inspiration for an investigator in "The Silence of the Lambs" and
    he drew up the Unabomber's profile when the bombings began. 

    The body of JonBenet, a former National Tiny Miss Beauty, was found in
    her basement, eight hours after her mother called 911 to report she had
    found a ransom note and her daughter was missing. 

    Authorities have released little about their investigation; no arrests
    have been made. Police have said JonBenet was strangled but they have
    refused comment on reports that she was sexually assaulted and her
    skull fractured. 

    Douglas said he suspected JoBenet's parents at first. When someone is
    killed in a home, "the primary suspects will always and should be
    family." 

    His investigation convinced him otherwise, Douglas told NBC. 

    JonBenet's body was found by her father and Douglas noted, "Generally,
    if a parent kills a child, they don't want to be the one who finds the
    child," 

    He said they also "usually place their child with a very peaceful type
    of look to it. They stage the crime scene." 

    Douglas considers the ransom figure -- $118,000 -- significant. That
    was the amount Ramsey received as a bonus in 1996 from his computer
    company. 

    "Is that just a fluke? I don't think so," said Douglas. "I think it is
    very, very significant. And you cannot ignore that." 

    NBC said Boulder Police spokesman Kelvin McNeill confirmed receiving
    information from Douglas, but police haven't said if it influenced
    their probe. 
7.301IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0864
    AP 28-Jan-1997 23:22 EST   REF5469

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Jokes Galore at Congress Dinner

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Freshman Rep. Dennis Kucinich said his constituents
    sent him to bring civilization from Cleveland to the capital after they
    learned about House Speaker Newt Gingrich's activities. 

    "People just hated it when they found out he violated all those
    ethnics," Kucinich punned at an annual dinner for congressional
    correspondents Tuesday. 

    Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and Secretary of State
    Madeleine Albright were among the guests gathered Tuesday night at the
    Washington Press Club Foundation's 53rd annual congressional dinner. 

    The theme? "Making Nice." 

    As at all such dinners at which journalists mingle with the politicians
    they cover, the speeches were full of jokes. Some were even funny. 

    "Teen-agers and Democrats are always happy spending someone else's
    money," said freshman Rep. Anne Northrup, R-Ky. "But teen-agers grow
    up, and when they have to spend their own money they become
    conservatives." 

    NBC's Tim Russert was the emcee, and Kucinich, D-Ohio, and Northrup
    were joined at the podium by freshmen Sens. Mary Landrieu, D-La., and
    Sam Brownback, R-Kan. 

    Brownback may be overly optimistic about the prospects for
    bipartisanship in the capital. 

    "I can just see it now," he said, imagining a few dream tickets for the
    2000 presidential race. "Al and Al; Gore and D'Amato, going after the
    angry senator vote." 

    How about Pat and Pat; Moynihan and Buchanan, going after "the angry
    white male Ph.D. vote?" Or Jesse and Jesse; Helms and Jackson. "Just
    going after the angry, angry vote," Brownback said. 

    Landrieu, whose challenger has accused her of turning to vote fraud to
    win a close race, said it wasn't true: All of the voting machines that
    made Louisiana elections notorious have been sold to Mexico. 

    "However, they're still trying to figure out how Earl Long got elected
    mayor of Cancun," Landrieu said. 

    To civilize Washington, Kucinich said he would rely on three items
    close to Cleveland's heart: kielbasa, the polka (to fight the Macarena)
    and bowling. 

    Why bowling? Take the parties' differences over campaign finance
    reform: 

    "Right now, we have a split on Capitol Hill -- a 7-10 split, if you
    will -- over how to stop the special interests from controlling the
    lanes of Congress," he said. 

    If only they would bring back bowling to the House gym, lawmakers could
    develop the skills they need "to keep our government from rolling into
    the gutter," Kucinich said. 
7.302IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0890
    AP 28-Jan-1997 22:51 EST   REF5304

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Post-Castro U.S. Aid Promised

    By GEORGE GEDDA

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Cuba can expect to receive between $4 billion and $8
    billion from the United States and other outside donors during the
    first six years after Cuba's communist system gives way to a transition
    government, a White House report says. 

    The United States is likely to be the "predominant bilateral provider,"
    the study said, because of Cuba's proximity and the U.S. national
    interest. 

    But, it said, contributions also can be expected from other
    governments, the European Union, agencies of the United Nations, the
    World Bank and other international financial institutions. 

    Draft copies of the report were made available to The Associated Press
    and other news organizations. 

    In Havana, President Fidel Castro strongly rejected what he called the
    U.S. transition plan and reiterated that Cuba was committed to
    Communism. 

    "Let them not make a mistake, our imperialist enemies should not
    underestimate us," Castro said in a speech at a ceremony honoring the
    144th anniversary of the birth of Jose Marti, Cuba's national hero. 

    "What infuriates us most is that they're trying to buy us the day we
    start wavering," he said. 

    The Cuban president's comments were contained in a dispatch from
    Havana, monitored in Mexico City, by the Mexican government news agency
    Notimex. 

    The White House study predicted a surge in the amount of money Cuban
    exiles in the United States send to relatives in Cuba once a transition
    takes place, as well as "dramatic increases" in foreign investment. 

    The report also raises the possibility that the Guantanamo Naval Base,
    the U.S.-run base in Cuba, could be returned to Cuba or the agreement
    governing its use renegotiated once a transition occurs. 

    Titled "Support for a Democratic Transition in Cuba," the report was
    required by the 1996 Helms Burton law that imposes sanctions against
    Cuba. 

    The law, among other features, seeks to punish foreign investors who do
    business on property confiscated from Americans in the early years of
    the revolution. 

    The premise of the report is that communism in Cuba is a transitory
    phenomenon and that democracy will take hold in Cuba once Castro, 71,
    passes from the scene. 

    Cuban officials often have disputed that premise, contending that the
    system Castro has in place will survive his passing. 

    White House press secretary Mike McCurry said Tuesday he disagrees with
    that view. 

    "The sweep of history teaches us a profound lesson -- that the
    totalitarian, Marxist ... economies fail. And this one is destined for
    failure because they cannot sustain themselves," he said. 

    "Sooner or later, Cuba will be on the right side of history. And sooner
    or later, Fidel Castro will understand that or he won't." 

    The report predicts a surge in remittances from the United States to
    Cuba during the early transition period. 

    "Projections based on remittance flows from other immigrant communities
    in the United States suggest that remittances to Cuba following a
    transition could exceed $1 billion per annum," the report said. 

    "The amount of available financing, official and private, for Cuba's
    transition appears to be quite large, certainly larger than what was
    available on a per capita basis to any of the countries of the former
    Soviet Union." 

    Accounts of the study in The Washington Post and The Miami Herald
    quoted Rep. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., as saying the report is intended
    largely as a signal to the Cuban people that the United States stands
    ready to help once a democratic government is in place. 
7.303IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0841
    AP 28-Jan-1997 22:32 EST   REF5111

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Selena's Killer Denied New Trial

    CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) -- Yolanda Saldivar, the woman convicted of
    killing Tejano singing star Selena, does not deserve a new trial
    because records she claimed are missing were never admitted into
    evidence, the judge who presided over her trial said. 

    "All exhibits which were properly marked, offered and admitted into the
    record are accounted for and are in the custody of the 14th Court of
    Appeals," State District Judge Mike Westergren said Tuesday. 

    The judge, responding to a request from the 14th Court of Appeals, said
    he told a court employee to make a box of documents subpoenaed from the
    singer's father part of the trial record even though he did not allow
    them into evidence. 

    His instruction, however, was not followed and the judge said none of
    the court clerks or court reporters recalls receiving such directions. 

    Westergren said it was up to Ms. Saldivar, serving a life prison term
    for the March 1995 shooting of Selena Quintanilla Perez, 23, to make
    sure a sufficient record was presented to show her case should be
    overturned. 

    He noted Ms. Saldivar never made the documents part of the trial record
    for review by the appeals court, and that most of the papers that
    remained in the courtroom after trial were delivered to her lawyers. 

    The appeals court, which is reviewing Ms. Saldivar's conviction and
    sentence, asked for an explanation about the claims of missing records,
    prompting Westergren to hold an evidentiary hearing earlier this month
    in Houston. 

    Ms. Saldivar, 36, fatally wounded the Grammy-winning singer March 31,
    1995 during a confrontation at a Corpus Christi motel. The former head
    of the singer's fan club and manager of her boutique contended she
    fired the .38-caliber revolver by accident. 
7.304IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0865
    AP 28-Jan-1997 21:06 EST   REF5996

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh's Kin Says He Robbed

    IDABEL, Okla. (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's sister told FBI agents he once
    gave her $300 he said he got from a bank robbery and asked her to
    exchange it for clean money, a newspaper reported Tuesday. 

    She said their transaction was in December 1994, a time when
    prosecutors have said McVeigh and co-defendant Terry Nichols were
    financing a plot to bomb the Oklahoma City federal building. 

    Jennifer McVeigh said in the sworn statement to federal agents that her
    brother told her he helped plan, but did not participate in, the
    robbery, the McCurtain Daily Gazette reported. 

    Ms. McVeigh told the agents that her brother had "an undetermined
    quantity of $100 bills, of which he provided me a small portion," the
    paper reported. 

    The Gazette did not detail how it obtained the information, but said
    Ms. McVeigh gave the sworn statement on May 2, 1995, weeks after the
    Oklahoma City explosion that killed 168 people. 

    Justice Department spokeswoman Leesa Brown in Denver said the
    department had no comment on the newspaper report. 

    Defense attorney Stephen Jones said there is no evidence "from any
    source that Tim McVeigh was ever involved in a bank robbery." 

    Jones said McVeigh's sister apparently misunderstood her brother's
    joke, and that he was being facetious when he said the money came from
    a robbery. 

    Jones said the sister's statement was probably leaked by someone in
    federal government bent on distracting public attention away from
    problems with the FBI's crime lab in Washington. 

    The agency has removed three senior FBI agents who evaluated evidence
    in the bombing case, as well as an FBI whistle-blower, from its crime
    lab while it evaluates a Justice Department report critical of the
    lab's work. 

    Federal prosecutors have decided against calling one of the
    investigators as an expert witness when McVeigh goes on trial in March.
    Nichols will be tried later. 

    The newspaper said Ms. McVeigh told agents about the money after they
    returned to her and said her original affidavit would need to be
    verified by a polygraph examiner. 

    She then said her brother gave her three $100 bills and asked her to
    circulate the money, the Gazette reported. She gave him about $300 in
    exchange and deposited the money he gave her in a federal credit union.

    She also told agents that her brother wrote her in December 1993 that
    bank robbers might not be criminals at all, that banks were the real
    thieves and that income tax is illegal, the newspaper reported. 

    Ms. McVeigh also said her brother wrote a letter highly critical of the
    government's raid on the Branch Davidian complex and mailed it to the
    federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms with a note saying,
    "You ... are going to hang," the newspaper reported. 
7.305IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:08111
    AP 28-Jan-1997 21:05 EST   REF5995

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Security Guard Sues Paper

    By LEONARD PALLATS

    Associated Press Writer

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Richard Jewell sued The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    and the college where he once worked as a security guard on Tuesday,
    accusing them of libeling him in stories linking him to the Olympic
    bombing. 

    Jewell's lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, accuses the
    newspapers of portraying him as a man with "a bizarre employment
    history and an aberrant personality" who likely was guilty of placing
    the bomb. 

    Those stories quoted Piedmont College President Ray Cleere as
    describing Jewell as a "badge-wearing zealot" who "would write epic
    police reports for minor infractions," the lawsuit said. 

    Lin Wood, a lawyer for Jewell, called the lawsuit "the first step in
    what will be a long and hard-fought battle against a billion-dollar
    corporation that tried and convicted Richard Jewell for a crime he did
    not commit." 

    Journal-Constitution publisher Roger Kintzel on Tuesday defended his
    newspapers' coverage of the bombing as "fair, accurate and
    responsible." 

    "Noticeably lacking is any explanation of what is false about what we
    reported," Kintzel said at a news conference. 

    The newspapers will fight the lawsuit, he said. "There has been no
    discussion of any settlement." 

    In December, the newspapers refused Jewell's demand to print a
    retraction to three stories about him while he was a suspect. 

    Meanwhile, Jewell and his mother settled a complaint against CNN for an
    undisclosed amount, according to a joint statement issued by CNN and
    Jewell's lawyers. 

    "CNN continues to believe that its coverage was a fair and accurate
    review of the events that unfolded following the Centennial Olympic
    Park explosion," the Atlanta-based network said in a statement. 

    Jewell, in an interview Tuesday with Atlanta radio station WGST-AM,
    said he was "very satisfied" with the CNN settlement. 

    "I'm not doing this just for me ... I want them to think about what
    they did to me and my mother and my attorneys," Jewell said about the
    lawsuits filed Tuesday. "I want them to get the story 100 percent
    before they put it out. I'm doing it so this won't happen to anybody
    else." 

    Last month, Jewell reached a settlement with NBC over comments
    anchorman Tom Brokaw made on the air about Jewell shortly after the
    bombing. The Wall Street Journal reported the settlement was worth
    $500,000. 

    Jewell, 34, was working as a private security guard in Centennial
    Olympic Park when a pipe bomb exploded before daybreak on July 27,
    killing one person and injuring more than 100. 

    He initially was praised as a hero for spotting the bomb in the Olympic
    park and helping to move people out of the way before the blast. 

    Three days after the bombing, an extra edition of The Atlanta Journal
    identified Jewell as a suspect. Jewell came under intense media
    scrutiny for three months, until federal prosecutors cleared him in
    October. 

    The Journal report linking Jewell to the bombing was leaked by an FBI
    agent and confirmed by unidentified members of the Atlanta Police
    Department, the lawsuit said. 

    Nine reporters or editors of the newspapers and officials of Piedmont
    College in Demorest also are named as defendants in the lawsuit. 

    Wray Eckl, a lawyer for the college, had no comment. 

    No one has been charged in the bombing. 

    Also Tuesday, ABC's "World News Tonight" interviewed a witness who
    claims to have seen a man carrying two knapsacks in his hand and one on
    his back in Centennial Olympic Park before the bombing who resembles a
    defendant later arrested in a series of bombings at Spokane, Wash. 

    The witness, an Atlanta architect who did not want to be identified,
    said he told the FBI twice about the man but never heard back from
    agents. 

    He called the Spokesman-Review of Spokane, which also reported on the
    architect Tuesday, after seeing a television report on three men who
    are charged with robbing a bank and setting off several bombs last year
    in Washington state. 

    "I was just dumbfounded to see one of the people in the photo resembled
    my sketch quite a bit," he told ABC. 

    He said the man he saw had a deformed right eye and "dirty
    blondish-type curly hair." 

    FBI Deputy Director Weldon Kennedy said he could not comment on any
    connection between the Olympic bombing and the Washington case "except
    to confirm that it is being thoroughly explored along with every other
    possibility." 
7.306IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0883
    AP 28-Jan-1997 20:48 EST   REF5985

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Guilty Plea In Cosby Extortion

    By LARRY NEUMEISTER

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The boyfriend of a woman who says she is Bill Cosby's
    out-of-wedlock daughter pleaded guilty Tuesday to helping in a $40
    million attempted extortion plot on the famous comedian. 

    Antonay Williams, 26, of Perry, Fla., pleaded guilty in U.S. District
    Court in Manhattan to conspiracy and aiding and abetting an extortion. 

    The plea by Williams, who prosecutors had not previously said was
    arrested in the case, was announced after he had already entered the
    plea. He was released on a $250,000 personal recognizance bond pending
    sentencing. 

    Autumn Jackson, 22, and Jose Medina, 51, have been charged with
    participating in a scheme to extort money from Cosby, whom Jackson
    claims is her father. The entertainer admits having had a one-night
    stand with Jackson's mother and said there is a possibility she is her
    father. 

    During the plea before U.S. District Judge John S. Martin, Williams
    said he helped the plot by doing research on Cosby and Cosby's
    corporate sponsors. 

    He also admitted he received a document from a representative of the
    newspaper, "The Globe," and helped take Jackson and Medina to the
    airport for their flight to New York to meet Cosby's representatives. 

    In court papers, prosecutors said Jackson began calling a Cosby
    representative last month and early this month to ask for money. 

    On Jan. 7, Jackson said if she was not provided the money "to live on,"
    she would go to the news media, the court papers said. 

    In a campaign to increase the pressure on Cosby, she and Medina sent
    letters to CBS and other entities threatening to reveal Jackson's claim
    that Cosby was her father, the papers said. 

    An attachment to a letter to CBS included an unsigned "source
    agreement" among Jackson, Medina and the publisher of a tabloid
    newspaper calling for the publisher to pay money for the rights to
    Jackson's story, the court papers said. 

    On the day Cosby's 27-year-old son, Ennis, was slain while trying to
    change a tire in California, she sent a facsimile from Burbank, Calif.,
    to Cosby's representative in New York City including a copy of the
    "source agreement" and a letter signed by Jackson, prosecutors said. 

    In the letter, Jackson said "it was urgent that you contact me to make
    certain arrangements," that "I need monies and I need monies now" and
    that "I don't want to do anything to harm my father in any way, if at
    all possible to avoid," prosecutors said. 

    The court papers alleged that in a telephone conversation the same day,
    Jackson told Cosby's representative that if Cosby did not pay her $40
    million, she would sell "her story" to the tabloid newspaper "and
    others." 

    Prosecutors said that on the morning of Jan. 18, Jackson and Medina met
    with Cosby's representative in New York City and each signed an
    agreement that called for $18 million to be paid to Jackson and $6
    million to Medina. 

    In exchange, prosecutors said, Jackson and Medina were to refrain from
    providing any information about Cosby to third parties, including the
    tabloid newspaper with whom Jackson and Medina had previously
    negotiated. 

    Jackson and Medina were both arrested last week in Cosby's lawyer's
    office, where they allegedly tried to negotiate a payoff. Jackson was
    released on bail Monday. Medina remains in prison. 

    The charges against Williams carry a maximum sentences of five years
    and two years. Each count carries a maximum fine of $250,000. A
    sentencing date has not been set. 
7.307IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0893
    AP 29-Jan-1997 1:17 EST   REF5622

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Serb Free Presses Defy Gov't

    By GEORGE JAHN

    Associated Press Writer

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Djordje Todorovic is working on faith
    alone. 

    The young reporter hasn't been paid since November, when he defected
    from another paper to found the independent Demokratija daily, which
    has just four other reporters. 

    With President Slobodan Milosevic dependent on the state news media to
    wage his propaganda campaign against pro-democracy protesters, staff
    members of Serbian state TV and pro-regime papers always get their
    salaries -- even when other wages and pensions are delayed for months. 

    But Demokratija is on the other side. It tells the story the state
    media twists or ignores -- how Milosevic's Socialists annulled
    opposition election victories in Belgrade and 13 other cities, sparking
    daily street protests for the past nine weeks. 

    Newsprint and printing are expensive, and the cover price of
    Demokratija is half that of government-run dailies. It stays afloat
    only because the staff works for nothing. 

    "This paper is fueled by enthusiasm, not money," Todorovic said,
    parking his coffee cup amid overflowing ashtrays, an empty bottle of
    whisky and scattered newspapers. 

    Demokratija and a handful of other independent newspapers are the only
    alternative to state news media that Milosevic's Socialists seem
    prepared to tolerate. 

    State television, intensely pro-government, remains the main source of
    news, particularly in rural areas, home to most of the 43 percent of
    Serbians considered functional illiterates. 

    Newspapers are not overtly harassed. But independent journalists
    interested in reporting both sides of the story are not welcome at
    government news conferences. None can use state printing or
    distribution networks. 

    The only choice is delivery outside Belgrade by private car, bus or
    train. Radovic says about a quarter of his newspaper's daily 80,000
    copies are distributed outside the capital. 

    Two independent dailies, Dnevni Telegraf and Nasa Borba, have been
    around for some years -- the government apparently has tolerated their
    limited circulation rather than risk international condemnation by
    shutting them down. 

    Demokratija and Blic, both tabloids, are newcomers, launched around the
    time of the current turmoil. Demokratija's masthead proudly proclaims
    "ab ovo" -- Latin for "from the egg," an allusion to the thousands of
    eggs thrown by anti-Milosevic protesters at buildings housing the state
    news media. 

    The four independent newspapers report what government dailies don't --
    the daily protests drawing tens of thousands to Belgrade streets; the
    fight over who runs television; the foreign pressure on Milosevic to
    make him give up all the cities the opposition won. 

    Fed by the need to know in times like these, circulation is healthy --
    together, the four dailies sell more than 300,000 copies a day, and
    their staffs estimate readership is at least double that. The newcomers
    sell for one dinar -- 25 cents -- and grab readers with splashy
    layouts. 

    "By getting this large circulation and creating a large audience, we've
    dented Vecernje Novosti and Politika," said Blic's chief editor,
    Manojlo Vukotic, referring to two major state-run dailies. "We are
    opening people's eyes." 

    As evidence, Blic has letters from the countryside. 

    Vladan Spremic, from the small town of Jagodina, urged Blic to "fight,
    in the name of truth and justice." From the southern town of Istok,
    four readers urged Vukotic "not to cave in." 

    Managers of the independents acknowledge that the turmoil has helped
    them, but they expect to survive and compete in what they hope will be
    an opening news market. 

    "The truth will still need to be told," said Vukotic, who was chief
    editor of the Borba daily newspaper until it was forced to toe the
    government line. "The elections are just one farce that need to be
    exposed. There are so many other frauds." 
7.308IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0982
    AP 28-Jan-1997 21:07 EST   REF5998

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Yeltsin Returns to Kremlin

    By SERGEI SHARGORODSKY

    Associated Press Writer

    MOSCOW (AP) -- A trimmer, more vigorous Boris Yeltsin was shown working
    in the Kremlin on Tuesday in the first pictures released of the Russian
    president in more than three weeks. 

    Yeltsin spent nearly three hours at work in his first trip to the
    Kremlin since a brief visit Jan. 22 after getting out of the hospital,
    where he was treated for pneumonia. He since has been resting at home. 

    Photos and film released by the Kremlin showed a smiling but slightly
    pale Yeltsin greeting Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and then
    sitting at a table, gesturing with his hands. 

    Yeltsin clearly had lost weight since his heart bypass in November but
    was moving more vigorously than he had in months. 

    The Russian leader met with Chernomyrdin and Ivan Korotchenia,
    secretary of the Commonwealth of Independent States, presidential aides
    said. 

    He also worked on government documents before returning to his country
    house west of Moscow. Yeltsin, who turns 66 on Saturday, plans to
    celebrate his birthday there with his family, aides said. 

    The president had fallen ill Jan. 6, just two weeks after returning to
    work after the surgery, and hadn't been seen on television or in person
    since. Doctors maintain Yeltsin is making a gradual, steady recovery
    from pneumonia that had nothing to do with his history of heart
    problems. 

    Presidential spokesman Sergei Yastrzhembsky said Yeltsin might go to
    the Kremlin again this week, but that it was too early to talk about
    him returning to work full time. 

    "There has been an obvious improvement in his health, although I say
    that with caution," Yastrzhembsky said at a news briefing. 

    "The difference between his previous trip to the Kremlin and that today
    is significant," he said. "The president is going to build up his
    physical activity and activity at work." 

    Yastrzhembsky said Yeltsin inquired about discussions on the 1997
    budget in parliament. He and Chernomyrdin also discussed the painful
    question of unpaid wages for state workers, and the president noted
    that the government has failed to ease the situation, the spokesman
    said. 

    There is widespread debate about the state of Yeltsin's health after
    six months of illness that have sidelined the president. Aides insist
    he is gradually recovering, while critics claim he is more ill than the
    government will admit. 

    In parliament recently, opposition deputies unsuccessfully tried to
    oust the president, citing poor health and inability to govern. 

    New doubts were raised Monday after officials called off his trip next
    week to the Netherlands for consultations with European Union leaders. 

    The Kremlin, however, said plans were going ahead for a weekend meeting
    with French President Jacques Chirac in Moscow, Yeltsin's March summit
    with President Clinton and an April summit in Moscow with Chinese
    President Jiang Zemin. 

    In Washington, Clinton said he has no reason to believe that Yeltsin is
    in worse shape than the Russian government says he is and expects to go
    ahead with the U.S.-Russian summit in March. 

    "I expect it to be an important one and, I hope, a successful one,"
    Clinton said. 

    U.S. officials in Washington, speaking on condition of anonymity, had
    said the summit could be postponed until April and held outside
    Washington. Chernomyrdin travels to the United States on Feb. 5. 
7.309IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0936
    AP 28-Jan-1997 20:33 EST   REF5981

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    South Korean Novelist Under Fire

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korean prosecutors demanded a
    seven-year prison term Tuesday for a novelist who illegally visited
    communist North Korea last summer. 

    Kim Yong, better known by his pen name Kim Ha-ki, has maintained that
    he unknowingly entered North Korea while drunk. But the prosecutors
    said Kim's visit was deliberate. 

    The two Koreas are technically still at war, having signed no peace
    treaty after the 1950-53 Korean War. Government permission is necessary
    for South Koreans to visit North Korea. 

    "Considering his past activities as a North Korean sympathizer and the
    circumstances of his visit, it is believed that Kim deliberately
    entered the North," prosecutor Choi Sang-kwan said. 

    Prosecutors said Kim, 38, divulged information about South Korea's
    political situation and the condition of its prisons while in the
    North. 

    Kim had been touring Yanji, a Chinese town near the North Korean
    border, when he disappeared from a restaurant on July 30. He was found
    in North Korea the next day. Expelled by North Korea, Kim returned to
    South Korea in August. 

    Kim is best known for a series of award-winning novels about the lives
    of anti-government student activists and North Korean spies imprisoned
    in South Korea. The novels were written after his release from a
    seven-year sentence for alleged anti-government activities when he was
    a student. 
7.310IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0982
    AP 28-Jan-1997 20:07 EST   REF5970

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bulgarian Economic Protests Rise

    By VESELIN TOSHKOV

    Associated Press Writer

    SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) -- The Socialist Party accepted a grudging offer
    to govern Bulgaria on Tuesday, sparking a new outburst of street
    protests over the economic misery they are accused of causing. 

    On the 22nd day of protests against the Socialists, the renamed
    Communist Party, up to 50,000 people rallied in protests far bigger
    than those of previous days. In sharp contrast to the festive
    atmosphere of the past week, the mood was tense, with chants of
    "Resign!" "Red garbage!" and "Elections!" 

    The leaders of Bulgaria's three major trade unions called a nationwide
    strike beginning Wednesday. 

    "The country will be closed down as from tomorrow," vowed Vesko
    Mihailov, member of a joint coordinating committee of the protests. 

    The Socialists are blamed for rampant inflation, a plunge in living
    standards and failure to institute economic reform. Their government
    resigned last month, bringing on a political impasse intensified by
    street protests. 

    Many had hoped Bulgaria's new president, Petar Stoyanov, would find a
    way to ease them from power entirely. 

    But the Socialists, who have the most seats in Parliament, accepted
    Stoyanov's offer Tuesday to form a new government. As president,
    Stoyanov is obligated to ask the largest party to form a government. 

    The president had hoped the Socialists would refuse the offer as a step
    toward resolving the country's deepest crisis since the end of
    communism, and open the way for new elections. Elections must be held
    by December 1998. 

    Later Tuesday, the Socialist party leadership offered continued
    negotiations with the opposition on forming a coalition government and
    elections next fall. There was no immediate reaction, but the
    opposition had previously rejected a coalition. 

    The Socialists also offered to discuss the possibility of replacing
    premier-designate Nikolai Dobrev, the country's current interior
    minister, whom the opposition opposes. 

    Ivan Kostov, head of the main opposition, the Union of Democratic
    Forces, said his party was ready to end its 2 1/2-week boycott of
    parliament to help adopt emergency measures. 

    "If there is the will and consensus, Parliament can endorse in a short
    term the necessary laws, and early elections can be called," Kostov
    said. 

    Stoyanov had proposed he appoint a caretaker government and call
    elections in May. 

    Opposition leaders, supported by the protesters, vowed at Tuesday's
    rally to fight for new elections. 

    Stoyanov, who greeted students marching past his office, said the
    situation was "explosive." 

    Stoyanov talked with British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind on
    Tuesday and was later to leave for Brussels on a trip underlining
    Bulgaria's desire to join the European Union and NATO. 

    Protesters worried the crisis could worsen. 

    "At the moment, the intelligentsia are at these rallies," said Elena
    Altimirska, a student. "When the situation becomes worse, the factory
    workers will go out because the situation is the worst ever, maybe in
    the history of Bulgaria. Then it will be very bad for everybody." 

    Bulgarians today, she said, "have to choose between being warm and
    eating." 
7.311IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0996
    RTw  29-Jan-97 04:04    

    FEATURE-Cyberauthor Gibson unbound by sci-fi themes

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Cynthia Osterman 

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Jan 29 (Reuter) - Sipping coffee in a
    gloomy Internet cafe on a winter afternoon, science fiction guru
    William Gibson -- the man who coined the word "cyberspace -- confesses
    he finds the computers around him, well, boring. 

    "This technology, it's all obsolete. Computers are like ice sculptures
    in terms of obsolesence," the 48-year-old author said, watching people
    tapping intently on keyboards. 

    Idolised by Internet groupies, Gibson invented the term "cyberspace" in
    a 1982 short story and vaulted to cult status with his award-winning
    first novel "Neuromancer" in 1984. 

    Although his books have sold millions of copies, he is no sci-fi hack.
    Critics have lavished praise on him and many technophiles view him as
    one of the digital age's most visionary thinkers, alongside Microsoft
    founder Bill Gates. 

    Gibson, whose short story "Johnny Mnemonic" was made into a 1995 movie,
    published his latest book "Idoru" last year and is now writing a
    screenplay for "Neuromancer." After that, he plans to start his sixth
    novel. 

    Although technology is at the heart of the often-bleak future world of
    his stories, Gibson keeps it at arm's length. He wrote "Neuromancer" on
    a clunky 1927 typewriter and only recently graduated to writing on a
    computer. He shuns e-mail. 

    "I was really lucky when I started writing because I knew nothing about
    computers," the Vancouver-based writer told Reuters. "I didn't have a
    lot of preconceptions." 

    IMAGINATION ROAMS FREE 

    This has allowed his imagination to roam free. 

    Gibson's early work envisioned global computer networks, virtual
    reality, hackers, pirated software and electronic cash before any of
    them actually existed. He had little inkling how computer networks
    would take the world by storm when he coined the term "cyberspace" 14
    years ago. Now in the Oxford English Dictionary, it describes the
    digital world of computers and electronic communication where geography
    no longer exists. 

    The word "has the currency it does because it turned out to actually
    describe something people need to describe every day. Cyberspace is
    where the bank keeps your money or where you 'are' during a phone
    call," Gibson said. "It's increasingly where a large part of what
    passes for civilised activity these days actually happens." 

    "Idoru," his new book, is set in the twilight urban landscape of a
    post-earthquake Tokyo and includes buildings that construct themselves,
    a romance between an ageing Chinese-Irish rock star and a
    computer-generated beauty and an experimental drug that compels users
    to murder only celebrities and politicians. 

    NOT JUST ESCAPIST FANTASY 

    For all his mind-bending images of the future, Gibson does not intend
    his work to be merely escapist fantasy. He aims instead to prod readers
    to ponder the chaotic world of today. 

    The tall, lanky author leans forward in his chair, staring fixedly into
    his coffee cup, as he searches for the right words to describe his
    mission. 

    "I often think that in my work I am actually attempting to explore an
    unthinkable present. We have to ask ourselves what is holding the world
    together," he said, his faint accent betraying his origins in the
    American South. "I am trying to induce a vertigo ... so that for a few
    hours people will walk outside and see things a little differently." 

    Born in South Carolina, Gibson grew up in the mountains of southwestern
    Virgina with his widowed mother and attended boarding school in
    Arizona. He left the United States at 19 for Canada to avoid the
    Vietnam War draft. Married, with two teenage children, he has lived in
    Vancouver since 1972. 

    He admits to being more than a little puzzled by today's world where
    the artificial seems increasingly to supplant the real. This confusion,
    he says, is an important theme in his work. 

    "The nature of reality in a hyper-mediated world is something I keep
    coming back to. It's all increasingly fuzzy, what is real and what is
    Memorex," he said. "If I could define reality, I would have run out of
    ideas for writing these books." 

    REUTER
7.312IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0939
    RTw  29-Jan-97 01:05    

    Britain's Millennium Exhibition gets go ahead

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 28 (Reuter) - Plans for the construction of the world's
    largest dome which will be the centre of Britain's Millennium
    Exhibition were given the go ahead on Tuesday. 

    The local council in Greenwich -- home of the zero line of longitude,
    source of Greenwich Mean Time -- where the 130-acre (50-hectare) site
    is situated, gave planning permission after consulting more than 80,000
    residents. 

    In addition to the dome which will be a kilometre (more than half a
    mile) round, the exhibition will include a park, gardens, a plaza and
    performance area and a variety of transport and parking facilities on
    the site near the River Thames. 

    The exhibition is due to open on December 31, 1999, and will last a
    year. 

    "This is brilliant news. Over the next two to three months we will be
    building a detailed budget and business plan for the project," said
    Jennifer Page of the Millennium Central which is organising the
    project. 

    The dome will have glass sides and a white fabric roof supported by 12
    giant masts. It is expected to attract up to 12 million visitors. 

    Funding for the project will be provided by a 200 million pound grant
    ($333 million) from National Lottery funds, as well as money from
    private donations. 

    Construction of the exhibition is expected to provide 2,000 jobs and
    the exhibition will employ 5,000 people. 

    REUTER
7.313IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0937
    RTw  29-Jan-97 00:47    

    Britain rejects joint control of Gibraltar

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 28 (Reuter) - Britain has rejected a Spanish proposal to
    share sovereignty of Gibraltar for the next 100 years and then give
    control of the colony to Madrid, the Foreign Office said on Tuesday. 

    Spanish Foreign Minister Abel Matutes presented his British counterpart
    Malcolm Rifkind with the proposal last week during a visit to Madrid. 

    "The Spanish foreign minister did raise it informally last week as he
    had done on previous occasions. The foreign secretary rejected the idea
    because such a proposal did not have the concern of the people of
    Gibraltar," a Foreign Office spokeswoman said. 

    "Our constitutional position on Gibraltar is very clear," she added. 

    Britain and Spain have wrangled over the sovereignty of the 5.8 square
    km (2.2 square miles) colony at the tip of the Iberian peninsula for
    many years. 

    Britain seized the colony from Spain in 1704. It was ceded by Spain in
    perpetuity under the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht. 

    Spain's insistence that it is disputed territory has soured relations
    between the two countries for decades. 

    In a referendum in Gibraltar in 1967, 99 percent of the people voted to
    remain British. 

    Britain has insisted that the people of Gibraltar must be consulted on
    any change in the sovereignty of the colony. 

    REUTER
7.314IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0958
    RTos 28-Jan-97 23:11    

    Gandhi's Ashes Make Final Pilgrimage

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    CUTTACK, India (Reuter) - To the cry "Long live Mahatma Gandhi," the
    great grandson of modern India's founding father Tuesday took his ashes
    out of a bank vault on a final pilgrimage to the sacred Ganges River. 

    Tushar Arun Gandhi emerged from the State Bank of India in the eastern
    city of Cuttack, carrying on his head a reddish wooden box containing
    what he said were his great grandfather's ashes. 

    About 1,000 onlookers sang and chanted as the chief minister of Orissa
    state, J.B. Patnaik, placed garlands around Tushar Arun Gandhi's neck
    and the box, which was placed on the back of an open truck with two
    police guards. 

    After a fast and much media attention, Tushar Arun Gandhi won control
    in November of the box, which had lain in a vault in the bank since
    1950. 

    "No Hindu will ever like the ashes of his forefathers to be kept in a
    museum let alone a bank locker," he told Reuters in nearby Bhubaneswar
    city earlier Tuesday. "Which is why I had to battle it out." 

    Gandhi was shot dead by a Hindu fanatic on January 30, 1948, five
    months after India, spurred by the apostle of non-violence, won
    independence from Britain. He was cremated in Delhi. 

    The box contains an urn which measures 18 inches by 18 inches by 20
    inches and bears the inscription "It contains the ashes of Mahatma
    Gandhi." 

    But some state authorities have called the claims that the box contains
    Gandhi's ashes a hoax. 

    Tuesday evening, the sealed wooden box was to be placed on a podium in
    a special railway carriage, which would then leave on a 19-hour train
    ride through four states to the banks of the mighty Ganges, the Hindu
    religion's most sacred river. 

    The ashes were to be immersed in the Ganges at Allahabad city on
    January 30, the 49th anniversary of the assassination of the Mahatma. 

    "In the wildest of my dreams, I never thought that I would be part of
    Bapuji's last rites," Gandhi's great grandson told Reuters, using a
    common term of endearment for the Mahatma. 

    The 38-year-old graphic artist said he was interested in entering
    politics. 

    "At the moment, I cannot identify myself with any political party," he
    said. "I'm doing this immersion as a responsibility toward my great
    grandfather. I will not use Gandhi's name as an entry into politics." 

    REUTER
7.315IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 10:0949
    RTos 28-Jan-97 23:11    

    French Railways Brace for Widespread Strike

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    PARIS (Reuter) - France's SNCF state railways said Tuesday a 36-hour
    strike against proposed government legislation could hit up to
    two-thirds of train services from Wednesday evening. 

    The strike, from Wednesday until Friday, could prove the most
    disruptive since 1995 when a stoppage by rail workers spread across the
    public sector and crippled the country for several weeks in November
    and December. 

    SNCF said Eurostar intercity train services through the Channel Tunnel
    from Paris and London and high-speed services to Belgium should run
    normally but intercity services within France could be reduced by 30 to
    70 percent. 

    The Communist-led CGT and Socialist CFDT unions, with a majority of the
    180,000 rail staff, have called the strike over a law which they say
    will break up the SNCF, threatening the rail monopoly and jobs. 

    Transport Minister Bernard Pons has proposed legislation which would
    create a state holding company to take over 132 billion francs ($23.67
    billion) in debt out of more than 200 billion ($35.86 billion) run up
    mainly in developing the SNCF's high-speed TGV train system. 

    But his plan to make the holding company the owner of the rail network
    and allow it to charge the SNCF to use the system has run into stiff
    resistance from the powerful CGT and CFDT. 

    Pons shelved the reform law in the face of union disquiet in November
    but has since vowed to push it through parliament with backing from
    other unions on grounds that the SNCF would otherwise buckle under its
    debts and soaring interest payments. 

    The CGT said Tuesday the national strike notice it issued last week had
    been heavily backed by members. CFDT spokesman Bruno Dalberto said he
    was expecting a big response from his union members. 

    In a separate development, the CGT and Force Ouvriere (FO) urban
    transport workers union called for a nationwide strike on the metro
    (underground railway), bus and other urban transit systems on February
    6 to press for shorter working hours and the lowering of the retirement
    age to 5 [I assume this is a typo and should be 55 - Jamie]

    REUTER
7.316IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:1352
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Tories defy Major over vote to bring back cane
    
    By Robert Shrimsley and George Jones 

    ALMOST 100 Tory MPs - close to half the party's backbenchers - defied
    the Government last night by backing an unsuccessful move to bring back
    caning in schools.

    Although the proposal was heavily defeated by a combination of
    ministerial and Labour votes, 101 MPs supported an amendment to allow
    the cane to be used with parental consent.

    Most of the move's supporters were Tories, including John Redwood,
    although four Ulster Unionists also backed the amendment. The proposal
    to restore caning was defeated by 376 votes to 101, a Government
    majority of 275. So great had been the demand for the re-introduction
    of the cane among Tory MPs that the Government had been forced to
    concede a free vote to its backbenchers in order to avoid a major
    revolt.

    It had been embarrassed last year after Gillian Shephard, Education and
    Employment Secretary, had admitted that she personally supported the
    re-introduction of corporal punishment. She was very publicly
    over-ruled by the Prime Minister. The scale of support for yesterday's
    amendment was a further shock for ministers, who had expected it to be
    no more than half its final tally.

    As the debate began, Tories lined up to support the re-introduction of
    corporal punishment. John Carlisle, MP for Luton North, talked of the
    deterrence value of a "good sound thrashing". 

    James Pawsey, chairman of the Tory backbench education committee,
    proposed the amendment to the Education Bill, saying that where a child
    had been so badly behaved as to face permanent exclusion from school,
    they could, as an alternative, be caned, if the parents gave their
    consent. Proposing the amendment, Mr Pawsey asked: "What does the
    greater damage to a child: exclusion or being caned? It is a powerful
    deterrent and . . . an aid to class discipline."

    But there were Tories equally forceful in their opposition to the
    proposals. Lady Olga Maitland called it barbaric to cane girls, and
    Patrick Nicholls mocked the entire amendment. For the Government, Eric
    Forth, education minister, hinted at his own instinctive support for
    the idea, saying that he opposed the amendments "with some regret".

    But he described both amendments as unworkable. He said Mr Pawsey's
    plan to allow caning with parental consent would create "two categories
    of children" and said those parents ready to sanction punishment were
    likely to be those whose children least required it. He said that there
    was not much proof that it worked as a deterrent.*
7.317IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:1876
7.318IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:19136
7.319IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2133
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    I didn't kill Naomi, says accused man

    THE man accused of murdering 15-year-old Naomi Smith said yesterday
    that he had not done it.

    Edwin Hopkins, 20, told Birmingham Crown Court that he had not seen
    Naomi on the night in September 1995 when she died. He said he had been
    drinking and playing a computer game at the home of his sister, Julie,
    in Ansley Common, Warks, where he and Naomi also lived.

    At about 9.30pm on Sept 14 he had gone on his bicycle to buy lager and
    crisps from an off-licence. He said the round-trip had taken about 30
    minutes, adding that he could not recall seeing anyone on the way.

    Hopkins's sister has told the court that he was gone longer than half
    an hour. She said he was away so long that she feared for his safety.
    She said that when he returned, he had changed his trainers, though
    Hopkins denied this.

    Naomi was murdered after going to post a letter for her mother
    Catherine. Her body was left under a slide on a recreation ground near
    their home. Her throat had been cut and she had been sexually
    assaulted. The court has heard that she left home at about 9.40pm, and
    was found later.

    James Hunt, QC, defending, referred to bite marks and DNA samples from
    saliva on Naomi's body which identified Hopkins. He asked the defendant
    what he had to say about it. Hopkins replied: "I have no explanation
    for it." Asked if he had killed Naomi, Hopkins said: "No, I did not."

    The case continues.
7.320IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2123
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Double killer who defied court gets life
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    A MAN who refused to attend his own trial was given two life sentences
    yesterday for the murders of a car dealer and his colleague.

    Terence Clifton, 26, beat Antonio Marocco, 48, to death with a wrench
    three weeks after agreeing a deal with him over a second-hand car. A
    few minutes earlier he had stabbed Mr Marocco's colleague, Paul
    Sandham, 29 times. 

    Clifton left the scene of the murders near Morecambe, Lancs, in a white
    MG Metro Turbo stolen from Mr Marocco's garage, TM Motors.

    Preston Crown Court heard that he probably killed them because he was
    dissatisfied with a Honda Prelude he accepted for his BMW.

    Clifton, a self-styled "Muslim proselyte and zealot", of Erith,
    south-east London, had to be carried to the dock and pinned down by six
    prison officers to be sentenced.
7.321IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2224
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Dog mauls pupils in playground
    
    By Carole Cadwalladr 

    SIX pupils and their headmaster were injured yesterday when they were
    attacked by a dog in their playground.

    The dog, a German shepherd, attacked boys playing football at St
    Peter's School in Jarrow, Tyne and Wear, shortly before 11am yesterday.
    Ian Thompson, the headmaster, tried to usher the children, aged between
    seven and 10, inside and was bitten on the leg. The boys suffered bites
    to their arms, legs and bodies.

    Mr Thompson, 51, said: The dog seemed fine at first but with all the
    excitement and noise its mood quickly changed and it started biting the
    children."

    Lesley Burn, 26, owner of the dog, called Fuhrer, said it would be put
    down. She said: "My husband is a bit of an Adolf Hitler fan so he named
    the dog after him. He gets on all right with my kids and when he goes
    out in the street he never touches anyone. He is a boisterous pup and
    he shouldn't have been out but the rent-collector left my gate open."
7.322IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2229
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Coroner calls for checks on doctors after baby's death

    THE death of a premature baby who was given a massive overdose of
    morphine prompted a coroner yesterday to call on the General Medical
    Council to require doctors to show "competence in basic arithmetic".

    Dr Hilary Evans, a junior doctor who prepared a dose 100 times greater
    than normal, wept as an open verdict was recorded on Louise Wood.
    Louise, a twin born two months prematurely, died at Rotherham District
    General Hospital in 1995 after being injected with 15 milligrams of
    morphine because of breathing difficulties. The correct dose would have
    been 0.15 milligrams.

    Stanley Cooper, the Rotherham coroner, said that although he believed
    that Louise's death was caused by the overdose, he could not say this
    was "beyond reasonable doubt", the test required for a verdict of
    unlawful death. He said: "It is not up to me to say what will be the
    professional future of Dr Hilary Evans but I strongly hope that she
    does not practise medicine again until she demonstrates competence in
    basic arithmetic."

    He said he would recommend to the GMC that no one go on the Medical
    Register until they demonstrated 'a tolerable ability'. He is also
    recommending that all drawing up of drugs should be double-checked.

    Dr Evans is now a senior house officer in psychiatry at the hospital
    following "rigorous" retraining after Louise's death.
7.323IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2646
7.324IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2741
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Vicar found dead after losing wife
    
    By A J McIlroy 

    A VICAR who was found drowned after his wife left him for another man
    sent her a letter containing his wedding ring on the day before he
    disappeared, an inquest was told yesterday.

    Peter Lewis, 56, a father of four, had told friends that he was
    shattered as his marriage of 28 years was over. His estranged wife,
    Christine, 52, had walked out of the vicarage in Little Paxton, Cambs,
    to live with a family friend and local magistrate.

    She said at an inquest in Huntingdon: "He stated his intention to carry
    on as vicar and stay in Little Paxton without me. He was coping quite
    well with the support of family and friends. I had left the house about
    three weeks previously. Over the last few years our relationship had
    deteriorated."

    Mr Lewis was found in a gravel pit. His border collie, Lark, sat on the
    bank as police recovered the body. Mr Lewis's youngest son, George, 15,
    raised the alarm when his father failed to take a carol service at
    church.

    Alfred Cousins, a churchwarden, told the inquest: "Prior to Peter's
    death, I was aware he had marital problems. He was low in spirits, but
    I believed he would get over his problems. He said he was beginning to
    pick up and that George had stopped crying, and that this was helping
    him."

    Dr Colin Lattimore, the deputy coroner, recorded a verdict of
    accidental death. Referring to the letter Mr Lewis wrote on the night
    before he died, he said: "He shows a degree of distress in his writing,
    and possibly anger, at what had happened.

    "I think, on the balance of probabilities, that he performed a
    deliberate act in going to the gravel pit and that he went in. I am not
    convinced beyond all reasonable doubt that the Rev Lewis took his own
    life."
7.325IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2827
7.326IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:2928
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Boy lost for words gives clue to how brain works
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    A 14-year-old boy of normal intelligence who is almost as poor at
    grammar as a three-year-old has provided new evidence of how the brain
    deals with language.

    A study of the boy, known as AZ, carried out at Birkbeck College,
    London, is to be presented at a conference on specific language
    impairment (SLI) to be held on Friday near Frankfurt, Germany.

    The condition affects 500,000 children in Britain, said Dr Heather van
    der Lely of Birkbeck, who studied AZ. "SLI affects reading and writing
    and hampers job prospects," she said..

    AZ's impairment suggests that grammatical ability is dominated by
    genetics, rather than upbringing. He can say individual words and
    construct simple sentences but consistently fails on a number of basic
    grammatical tasks.

    However, he does have a high IQ - of around 135 - suggesting
    dissociation between linguistic ability and other cognitive skills.
    This is strong evidence that AZ's deficit is language specific,
    suggesting that this cognitive skill was specialised before birth as a
    result of genetic factors.
7.327IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:3023
7.328IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:3040
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Open University challengers are older and wiser
    
    By Nigel Reynolds, Arts Correspondent 

    IN a triumph for grey power over callow youth, an Open University team
    has recorded what is believed to be the highest score in the 27-year
    history of University Challenge.

    The four-strong team, captained by a 50-year-old and including a
    72-year-old former pharmacist, the programme's oldest contestant, beat
    University of Wales, Swansea by 395-85. The first-round contest, shown
    on BBC2 on Monday night, was a spectacular humiliation for Swansea,
    whose team included a student called John Thick.

    The difference was not all down to age. Martin Heighway, 33, a
    Cambridge teaching graduate and science teacher at Cowplain School,
    Portsmouth, was consistently first to the buzzer with correct answers.
    "He was always there first. He was so fast," said team captain Mrs
    Harriet Courtney, an analyst programmer from Cheltenham, Glos, studying
    Earth Sciences. Other members were Ida Staples, 72, from Huntingdon,
    Cambs, who is studying for a BSc in Earth Sciences, and Mr Peter
    Bissett, 47, from Glasgow, who left school with one A-level but
    recently gained an arts BA.

    The Swansea team's shame was complete when they failed to answer the
    question: "To what tune is the hymn Guide Me, Oh, Thou Great Jehovah,
    normally sung?"

    "Don't know," replied Kevin Finn, the captain. "Cwm Rhondda," said the
    chairman Jeremy Paxman with a faintly-disguised sneer. "You of all
    people should know that."

    Paul Edwards, president of the Swansea students' union, said
    responsibility lay with the selection policy of his predecessor. "I
    think he chose the team by testing them from the Traveller's Book of
    Trivial Pursuits. We're blaming it on a mix-up. We sent the wrong team
    to University Challenge. They were supposed to be the team for
    Supermarket Sweep but we sent them to the wrong place."
7.329IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:3248
7.330IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:3242
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Annulments too easy, says Pope
    
    By Bruce Johnston and Victoria Combe 

    THE Pope has complained that marriage annulments are being given away
    too easily to Catholic couples experiencing the ordinary difficulties
    of married life.

    He told the Vatican's Sacred Rota tribunal - the Vatican court for
    annulments - to be more severe in its judgments and only to consider
    cases where there was a "real incapacity to carry out one's marital
    duties". He said he feared that tribunal judges were being influenced
    by the social trend of individualism and the growing perception of
    marriage as a mere contract.

    "The Canon law is only the expression of an underlying anthropological
    and theological reality," he said, adding that a subjective outlook of
    the world ignored Man's metaphysical nature. Couples, he said, had to
    accept that staying together meant making sacrifices and enduring times
    of unhappiness and strife.

    The Sacred Rota handles applications from all over the world which have
    not been resolved in the two compulsory hearings carried out in the
    dioceses. It has 814 cases outstanding.

    Thousands of cases are heard in Britain every year in closed marriage
    tribunals of three judges, usually priests who are qualified canon
    lawyers. Cases are only passed to the Vatican court if the judgment of
    the first hearing is in favour of annulment and the court of appeal -
    which happens automatically - comes out against.

    Annulments are particular to the Roman Catholic Church which does not
    recognise divorce and will only allow its faithful to remarry if they
    can prove that the sacrament of their existing marriage was invalid.

    The Rota has been too liberal in the Pope's eyes and in 1985 - the last
    year that records were published - it granted annulments to almost half
    the couples who applied. The reasons were not always convincing. One
    Italian couple's marriage was dissolved because they argued about
    politics. 
7.331IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Wed Jan 29 1997 17:3374
7.332IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:01101
    AP 30-Jan-1997 1:07 EST   REF6102

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, Jan. 30, 1997
   
    HUMAN RIGHTS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Human rights conditions worsened in several countries
    last year, including China, Nigeria, Cuba and Myanmar, according to a
    Clinton Administration report, The New York Times reports in Thursday's
    editions. The report says a general assessment of Russia's record was
    mixed. That was because the relatively free Russian presidential
    elections and the withdrawal of troops from Chechnya were offset by
    discrimination against minorities, uneven legal reforms, hazing of
    military recruits and a worsening of already harsh prison conditions,
    the report says. 
   
    OKLAHOMA BOMBING 

    DENVER (AP) -- The Justice Department says the man in the sketch of
    John Doe No. 2 in the Oklahoma City bombing case has been identified as
    an Army private who had no role in the attack. Prosecutors say Pvt.
    Todd Bunting rented a truck at a Junction City, Kan., body shop the day
    after suspect Timothy McVeigh rented the truck believed to have been
    used in the bombing, which killed 168 and injured more than 500.
    Prosecutors are still looking for another person who may have been with
    McVeigh. 
   
    SIMPSON TRIAL 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- The O.J. Simpson civil jury has adjourned
    after a second day of deliberations. The panel deliberated for two
    hours Tuesday, and for six hours Wednesday -- already more than twice
    as long as the jury that acquitted Simpson of murder 16 months ago. The
    jury must decide whether Simpson is financially liable in the June 12,
    1994, slashing deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. 
   
    COLON CANCER 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- An easy take-home test for colorectal cancer could
    lower the cost and unpleasantness that deter many Americans from being
    examined for the nation's second-leading cancer killer, say new medical
    guidelines being released this week. Taking those simple tests to
    detect blood in stool samples every year after age 50 could cut
    colorectal cancer deaths by a third, making them about as effective as
    mammograms are for breast cancer, say the guidelines, endorsed by the
    American Cancer Society and seven other medical groups. 
   
    COLOMBIA-BOMBING 

    BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- A bomb ripped apart the offices of a community
    association in downtown Medellin Wednesday, killing at least four,
    injuring 18, and hurling debris down onto passers-by in the street
    below. Police say they had no information on a possible motive.
    However, the association includes various nongovernmental groups that
    are struggling for control. 
   
    TWA OFFER 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A New Jersey-based investment group, teaming with
    Russia's second-largest airline, has offered to take control of
    struggling Trans World Airlines, USA Today reports for Thursday's
    editions. Transaero wants to use TWA to create a global airline, the
    Russian carrier's vice chairman, Gregory Gurtovoy, has told the
    newspaper. TWA spokesman John McDonald says he has no knowledge of the
    proposal. The report says representatives of Strategic Capital Group
    presented the plan to TWA's board at a meeting Tuesday. 
   
    AMERICA ONLINE 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- America Online has agreed to give refunds to customers
    unable to get online, offering cash or free online access to settle
    complaints that it sold people a product it couldn't reliably deliver.
    AOL also will cease advertising its high-volume online service in
    February and add a new disclaimer to ads saying that people may
    encounter delays logging on. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar is lower against the yen in early Thursday
    trading. Stock prices edged lower. In New York, the Dow snapped a
    five-day slide, gaining 84.65 to close at 6,750.74. 
   
    SHARKS-OILERS 

    EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) -- Andrei Kovalenko scored the game-winning goal
    late in the second period as the Edmonton Oilers won their third
    straight game with a 3-1 decision over the San Jose Sharks. Edmonton
    has won seven of its last 11 games while the Sharks suffered their
    third consecutive defeat. 
   
    PARCELLS-FUTURE 

    FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) -- If Bill Parcells wants to coach another NFL team
    in 1997, it must be on the New England Patriots' terms. Commissioner
    Paul Tagliabue's ruling in favor of New England owner Robert Kraft
    doesn't mean Parcells won't leave the team, but he must first get the
    Patriots' permission. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.333IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0192
    RTw  30-Jan-97 03:17    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON - The head of Japanese carmaker Toyota stirred up a pre-election
    row among Britain's ruling Conservatives by seeming to rule out
    building new factories in the country if it stayed out of Europe's
    single currency. The reported comments by Toyota president Hiroshi
    Okuda plunged the Conservatives into fresh arguments over Europe and
    whether Britain should sign up for the first stage of Economic and
    Monetary union (EMU) in 1999. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Leaders of Israel, the Palestinians, Egypt and Jordan will
    hold separate meetings with President Bill Clinton in the next two
    months, the White House announced. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Rebel fighters holding towns and territory in eastern Zaire
    are advancing towards the mineral-producing province of Shaba and
    Kalemie, home town of rebel leader Laurent Kabila, sources on both
    sides said. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Serbian opposition leaders vowed to persist in street
    protests against election fraud and dismissed any prospects of dialogue
    with President Slobodan Milosevic until his ruling Socialists
    reinstated the results of local polls. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Bulgaria's ruling Socialists appealed for talks with angry
    opposition parties to set a date for early elections, saying the Balkan
    country's political and economic crisis was "alarming, tense and
    explosive." 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Gulf War commander Norman Schwarzkopf said it was possible
    that allied carpet bombing exposed U.S. troops to Iraqi war gas, but
    said he got no report of any such exposure throughout the 1991 war. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration unveiled a plan to clear up
    about $1 billion in U.S. arrears to the United Nations but ran into
    criticism from Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jesse Helms. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - A U.S.-funded radio station will begin beaming short-wave
    broadcasts to Burma and Vietnam next month despite complaints from Asia
    that the news services represent propaganda and violate other nations'
    independence. Radio Free Asia, created by Congress as an Asian
    counterpart to the anti-communist Radio Free Europe and set up as a
    private corporation, will start service to Burma on February 4 and
    Vietnam on February 6. 

    - - - - 

    SANTA MONICA, California - Jurors in O.J. Simpson's civil trial
    deliberated for a full day without reaching a verdict. It took jurors
    in the criminal trial less than four hours in October 1995 to acquit
    Simpson of charges of murdering his ex-wife Nicole and a friend. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - A U.S. federal judge sentenced Vyacheslav Ivankov, 56, the
    reputed "Godfather" of Russian organised crime in the United States who
    was convicted of extortion and marriage fraud, to 115 months in prison. 

    - - - - 

    CHARLOTTE, North Carolina - Convicted serial killer Henry Louis Wallace
    was given nine death sentences -- one for each woman he confessed to
    strangling. The jury returned the recommendation of death after
    deliberating for four days. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - Blue-chip stocks rebounded sharply on Wednesday from their
    weeklong losing streak, propelling the market to its biggest rally in
    nearly four weeks. The Dow Jones industrial average ended up 84.66
    points at 6,740.74, its best gain since Jan. 3, when it surged 102
    points. 

    REUTER
7.334IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:01114
    RTw  30-Jan-97 06:18    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    To neighbours' dismay, Muscovite has 52 dogs 

    MOSCOW - Veronika Borash, 59, a retired engineer, has as many as 52
    dogs in her one-room apartment on the outskirts of Moscow and it can
    get a bit noisy at times. 

    Her neighbours hate her for it and are not shy about expressing their
    feelings. 

    "At 2 a.m. everybody in the building is awoken by her dogs!" one
    neighbour complained aloud as Borash passed by to enter her apartment
    building. 

    Borash has made her apartment into a kennel for stray dogs and says
    they are like family. She seems not to notice the overpowering stench
    or the tiny insects that have taken hold. 

    Many of the dogs sleep on the bottom two rungs of a three-level bunk
    bed and she devotedly collects leftovers from local schools to feed
    them. 

    As Muscovites have suffered through tough economic times, the number of
    stray animals has risen and it has devolved on animal lovers to take in
    the rejects or find them new homes. 

    When takers are few, the number of dogs grow in the home kennels. Last
    summer Borash had as many as 114 dogs. 

    - - - - 

    NY man accused of hiding lottery winnings 

    CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. - A New York man, whose colleagues trusted him to
    buy their weekly lottery tickets, was accused on Wednesday of winning
    more than $700,000 and not sharing the news -- or the money -- with his
    co-workers. 

    Hector Ospina, who bought one of five winning tickets in the state's
    Dec. 21, 1996, Lotto drawing, faces charges of grand larceny and up to
    25 years in prison if convicted. 

    Nine of Ospina's co-workers at an Estee Lauder factory in suburban
    Melville, New York, gave him $5 apiece to buy lottery tickets each
    week, authorities said. 

    He bought 10 tickets for the Dec. 21 drawing and won $1.4 million which
    he split with a friend, authorities said. 

    But he told some co-workers he hadn't bought any tickets, and he told
    others he used his own money, authorities said. 

    When Ospina was arrested at his home in Huntington, New York, late on
    Tuesday, he was carrying an airplane ticket for a Wednesday flight to
    Colombia in his pocket, authorities said. 

    - - - - 

    Suspected car thief rescued from U.S. river 

    ELLICOTT CITY, Md. - A suspected car thief was hoisted to safety by
    daring rescuers off a tiny river island in Maryland on Wednesday after
    five hours of battling hypothermia, police said. 

    Police in Howard County, Maryland, outside Baltimore, said four
    suspects, including the driver, David Cook, 22, had fled from a stolen
    car after running into a dead-end street during a police chase early on
    Wednesday. 

    Although two suspects were immediately arrested, the other two got
    away. But police soon got a call that a man, who turned out to be Cook,
    was trapped on the island in Potapsco River and yelling for help. 

    Howard County Police Sergeant Dave Richards said a police officer and a
    fire fighter tried to wade out to Cook in cold, turbulent waters. 

    The officer made it but the firefighter got caught in the rope
    underwater, was cut free, and then floated downstream for about a
    quarter of mile until he was pulled out unconscious, said county Fire
    and Rescue Lieutenant Chris Cangemi. 

    Five hours later, Cook was hand-pulled across the river with a rope
    before he was taken into custody. 

    - - - - 

    Man wins C$250,000 after flu mistaken for cancer 

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia - A Canadian man won $246,500 Canadian
    ($182,600 U.S.) in damages after his doctor misdiagnosed an apparent
    case of the flu as terminal cancer, the man's lawyer said on Wednesday. 

    British Columbia Supreme Court awarded the damages to David McBeth, a
    55-year-old former ship fitter from Vancouver, against Dr. Werner
    Boldt, lawyer Derek Miura said. 

    Boldt, a hematologist, told McBeth in 1991 that he suffered from a rare
    bone marrow cancer and put McBeth on an experimental cancer drug that
    resulted in rashes, weight loss and other side effects. 

    After further testing a year later, it was discovered McBeth never had
    the disease, Miura said. Evidence presented at the trial showed Boldt
    did not follow standard testing procedures when he made the original
    diagnosis, he said. 

    REUTER
7.335IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0140
    AP 30-Jan-1997 0:14 EST   REF6076

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Environmental Group Targets Ohio

    By JOHN McCARTHY

    Associated Press Writer

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- A coalition of environmental advocates has asked
    the federal government to step in and enforce clean air and hazardous
    waste laws in Ohio. 

    The coalition, which includes Rivers Unlimited and the Sierra Club,
    said the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency cannot do the job since
    the Legislature passed the environmental audits bill late last year. 

    The new law allows companies to keep from the public certain records
    related to cleaning up environmental problems if they do the job
    themselves. It also offers those companies immunity from certain EPA
    penalties. 

    "Passage of the pollution secrecy act in Ohio places our state among
    the leaders in the race to the bottom to eliminate environmental
    safeguards designed to keep polluters in check," said Jeff Skelding,
    executive director of Rivers Unlimited. 

    Skelding was joined at a news conference by other members of the
    coalition and Cincinnati lawyer David Altman, who sent the petition to
    the federal Environmental Protection Agency. 

    Altman said groups in other states, including Colorado, Michigan, Idaho
    and Texas, are considering similar petitions. 

    The Ohio and federal EPA offices did not immediately return calls
    seeking comment. 

    Mike Dawson, a spokesman for Gov. George Voinovich, said the new Ohio
    law had no effect on the EPA's capacity to enforce the law. 
7.336IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0225
    AP 30-Jan-1997 0:02 EST   REF5662

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Drugs, Fast Food Connection

    MONROE, Conn. (AP) -- A McDonald's employee was arrested for allegedly
    dealing marijuana through the drive-through window, taking orders with
    a beeper and handing out the drugs along with hamburgers and fries. 

    Mence Powell, 19, of Monroe, was arrested Monday on charges including
    selling the drug within 1,500 feet of a school. The corporate-owned
    McDonald's where he worked is across the street from an elementary
    school. 

    "You drive up to a window and you place your order, whether it be a Big
    Mac or a Quarter Pounder with cheese, and he would put a quantity of
    marijuana in the bag," Officer Daniel Brennan explained Wednesday. "If
    they did not order any food, he would put it in a Happy Meal." 

    Powell was being held in lieu of $20,000 bond Wednesday. McDonald's
    said it suspended him from his job. 

    "Obviously, this is something we will just not tolerate," said Jane
    Hulbert, a spokeswoman at the chain's headquarters in Oak Brook, Ill. 
7.337IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0228
    AP 30-Jan-1997 0:00 EST   REF5657

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Suspected Illegal Aliens Nabbed

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal agents arrested 19 suspected illegal
    immigrants in a pre-dawn raid Wednesday on the new football stadium
    being built in suburban Maryland by the Washington Redskins. 

    The workers -- from Mexico, Bolivia and El Salvador -- were taken to
    Baltimore and held at an Immigration and Naturalization Service
    detention facility, said INS spokesman John Shallman. 

    The workers will be allowed to leave the U.S. voluntarily and return to
    their native countries, Shallman said. Those who don't voluntarily face
    deportation, he said. 

    Clark Construction Co., the contractor for the 78,660-seat stadium,
    said it had not knowingly hired illegal immigrants and was cooperating
    fully with the INS. 

    Penalties for hiring an unauthorized worker can range from $250 to
    $2,000 per worker. Penalties for verification violations range from
    $100 to $1,000 per worker. 

    Clark employs 175 of the 600 workers building the stadium. About 20
    subcontractors also are involved in the stadium construction. 
7.338IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0228
    AP 29-Jan-1997 23:59 EST   REF5626

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Gas Leak Causes Fla. Mall Blast

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Two workers at a restaurant in an outlet mall
    accidentally opened a gas valve, sparking an explosion Wednesday night
    that sent hundreds of panicked shoppers fleeing the building. 

    The two workers were in critical condition at Orlando Regional Medical
    Center. Their names were not released. There were no other injuries
    reported. 

    Through the smoke, shoppers at Belz Factory Outlet World saw one worker
    at the Sbarro Italian Eatery with her clothes on fire. 

    "It seemed like it lasted forever and you couldn't do anything for
    her," said Jennifer Croening, an employee at the shop next door, told
    The Orlando Sentinel for Thursday's paper. 

    A restaurant worker who was cleaning near the oven knocked open a valve
    on a gas pipe that wasn't connected to anything. A second worker opened
    a hot oven to check on a food order, igniting a fireball. 

    "It was accidental," said Randy Tuten, assistant chief of Orlando Fire
    Department. "You had people trying to do their jobs as best they
    could." 
7.339IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0254
    AP 29-Jan-1997 23:57 EST   REF5590

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Blood In Olympic Bomb Probe

    By LEONARD PALLATS

    Associated Press Writer

    ATLANTA (AP) -- The head of the FBI's Chicago office has been brought
    in to handle the Olympic Park bombing investigation, a common practice
    in high-profile cases and not a sign of dissatisfaction with the
    Atlanta bureau, Assistant FBI Director Robert Bryant said Wednesday. 

    "It's common with major investigations to send in an inspector to give
    his total effort to the case and assist the local office," Bryant said. 

    The Jan. 16 bombing at an abortion clinic in Atlanta that injured seven
    spurred the decision to reassign Jack Dalton from Chicago to the
    Olympic bombing case, Bryant said. 

    A federal law enforcement official who requested anonymity described
    Dalton as "a hard charger, and the director wanted someone who had
    nothing else to worry about." 

    Woody Johnson, in charge of the Atlanta office, remains responsible for
    the office's other cases. 

    Bryant said 100 FBI employees are still working on the July 27 Olympic
    bombing, which killed one and injured more than 100, and a somewhat
    smaller number are assigned to the abortion clinic blasts that injured
    seven. No arrests have been made in either case. 

    Appointing an outside agent to take charge of a major investigation is
    not unusual for the FBI, Bryant said, pointing to major civil rights
    investigations in the 1960s and other cases in the 1980s, including the
    killing of two federal judges, one in Texas and the other in Alabama. 

    On Tuesday, ABC's "World News Tonight" interviewed an Atlanta architect
    who claims to have seen a man carrying two knapsacks in his hand and
    one on his back in Centennial Olympic Park before the bombing. He said
    the man resembles one of three men later arrested in a series of
    bombings at Spokane, Wash. 

    A federal law enforcement official who requested anonymity said FBI
    agents in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday interviewed the architect's
    daughter, who was with her father in the park about an hour before the
    bomb exploded. 

    She was shown pictures of a backpack believed to be similar to the one
    that held the Olympic bomb. The pictures had been released at a news
    conference last late year. The official said her answers were
    inconclusive. 
7.340IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0260
    AP 29-Jan-1997 23:54 EST   REF5563

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Student Cracks High-Level Code

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- It's the most secure encryption code the United
    States has allowed to be exported -- and it took a graduate student
    only 3 1/2 hours to break it, industry officials said Wednesday. 

    "It shows you that any kid with access to computers can crack this kind
    of cryptography," said RSA Data Security Inc. spokesman Kurt
    Stammberger, whose company had offered the challenge. "The cryptography
    software that you are allowed to export is so weak as to be useless." 

    The company put its challenge on the Internet Monday, offering $50,000
    in prizes to crack various levels of encryption codes with electronic
    key lengths ranging from 40 to 256 bits. 

    The federal government, worried about security, has barred exports of
    codes higher than 40 bits. Devices with larger numbers of bits are
    stronger and harder to decode. 

    Last month, the Clinton administration began allowing companies to
    export encryption devices with 56-bit keys -- but only if they have a
    way for law enforcement officials to crack the code and intercept the
    communications. Most computer companies have rejected that demand. 

    Meanwhile, Ian Goldberg, a University of California-Berkeley graduate
    student, took on RSA Data Security's challenge by linking together 250
    idle workstations that allowed him to test 100 billion possible "keys"
    per hour. 

    That's like trying every possible combination for a safe at high speed,
    and many students and employees of large companies have access to such
    computational power, the school said. 

    In 3 1/2 hours, Goldberg had decoded the message, which read, "This is
    why you should use a longer key." 

    Goldberg, who won $1,000 with his effort, says the moral is clear. 

    "This is the final proof of what we've known for years -- 40-bit
    encryption technology is obsolete," the student said. 

    That puts software exporters in a quandary, said Stammberger. 

    Almost all business software now requires built-in encryption, a
    necessity for any company doing business over the Internet. 

    But no one will buy U.S. software that can be cracked by a student in 3
    1/2 hours, he said. 

    "You're talking about the U.S. giving up its global dominance in
    software because of some outdated Cold War spy agencies," Stammberger
    said. "People in the industry are pretty angry ... The market is
    enormous, literally in the hundreds of billions of dollars." 

    As of Wednesday afternoon, no one had broken any of the codes higher
    than 40 bits, Stammberger said. 
7.341IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0248
    AP 29-Jan-1997 23:16 EST   REF5496

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Victory for Alabama Inmates

    By JESSICA SAUNDERS

    Associated Press Writer

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -- A federal magistrate Wednesday ruled against
    Alabama's use of "hitching posts" to restrain prison inmates, rejecting
    the state's claim that it wasn't intended as punishment. 

    "Short of death by electrocution, the hitching post may be the most
    painful and tortuous punishment administered by the Alabama prison
    system," U.S. Magistrate Vanzetta Penn McPherson wrote. 

    The decision settles the last remaining practice cited in a lawsuit
    challenging Alabama's 1995 return to chain gangs as illegally cruel. 

    In June, inmates' lawyers, state prison officials and Gov. Fob James
    agreed that prisoners will continue to work with chained legs but will
    not be chained to other inmates. 

    The chest-high silver rails known as hitching posts have been used at
    Alabama prisons since 1986 to detain inmates who refused to work. The
    practice had been challenged unsuccessfully before the prison system
    revived chain gangs amid international attention. 

    "In the absence of physically violent behavior which threatens the
    safety of officers or other inmates, it is excessive to shackle a man
    by his arms and legs to a post for several hours ... in the heat of the
    Alabama sun because he announces his refusal to work, sits down at work
    or disobeys an officer's direct order to work," McPherson said. 

    Rhonda Brownstein, an attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center,
    which sued to block the chain gangs, said several prisoners were forced
    to defecate and urinate in their pants and were teased by guards and
    other inmates. 

    The state Department of Corrections plans to file an objection to
    McPherson's recommendation, which goes to a federal judge for final
    review. 

    Alabama became the first state to revive chain gangs in May 1995.
    Florida, Arizona, Wisconsin and Iowa have adopted forms of the
    leg-ironed work crews. 
7.342IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0222
    AP 29-Jan-1997 21:45 EST   REF6063

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Plane Skids Off JFK Runway

    NEW YORK (AP) -- An Air China jumbo jet landing at Kennedy
    International Airport Wednesday night skidded off a runway before
    coming to rest in a grassy area between landing strips, police said. No
    one was reported injured. 

    The plane, with 197 people on board, was landing at 8:40 p.m when it
    slid off the runway, into the grassy area where it became stuck in mud,
    said Sgt. John Mariano, a Port Authority police spokesman. 

    The Boeing 747's emergency escape chutes were not deployed, Marino
    said. A that a stair truck was dispatched to remove passengers from the
    plane, he added. 

    Marino did not know where the flight originated. 

    No further details were immediately available. 
7.343IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0296
    AP 29-Jan-1997 20:51 EST   REF6035

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saddam Puts Wife Under Arrest

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Saddam Hussein put one of his wives under house
    arrest after she opposed his plan to forgive the killers of his two
    sons-in-law, Iraqi dissidents said Wednesday. 

    Saddam has also ordered training exercises for his troops and is
    pondering invading Kuwait again, a senior U.S. military officer said in
    Washington, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

    National Security Adviser Sandy Berger later confirmed that Iraq has
    been conducting military exercises, but presidential spokesman Mike
    McCurry said he was unaware "of anything that would suggest any
    offensive designs." 

    The Iraqi president increasingly has relied on a dwindling inner circle
    of close family members since the end of the Persian Gulf War, when a
    U.S.-led alliance forced him to withdraw his troops from Kuwait.

    Dissidents say he wants relatives of his sons-in-law to forgive the
    killers as a way of reuniting his feuding clan. But Sajida Talfah,
    Saddam's first wife, insisted that those who took part in the killings
    must be punished before there can be a family reconciliation, the
    dissidents said. 

    McCurry said Wednesday there appeared to be "complicated internal
    struggles for power" going on in Iraq, citing as evidence an attempt
    last month on the life of Saddam's eldest son and heir apparent, Odai. 

    Odai appeared on Iraqi television Wednesday night, lying on his
    hospital bed while chatting with senior government officials.
    Television footage of the reception at Ibn Sina hospital was shown on
    Youth Television, the TV station owned and run by Odai. 

    Odai, in his early 30s, was wearing a white hospital shirt. He was
    moving his right arm freely, but there was no visible movement in his
    left arm. 

    The U.S. military official in Washington said Odai may be paralyzed and
    could lose a leg to gangrene. 

    The house arrest of Saddam's first wife apparently is linked to the
    deaths of Lt. Gen. Hussein Kamel al-Majid and his brother Saddam. They
    were killed by family members after returning to Iraq in February from
    Jordan, where they had defected. 

    Hussein Kamel al-Majid had been in charge of Iraq's secret weapons
    program and Saddam Kamel al-Majid was deputy head of the Iraqi leader's
    palace guard. They were married to Saddam's daughters Raghda and Rana,
    and their defection was a major embarrassment to his regime. 

    At the time, Saddam blessed the killings and called the two men
    traitors. 

    Haroun Mohammed, a spokesman for the Iraqi National Accord, a dissident
    group based in Jordan, said Saddam now hoped to repair the brothers'
    reputations and forgive their killers as a way to unite his clan. 

    Mohammed said Saddam decided to give the al-Majid family the equivalent
    of $750,000 in blood money so the killers of his sons-in-law could be
    forgiven. 

    According to Islamic law, blood money should be paid by the killer to
    the family of the victims to ask forgiveness. Families who refuse the
    money usually seek revenge. 

    Mohammed said Sajida has insisted that all those who participated in
    the slayings must be punished. 

    Sajida is Odai's mother. He once reportedly bludgeoned a servant to
    death in 1988 to defend his mother's honor, because the servant was
    arranging romantic liaisons for his father. 

    Saddam and Sajida have another son and three daughters. Since the
    slayings, Sajida and her two daughters have reportedly had a falling
    out with Saddam. 

    Saddam is believed to have married a second wife, whom he has since
    divorced, and then to have taken another wife. 

    The senior U.S. military officer, speaking Tuesday with Pentagon
    reporters on condition of anonymity, quoted unidentified intelligence
    sources as saying Saddam "comes in every morning and makes a decision"
    on whether his forces should move toward Kuwait. 

    He said Iraq's air and ground forces have maintained a rapid pace of
    training over the past several weeks, presumably to educate new
    commanders put in place after a recent military purge. 

    American planes patrol southern Iraq to enforce a "no-fly" zone set up
    after the Gulf War to protect Shiite Muslims, and would presumably be
    immediately aware of any Iraqi move toward Kuwait. 
7.344IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0346
    AP 29-Jan-1997 20:48 EST   REF6031

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Historic Newspapers Given Away

    LONDON (AP) -- The British Library is offering up tens of thousands of
    foreign newspapers dating back to coverage of the Crimean War,
    thrilling historians elsewhere in Europe. 

    After making sure it has microfilm copies of the newspapers, the
    library is cleaning house -- literally. Newspapers, especially when
    printed on the cheapest wood-pulp paper, are difficult to keep in good
    condition even when they are bound. 

    "They first start to go at the edges and at the end of a day the floors
    around the readers' desks tend to look as if confetti had been
    dropped," said Stephen Lester, collections officer at the library's
    newspaper collection in north London. 

    The newspapers are all printed in European languages after 1850, a
    decade whose big news included the Crimean War and the famed charge of
    the Light Brigade. They are first being offered free to the national
    libraries in the countries of publication, although takers will have to
    pay the shipping costs. 

    Among the first to benefit when microfilming started was the Prussian
    State Library in Berlin, which sent two large trucks to collect German
    newspapers. German libraries and newspaper companies lost many files in
    World War II. 

    Belgium's National Library was also eager. "They wanted to collect
    right away," Lester said. 

    Any papers not claimed by libraries will be offered to dealers, and any
    left after that will be pulped. 

    Old newspapers have become big business in recent years, with dealers
    charging up to $40 for a copy issued on the buyer's birth date.

    The Newspaper Library holds more than 100,000 newspaper titles in
    Western languages going back to the 17th century. Oriental titles are
    kept separately by the parent British Library. 

    All pre-1850 newspapers in the library are being retained whether or
    not they are on microfilm. 
7.345IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0337
    AP 29-Jan-1997 20:43 EST   REF6022

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    40-Year-Old Message Delivered

    ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) -- A disgruntled crew of mountain climbers
    repairing the spire of a historic cathedral concealed their written
    complaints inside the bronze figure of an angel, 400 feet above the
    ground. 

    Nearly 40 years later, another crew of climbers discovered the letter,
    hidden in a lemonade bottle inside the weather vane, The Moscow Times
    reported Wednesday. 

    "The job is done badly because the bosses did not care about us," the
    letter said. "They paid little. The deadlines were short." 

    The first team was sent to the top of the spire above St. Petersburg's
    Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul in 1957 to repair the angel's gold
    leaf and the weather vane mechanism. 

    In their letter to "future climbers," the six workers complained that a
    strict deadline imposed by city authorities made it impossible to
    remove the 12-foot-high angel and make the repairs on the ground. 

    In 1991, the second set of climbers scaled the spire to remove the
    angel for restoration. While dismantling the figure, they discovered
    the hidden lemonade bottle, the English-language daily said. 

    Taken with the idea of using the angel as a messenger, the contemporary
    climbers hid their own message in a bottle in the angel when they
    replaced it in 1995. 

    Elvira Degmirova, a spokeswoman for the Peter and Paul Fortress, where
    the cathedral is located, said the contents of the second letter will
    remain a secret until the next time the figure is dismantled. 
7.346IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0350
    AP 29-Jan-1997 17:01 EST   REF5239

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Medical Journal Backs Marijuana

    By DANIEL Q. HANEY

    AP Medical Editor

    BOSTON (AP) -- The New England Journal of Medicine has come out in
    favor of allowing doctors to prescribe marijuana for medical purposes,
    calling the threat of government sanctions "misguided, heavy-handed and
    inhumane." 

    "Whatever their reasons, federal officials are out of step with the
    public," Dr. Jerome P. Kassirer, the journal's editor, wrote in an
    editorial in Thursday's issue. The journal is one of the world's most
    prestigious medical publications. 

    After voters in Arizona and California passed propositions letting
    doctors prescribe pot for medical uses, Attorney General Janet Reno
    said doctors who do this could lose their prescription-writing
    privileges, be excluded from Medicare and Medicaid and even be
    prosecuted. 

    Some doctors believe marijuana can relieve internal eye pressure in
    glaucoma, control nausea in cancer patients on chemotherapy and combat
    the severe weight loss seen in AIDS patients. However, administration
    officials note that such uses of marijuana have not been proved. 

    Kassirer said marijuana is safer than some drugs used legally for some
    of the same conditions, such as morphine. 

    Furthermore, he said experiments to prove marijuana's value would be
    hard to do because of the difficulty of measuring nausea and other such
    sensations. 

    "What really counts for a therapy with this kind of safety margin is
    whether a seriously ill patient feels relief as a result of the
    intervention, not whether a controlled trial 'proves' its efficacy,"
    Kassirer wrote. 

    In a written response, retired Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey, director of
    the Office of National Drug Policy, said marijuana might someday be
    approved for specific medical purposes. 

    "But up to this point, smoke is not a medicine," McCaffrey said. "Other
    treatments have been deemed safer and more effective than a
    psychoactive burning carcinogen self-induced through one's throat." 
7.347IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0348
    RTw  30-Jan-97 05:59    

    Researchers explore surgery cure for stutterers

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuter) - Researchers are exploring the use of brain
    surgery to cure stutterers, the New Scientist magazine reported on
    Thursday. 

    It said scientists at the University of Texas in San Antonio would run
    tests this year aimed at interrupting the faulty circuit in the brain
    they think causes stuttering. 

    "They will start by temporarily paralysing parts of the brain with
    localised magnetic pulses. If that goes to plan, they may try something
    more permanent -- brain surgery," the magazine said. 

    When a stutterer stumbles over words, the brain functions in an unusual
    way. Regions switch on that are supposed to be dormant and connections
    are made when there are supposed to be none. Stuttering may therefore
    lend itself well to the treatment since it can be switched on and off
    easily, said the New Scientist. 

    Neurosurgery could also be used to help conditions as diverse as
    migraine, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder, it said. 

    "Such treatments are still highly experimental. It could be some years
    before the first operation for stuttering is actually performed. But
    the pendulum that swung away from the idea of surgical intervention for
    neurological diseases over the past few decades is now swinging back,"
    the magazine quoted neurologist Mahlon DeLong as saying. 

    Despite the huge potential, some scientists remain uneasy about brain
    surgery, saying it is too radical to remove part of the brain for
    disorders such as stuttering. 

    The team says it is proceeding with extreme caution as it begins the
    preliminary tests on stutterers this year. 

    "It's a long way from finding the pieces that make up the puzzle to
    understanding how they all fit together -- let alone which pieces you
    can take away to improve the picture," said the New Scientist. 

    "Before they can contemplate surgery, the scientists have to work out
    where to intervene." 

    REUTER
7.348IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0353
    RTw  30-Jan-97 02:13    

    Fuel of the future lies locked in the earth

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Jan 29 (Reuter) - American scientists said on Wednesday that
    they had found a tantalising new energy source in vast stores of
    methane locked beneath the ocean floor. 

    Writing in the science journal Nature, the scientists said they had
    found a reservoir of methane in the form of a solid gas hydrate
    equivalent to around 15 billion tonnes of carbon at Blake ridge in the
    Western Atlantic. 

    Underneath that, to their surprise, they found the same amount or even
    more methane in the form of gas bubbles amid the sediment. 

    "The 35 billion tonnes of methane carbon on the Blake ridge is a
    quantity of methane that could meet the 1996 United States' natural gas
    consumption rate for the next 105 years," said Gerald Dickens of the
    University of Michigan. 

    Theoretically, methane in hydrate form could be used as natural gas.
    Unfortunately, the scientists have not yet found a way of getting the
    methane out of the earth in a useable form. 

    At the low temperatures and high pressure under the surface of the
    earth, the methane stays in solid hydrate form, which looks much like
    ice. 

    But when it is raised to the surface, the higher temperature and lower
    pressure make the hydrates melt. 

    Dickens said he and his team probably lost about 99 percent of the
    hydrate from the sediment cores they drilled out in their
    investigations at Blake ridge. 

    "It will take some technological advances before hydrate can be
    recovered economically," he told Reuters. 

    Nevertheless, he said the team's investigations indicated that methane
    reserves could make up the earth's biggest store of fossil fuel. 

    Previous surveys had concentrated on the amount of methane stored in
    hydrate deposits, but the team's findings suggest that there is at
    least as much again stored in free gas beneath the hydrate zone. 

    "The distribution of methane in a hydrate reservoir can be
    enormous...we had assumed that most of the methane was as hydrate and
    not as bubbles," said Dickens.

    REUTER
7.349IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0341
    RTw  30-Jan-97 01:51    

    Internet as good as classroom for learning - study

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuter) - Students learning on the Internet can do as
    well as or better than pupils in a conventional classroom, a British
    scientific journal reported on Thursday. 

    New Scientist magazine said an experiment with 33 sociology students at
    a U.S. university found that students who learned on the Internet
    scored 20 percent higher in examinations than those taught in the
    classroom. 

    Jerald Schutte, a professor at California State University in
    Northridge, found after dividing his statistics class into two groups
    -- traditional and online -- that the online group also spent more time
    on classwork, understood the material better and collaborated more. 

    None of the students knew they were part of an experiment. 

    "I would say the collaboration resulted from the panic of having no
    face-to-face interaction," Schutte told the magazine. 

    The traditional group was taught each Saturday for 14 weeks while the
    online students only met for examinations at the beginning and the end
    of the course. But the Internet students used electronic mail to
    collaborate in groups and had weekly discussions on the Internet with
    Schutte. 

    He stressed that his class was just a small experiment and larger
    studies on the benefits or drawbacks of learning on the Internet are
    now needed. 

    "We believe you can't dispense with the intervention of a teacher, at
    least in schools, though the results are perfectly plausible for
    university-age students," Jeff Morgan, director of communications at
    the UK National Council of Educational Technology, told New Scientist.

    REUTER
7.350IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 10:0369
    RTw  29-Jan-97 21:25    

    Researchers find gene that helps grow nerves

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, Jan 29 (Reuter) - A gene that can help tumours grow could be
    put to good use to re-grow damaged nerves, offering hope to millions of
    people paralysed by damaged spinal cords, U.S. researchers reported on
    Wednesday. 

    The gene, bcl-2, is normally suppressed by chemicals in the body. But
    the researchers, reporting in the scientific journal Nature, said it
    could possibly be turned back on. 

    Susumu Tonegawa, Dong Feng Chen and colleagues at the Massachusetts
    Institute of Technology (MIT), working with Glaxo's Institute for
    Molecular Biology, bred two kinds of mice -- one lacking the gene, and
    one genetically engineered to have an extraordinarily active gene. 

    The bcl-2 gene directs cells to produce a protein that is known to
    interfere with apoptosis, the "voluntary" suicide by old or damaged
    cells. When this fails to happen and cells keep on dividing out of
    control, it can be a first step to cancer. 

    Tonegawa's group found bcl-2 also helped regenerate axons in the
    retina, both in test tubes and in laboratory mice. Axons are the long
    threadlike arms that link neurons -- brain cells and nerve cells. 

    "We believe this applies to all of the neurons in the central nervous
    system, including not only the brain, but also the spinal cord,"
    Tonegawa, director of MIT's centre for learning and memory, said in a
    telephone interview. 

    The mice genetically engineered to lack the gene had 80 percent fewer
    retinal axons than normal mice, even at the embryonic stage. 

    In the other group of mice, expression of bcl-2 protein was high all
    their lives, and experiments showed their neurons re-generated. 

    "We believe that the level of expression of bcl-2 is essential in
    dictating ability to re-generate," Tonegawa said. 

    "In normal animals, and also probably in humans, expression of bcl-2 is
    high in the embryonic stage but it becomes low around the time of
    birth." 

    If chemicals could be found that allowed the body to keep bcl-2 turned
    on, they could help repair damaged nerves, he said. 

    "It provides a basis for the design of new therapeutic strategies for
    treatment of brain and spinal injuries, as well as many
    neurodegenerative diseases," the report in Nature added. 

    Gene therapy was a distant possibility, Tonegawa added. What his group
    would pursue was finding drugs that helped control production of bcl-2. 

    This would best be done locally, as turning the gene on all over the
    body could result in tumours. Doctors would want only a very localised
    effect. 

    "Our goal will be to temporarily and regionally in the brain or where
    the injury occurred, to boost the expression of bcl-2," Tonegawa said.
    Each year, 700 people in Britain and 10,000 people in the United States
    injure their spinal cords. 

    REUTER
7.351IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:3777
7.352IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:3739
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Blair backs Holocaust denial law
    
    By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent 

    TONY Blair yesterday backed moves to create a criminal offence of
    denying the Holocaust.

    The Labour leader said he saw a "very strong case" for making it
    illegal to say that Hitler's extermination of six million Jews did not
    take place. Opening an exhibition dedicated to Anne Frank, Mr Blair
    pledged that a Labour government would give "active consideration"
    towards legislation.

    His comments came as a cross-party backbench Bill to create an offence
    of Holocaust denial cleared its first Commons hurdle. The Bill,
    introduced by Mike Gapes, Labour MP for Ilford South, received an
    unopposed First Reading but lack of Commons time means it is unlikely
    to pass into law. The Bill could lead to the imprisonment of those who
    publish material denying the existence of the death camps.

    Mr Gapes said there was a loophole in the law which banned material
    likely to incite racial violence or hatred because no one had been
    prosecuted for debying the Holocaust. He said: "We are told that though
    this material is offensive it is not insulting." He said there were
    laws against Holocaust denial in many other nations, and rejected
    criticism that the move infringed free speech. 

    Mr Blair's visit to the Anne Frank exhibition at Southwark Cathedral,
    south London, marked the 50th anniversary of the publication of the
    teenager's diary. Anne Frank recorded how she, her elder sister,
    Margot, her parents, Otto and Edith, another family and a dentist hid
    from the Nazis in the attic of a house in Amsterdam. Two years later
    those in the annexe were sent to concentration camps where Anne, her
    sister, and mother died.

    The Reform Synagogues of Great Britain welcomed the Bill, saying that
    those who denied the Holocaust "wish to rehabilitate fascism".
7.353IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:3863
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Scientists hunt 60ft leviathan of seamen's legends
    
    By Paul Chapman in Wellington 

    A TEAM of scientists and adventurers are about to set sail in quest of
    the giant squid, a monster of mythological proportions and one of the
    last great ocean mysteries.

    The international group will shortly leave Wellington on a six-week
    trip to waters over the deep trenches off New Zealand's South Island.
    The squid is a leviathan, believed to measure more than 60ft in length,
    with eyes as big as dinner plates and a powerful, bird-like beak. It
    has tentacles as big as tree trunks and covered with suction cups. It
    is the largest aquatic invertebrate and is believed to weigh up to two
    tons.

    Although the creature has been woven into seafarers' tales for
    centuries, the only giant squid with which scientists have had close
    encounters are dead ones. There has never been a recorded sighting of a
    live one. Seafarers' accounts have become the stuff of legend: the
    fabulous sea monster Kraken, which was said to have dragged down ships
    off Norway; the behemoth with which Jules Verne's Captain Nemo did
    battle in the submarine Nautilus; and the creatures encountered in
    Herman Melville's Moby Dick.

    The two-boat expedition, sponsored by National Geographic magazine and
    television productions, will be using the latest equipment. Undersea
    digital video cameras with canisters of slow-release fishbait attached
    will be suspended from the boats. The cameras can be lowered 10,000ft,
    although the expedition organisers are hoping to find squid at only
    1,000ft below the surface. A computer-directed submersible built by the
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology will also be used.

    The waters off Kaikoura are a feeding ground for whales, among the few
    creatures prepared to do battle with the giant squid, on which they
    prey. In a controversial move, further cameras called Crittercams will
    be attached to some of the whales using tags and biodegradable straps.

    One of the expedition's leaders, Dr Clyde Roper of Washington's
    Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, said: "It is a
    staggering phenomenon that this big animal exists and we don't know
    much about it. More is known about the dinosaurs. The only creatures
    who know where they live are sperm whales, so we will let the whales be
    our hound dogs and lead us to them."

    Dr Roper said if the expedition was a success, a second one might
    follow next year, using a crewed submersible.

    Robert Uhlig, Technology Correspondent, writes: A small group of whales
    that can barely open their mouths has been found to eat by pouting
    their lips and sucking in squid and fish.

    Examinations of beaked whales by John Heyning, of the Los Angeles
    County Museum of Natural History, and James Mead, of the American
    National Museum of Natural History in Washington, disclosed a very
    loose tongue attached to the base of the mouth via exceptionally large
    muscles and bones. 

    "The tongue slides back with extreme ease and very quickly in a kind of
    piston action to suck in their prey," Dr Heyning says in today's New
    Scientist.
7.354IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:3977
7.355IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:4049
7.356IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:4266
7.357IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:4354
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Euro-sceptic Gardiner faces vote to oust him
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 

    NEARLY a third of the membership of the Reigate Conservative
    Association have signed a motion of no confidence in Sir George
    Gardiner, their Euro-sceptic MP. 

    Tonight Tories in the Surrey constituency will try to oust him as their
    MP for the second time. Sir George survived a deselection bid last
    June, when 311 members of the association supported him and 206 voted
    against him.

    But the number of his opponents has nearly doubled. A petition signed
    by 382 members of the association saying they have no confidence in
    their MP has been sent to the chairman, Maj-Gen Michael Steele.

    Although Sir George's opponents pledged to rally round him after he won
    the confidence motion last summer, they were angered by an article he
    wrote in the Sunday Express in December saying that John Major had
    become Kenneth Clarke's "ventriloquist's dummy" because of his refusal
    to rule out joining a single currency.

    The second attempt to oust the Reigate MP was launched on Jan 3 when 50
    association members wrote to Maj-Gen Steele asking him to call a
    meeting. About 650 activists - half of the membership of the
    association - are expected at the special general meeting tonight to
    vote on the no confidence motion. If it is carried, they will vote on a
    motion to deselect Sir George. Insiders say some of those who supported
    Sir George in the previous vote have turned against him.

    The MP will also be undermined by the fact that 81 of his opponents
    rejoined the association in December, making them eligible to vote
    tonight. Maj-Gen Steele said feeling was "running high" in the
    constituency. "Sir George has been the MP for 23 years and there are
    some people who feel very, very loyal to him - and similarly there are
    some who feel very, very strongly opposed to him. Both groups are very
    vociferous," he said.

    Douglas Simpson, the former chairman of the association and a supporter
    of Sir George, said a "bitter vendetta" was being waged against the MP.
    Sir George has not threatened to resign and force a by-election as he
    did last time. Earlier this week he wrote to association members
    apologising "unreservedly", but he condemned the deselection bid as a
    "suicide exercise". He wrote: "The damage being done to our party, both
    locally and nationally, by this public display of Tory clawing at Tory
    is incalculable."

    Last night he said he would fight the attempt to oust him, saying: "I'm
    being arraigned for pressing a policy over joining a European single
    currency which the Cabinet has now adopted. "I fought the wreckers off
    before and I'm determined to fight them off again."
7.358IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:4462
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 29 January 1997

    Senior Tory's son leapt to death after taking ecstasy
    
    By Colin Randall, Chief Reporter 

    THE son of a senior Government education adviser jumped more than 80
    feet to his death after taking ecstasy at an illegal rave party, an
    inquest was told yesterday.

    Alexander Balchin, 21, a student about to start a course at Brighton
    University, had asked three friends to join him in making the jump,
    saying he wanted to "make the world more beautiful".

    His father, Sir Robert, 54, a prominent Conservative and chairman of
    the Grant-Maintained Schools Foundation, told the inquest in Southwark,
    south London, that his son had no history of drug-taking. "We are
    teetotal and Alex hardly touched alcohol at all," he said. His death
    had been a "bolt from the blue". Sir Robert added: "Alex was a very
    fun-loving person who brought a lot of joy to us all and to his friends
    and to all those he knew."

    His son, who divided his time between his family's 16th-century home in
    Lingfield, Surrey, and a commune in Brighton, was among 2,000 people at
    the all-night rave on Nov 30 in an annexe to County Hall, the old GLC
    headquarters.

    Leaflets advertising the event, staged as a "farewell rave" for
    squatters who had been occupying the building for a few weeks, had been
    distributed. Seven sound systems were used and the party was still in
    progress when Mr Balchin jumped from the roof at 4.30am. Death was from
    severe head injuries and a post-mortem examination showed that he had
    taken ecstasy and cannabis.

    Gary Bunch, who had known Mr Balchin for about a month, told the
    inquest he joined his friend and other revellers on the roof with a
    three-feet-high ledge. "As soon as we got on the roof, Alex said 'I
    want the world to be more beautiful' and 'What have we done?' He was
    looking over the edge." He said Mr Balchin seemed to be under the
    influence of drugs with his eyes "bulging out of his head". He climbed
    on top of the wall, got down again at the request of his friends but
    then "ran and jumped over the edge".

    John Blythe, 19, another friend, said all "dance drugs" were available.
    He said Mr Balchin "appeared to be tripping on psychedelic drugs". When
    they were on the roof, he said: "Gary said 'come down', and he looked
    as though he was going to but he turned around and, at a run, leapt
    over the edge."

    Dr Vesna Djurovic, a pathologist, said Mr Balchin had consumed no
    alcohol and said the amount of ecstasy he had taken was "not large".

    Sir Montague Levine, the coroner, recording a verdict of misadventure,
    said: "Ecstasy has accounted for his very strange and bizarre
    behaviour. A lot of people might think ecstasy never causes this but,
    as the pathologist says, reaction of drugs varies from person to
    person. It is quite clear he was acting strangely. The words 'tripping,
    high and agitated' have been used."

    There was no suggestion he was suffering from depression or had wanted
    to end his life. "The fact is he was under the influence of drugs,"
    said Sir Montague.
7.359IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:5453
7.360IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:5532
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Book war 'poses a cultural threat'

    BRITAIN'S culture would be "degraded" and its education threatened by
    the scrapping of re-sale price maintenance on books, Sir David Steel,
    the former Liberal leader, said yesterday.

    Sir David, opposing the Office of Fair Trading's "public interest" bid
    to finally kill off the price-fixing allowed under the Net Book
    Agreement, told the Restrictive Practices Court that "books should not
    be treated like soap powder".

    He said: "The public interest is more than just whether you can get
    books at the cheapest price. It is a question of the long-term future -
    whether you want to maintain cultural diversity and cultural depth."

    Making the NBA illegal would lead to a reduction in the number of
    stockholding bookshops and a rise in the price of most books other than
    best-sellers. "Fewer titles would be published, and those which failed
    to find a publisher would include works of probable literary or
    scholastic value," he told a tribunal headed by Mr Justice Ferris.

    Sir David was called as a witness by groups concerned with the supply
    of books to libraries. They are opposing an attempt by the Director
    General of Fair Trading to block a reintroduction of the suspended NBA.

    He said the disastrous repeal of a similar pricing system in France,
    and its subsequent reinstatement, "should alert us to the danger of
    outlawing the NBA too soon".

    The hearing continues.
7.361IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:5627
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Bishop bans 'harmful' religious movement
    
    By Victoria Combe, Churches Correspondent 

    A ROMAN Catholic bishop announced measures yesterday to halt the
    activities of a religious movement which he claimed was harmful to
    individuals and parish life.

    The Rt Rev Mervyn Alexander, Bishop of Clifton, has removed two priests
    who belong to the arch-traditionalist movement - the Neo-Catechumenal
    Way - from their parishes and a third member agreed to resign. His
    intervention follows a year-long investigation into the
    Neo-Catechumenal Way's activities in the parishes of St Nicholas of
    Tolentino, Bristol, Sacred Hearts, Cheltenham, and St Peter's,
    Gloucester. In November the bishop ordered the priests to stop
    recruiting and to be more open to non-members within the parishes.

    "The measures I am implementing should not be seen as criticisms of the
    Way. They are designed to improve the situation for all the parish
    family."

    Canon Michael English and Fr Tony Trafford will both be shifted to "new
    pastoral situations" in the diocese and Canon Jerry O'Brien, 75, has
    resigned. The bishop said the move was not a "criticism of any of the
    priests".
7.362IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 13:5966
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Schoolboy athlete died after collapsing in race
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    A BOY collapsed as he neared the end of a race at an inter-school
    sports event, an inquest heard yesterday.

    Philip Green, 12, a pupil at Grange School, Hartford, Cheshire, was
    within sight of the finishing line when he fell to the ground. His
    father, David, who had been taking photographs of the race, tried to
    revive him but he was pronounced dead in hospital 75 minutes later.

    Philip, of Wincham, Cheshire, suffered a similar collapse a year
    earlier, the hearing in Manchester was told. Medical tests carried out
    at the time uncovered no sign of heart problems.

    On June 19 this year he was chosen to represent his school at the North
    West Area Championships in Stretford, Manchester. He had already taken
    part in the triple jump, shot put and 100-metre relay, and was part-way
    through the 200m race when he collapsed.

    Mr Green, 39, a contract manager, said: "He looked a little tired and I
    said to him 'Go and sit down and have a drink'. That was all. There was
    no problem. He then took part in the 200 metres final. He'd gone about
    150 metres and was well in the lead when he collapsed. He was on the
    finishing straight and I was stood at the end of the straight taking
    pictures. When I got to him he was breathing erratically, gasping for
    breath."

    Mr Green began giving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, while the school's
    head of physical education, Thomas Tindale, administered chest
    compression. Philip was taken to the casualty department of Withington
    Hospital where he died.

    Recalling the incident a year ago, Mr Green said his son had collapsed
    while warming up for another 200 metre event. "When he was taken to
    hospital they thought he may have had a fit or fainted. But, after
    tests, he was given a clean bill of health. Cardiologists' tests showed
    nothing. Philip was supremely fit. There was nothing to give the
    slightest hint of anything wrong."

    Questioned by the Manchester coroner, Leonard Gorodkin, Mr Tindale said
    that he felt it was within Philip's capabilities to be in so many
    events.

    Dr Fiona Knox, the pathologist who carried out a post mortem
    examination, said she was unable to decide upon a positive cause of
    death but it seemed most likely that Philip died of a cardiac
    arrhythmia. She agreed with Mr Gorodkin that it was "the same type of
    situation" as sudden infant death syndrome.

    Recording a verdict of death by natural causes, Mr Gorodkin said it was
    tragic that a young, healthy boy should suddenly collapse in such a
    situation.

    After the hearing, Mr Green, who has a surviving son aged 10, said he
    and his wife, Helen, were hoping a sporting memorial could be
    established in Philip's name. "He excelled academically and sportingly,
    and we miss him terribly. On the day everyone did what they could," he
    said.

    Philip's head teacher, Scott Marshall, said: "This is a sad loss.
    Philip was very able academically, one of the most talented pupils the
    school has ever had."
7.363IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:0026
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Couple refuse to destroy attack dog
    
    By Carole Cadwalladr 

    THE owners of a German shepherd dog which attacked and injured six
    pupils and their headmaster in a school playground have refused to have
    it destroyed and have sent it into hiding.

    Seven-month-old Fuhrer wandered into the grounds of St Peter's School
    in Jarrow, Tyne and Wear, on Tuesday and started biting six boys aged
    between seven and 10. Ian Thompson, the headmaster, tried to shield the
    children from the dog, and was also bitten. All seven required hospital
    treatment.

    But despite agreeing with Northumbria police that the dog should be
    destroyed, Gordon and Lesley Burn, announced yesterday that it had been
    hidden. Mrs Burn, 26, said: "After we saw the damage we decided it was
    not bad enough to justify having Fuhrer put down."

    Mrs Burn explained that the dog was named after Adolf Hitler, of whom
    her husband is an admirer. The animal was traced to a house in South
    Shields where it was being looked after by Gary Spour. But when police
    returned with a magistates' warrant to recover the dog, there was no
    sign of Mr Spour or Fuhrer.
7.364IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:0282
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Justice for hero's widow after 30 years
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 

    A WIDOW whose husband was shot dead by a bank raider 30 years ago saw
    his killer brought to justice yesterday.

    Anthony Fletcher was labelled Britain's first "have a go" hero after
    the incident in Chelsea when he cornered the gunman and was hit in the
    chest at point blank range. He was awarded the George Cross
    posthumously. The killer, Arthur Jackson, fled to America where he was
    eventually jailed for stalking and repeatedly stabbing a Hollywood
    actress.

    While in a Californian prison cell, he confessed to the 1962 killing
    and extradited back to Britain for trial. Jackson has never expressed
    remorse, telling police: "The only pity I felt was when I pulled the
    trigger and saw the look in his eyes of impending doom."

    Valerie Fletcher and her three children sat in court at the Old Bailey
    yesterday as Jackson, now 61, denied murder but admitted manslaughter
    on the grounds of diminished responsibility. Jackson, said to represent
    a continuing danger to the public and "those who fall prey to his
    psychotic fascinations", will be sentenced next week when a bed in a
    secure hospital becomes available.

    But Martin Fletcher, 39, the victim's eldest son, later called for the
    reintroduction of the death penalty, saying: "He should have been
    hanged. He robbed my mother of a devoted husband and we all lost a
    great Dad. He was a pal and is always in my thoughts. Jackson is a very
    clever and devious man who knows what he wants and knows how to
    manipulate people. Now he has pleaded guilty, we can say what this man
    has done to me and my family. I will be pleased if the judge puts him
    away for life so he cannot do anyone else any harm. But nothing will
    bring my father back."

    Jackson has a history of "severe and intractable paranoid
    schizophrenia" which began when he was 12 and had problems with the
    occult and a "voodoo jinx". The friendless and solitary figure suffered
    "bizarre and delusional fantasies". In the 1950s he served in Germany
    with the American Army and formed an obsession for a fellow soldier he
    described as "Angel adonis, chic mystique".

    Just before killing Mr Fletcher, he had a fixation about a Scottish
    woman he called "Enchantress and femme fatale" and made his way to
    Italy to get a gun to kill her and then commit suicide. That gun was
    used to kill Mr Fletcher. He became obsessed with Theresa Saldana, an
    actress who starred with Robert De Niro in the flim Raging Bull, and he
    went to California in 1982 on a "divine mission" to kill her and then
    commit suicide so they could be together in heaven.

    Jackson confronted the actress near her home and stabbed her
    repeatedly. Had it not been for a bystander, she would have died,
    Orlando Pownall, prosecuting, told the Old Bailey. She needed 26 pints
    of blood and extensive surgery and is in fear of Jackson to this day.

    In America, Jackson was jailed for 12 years and told by the judge he
    had "a tortuous and tortured" mind. "A man with his mental state should
    never see the light of day."

    Five years later, from his cell, Jackson wrote to the Commissioner of
    the Metropolitan Police confessing: "I am the person responsible for
    those tragic incidents - the killing of Anthony Fletcher. I am prepared
    to sign a confession and offer full co-operation on condition
    extradition proceedings to bring me back to England begin immediately."

    Mr Pownall said: "His reasons had little if anything to with remorse"
    but were connected with changes in the American penal code which would
    have extended his time in jail.

    British police visited Jackson along with an FBI agent and recorded his
    confession. He told them he knew where the gun was, describing it as
    his "prize" but refused to disclose its whereabouts unless they met
    "preposterous conditions" to grant him an amnesty.

    Jackson's parole was delayed after he went on a prison rampage and sent
    further threats to Miss Saldana. He received a further five years. Last
    year he was returned to Britain. Stephen Leslie, QC, his counsel, said
    Jackson wanted the royalties from any books and films about him to go
    to his victim's family as compensation.
7.365IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:0473
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Family 'discussed ways of killing mother'
    
    By Paul Stokes 

    A BOY told a jury yesterday of his involvement with his father and
    brother in a plan to kill their mother in a hammer attack.

    John Howells, who was 14 at the time, claimed that they had previously
    discussed pushing her off a cliff, under a vehicle or off a hotel
    balcony. He recalled the idea of using a hammer being mooted two to
    three weeks before Evelyn Howells, 48, a history teacher, was
    bludgeoned to death.

    It had been agreed that it should be made to appear that the motive had
    been a burglary that went wrong, he said. He told the jury that he, his
    brother Glenn, then 15, and their father David, 48, had talked about
    the choice of weapon but he said that he could not remember whose idea
    it was. "I don't really know. I don't know if it was my Dad or not,"
    John Howells told Leeds Crown Court.

    He admitted that they had talked about killing Mrs Howells on a
    Thursday night, a time that she always spent relaxing at home while her
    husband played for a darts team. It had been suggested that he would
    help Glenn by getting rid of the murder weapon and a date was initially
    fixed for the killing to take place.

    After that day passed he thought "it had just evaporated" but the fatal
    attack was delivered by Glenn a week later on Aug 31, 1995, he said. He
    and Glenn had returned to their home in Dalton, West Yorks, that night
    after taking the family dog for a walk.

    John Howells said his mother began shouting and swearing at them to
    take the dog back out for a proper walk. He said she had spoken to them
    in a "very loud, shrieking voice" and he recalled going into the
    bedroom before seeing Glenn changing his clothing.

    "I cannot honestly remember me passing the hammer to Glenn or him
    getting it himself," he told the jury. He saw Glenn leave the bedroom
    and the next thing he remembered was hearing "a noise, like a bang".
    John said: "I went through to the lounge. I saw Glenn striking Mum. I
    was asking Glenn to stop. I was saying 'No, No'. Vaguely I remember
    saying I would kill her in some different way." Asked by his counsel,
    Aidan Marran, QC, what other method he had considered for disposing of
    his mother he replied: "Poisoning."

    Glenn asked him to take a bag containing his blood-stained T-shirt, a
    pair of jeans and the murder weapon away on his bicycle and he dumped
    them at a rubbish tip. About a week later he went to move the T-shirt
    and the hammer, with his father's knowledge, after learning that police
    were searching in that area.

    At the time of his mother's death he kept a photograph of her in his
    wallet and told the jury: "I loved her, but then again I also disliked
    her - I hated her. We just wished that she wasn't there. She just got a
    lot worse and we thought how it would be better if she wasn't around
    us." 

    Asked if his father was engaged in that conversation he responded:
    "Just a little bit." He added that he had talked with his father and
    brother "quite a few times" about Mrs Howells being dead a year before
    the killing took place.

    "It made me feel easier," he said. "I disliked my Mum very much. I just
    wished she would just disappear. I love my Dad, I still love my
    brother."

    David Howells, a maintenance engineer, Glenn Howells, now 17, and John
    Howells, now 15, all deny murder. Glenn Howells admits manslaughter on
    the grounds of provocation, a plea not accepted by the Crown.

    The hearing continues.
7.366IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:0731
7.367IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:0943
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Anger at road plan
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 

    THE Government was accused of "appalling arrogance" yesterday after
    agreeing more improvements on the road where work is being delayed by
    tunnelling protesters.

    Ministers approved 14-miles of dual carriageway on the A30/A303 from
    Honiton, Devon to Ilminster, Somerset. The Department of Transport said
    the timing of the announcement was unrelated to the tunnel protest. But
    the Council for the Protection of Rural England said: "This is a
    dreadful decision. We can't think of a more provocative action the DoT
    could have taken."

    It forecast that the route, running through the Blackdown Hills, a
    recently designated area of outstanding natural beauty, would severely
    damage the landscape and generate as much opposition as the M3 Twyford
    Down project, one of the most protracted roads protests, in Hampshire
    five years ago.

    Friends of the Earth said the dual carriageway, most of which will be
    built closely parallel to the existing road, would destroy part of the
    Longlie Hill site of potential special scientific interest, damage
    ancient bluebell woodland and wildlife sites and require the relocation
    of badger setts and dormice.

    A spokesman said: "It is appalling arrogance of the Government to give
    the go-ahead for yet more destructive road schemes while protesters are
    braving their lives in nearby tunnels to defend the countryside."

    Tunnel specialists attempting to evict the Fairmile activists said that
    part of the underground network had collapsed. The cave-in occurred in
    the chamber where two protesters were caught on Monday. Three others
    spent yesterday in another part of the system, which is reached by an
    18-foot unshored vertical shaft.

    A spokesman for Trevor Coleman, Devon under-sheriff who is leading the
    eviction, said the collapse showed the system's danger and instability.
    The eviction team, still shoring up the complex, were in voice contact
    with the three protesters, who ignored pleas to come to the surface.
7.368IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:1127
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Vice squad investigate the ice man
    
    By Carole Cadwalladr 

    A COUNCIL'S attempt to bring modern art to the masses has outraged one
    of its members and led to a vice squad investigation.

    Among the sculptures to be displayed at the Walsall Museum and Art
    Gallery in the West Midlands are an ice version of Epstein's Adam,
    missing everything except his highly-stylised genitalia, and a six-foot
    high lump of marzipan which visitors can lick.

    Councillor Melvin Pitt said the exhibition, that opens on Saturday, was
    indecent and asked the West Midlands Police to look at the iceman. But
    they decided that none of the exhibits was pornographic.

    "The sculpture is obscene, not just because of what it is portraying
    but also because it is a huge waste of public money," said Mr Pitt.

    Deborah Robinson, the gallery's senior exhibitions officer, said: "The
    marzipan was produced by a partially sighted artist who plays with
    smell and texture to evoke memories."

    The ice sculpture, by Hermione Wiltshire, had been left anatomically
    abstract so that people could "project their own sexuality on to it".
7.369IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:1722
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Evans 'went too far' with tasteless joke
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 

    CHRIS Evans, the former Radio 1 disc jockey, has been criticised again
    by the Broadcasting Standards Council for making tasteless jokes
    on-air.

    Evans, 30, who left the station this month, was the subject of six
    complaints to the watchdog in one month - and more are being
    investigated, said a spokesman.

    In all but one, the council said that his humour was juvenile but did
    not go beyond acceptable limits. However, his jokes about violence to
    women and inviting his team to join him in apparently kicking Holly
    Samos, a female team member, went too far.

    A complaint about Radio 4's Desert Island Discs was not upheld. Fran
    Landsman, a poet, chose cannabis seeds as her luxury item. The council
    said that a fantasy choice did not promote drugs.
7.370IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:1943
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Are you suited for a parking permit?
    
    By Michael Smith 

    COUNCIL investigators who suspected that a businessman was using his
    resident's parking permit illegally monitored his movements before
    asking to check his wardrobe to ensure that he was a resident.

    The private contractors demanded right of access to Peter Sarony's
    house to check that he lived there and said they might need to ensure
    his clothes were in the wardrobe and his bed had been slept in. Mr
    Sarony, 55, an architect, who had lived in Westminster for 33 years,
    held a parking permit for 15 and is up to date with his council tax. He
    wouldn't admit them.

    "I thought it was a wind-up at first," he said. "But then I realised
    they were serious. I told them this was something you would expect in
    Hitler's Germany, not in modern-day London."

    But the Westminster city council investigators said they were retired
    police officers and advised him to look at the small print of his
    parking permit application form. There Sub-section 4 states: "I
    understand and accept that the city council may request my permission
    to inspect the address given as my place of residence before or after
    the issue of a permit, and that, should I refuse that permission, it is
    likely that the permit will not be granted or will be withdrawn."

    Like many residents of Westminster, Mr Sarony had ticked the box
    alongside this clause without realising quite what it might entail. Not
    even his presence on the electoral roll was sufficient for the
    investigators, as he might have moved out since his name was
    registered. A look around his home, and if necessary a sweep through
    his wardrobe, was all that would do.

    The council said Mr Sarony's problems came about because he lived and
    worked in the same parking zone. Investigators checked the parking bay
    outside his office at 7am on successive mornings and his car was not
    there. When it was there at 11am, they concluded that he was not a
    resident and not entitled to his pass. James Hood, chairman of the
    council's traffic sub-committee, said: "I'm looking into the
    procedures."
7.371IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:2125
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Computer weighs pigs at a glance
    
    By Robert Uhlig, Science Correspondent 

    A MACHINE that can accurately tell the weight of a pig simply by
    looking at it has been developed by British scientists.

    The machine, called "Watch 'em Grow", uses a camera mounted above the
    pig's trough to take a picture from which the animal's size is
    calculated. Computer software analyses the image and compares it with a
    record of other pigs of known size and weight to determine the animal's
    heaviness.

    "It's as effective as a conventional farm weighing crate," said Paddy
    Schofield, a research scientist who has developed the system at the
    Silsoe Research Centre, a food and agriculture institute. "If you knew
    the breed of the pig at a county show and could place the camera in the
    right place above the pig then you could certainly win the 'Guess the
    pig's weight' competitions."

    The next stage of the system will be able to tell the slaughter
    properties of each animal. Mr Schofield said: "We should be able to
    know how much of the pig will be ham, bacon, chops and pork joints."
7.372IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Jan 30 1997 14:2258
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 30 January 1997

    Mars 'crater of life' pinpointed
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    A CRATER on Mars where life may have thrived millions of years ago has
    been pinpointed, a meeting of space scientists will be told.

    The claim will be made by James Rice of Arizona State University at the
    28th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in March. A summary on the
    Internet yesterday reveals that Mr Rice believes he has identified the
    crater that yielded the potato-sized Martian meteorite ALH 84001.

    The meteorite was found in Antarctica and last year a team of Nasa and
    Open University scientists said it may have once hosted bacteria. The
    6.2 mile-diameter crater, positioned at 5 deg S and 146 deg W, is in
    the Memnonia region of Mars, near the planet's equator. It has an
    oblique debris blanket, suggesting the impact occurred at an angle.

    Mr Rice said: "This oblique impact would have facilitated the ejection
    of material off the Martian surface and into space. This region of Mars
    contains numerous valleys and canyons where water once flowed from the
    southern cratered highlands of Terra Sirenum to the lowland volcanic
    plains of Amazonis Planitia, billions of years ago."

    The igneous rock in the 4.2lb meteorite has been dated to about 4.5
    billion years, when the planet formed. Mr Rice said: "It seems quite
    reasonable to assume that the rock formed in an ancient region
    (Noachian Age) of the Martian surface, namely the cratered highlands."

    He then searched Viking Orbiter images to find a crater which was
    formed 16 million years ago - exposure of ALH 84001 to cosmic rays
    suggest this was the time it was ejected by a comet or asteroid. "This
    would result in a very fresh and young crater," said Mr Rice. "Young
    craters on Mars are defined as having sharp, complete, well-preserved
    rims, steep walls, deep and rough floors."

    The conference, sponsored by Nasa and held at the Johnson Space Centre
    and the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, Texas, will be
    dominated by the debate over whether ALH 84001 did contain evidence of
    life.

    One team from the University of Hawaii will present a series of
    mechanisms using inorganic - non-living - processes to explain some of
    the finds. Others will question whether there are "biofilms" in the
    meteorite, a covering of organic matter that was thought to have been
    deposited by biological processes.

    Roger Highfield, Science Editor of The Telegraph, won the 1996 Chemical
    Industries Award yesterday for his outstanding personal contribution to
    increasing the public understanding of science. At an awards ceremony
    in London, Robin Paul, president of the Chemical Industries
    Association, commended Dr Highfield and The Daily Telegraph for their
    "manifest commitment and constant approach" to science and technology
    coverage. The award was presented for a series of articles including
    those on drug use at the Atlanta Olympics, sleep and dream patterns and
    genetic engineering.
7.373IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:31117
    AP 31-Jan-1997 1:03 EST   REF5842

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, Jan. 31, 1997
   
    CLINTON-FEDERAL AID 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton released $39 million in federal
    aid Thursday to restore public facilities damaged last year in natural
    disasters. The money, which is headed for 30 states, the Virgin
    Islands, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia, will pay for repairs
    and construction on lands maintained by five federal agencies: the Fish
    and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Land
    Management, U.S. Geological Survey and National Park Service. The
    facilities sustained damage from last year's Midwest and Southeast
    flooding, and from hurricanes. The Western and Mountain states also
    suffered from forest fires last year. 
   
    OBIT-TEJEDA 

    SAN ANTONIO (AP) -- Texas Congressman Frank Tejeda died Thursday night
    at his home at age 51. The San Antonio Democrat had battled a malignant
    brain tumor since September 1995, undergoing surgery, radiation and
    chemotherapy treatments. Tejeda was a high school dropout who later
    earned distinction on the battlefields of Vietnam and Ivy League
    campuses. 
   
    CHINA-US TRADE 

    BEIJING (AP) -- China and the United States worked Thursday toward
    ending a key trade dispute and said U.S. secretary of state Madeleine
    Albright would make a trip to Beijing in late February. Chinese Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Shen Guofang said Beijing was ready to work with
    Washington to ease tensions and settle disputes. Both countries have
    signaled their eagerness to mend relations, frayed by hard feelings
    over Taiwan, trade disputes and U.S. criticism of China's human rights'
    record. 
   
    WALL COLLAPSE 

    HOUSTON (AP) -- Rescue crews in Houston have recovered the bodies of
    three women killed Thursday when a wall collapsed in a shopping center.
    Authorities say they're afraid as many as six other people may be
    missing. The wall at the Northline Mall was being torn down to make way
    for a movie theater. Rescuers have been using dogs to hunt for victims,
    and cranes were brought in to move rubble. 
   
    AIR-BAGS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Domestic car makers are making the case for less
    forceful air bags. The companies say their proposal for modified air
    bags would save hundreds of lives and should be adopted quickly. The
    letter to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration disputes
    the idea that hundreds of other lives would be put at risk if air bags
    are "depowered." 
   
    SIMPSON-JURY 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- Jurors in the O.J. Simpson civil trial
    have gone home after completing their second full day of deliberations.
    Thursday, they watched video of police activity around the scene of the
    killings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman and asked for DNA test
    strips and photos indicating whether blood could have been planted or
    contaminated. 
   
    BOMBING TRIAL 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A videotape from a McDonald's restaurant security
    camera places Timothy McVeigh near the shop that rented the truck used
    in the Oklahoma City federal building bombing, CBS News reported. The
    videotape shows McVeigh for about two minutes buying a hamburger, only
    minutes before he allegedly rented the Ryder truck from the nearby
    Elliott's Body Shop in Junction City, Kan., CBS said, citing
    unidentified sources. 
   
    PERU HOSTAGES 

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Police hunted Thursday for a small band of leftist
    rebels thought to be acting as a liaison between guerrillas holding 72
    hostages in Lima and their comrades in the remote jungle. The search
    comes as President Alberto Fujimori and Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro
    Hashimoto prepare for a weekend summit that could renew negotiations to
    free the hostages. Fujimori's younger brother is among the captives. 
   
    COMPUSERVE ORDERS 

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- CompuServe said Thursday that new orders have
    jumped fivefold after the company's Super Bowl commercial promoting its
    reliability. The new orders come as customers of rival America Online
    are having well-publicized trouble logging on because of clogged phone
    lines. AOL on Wednesday reached a multi-state agreement to give
    millions of dollars worth of credits and refunds to customers. 
   
    JAPAN MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The Nikkei rose 570.68 points to 18,434,72 points at the
    end of the morning session. On Thursday, the average lost 471.26
    points. At late morning, the dollar traded at 121.84 yen, up 0.48 yen. 
   
    NBA-LAWSUIT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- In a defeat for the National Basketball Association, a
    federal appeals court ruled that STATS Inc. and Motorola may transmit
    real-time scores over the Internet and hand-held pagers. It overturned
    a lower court decision that barred the two companies from transmitting
    live updates from NBA games taken from television and radio broadcasts.
    News organizations, including The Associated Press, had filed briefs
    supporting the companies' right to provide the scores.
   
    REDS-SANDERS 

    CINCINNATI (AP) -- NFL star Deion Sanders is returning to major league
    baseball. He will rejoin the Cincinnati Reds this season. Sanders will
    continue to play football for the Dallas Cowboys. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.374IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:32117
    RTw  30-Jan-97 20:42    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on Syria
    to stop Hizbollah guerrilla attacks on Israeli forces in Lebanon after
    a roadside bomb killed three soldiers. Netanyahu also urged Syria to
    restart peace talks with Israel suspended for nearly a year. 

    GAZA - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat has asked the United States
    to refrain from extraditing a top leader of the Islamic militant Hamas
    group to Israel, an aide said. 

    HEBRON, West Bank - Jewish settlers in Hebron dug foundations in
    preparation for the expansion of an enclave in the Israeli-ruled part
    of the West Bank town, witnesses said. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin returned to the Kremlin for
    talks intended to show demonstrate he is retaining command of the ship
    of state while recovering from pneumonia. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Pro-democracy demonstrators, their enthusiam unbowed in a
    waiting game with the Serbian government, marched through Belgrade in a
    75th straight day of protests. The capital was rife with rumours of a
    cabinet reshuffle and hints that authoritarian Serbian President
    Slobodan Milosevic would offer dialogue with opposition parties in a
    marathon dispute over annulled municipal elections. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Human rights will remain a "key element" in U.S. foreign
    policy, new Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said after her
    department issued its annual human rights report. 

    - - - - 

    BAGHDAD - Shoppers in Baghdad cursed U.S. President Bill Clinton and
    said Washington was reviving its vendetta against President Saddam
    Hussein to scupper Iraq's oil-for-food deal with the United Nations. 

    NICOSIA - Iraqi dissidents said that recent U.S. statements on Iraq
    gave an accurate account of rifts in Saddam Hussein's inner circle. 

    GENEVA - U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said that he expected the
    Security Council to renew Iraq's oil-for-food deal for another six
    months in June. 

    - - - - 

    ZURICH - The head of a Clinton administration probe into Nazi assets
    said a boycott of Swiss banks would be counter- productive to
    Switzerland's efforts to clear up its World War Two financial role.
    Commerce Undersecretary Stuart Eizenstat, chairman of a United States
    interagency task force, said damage to the Swiss banking system would
    not be in the U.S. or world interest. 

    GENEVA - The new U.N. chief Kofi Annan  called Switzerland's dispute
    with Jews over the fate of unclaimed bank accounts a public relations
    disaster and urged a fair settlement. 

    BONN - Germany has been paying supplementary "victims' pensions" worth
    billions of marks (dollars) each year to thousands of Nazi war
    criminals, a German television network said . 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Roadblocks and strikes around Bulgaria showed protesters' firm
    rejection of the ruling Socialists' latest compromise offer for early
    elections on the 25th day of protests fuelled by an economic crisis. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Moslem rebels killed an Algerian former army general  in the
    western Algerian city of Oran, Algerian security forces said. 

    - - - - 

    GROZNY, Russia - Chechen guerrilla leader Aslan Maskhadov, acclaimed
    winner of Sunday's post-war election in the breakaway region, sought to
    bring his main presidential rival into a future government. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Zaire's counter-offensive against rebels has run into
    difficulty with the mercenary-backed government army on the defensive
    on many fronts, government and military sources said. 

    - - - - 

    MUSANZE, Rwanda - Hutu extremists killed about 20 Tutsi civilians and
    wounded at least nine in a village in northwestern Rwanda at the
    weekend, aid and hospital officials said. They told Reuters that the
    Tutsi-dominated army killed an unknown number of Hutus in reprisal. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - France denied any change in nuclear doctrine after German
    Defence Minister Volker Ruehe fuelled uproar in Paris by saying the
    French had for the first time accepted the supremacy of NATO's U.S.
    nuclear deterrent. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - The British government agreed to create a commission to try
    to defuse sectarian tension sparked by the annual parade season in
    Northern Ireland. But Northern Ireland Minister Patrick Mayhew said it
    needed more time to decide whether the commission, as recommended by an
    independent review body, should have legal powers to decide whether
    disputed parades by the Protestant majority go ahead. 

    REUTER 
7.375IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3253
    AP 31-Jan-1997 0:30 EST   REF5676

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    IRS Rethinking Tax Processing

    NEW YORK (AP) -- After spending $4 billion developing computer systems
    that "do not work in the real world," the Internal Revenue Service says
    it is considering hiring an outside contractor to process paper tax
    returns. 

    The agency has found that its customer service representatives must use
    as many as nine different computer terminals, each of which connects to
    several different data bases, to resolve problems, The New York Times
    reported. 

    "Dysfunctional as some of these systems may be today," said Arthur
    Gross, the IRS's assistant commissioner, the agency "is wholly
    dependent on them" to bring in $1.4 billion in taxes. What's more,
    Gross said, it is doubtful the IRS has the capability of developing
    workable computer systems. 

    The problem with the current systems, the Times quoted Gross in
    Friday's editions, is that they "do not work in the real world. 

    Saddled with such problems, the IRS is planning to survey private
    companies about building and operating a system to process
    approximately 200 million tax returns each year, The Washington Post
    reported Monday. 

    In a 43-page report sent last week to the House and Senate
    appropriations subcommittees that oversee the Treasury Department, the
    IRS said contracts could begin about four years after the agency
    evaluates the companies' replies. 

    Any move to out source the processing of taxpayers' returns is likely
    to draw complaints from people concerned about privacy. The Post
    reported that agency lawyers were reviewing statutes regarding which
    government functions cannot legally be entrusted to the private sector.

    The Post reported some of the agency's problems are related to its
    aging computer systems, noting the system used to enter data for
    processing and posting to a taxpayer's file is 12 years old and a
    system that routes payments for deposit is 19 years old. 

    The Times added that efforts to modernize the system have also met with
    serious problems. The IRS has already killed one modernization project,
    a plan to turn paper tax returns into electronic images, after paying
    $284 million to develop it, the Times said. 

    Twelve other modernization projects are under review, the Times said,
    quoting an agency spokesman as saying the cost of shutting those down
    would be astronomical. 
7.376IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3243
    AP 31-Jan-1997 0:26 EST   REF5663

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    CBS Yanks Bill Cosby Interview

    NEW YORK (AP) -- CBS News won't air the rest of Dan Rather's interview
    with Bill Cosby on Sunday, including the entertainer's admission that
    he had an affair with the mother of a woman who claims to be his
    illegitimate daughter. 

    Facing criticism that the network was parceling out its exclusive to
    bolster ratings, CBS News president Andrew Heyward and "60 Minutes"
    producer Don Hewitt decided not to broadcast the rest of the interview,
    portions of which aired Monday on "The CBS Evening News." 

    "I suggested to Dan and ... Heyward that maybe too many people had
    picked over the interview and there wasn't as much left as we thought
    there would be," Hewitt said in a statement issued Thursday. 

    "And furthermore, none of us could disagree all that much with
    columnists who said this story was being exploited." 

    Cosby has not given interviews to anyone but Rather since his son,
    Ennis, was shot to death while changing a flat tire along a Los Angeles
    freeway on Jan. 16. There have been no arrests. 

    Cosby returned to work this week on his CBS sitcom, "Cosby." 

    According to a transcript of the portion of the interview that was
    intended for "60 Minutes," Cosby admits having an affair with Shawn
    Thompson in the mid-1970s. 

    "If you said, 'Did you make love to the woman?' the answer is yes. 'Are
    you the father?' No," Cosby said. 

    But when pressed by Rather if there's a chance he could be the father
    of Ms. Thompson's daughter, Autumn Jackson, Cosby replied: "There is a
    possibility." 

    Ms. Jackson, 22, and an accomplice are charged with trying to extort
    millions from the entertainer by threatening to publicly allege that he
    is her father. 
7.377IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3264
    AP 30-Jan-1997 23:54 EST   REF5612

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mont. Senator Comes Under Fire

    By SUSAN GALLAGHER

    Associated Press Writer

    HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- At least seven people claim a state senator who
    wants to repeal the ban on corporal punishment in Montana's schools
    beat and abused students when he was a high school gym teacher in the
    1960s and 1970s. 

    Casey Emerson, 71, a Republican from Bozeman, denies the accusations,
    saying they contain "obvious lies." And some other former students
    contacted by The Associated Press recalled Emerson as strict, but not
    abusive. 

    The seven men and women, some in their 40s, want Emerson removed from
    the Senate's education committee, but senators are resisting, saying
    there's no evidence to support the allegations. 

    Emerson mostly taught physical education from 1965 to 1975 at Bozeman
    Junior High School. 

    After he unsuccessfully introduced a bill to repeal the ban on school
    corporal punishment earlier this month, former students began writing
    legislators with tales of abuse. 

    "I saw Casey hold a student's head in the urinal and flush it," wrote
    Alvin Huntsman III of Corvallis, Ore. "I myself was paddled on one
    occasion." 

    Craig Menzel of West Yellowstone said he recalled "a huge wooden paddle
    about 4 feet long with holes drilled throughout its length, which he
    used to beat me on two separate occasions." 

    Terri Sullivan of Bozeman told legislators Emerson pushed her down a
    school staircase in the late 1960s. 

    Sullivan said this week that news coverage of her remarks and Emerson's
    denial brought many calls from former students claiming abuse. 

    However, other former students and former Bozeman Junior High Principal
    Francis Olson said in phone interviews that Emerson imposed strict
    discipline, but they didn't recall any abuse. 

    "I don't have anything but positive recollections of Casey as a teacher
    and a coach," said Ron Aasheim of Helena. 

    Gary Litle of Bozeman said Emerson "commanded respect and discipline,
    and I think that's necessary." 

    "They had a paddle that hung on the wall -- I think they called it
    Bertha. If you screwed around, you got a swat with Bertha. I'm sure I
    received a swat or two. It's not something that hurt," he said. 

    Emerson said the allegations of abuse are part of a campaign to derail
    his legislative career because he is an unflinching conservative. 

    "This stuff is totally political because I won't give an inch," Emerson
    said. "They intend to get me." 
7.378IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3275
    AP 30-Jan-1997 23:45 EST   REF5581

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    3 Killed in Texas Mall Collapse

    By MICHELLE KOIDIN

    Associated Press Writer

    HOUSTON (AP) -- A wall collapsed at a shopping mall Thursday morning,
    killing three people, injuring seven and sending dozens of elderly
    "mall walkers" scrambling for their lives. As many as six others were
    feared missing under tons of concrete and steel rubble. 

    The wall was being torn down to make room for a Magic Johnson movie
    theater complex when it caved in. 

    "It just all of a sudden went crackling. I ran," said Dorothy McCann,
    who was among those who exercise daily by walking laps inside the
    Northline Mall. 

    Rescuers using dogs searched through the debris for victims. Cranes
    were brought in during the afternoon to move rubble, and a mall
    security videotape was being reviewed to see if it could shed light on
    what happened. 

    The bodies of three women were retrieved from the rubble late Thursday,
    more than 10 hours after firefighters and paramedics descended on the
    site. Four to six others were believed to be missing. 

    "We're pretty certain there may be other people under the debris," Fire
    Chief Eddie Corral said. "We won't really know until we get in there
    and pull it off. Some of it is rather large and heavy." 

    Authorities continued searching late into the night with hope that
    those missing could still be alive. 

    "That's always a possibility," Corral said. "We're not going to say no.
    A lot of miraculous things happen." 

    Demolition crews were removing the last sections of an old department
    store when a wall shared by the store and the mall caved in at about
    the time the mall opened at 9 a.m. Authorities described the wall as
    about 20 feet high. The fallen section was said to 150 to 200 feet
    long. 

    "I just heard a loud rumble," said Mary Shields, 59, who was inside the
    mall. "I could see dust flying. I turned around and looked back. I saw
    people running out of the offices saying somebody got hurt. The dust
    was so thick. You couldn't see." 

    It was not immediately known whether those killed were construction
    workers or mall employees or visitors. 

    Six of the injured were "mall walkers," most of them in their 60s and
    70s, including a man who ran through a window to flee the avalanche of
    debris and a couple who were pushed to the ground by the force of the
    collapse. 

    The most seriously injured was a 67-year-old woman with a broken ankle. 

    Like many malls around the country, Northline is a popular place for
    people, especially the elderly, to exercise each day by walking laps
    before the stores open. 

    Mayor Bob Lanier said the search for victims was slowed by the need to
    make certain the rescue crews were in no danger. "They've got to make
    it safe," he said. "When they do, we think they will find some more
    (bodies)." 

    In 1995, Johnson, the former basketball star, broke ground on his chain
    of movie theaters with a promise to provide jobs and good service to
    minority urban areas. The mall is about five miles north of downtown
    Houston. 
7.379IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3351
    AP 30-Jan-1997 23:44 EST   REF5568

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Arrested for Harassing Notes

    By KAREN MATTHEWS

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- An ex-convict was arrested for blanketing the
    windshields of Russian diplomats' cars with harassing notes such as
    "Russki scofflaws, get out and go home," police said Thursday. 

    The arrest of James Cohen, who lives near the Russian mission to the
    United Nations, came hours after Police Commissioner Howard Safir told
    diplomats Wednesday that he sympathized with their parking woes. 

    Last month, Russian and Belarussian envoys claimed they were manhandled
    by New York City police who had ticketed their car. A Russian newspaper
    reported Thursday that the Moscow city government has retaliated by
    declaring foreign drivers, mainly Americans, a hazard. 

    Police said Cohen, 60, left at least two dozen computer-printout notes
    on the windshields of Russian diplomats' cars parked near their U.N.
    mission. He was arrested on a charge of aggravated harassment. Cohen
    was convicted twice of attempted grand larceny in 1984, but police
    didn't say whether he served any jail time. 

    Dmitri Feoktistov, deputy press secretary of the Russian mission, said
    he got three of the notes himself. 

    The first one, Feoktistov said, read: "You are disgusting and no
    diplomat. You are holding parking spots meant for ordinary people. You
    should be ashamed of yourself." 

    The second one said: "Russki scofflaws, get out and go home." He
    declined to read the third note aloud "because it has strong language."

    Cohen's phone number is unlisted. 

    Diplomats, whose cars bear identifying plates, are supposed to park in
    designated spots but often park elsewhere and ignore the tickets they
    collect because of diplomatic immunity. Their perceived cavalier
    attitude has at times engendered hostility in a city of scarce parking.

    Russian diplomats owe at least $722,000 in outstanding parking fines,
    according to the city. 

    Feoktisov said the Russian mission does not have enough parking spaces.
    "We try to obey the law." 
7.380IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3397
    AP 30-Jan-1997 22:53 EST   REF5367

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Probe Focuses on O.J. Jury

    By MICHAEL FLEEMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- Two jurors from the first O.J. Simpson
    trial and an entertainment agent are under investigation for allegedly
    contacting jurors in the civil trial, sources said Thursday. 

    An angry Superior Court Judge Hiroshi Fujisaki ordered the probe after
    two civil-trial jurors reported receiving a letter at their homes from
    criminal trial jurors Brenda Moran and Gina Rosborough, sources told
    The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. 

    In the handwritten letter, Moran and Rosborough praise the civil trial
    jurors and urge them to consider contacting an entertainment
    agent-publicist named Bud Stewart offering to represent them in media
    deals, the sources said. 

    "Congratulations on successfully surviving a trying experience," says
    the letter, which apparently was written by Moran and refers to Gina
    Rosborough, who had a joint book deal with Moran. It was unclear if
    both women signed the letter. 

    The women say they would "respect your verdict and look forward to
    meeting you" for coffee or dinner, according to the letter, which was
    read to the AP. 

    "We would like to make sure that you're aware that if you listen to
    professionals who know the media business you have a great opportunity
    to protect your rights," the letter says. 

    Sheriff's deputies descended on Moran's home in a neatly kept
    working-class neighborhood in south-central Los Angeles Thursday night,
    searching cars and shutting themselves in the house with Ms. Moran and
    her parents while reporters camped outside. 

    "They wouldn't even let me in," said James Moran Jr., the brother of
    the ex-juror. "I don't know what's going on." 

    Through their attorney, the women denied wrongdoing and contended they
    were merely trying to help the new Simpson jurors cope with the
    inevitable media avalanche that awaits them after the verdict. 

    "There was absolutely no attempt in the world to interfere with the
    jury, and the letter really is innocuous," said attorney Jeff Brodey. 

    Brodey said the women wrote the letter themselves and handed it over to
    Stewart, who is linked to a publishing house, Lincoln Press, which is
    publishing a book by Moran and Rosborough. 

    "They didn't send it out. Somebody else sent it out," Brodey said. 

    Brodey said he didn't know who sent the letter, or how the person who
    sent it figured out where the civil trial jurors lived. The judge has
    kept the jurors' identities secret. 

    Moran and Rosborough refused to comment. Stewart didn't return messages
    left on his answering machine. 

    It was this letter that caused Tuesday's court session to be delayed
    about an hour while the judge interviewed all of the jurors, sources
    said. None of the jurors was bounced from the panel, and deliberations
    began that afternoon. 

    Fujisaki had imposed an order forbidding anyone from contacting the
    jurors. The panelists aren't sequestered. 

    Brodey said the women had not yet been contacted by authorities, only
    media. 

    It was not entirely clear who Stewart is. The Moran-Rosborough book
    deal was announced just days after the criminal trial ended in October
    1995 by a Bud Stewart, who gave a Wilshire Boulevard address in Beverly
    Hills that is a mail drop in a pharmacy. 

    At the time, the book title was said to be "Inside the Simpson Jury
    (The Parallel Universe)" and the publisher was listed as Los
    Angeles-based Advanced Books. 

    The address that Stewart gave is also listed in state records as
    Jackson Music Co., with a phone number that has since been
    disconnected. The owner of Jackson Music is listed as a Bary Gorden. 

    On Thursday, the New York Post quoted a man with the name Barry Gordon,
    with this different spelling, who identified himself as a
    representative for Moran and Rosborough and who was able to get a Post
    columnist in touch with Moran. 

    The Barry Gordon quoted in the Post also had information about the
    letter to the civil-trial jurors, and said that it was written by
    Moran. 
7.381IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3349
    AP 30-Jan-1997 22:39 EST   REF5104

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mass Transit in Grand Canyon?

    By MICHELLE BOORSTEIN

    Associated Press Writer

    PHOENIX (AP) -- Besieged by escalating traffic and scarce parking,
    Grand Canyon National Park officials have come up with a way to cut
    back on cars in the park -- mass transit. 

    Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt planned to unveil several transit
    options Friday at the canyon, including a light rail system and
    alternative-fuel buses that run on electricity and liquid methanol. 

    Under the plan, cars will be banned from the park by the summer of
    2000, except for people driving along state Route 64, staying at hotels
    or camping. Other visitors would have to leave their cars in nearby
    towns or at a massive lot to be built outside the park, then shuttle in
    by bus or rail. 

    Officials estimate the plan will eliminate 80 percent of the 1.5
    million cars that enter the park each year. 

    "The goal is to give people relief from the current problem, which is
    you're driving around looking for a parking place all day," said Susan
    Finley, sales director for the Grand Canyon National Park Lodges, the
    park's concessionaire. 

    The transportation proposal is part of a $350 million Park Service plan
    to improve the park for visitors, which numbered about 5 million last
    year. It includes building a central bus station/information center,
    improving employee housing and constructing an 11-mile bike trail. 

    "The park's roads and facilities in the developed areas were never
    designed to handle the current volume of vehicles. The result is that
    resources are being damaged and the quality of the experience is being
    downgraded," said Robert Arnberger, park superintendent. 

    Officials must complete an environmental impact assessment for both
    buses and trains before they can finalize plans. And questions remain
    about funding. 

    While the Park Service has access to income from a recent hike in park
    fees as well as fund-raising revenues, it is depending on finding
    private contractors for much of the project. 
7.382IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3398
    AP 30-Jan-1997 22:24 EST   REF5075

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Depowered' Air Bags Argued for

    By CATHERINE O'BRIEN

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Domestic automakers told federal regulators in their
    most strongly worded letter to date that the companies' proposal for
    less forceful air bags would save hundreds of lives and should be
    adopted quickly. 

    The detailed letter, sent Thursday to the National Highway Traffic
    Safety Administration, also said a recent government suggestion that
    hundreds of lives would be put at risk if air bags are "depowered" was
    vastly overstated. The assertion is based on a lot of incorrect
    assumptions, the letter said. 

    The agency needs to "go forward with a final rule on depowering as
    quickly as possible," said Barry Felrice of the American Automobile
    Manufacturers Association, which sent the letter in behalf of the Big
    Three automakers. 

    Air bags inflating at speeds up to 200 mph have been blamed for the
    deaths of 34 children and 20 adults in low-speed accidents they
    otherwise would have survived. Most of the adults were smaller women,
    and about one-third were elderly. 

    Air bags have saved more than 1,600 lives in higher-speed accidents.

    Less forceful air bags would save 327 to 446 additional lives annually
    when every car in America is equipped with the devices in the next
    century, the manufacturers' letter said. 

    Most of those saved would be of the same two categories that government
    investigations show have been vulnerable to deploying air bags in
    low-speed accidents, smaller adults not wearing seat belts and
    children. 

    The tradeoff is that less powerful air bags could result in death for
    seven to 47 unbelted adults who would have survived if air bags
    continue to deploy as they do today, the letter said. 

    The automakers' estimate is considerably lower than the government's.
    It said 122 to 969 adults who would have survived might die if air bags
    were made less forceful. 

    Phil Recht, deputy administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety
    Administration, said the government analysis "was not meant to be
    rigid" but rather to serve as an indicator of what tradeoffs could be
    involved. 

    "We have reason to believe, based on some limited real-world
    experience, that the results may be more optimistic than the charts
    indicate," Recht said. Government documents briefly mention the
    possibility of no adult lives being lost. 

    Last fall NHTSA agreed to installation in new cars of air bags 20 to 35
    percent less powerful than they are now, reflecting a higher priority
    on protecting children. 

    "We are committed to moving forward with depowering," said Recht. "We
    think it is an important part of the interim solution." NHTSA officials
    are reviewing public comments before issuing a final rule on less
    forceful air bags in February. 

    "We are willing to give up some of the gains that we have seen in the
    recent past with respect to unbelted occupants to eliminate or reduce
    risk for children and adults who are at risk," Recht said. 

    Automakers argue their proposal is the only comprehensive one because
    it would allow all new cars to have less forceful air bags and would
    allow installation to begin within nine months. The changeover would be
    completed in two years. 

    An agency-designed proposal would allow less forceful air bags only on
    31 percent of vehicles and would take up to four years, the letter
    said. 

    "Under the agency's proposal, we couldn't depower most of the vehicles
    at all, ever," the association's Felrice said. 

    In a strong rebuke of the government estimates of fatalities as
    compared with lives saved, the association's letter said one government
    analysis was "fraught with error" and a second extrapolated from sparse
    data to arrive at unsubstantiated conclusions. 

    The letter said, among other errors, the government: 

    --Plugged in the wrong numbers in two key instances. Those errors alone
    caused an estimate in the risk of death from depowering to be 10 times
    what the figure should have been. 

    --Based fatality estimates for all occupants under their proposal on a
    study that involved only drivers who were wearing seat belts. 
7.383IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:33121
    AP 30-Jan-1997 21:46 EST   REF6014

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    OJ Jurors Finish Third Day

    By LINDA DEUTSCH

    AP Special Correspondent

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- Seemingly intent on doing their own
    scientific sleuthing, the jurors deliberating in the O.J. Simpson case
    Thursday asked to see DNA test strips, photos and videotapes focusing
    on whether blood could have been planted or contaminated. 

    Jurors, who quit for the night after a third day of deliberations,
    appeared relaxed and cheerful when they came into court to watch video
    reruns of police activity around the crime scene. 

    Two of the tapes showed criminalist Dennis Fung and his assistant
    Andrea Mazzola handling critical pieces of evidence -- Simpson's blood
    sample and a bag containing a bloody glove found behind Simpson's
    estate. 

    Another video was notable for its absence of evidence -- a scene shot
    in Simpson's bedroom. Police said they found bloody socks at the foot
    of the bed, but the police videotape made that same day showed no sign
    of such socks. Defense lawyers say that is proof the socks were
    planted. 

    One tape showed Detective Philip Vannatter striding into Simpson's
    front door with an envelope in one hand and a duffel bag in the other.
    Vannatter has said the envelope contained Simpson's blood sample. His
    admission that he carried the blood vial around in an unsealed envelope
    is cited by the defense as proof the blood could have been used for
    planting. 

    The jury's appearance in the courtroom drew an instant audience of
    media and spectators who had been waiting nearby for any word that a
    verdict might be near. 

    Attorneys also rushed to the courtroom but the jury requests appeared
    to leave them puzzled. They left court shrugging and declined to
    interpret the developments. 

    Earlier, the jurors asked for photo boards illustrating several key
    pieces of evidence, including the rear gate and walkway at Nicole Brown
    Simpson's condominium, the grounds at Simpson's estate where the glove
    was found and the interior of Simpson's Bronco. 

    They also asked to see DNA test strips used by the state crime lab to
    analyze specific blood drops, among them a single drop lifted from the
    back gate of Ms. Simpson's condo. The drop contained Simpson's DNA
    type. 

    Using specific exhibit numbers, the jury also wanted to know
    "development times" on some of the DNA tests. 

    The only piece of testimony jurors asked to hear again was from state
    crime lab biochemist Gary Sims on the subject of cross-hybridization of
    DNA samples during testing. 

    The jurors' note asking for Sims' testimony specified they were
    interested in "contamination." 

    During the videotape showing of Simpson's bedroom -- which jurors
    watched twice in slow motion -- three jurors took active notes and
    seemed to be looking at each other as if confirming something. 

    At one point, the judge stopped the video show and summoned lawyers to
    his bench for a brief conference. While they had their backs turned, a
    number of the jurors began whispering to each other as if discussing
    what they had just seen. 

    A court bailiff quickly told them to stop talking and save their
    remarks for the deliberation room. 

    Legal experts said it was too soon to guess about a verdict based on
    the jury's requests. They noted the jurors appeared to be taking pains
    to do a thorough job, in part because they know they will be expected
    to justify their decision. 

    "I think they want to be so sure of the verdict when they face the
    public that they want to cross every 't' and dot every 'i,"' said
    Laurie Levenson, associate dean of the Loyola University law school. 

    The length of deliberations isn't a cause for concern yet, but if they
    drag on through the end of the day Friday, it might be time to start
    worrying about a serious split, said Robert Pugsley, a law professor at
    Southwestern School of Law in Los Angeles. 

    The slew of requests began shortly after The Associated Press confirmed
    the jurors had chosen as their foreman the most meticulous notetaker
    among them, a policeman's son who said during jury selection he admired
    Simpson but believed he was probably guilty at his murder trial. 

    The man, in his late 50s or early 60s with a white handlebar mustache
    and beard, has a background working with technical information and is
    believed to have retired from a corporate job to do consulting. 

    The foreman paid close attention when evidence was passed around for
    inspection during the trial and was the only juror who tried on both of
    the alleged murder gloves when they were handed to him for inspection. 

    The seven-woman, five-man panel consists of nine whites, one black, one
    Hispanic and one person of black and Asian ancestry. 

    On Wednesday, the panel asked for a special magnifying glass often used
    to examine photographs. They also asked to see a picture of a
    purple-topped test tube like the one used to store Simpson's blood
    sample. 

    Ever since Simpson was arrested on charges of murdering Ms. Simpson and
    Ronald Goldman, controversy has swirled around the Los Angeles Police
    Department's handling of evidence. Simpson's acquittal 16 months ago
    came after a high-powered defense team, including DNA experts, argued
    he was the victim of police corruption, contamination and conspiracy. 

    Relatives of Ms. Simpson and Goldman are now suing Simpson for wrongful
    death, claiming the football great should be held responsible for the
    June 12, 1994, killings and stripped of his fortune as punishment. 
7.384IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3428
    AP 30-Jan-1997 21:03 EST   REF5993

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: McVeigh Seen in Video

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A videotape from a McDonald's restaurant security
    camera places Timothy McVeigh near the shop that rented the truck used
    in the Oklahoma City federal building bombing, CBS News reported
    Thursday. 

    The videotape shows McVeigh for about two minutes buying a hamburger,
    only minutes before he allegedly rented the Ryder truck from the nearby
    Elliott's Body Shop in Junction City, Kan., CBS said, citing
    unidentified sources. 

    The tape provides prosecutors with physical evidence of McVeigh's
    presence at the time, and that's important because of conflicting
    testimony among witnesses who said they saw McVeigh at the shop, CBS
    said. 

    In the McDonald's video, McVeigh appears to wear clothes different than
    those described by witnesses at Elliotts, CBS noted. 

    McVeigh lawyer Steve Jones criticized the report, telling CBS that news
    of the tape only indicates prosecutors are trying to "rearrange deck
    chairs on the Titanic. They acknowledge their witnesses are confused."

7.385IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3447
    AP 30-Jan-1997 23:39 EST   REF5538

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Ireland Wants Parade Control

    By SHAWN POGATCHNIK

    Associated Press Writer

    BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -- Britain should form a commission to
    supervise Northern Ireland's Protestant parades, which sparked
    widespread rioting last summer, a government-commissioned panel
    recommended Thursday. 

    The British government shied from fully endorsing the three-volume
    report it commissioned from an English academic, a Protestant minister
    and a Catholic priest. 

    Their chief suggestion was creating a five-member Parades Commission
    that would mediate between Protestant marchers and Catholic protesters
    and have the power to restrict marching routes. 

    The British minister responsible for governing Northern Ireland, Sir
    Patrick Mayhew, told the House of Commons in London he supported the
    commission's expected "mediation, conciliation and educational roles,"
    but would suspend judgment on whether the panel should take
    parade-route decisions away from police. 

    Hard-liners on both sides -- the people on the front lines of parade
    battles -- attacked the report, setting the scene for another volatile
    summer. 

    The epicenter is likely again to be the Drumcree fields north of the
    mostly Protestant town of Portadown. 

    Last July, riot police barred Protestant Orangemen from marching
    through Portadown's main Catholic enclave for four increasingly violent
    nights, as tens of thousands of Protestants massed behind barbed-wire
    barricades. 

    When police commanders relented, Catholic areas erupted in four nights
    of worse rioting. 

    The violence cost two lives, scores of injuries, and at least $50
    million in damage. Both sides' extremists blamed a system in which the
    police held most power to stop or push through disputed marches. 
7.386IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3493
    AP 30-Jan-1997 22:13 EST   REF5012

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Surgery a Risk for Saddam's Son

    By JAMAL HALABY

    Associated Press Writer

    AMMAN, Jordan (AP) -- Saddam Hussein's oldest son risks total paralysis
    if he opts for surgery to remove bullets lodged in his pelvis and near
    his spine since an assassination attempt, sources said Thursday. 

    Odai, widely considered Saddam's heir apparent, has been partially
    paralyzed since being shot Dec. 12 during an attack in an upscale
    Baghdad suburb, they said. 

    Odai, 32, was thought to have suffered some paralysis based on
    appearances on Iraqi television in which he was shown not moving his
    legs. But the sources Thursday gave the most detailed description yet
    of Odai's condition. 

    In the Iraqi capital Baghdad, Iraq's information minister, Hamed Yousef
    Hamadi, denied suggestions that Odai was paralyzed or was at risk of
    losing a leg to gangrene. 

    "I have seen him," Hamadi told The Associated Press. "He is
    convalescing. He was hit by eight bullets. That is not a small thing." 

    The speculation on Odai's condition followed accounts of turmoil in
    Saddam's inner circle and coincided with reports by dissident groups
    that 6,000 Iraqi troops have been sent near the border with Kuwait,
    site of the 1990-91 Persian Gulf War. 

    Speaking from Jordan's capital, Amman, the dissidents said at least two
    brigades of special forces were sent to the southern city of Basra over
    the past few days and were deployed in palm tree groves just outside
    the city. 

    The groves' landlords, workers and their families have been asked to
    leave the area along the strategic Shat Al-Arab waterway in the
    northern tip of the Persian Gulf. 

    Opposition groups in London said the deployment could be linked to a
    recent surge in rebel attacks against government and security officials
    in Basra, 300 miles south of Baghdad. 

    The United States said this week that Saddam had launched extensive
    military exercises that again could threaten Kuwait. Iraq denied the
    charges Thursday, describing them, together with reports of unrest
    within Saddam's inner circle, as lies. 

    Quoting an Iraqi opposition group, the sources speaking in Amman about
    Odai's condition said two French physicians who arrived in Baghdad last
    month to check on him returned home this week. 

    "They did what they can, but Odai's condition is very complex," said
    one of the sources, whose government was well-informed on the
    physicians' experiences in Baghdad. 

    The source said the doctors, whom he declined to identify, operated
    three times on Odai and removed several bullets. 

    "But they were unable to remove one or two bullets that lodged in a
    sensitive area in the lower part of the spinal cord because that
    surgery could lead to total and permanent paralysis," the source said. 

    Another source, who maintains close contacts with the Iraqi regime,
    said "it's pretty bad that he's left with no choice but to undergo a
    very sensitive surgery that could leave him paralyzed forever." 

    The sources insisted they not be identified further. 

    Iraq has sought to disparage reports that Odai was seriously wounded.
    He has made several appearances on Iraqi television in the past few
    weeks, lying in bed in Baghdad's Ibn Sina hospital with his legs and
    much of his torso covered. 

    The most recent appearance was in 10 minutes of footage Wednesday,
    showing Odai smiling and chatting with his guests, who included Cabinet
    ministers and security officers. 

    The scenes apparently were filmed at different times since Odai
    appeared with a beard at one point, then without the beard. 

    He was wearing a white hospital shirt and his right arm and right leg
    were seen to move. There was no visible movement in the left arm. His
    left hand rested on his stomach and the fingers moved slightly. 

    Iraq has sought to blame the attack on Odai on neighboring Iran, with
    whom it fought an eight-year war in the 1980s. Iran has denied any
    involvement. 
7.387IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3471
    AP 30-Jan-1997 19:25 EST   REF5945

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Funding Cuts Hurt Brit. Health

    By MICHAEL WEST

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- Hospitals subsidized by the national health care system
    are struggling with an onslaught of winter patients that some say they
    are ill-equipped to handle because of funding cuts. 

    "We're currently facing what is probably the biggest crisis in accident
    and emergency in this hospital that I can remember in 12 years of being
    a consultant here," Dr. Lawrence Jaffey, clinical director of Royal
    Liverpool Hospital's accident and emergency department, said in a BBC
    documentary. 

    In his department, the workload is up by 50 percent in five years while
    funding has not increased, according to the documentary, broadcast
    Thursday. 

    With a national election due by May, the National Health Service is one
    of the biggest issues between the Conservatives and the opposition
    Labor Party. 

    The government says that the first weeks of January are always
    difficult because cold weather exacerbates some chronic ailments and
    people tend to put off medical care. On the whole, however, the public
    health system is getting more resources and performing better every
    year, the government insists. 

    "It is true that, since Christmas, the National Health Service has been
    under pressure," Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell said in a House of
    Commons debate Jan. 21. "I do not seek to deny that. It regularly
    happens during the first few weeks of the year." 

    Dorrell refused to discuss specific incidents, but named a list of
    cities and regions where the number of emergency beds had been
    increased. 

    The government says it has increased spending on the health service
    every year in real terms, and says its injection of market-style
    reforms in the system have shortened waiting times for non-emergency
    care. This year the NHS budget is $73 billion. 

    A commentary published last week in The Lancet, a British medical
    journal, took a sanguine view of recent events. 

    "It looks as though the government has escaped from its biggest
    electoral threat -- a media united in its belief that the National
    Health Service is being starved of the necessary funds to provide the
    extra care needed in winter," the article said. 

    The Office for National Statistics noted a significant increase in
    deaths from all causes in the new year -- 19,553 in the week ending
    Jan. 10 and 17,496 in the week following, compared to the January
    average of 13,000-14,000 a week. There were 103 deaths from flu in the
    first week and 60 in the second. 

    A poll conducted by The Gallup Organization late last year found that
    health was rated the nation's second-most urgent issue, behind
    unemployment. Another Gallup survey found that three-fifths believed
    the Health Service would get worse if the Conservatives won
    re-election. 

    Set up in 1948 by a Labor government, the National Health Service
    provides treatment to all, free of charge. Those who can afford it have
    the option of buying private care. 
7.388IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3466
    AP 30-Jan-1997 17:01 EST   REF5350

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Cites Weight-Gain Hormone

    By MALCOLM RITTER

    AP Science Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bolstering hopes of one day developing a new obesity
    drug, scientists have uncovered the first direct evidence that people
    with low levels of the hormone leptin may be prone to weight gain. 

    A study reported in the February issue of the journal Nature Medicine
    found that people who gained an average of 50 pounds over three years
    had started out with lower leptin levels than did people who didn't put
    on any weight. 

    While the study doesn't prove low leptin levels lead to weight gain, it
    strongly suggests that, said one of the researchers, Eric Ravussin, a
    visiting scientist at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive
    and Kidney Diseases. 

    The finding supports the tantalizing idea that giving leptin might help
    some fat people slim down. Ravussin said some 10 percent of overweight
    people might be leptin-deficient. 

    Leptin made headlines in 1995 when scientists reported that it could
    melt weight off mice. It is made by fat cells and appears to tell the
    brain how much fat an animal is carrying. 

    The mouse brain is thought to have a leptin thermostat. If it senses a
    lot of leptin, which indicates a lot of fat, it tells the animal to eat
    less and be more active. If there's too little leptin, it signals the
    mouse to put on weight. 

    People have leptin in their blood too, but it's not clear whether it
    affects their weight. Studies of injecting leptin into people have
    already begun. 

    Scientists launched the new study after noticing that some people have
    less leptin than would be expected from their degree of fatness. 

    Ravussin and colleagues turned to records from a long-running study of
    Pima Indians, who are prone to obesity. The researchers identified 19
    men and women who had gained at least about seven pounds a year and 17
    whose weight had been stable. 

    Then the researchers retrieved frozen samples of blood the Indians had
    given about three years before, and measured the levels of leptin they
    had at that time. On average, the weight-gainers started out with about
    one-third less leptin than the others. 

    The results are ntriguing, said John P. Foreyt of the Baylor College of
    Medicine in Houston, who has also studied leptin in people. But with so
    few participants, the study will have to be done again with larger
    numbers, and with people other than Pima Indians, he said. 

    Still, if further studies show similar findings, doctors may one day be
    able to identify children with low leptin levels and give them the
    hormone to help them keep from getting fat, he said. 

    Foreyt said leptin isn't the only influence over a person's weight, nor
    would low levels necessarily mean a person will get fat. "All of us are
    in control of our behavior," he said. 
7.389IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3432
    RTw  31-Jan-97 05:18    

    Ultrasound may kill leukaemia blood cells-report

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 31 (Reuter) - Ultrasound when used with photosensitive
    drugs may kill abnormal blood cells in those suffering from leukaemia,
    Japanese researchers said on Friday. 

    Dr Katsuro Tachibana and colleagues said they tested ultrasound's
    effect on photosensitive drugs -- those activated by light or other
    forms of radiation -- using blood samples from eight adults suffering
    T-cell leukaemia. 

    They treated the samples with ultrasound for about one minute and
    demonstrated it was more effective when combined with drugs. 

    There was a "significant difference" between the number of leukaemic
    cells that survived ultrasound treatment alone and those that survived
    treatment with ultrasound plus drugs, they found. 

    "The use of ultrasound to activate photosensitive drugs in the
    treatment of various diseases may be anticipated," Tachibana said in a
    letter to the Lancet medical journal. 

    Ultrasound is superior to light when used in combination with
    photosensitive drugs because it is relatively easy to use to treat
    large volumes of blood and takes a much shorter time to complete the
    treatment. 

    REUTER
7.390IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:35103
    RTw  31-Jan-97 03:36    

    FEATURE - History at your fingertips in Britain's ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - History at your fingertips in Britain's archives 

    By Paul Majendie 

    LONDON, Jan 31 (Reuter) - From Shakespeare's will to Captain Bligh's
    log recalling the mutiny on the Bounty, history is in your hands at
    Britain's National Archives. 

    Edward VIII's signature on the abdication document that shook the
    monarchy, Lawrence of Arabia's campaign maps, the 11th century Domeday
    Book -- the hi-tech building is a time capsule of the nation's history. 

    Up to 800 researchers a day delve into the millions of documents
    stacked on the 96 miles (155 km) of shelves at the Public Record
    Office. 

    Nine hundred years of history are there to be explored and everyone is
    welcome. Every New Year, journalists pore over cabinet secrets newly
    released by the government after a statutory 30 years gathering dust. 

    AUSTRALIANS, AMERICANS SEEK ANCESTORS 

    Entrance is free and a reader's ticket allows entry to the old and the
    new world. Australians look for details of ancestors deported as
    convicts. Americans whose forebears started a new life in the colonies
    hunt for clues to their family trees. 

    Pens are banned, only pencils are allowed. But you can photocopy
    documents and use a personal computer. 

    Readers are summoned by individual bleepers after staff using
    mechanised trolleys have scoured four floors of documents to track down
    the treasures the visitors need. 

    "To hold in your hand the actual log of HMS Bounty that Captain Bligh
    took with him when cast away in an open boat is a real thrill," said
    Anne Crawford, press officer of the Public Record Office. 

    "Touching the Domesday Book (Britain's first census), and realising
    William the Conqueror did too, is amazing," she said. 

    Great tragedies can be relived from the 16th century trial of Henry
    VIII's ill-fated wife Ann Boleyn to the 1649 trial of King Charles I
    that ended in his death on the scaffold. 

    PRICE INCALCULABLE, SECURITY TIGHT 

    "You couldn't begin to put a price on it in the open market. It is
    incalculable. I couldn't honestly tell you how many documents we have,"
    Crawford said. 

    Security is tight. Computers log the identity of every reader, cameras
    scour the reading room. The office has a staff of almost 500 and a 30
    million pound ($50 million) budget. 

    Everyone is searched when they leave the office, situated beside the
    world-famous botanical gardens at Kew in west London. Microfilmed
    records are stored at another central London location. 

    But Crawford admits: "No library anywhere in the world is foolproof."
    One thief was jailed for stealing beer labels from the patents
    register. "He was picked up on closed circuit television taking a blade
    to them," she said. 

    Contractors removing asbestos from storage rooms stole King George VI's
    royal warrant granting the then Princess Elizabeth formal permission to
    marry the Duke of Edinburgh. Police retrieved the document when the
    thieves tried to sell it. 

    FIRE THE RECURRING NIGHTMARE 

    Fire is a recurring nightmare but every document room can be isolated
    by metal doors. Smoking is banned. "The equipment is so sensitive it
    will pick up someone having a quick puff in the loo (toilet)," Crawford
    said. 

    The daily cast in the reading room is truly international. "We have
    students from all around the world seeing Britain's view of their
    country," she said. 

    And every year reveals new treasures as Britain slowly -- some would
    say grudgingly -- lifts the veil on the secrets of its past. 

    Of special interest are the secret agents who went behind enemy lines
    in World War Two. Government departments are gradually releasing
    documents after checking for national security risks. 

    "Everyone is waiting for the war records from the Balkans, France and
    the Low Countries. The Balkans are the next we are expecting later this
    year," Crawford said. 

    But for historians and researchers, there is nothing to equal the
    thrill of leafing through cabinet papers opened to the public gaze for
    the first time. Here are the innermost thoughts of leaders who shaped
    Britain's destiny. 

    REUTER
7.391IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3530
    RTw  31-Jan-97 01:10    

    Critic of UK's Major loses election candidature

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuter) - Conservative parliamentarian Sir George
    Gardiner, a leading Eurosceptic who fears the European Union is
    encroaching on British sovereignty, lost the chance on Thursday night
    to defend his seat at the next general election. 

    Gardiner, who once called Prime Minister John Major "a ventriloquist's
    dummy," was deselected as a candidate by local party officials in the
    southern English constituency of Reigate. He lost by 272 to 213 votes. 

    He had been a persistent critic of Major over Europe, the issue that
    has caused so much internecine strife in the ruling party. The
    Conservatives trail the opposition Labour Party in opinion polls in the
    runup to an election that Major must call by May 22 at the latest. 

    "I am obviously very disappointed at this result. It is a triumph of
    spite over loyalty," Gardiner said after battling in vain to save his
    political career with an unreserved apology for his comments in a
    newspaper article about Major. 

    "I have arranged to take whatever legal advice may be necessary and of
    course I will be consulting with my strong supporters in this
    constituency," he said after his defeat. 

    REUTER
7.392IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3523
    RTw  31-Jan-97 00:36    

    Queen Elizabeth I's seal purse found in trunk

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuter) - The 16th century velvet purse in which Queen
    Elizabeth's Great Seal of state was kept has been found in a storeroom
    trunk. 

    "As soon as i saw it, I thought "That's it, that's Elizabeth I's Seal
    Purse. I knew exactly, I was so very excited,"' Sotheby's textile
    specialist Kerry Taylor told the Times newspaper after the discovery in
    a widow's cluttered house. 

    The sumptuously embroidered purse that contained the symbol of the
    monarch's legal power is expected to fetch up to 30,000 pounds
    ($48,500) when put up for sale by the auctioneers in March. 

    The eldery woman, whose family had owned the purse for decades, had no
    idea of its value before she died in November. 

    REUTER
7.393IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3536
    RTw  30-Jan-97 23:48    

    Men must be warned of risks to orgasm - journal

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Jan 31 (Reuter) - Men should be warned that certain types of
    surgery or drug treatment may mean they can no longer experience
    orgasm, a leading British medical publication said on Friday. 

    Doctors cannot assume that male patients have given informed consent to
    such treatment unless the possible effects on orgasm have been
    discussed, the British Medical Journal said in an editorial. 

    At present, there is no reliable treatment for men who lose their
    ability to exerience orgasm. 

    "Although probably essential for the survival of the species, very
    little is known about the male orgasm," the journal said. 

    It said that loss of or change in the sensation of orgasm sometimes
    follows surgery on the prostate gland. Certain drugs, such as serotonin
    reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) used to treat depression, may also affect
    male orgasm. 

    Doctors believe that one in five men taking SSRIs may find they are
    unable to experience orgasm. 

    The journal cited a study of men who underwent prostate surgery in
    which about half the sexually active men reported "absent or altered
    orgasmic sensations" following treatment. 

    "A proportion of these men expressed their disappointment and on
    occasions anger at not having been warned of this side effect," it said

    REUTER
7.394IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3572
    RTw  30-Jan-97 23:42    

    British Conservatives hit by new opinion poll

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Mylrea 

    LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuter) - Britain's ruling Conservatives, facing a
    general election within four months, have failed to cut into the
    opposition Labour party's commanding lead in public opinion polls,
    according to a new survey of voters. 

    The latest poll carried out by the MORI organisation and published in
    Friday's edition of the Times newspaper showed Labour's lead had risen
    by four percentage points since early December to 55 percent. The
    government's support stayed static at 30 percent. 

    The gap now is 25 points. No British party has ever reversed a lead of
    this size in the time remaining before an election must be called. The
    last possible date is May 22. 

    Prime Minister John Major has been fighting back vigorously, homing in
    on the economy and claiming personal credit for the best economic
    climate the country has seen in decades. 

    He has also sought to capitalise on his image as a cautious, homely
    politician, using billboards to portray his opponent, Labour leader
    Tony Blair, as a wild-eyed socialist who would increase taxes and bring
    the economic boom juddering to a halt. 

    The poll in the Times showed that, while Major is personally liked by
    half of all voters, nearly two thirds dislike his government. A
    majority believe Labour is ready to govern with Blair as prime
    minister. 

    The only comfort for Major is that the party which suffered most in the
    poll was the minority Liberal Democrats, who fell two points to 11
    percent, the lowest for six years. MORI interviewed 1,707 adults
    between January 24 and 28 for the poll. 

    Some Conservative strategists fear the ruling Conservatives could fall
    victim to a "pincer movement," losing seats to the Liberal Democrats in
    the south and to Labour in the rest of Britain, leaving them with only
    a handful. 

    Speculation has swirled around parliament that Major could decide to
    call the election early if polls start to go in his favour, believing
    they understate his support and voters will swing back to the
    Conservatives during the campaign. 

    The poll is likely to pour cold water on speculation about an early
    election. Conservative sources also appeared to discount an early
    election on Thursday when they said they plan next week finally to
    announce the date of a by-election. 

    The by-election in the seat of Wirral has been pending since
    Conservative member of parliament Barry Porter died in November. 

    The government has waited to the last minute to call the by-election,
    which now is expected to be on February 27, giving it time to recover
    from the expected defeat in Wirral and hold a general election in late
    April or May. 

    Losing the seat would push the government, which is tied with the
    opposition parties overall but has 51 seats more than Labour, is
    expected to lose the seat, into a minority. 

    But it can still hang on to power with the support of sympathetic
    Northern Irish Unionist members of parliament. 

    REUTER
7.395IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3628
    RTw  30-Jan-97 22:28    

    Caymans church reaches into cyberspace for raffle

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands, Jan 30 (Reuter) - A Roman Catholic church
    in this British territory is reaching into cyberspace for raffle ticket
    buyers because there are not enough people here to support its
    ambitious fundraising goal. 

    Knowing that residents of the tiny Cayman Islands could not buy enough
    tickets to meet its target of $500,000, St. Ignatius Catholic Church
    decided to advertise its raffle on the Internet. 

    Grand prize -- a $500,000, two-bedroom condo on Grand Cayman's famous
    Seven Mile Beach. 

    "We needed to raise about half a million dollars to pay off some old
    church bills and for the schools," raffle organiser Jennison Nunes
    said. "But there are only about 33,000 people in the Cayman Islands.
    That would take a lot of sales to just a few people." 

    Since going on-line last week, the church has sold 3,500 tickets via
    the Internet. The church will accept credit cards payments for Internet
    purchase of the $25 raffle tickets. 

    REUTER
7.396IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 10:3633
    RTw  30-Jan-97 20:39    

    EU investigates phone company Internet activities

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BRUSSELS, Jan 30 (Reuter) - The European Commission has opened an
    investigation into the Internet-related activities of phone companies
    in Britain, France, Germany and Belgium, Commission sources said on
    Thursday. 

    The probe aims to ensure that the companies are not acting on a
    discriminatory basis by favouring their own Internet services at the
    expense of third parties, they said. 

    The European Union executive, which is not responding to any particular
    complaints, has sent a questionnaire asking for details from British
    Telecommunications Plc, France Telecom, Deutsche Telekom AG and
    Belgacom. 

    It asked them to reply by the end of January, although it said they
    could ask for more time, the sources said. It has not yet received any
    responses. 

    The probe is not targeting Internet service providers, but rather the
    telecoms companies who control facilities needed by those providers to
    operate. 

    The questionnaire asks for details about the companies' involvement in
    Internet or online service activities and about their dealings with
    other firms involved in such activities. 

    REUTER
7.397IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 15:4152
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Abuse victims to sue homes 
    
    By Barbie Dutter 

    MORE than 100 victims of sexual abuse at children's homes in the
    north-west of England are to start legal action today for compensation.

    Writs are to be issued against the operators of five homes in Cheshire
    and Merseyside, alleging sexual and physical abuse by care workers over
    30 years. Lawyers for the victims, now mostly in their 30s and 40s,
    said last night that the compensation being sought was likely to run
    into many millions of pounds. But it was of secondary importance to the
    victims, whose chief demand was for a public inquiry into how such
    widespread and protracted abuse was allowed to happen.

    Ten men have already been jailed for up to 15 years for paedophile
    offences at children's homes in Cheshire and Merseyside. Several trials
    have yet to be heard and orders have been made to prevent the reporting
    of certain details disclosed in some of the completed trials -
    including the names of the establishments in question - to prevent
    forthcoming hearings from being prejudiced.

    The compensation action follows a three-year inquiry by Cheshire police
    and a tandem investigation in Merseyside. In Cheshire alone, interviews
    with some 2,500 former children's home residents brought 350
    allegations of abuse - ranging from minor physical attacks to serious
    sexual offences - against 110 people. Roughly one in seven of those
    interviewed by police claimed they had been abused while in care.

    The writs will be issued this morning in the High Court in Manchester
    against Liverpool city council, which managed two of the homes; the
    Nugent Care Society, also responsible for two; and the charity NCH
    Action For Children, which ran one establishment.

    Peter Garsden, the solicitor who is co-ordinating the compensation
    claims for a group of 100 legal firms, said last night: "The victims
    aren't really interested in money, but they feel someone must pay for
    what has happened."

    He said a public inquiry - like the tribunal now investigating
    paedophile activity at children's homes in North Wales - was of
    inestimable importance to the victims. "They want this kind of
    recognition that people actually care enough to say they are sorry.

    "Some of the victims were abused at home by family members and were
    glad to get away from home and into care. Then they were abused in
    care, sometimes at repeated children's homes, by various different men.
    Not surprisingly, these are very badly damaged people. They are very
    insecure. They suffer from anxiety and depression. They make attempts
    to harm themselves, or turn to drink."
7.398IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 15:4453
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Roads protest ends as Swampy crawls out of his tunnel
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 

    THE week-long underground protest by anti-roads activists ended last
    night when Swampy, the last of five tunnel demonstrators, was brought
    to the surface.

    Swampy, who is thought to be Danny Needs, 23, from the Newbury area,
    emerged a few hours after two other protesters, known as Ian and
    "Muppet Dave", thought to be David Moss, were brought from their
    precarious tunnel network under the site of the A30 improvement scheme
    at Fairmile, near Honiton, Devon.

    They were arrested and taken to Exeter police station.

    The official leading the eviction, Trevor Coleman, the Under Sheriff of
    Devon, said that Swampy gave up at the request of the A30 Action Group.

    One of the seven-strong team of tunnellers who got to Swampy said he
    was 18ft below ground and 20ft along a passage. "It was just small
    enough for him to squeeze into. It would have taken us five days to get
    him out," he said.

    Asked about the condition of the area where Swampy was found, the
    tunneller, who was wearing a balaclava helmet and did not want to be
    named, said: "It was a death trap."

    Swampy told the news conference that his seven nights underground were
    "all right, I had plenty to eat." He added: "I stopped digging because
    I felt we had made our point and by coming out it was safer for all
    concerned."

    When the tunnellers reached him, Swampy said: "I was lying down reading
    my book eating some bourbon creams."

    Another protester who emerged yesterday was reached after security
    staff dug a parallel tunnel, then pushed through the intervening wall.
    Meanwhile, three activists who have been remanded in custody for
    breaching bail conditions after earlier arrests said they would refuse
    to take food unless a list of demands, including a new public inquiry
    into the road scheme, were met.

    The trio include two law graduates, from Liverpool University, Jennifer
    Hall, 23, from Preston, and Sarah Baker, 22, from Littlehampton, West
    Sussex, who are both in Eastwood Park women's prison,
    Wotton-under-Edge, Glos.

    The third is John Davies, a Welshman in his thirties, who has been
    living in Inverness and is now in Exeter jail. They said they would
    continue their hunger strike until work on the A30 ceased.
7.399IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 15:4871
7.400IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 15:55110
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Naomi's playground killer is jailed for life
    
    By David Millward 

    AN apprentice paint-sprayer was jailed for life for the murder of Naomi
    Smith, a schoolgirl whose mutilated body was found at a playground near
    her home in September 1995.

    Edwin Hopkins, 20, was convicted after a jury heard that his teeth
    matched bite marks found on the 15-year-old girl's body and that he had
    left a DNA "fingerprint" of saliva on her breast. Hopkins, who was
    flanked by prison officers, displayed no emotion as the jury found him
    guilty by a 10-1 majority after deliberating for
    three-and-three-quarter hours.

    There were muffled cheers from the public gallery at Birmingham Crown
    Court when the verdict was announced. Speaking after Hopkins was
    jailed, Naomi's mother, Catherine, said: "We are pleased with the
    verdict. Naomi was our only daughter. She died a child at the hands of
    Hopkins, who is possessed by evil. Edwin Hopkins is alive. We do not
    call this justice. We are advocates of capital punishment."

    Jailing Hopkins, Mr Justice Tucker said: "The jury have convicted you
    of the murder of an innocent schoolgirl. It was a savage murder and it
    had sadistic features. You are, in my opinion, a very dangerous young
    man. I bear in mind that you are only 20 years old. I sentence you to
    custody for life."

    Naomi was last seen alive when she left her home in Ansley Common,
    Nuneaton, Warwicks, to post a letter on Sept 14, 1995. Her half-naked
    body was found under a slide at the playground two hours later by her
    father and Emma Jones, her best friend, who had gone out to find her.

    She had been sexually assaulted, mutilated and Hopkins had also tried
    to strangle her. Hopkins, from Ansley Common, had denied murdering the
    girl. He admitted having met her on six occasions, the last being about
    two weeks before her death. On the night of her murder, he said that he
    had been at his sister Julie's house, having left it only briefly to
    post a letter.

    But Miss Hopkins destroyed her younger brother's alibi when she told
    the jury that his trip to the off-licence had taken longer than she
    expected. The route coincided with the one police believe that Naomi
    took to post the letter.

    Although the murder weapon was not found at Hopkins's home, the jury
    was told that he was obsessed with knives and had a collection which
    included a machete. The crucial evidence which led to his conviction
    was the DNA sample which Hopkins gave, along with other men aged
    between 14 and 40 from Ansley Common who answered a police appeal.

    Hopkins's sample, which was obtained from the inside of his mouth,
    suggested that he could not be eliminated as a suspect. A further blood
    test, which was also sent off for DNA analysis, suggested that there
    was only a one in 44 million chance that someone other than Hopkins
    could have murdered Naomi.

    Michael Barber, a DNA scientist, told the jury that he thought it was
    highly unlikely that another person in Britain could have the same
    profile as Hopkins. Forensic dental evidence also proved vital in
    securing Hopkins's conviction at Birmingham Crown Court.

    Experts who examined Naomi's body observed from bite marks that her
    killer had a tooth missing from the front of his mouth. A plaster
    impression of Hopkins's mouth matched the imprint found on the girl. He
    told police that a tooth had been knocked out when he fell off a
    bicycle as a child. Other chips and indentations also matched the marks
    on Naomi's body, the court was told. 

    Dr Andrew Walker, a forensic odontologist, told the jury: "I found that
    one of his front teeth was missing. The arrangement was unusual. As a
    result of the tooth loss the other teeth had moved into the space and
    closed the gap so that the upper jaw was lopsided. All the
    irregularities fitted the bite marks completely. It was a very good
    match."

    Colman Treacy, QC, prosecuting, said: "It was probably better than if
    the killer had left his autograph, because what was found in the area
    around the breast provides some of the most valuable evidence for the
    prosecution in this case."

    Naomi was remembered as a shy teenager who wanted to become a pop star
    and whose favourite group was Take That. The only child of Mrs Smith
    and her husband, Brian, Naomi was a pupil at Hartshill High School
    where she was due to take nine GCSEs. Friends remembered her as a quiet
    girl with a love of animals who was often seen around the village
    walking her dogs.

    "Naomi was very popular in the area and she would speak to anyone," Pam
    Alcott, her next-door neighbour said. "She was confident and very
    inquisitive. She would always be the first one to go out and have a
    look if anything was happening."

    Emma Jones lost a best friend who protected her against a gang of
    bullies. At an emotional press conference after the murder, Emma
    recalled the moment when she realised that what she thought was a
    bundle of clothes was her dead friend. "I saw what that evil person did
    to her. I don't think I will ever forget when I went to the rec."

    The killing devastated the ex-mining community and many villagers made
    a silent pilgrimage to lay flowers at the spot where the body was
    found. Observing the grief of the community was Hopkins, who joined the
    sombre crowd at the scene.

    Neighbours of the Smith family said they were pleased with the verdict
    and that the matter could finally be put to rest. One woman said: "He
    [Hopkins] was such a quiet kid at school, we were all shocked when he
    was arrested. There is a general feeling of relief around here now it
7.401IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0034
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Cabinet minister's attack on Brussels is censored
    
    By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent 

    A RIGHT-wing Cabinet minister was ordered to tone down a speech that
    would have portrayed the European Union as a destroyer of nations, for
    fear of exposing Tory splits. 

    Michael Forsyth, Scottish Secretary, was told by the Foreign Office to
    cut out sections of a speech that he delivered last night, including
    one remark that Brussels had become "a black hole devouring national
    sovereignty".

    Although the speech still contained some strong sentiments,
    Conservative Party sources said Mr Forsyth had been warned to remove a
    number of offending statements. Other comments that he was forced to
    omit are thought to have included some tough criticisms of the single
    European currency.

    Foreign Office sources said Mr Forsyth had not been "gagged" but that
    there had been "changes of nuance". One source said it was common for
    speeches on Europe to be checked with the department to make sure that
    they did not go beyond the official line.

    Last year, in an attempt to curb signs of Cabinet division, John Major
    ordered all speeches by his ministers which strayed outside their
    departmental responsibilities to be scrutinised. The bulk of Mr
    Forsyth's speech was a vigorous assault on the Scottish National Party
    for its stated aim of seeking "Independence in Europe".

    "The SNP soundbite of independence in Europe has as much credibility as
    offering the Picts greater freedom within the Roman Empire," he said.
7.402IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0052
7.403IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0226
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Sailors win fight to stay on Shetland

    TWO Bulgarian sailors have won their appeal against the Home
    Secretary's decision to deport them from Shetland.

    An Immigration Appeals Tribunal in London has granted Georgi Spasov and
    Dmitar Dmitrov political asylum. The men had said they feared
    persecution from former Communists if repatriated to Bulgaria, after
    leading a strike aboard the fish-factory ship Rotalia in Lerwick,
    Shetland, during the winter of 1994/95.

    Bulgaria is on Mr Howard's "white list" of countries where it is
    believed citizens are not at risk from authorities. Last night Mr
    Spasov said: We're very, very pleased and grateful."

    He and Mr Dmitrov were celebrating with friends in the village of
    Scalloway, where they share a flat above a chipshop. Derick Herning,
    the Lerwick interpreter who has helped the men for the past three
    years, said: "I'm highly delighted. Now they can start to flourish
    without the sword of Damocles hanging over them."

    The men have been working for a Shetland building contractor since
    receiving work permits a year ago. Their cause attracted widespread
    support.
7.404IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0357
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Attack on pupil 'left blood on the walls'
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 

    A TRADITIONAL ritual in which pupils at a leading London school were
    beaten up on their birthdays led to an attack that left walls
    splattered with blood, a court was told yesterday.

    The "birthday beats" were carried out by the members of London Oratory
    School's rugby first XV, but Leigh Boccius was attacked the day before
    his birthday by one pupil, Paul Brewin, a house captain, Knightsbridge
    Crown Court was told. Stanley Hughes, prosecuting, said Brewin, who
    weighed 13 stones and was well built, punched eight stone Leigh Boccius
    so hard his nose "exploded." He is also alleged to have swung the
    16-year-old round by his tie and hair and punched and kneed him in the
    face, back and stomach.

    The court was told that Leigh had annoyed Brewin, then 18 and a
    prefect, by accidentally barging into him in a corridor at the school,
    which is attended by Euan Blair, son of the Labour leader. Brewin
    reacted by shouting at Leigh and offered to fight him. But Leigh,
    fearing Brewin would lead the "beats" on him the next day, which was
    his birthday, allegedly threatened Brewin with a knife. Brewin, now 19,
    said he was terrified of Leigh who, he said, had twice threatened to
    stab him with a craft knife. He said he had seen Leigh with the weapon
    and was frightened.

    Later the same day the pair came face to face in the corridor. Mr
    Hughes alleged Brewin wanted revenge, but Brewin told the jury Leigh
    walked fast towards him, staring intently.

    He said: "I panicked, I was frightened. He had threatened he would stab
    me. I just reacted. I took a step forward and hit him. It all happened
    very quickly." But Mr Hughes claimed that Leigh had dented Brewin's
    pride. "He saw the younger boy as a cheeky upstart and wanted to teach
    him a lesson," Mr Hughes said. Brewin said that he was "very surprised"
    at how badly Leigh was hurt and denied Mr Hughes's allegation that he
    was "very angry" when Leigh flouted his senior position.

    Brewin, who has left the school, was asked by his counsel, Milliken
    Smith, if the rugby set carried out beatings. "Yes, but it was strictly
    between friends," he said. "It was just a few friends giving you a few
    digs in the arms and legs. It was light-hearted.".

    The court was told that Leigh suffered a broken nose in the attack.
    Brewin of Wandsworth, south London, denies causing him actual bodily
    harm last May. Two weeks earlier another pupil suffered concussion
    after "birthday beats".

    Another pupil, Brendan O'Reilly, said: "It was a tradition that went on
    throughout the school. I assume most staff knew about it but turned a
    blind eye." He said immediately after the concussion incident, staff at
    the 1,200-pupil school banned the beatings.

    The case continues.
7.405IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0561
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Minister thrown out of school in by-election row
    
    By Jon Hibbs, Political Correspondent 

    A GOVERNMENT minister was expelled from school grounds yesterday after
    being accused of "gate-crashing" a private visit by the shadow
    education spokesman, David Blunkett.

    Eric Forth, on a by-election campaign visit to Wirral South, was
    reprimanded by local council chiefs after he breached a strict ruling
    on party political visits by straying into the school car park to
    conduct a radio interview. 

    Mr Forth denied that he had deliberately sought to disrupt Mr
    Blunkett's visit to the Wirral County Grammar School for Girls and
    insisted that he had no intention of entering the school buildings,
    where Mr Blunkett and the Labour candidate, Ben Chapman, were meeting
    sixth formers.

    The future of grammar schools is likely to be a contentious issue in
    the by-election, which is expected to be held on Feb 27. The late Barry
    Porter had a majority of 8,183 at the last election. Mr Blunkett
    arrived in the constituency determined to "nail the lie" that Labour
    planned to close schools like the girls' county grammar and its boys'
    counterpart, where Harold Wilson, the former Labour prime minister, was
    educated.

    Meanwhile, Mr Forth arrived on the scene with the Tory candidate, Les
    Byrom, and Alan Duncan, a parliamentary aide to Brian Mawhinney, the
    party chairman. They had arranged a news conference at a nearby hotel
    to comment on Mr Blunkett's performance, but were diverted to the
    school car park for an interview with BBC Radio Merseyside.

    Mr Forth, believing that he was going to conduct a "head-to-head"
    debate with Mr Blunkett, hung around waiting but eventually went on air
    alone. But when Labour learned of the minister's presence he was asked
    to leave by a school governor, Montague Hughes, acting on the authority
    of the head teacher and the governing body.

    At this point rival accounts diverge as electioneering took over, with
    Labour maintaining that the party were escorted off the premises and
    the Tories accusing Mr Blunkett of being frightened to do a live debate
    with Mr Forth. 

    In a letter to Mr Blunkett last night, Mr Byrom described how "an
    excitable group of Labour Party members arrived" and asked Mr Forth to
    leave. "It should be noted that members of your party used physical
    force and employed vile and obscene language during this incident,"
    said Mr Byrom.

    Mr Duncan joined in, calling Mr Hughes "a political thug" who had
    abused his position as a school governor. Labour defended the
    77-year-old governor, insisting that Mr Hughes was a much decorated
    Parachute Regiment veteran. Mr Blunkett said Mr Forth had "made a fool
    of himself" by trying to make a "silly, party political point" at the
    expense of Wirral children.

    29 January 1997: Dating game has Westminster agog 22 January 1997:
    Heseltine gatecrashes the Blair party
7.406IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0779
7.407IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:0929
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Hume plea not to bug confession
    
    By Sarah Schaefer 

    CARDINAL Hume yesterday voiced concern about the Police Bill and asked
    Michael Howard, the Home Secretary, to provide a guarantee that police
    would not be allowed to bug the confessional box.

    In a letter to Mr Howard, the leader of Britain's 4.4 million Roman
    Catholics sought an amendment of the Bill to safeguard the sacrament of
    confession "and thereby to reassure the Catholic community". He wrote:
    "As presently drafted, the Bill provides wide powers for the police to
    conduct intrusive surveillance on any property. 

    "As no exemptions are made, the absolute confidentiality of the
    sacrament of confession could be violated if the police were to be
    authorised to conduct surveillance of a sacramental confession."

    Last week the House of Lords backed a Labour amendment requiring police
    officers to get permission from a special commissioner before
    conducting bugging operations. A Home Office spokesman said that since
    the amendment any surveillance of confession boxes was unlikely.

    The cardinal cited a recent American case in which a confession was
    taped, unknown to the priest, for possible use in evidence. He wrote:
    "Those seeking confession must be sure that what they say will never be
    revealed to anyone."
7.408IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:1645
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Bogus vicar 'great guy but eccentric'
    
    By Tom Utley 

    THE bogus vicar who conducted an unlawful marriage service last summer
    was identified yesterday as an eccentric first-year student of church
    history at the University of Wales.

    Friends of Steve Grant, 20, who stepped into the breach when the real
    vicar failed to appear, said he was a "great guy" who was trying to
    help. Mr Grant, described as bespectacled, podgy and spotty, was to
    have been a server at the marriage of Rod Earnshaw and Shirley Wilson,
    both 25, at St John's Church, Golcar, Huddersfield, in August.

    But the Rev Robin Townsend, who was due to take the service, arrived an
    hour late because of a mix-up over the time. And, by the time he
    appeared, Mr Grant had already pronounced the couple man and wife.

    The couple, who do not appear to have seen the funny side of their
    experience, are threatening to sue the Church of England although the
    church says that is not possible. Bodnar Hill of Leeds, solictors for
    Mr Earnshaw and Miss Wilson, refused to say yesterday if the couple had
    been legally married since being told five months ago that an impostor
    had conducted the ceremony.

    Mr Grant was not answering calls at his rooms on the university campus
    in Lampeter yesterday. But his friend Roland Hume, 20, said: "He's a
    great guy and, if he saw someone with a problem, he wouldn't think
    twice about helping. I'm sure he could see the bride and groom getting
    more and more distressed and so he stepped in. He's a bit of an
    eccentric but, if I had a problem, he's the first person I would turn
    to."

    Justin Breeze, 24, who lives on the same corridor in Mr Grant's hall of
    residence, said: "Steve is a great bloke. I'm sure he was just trying
    to help the bride and groom when the vicar didn't turn up."

    Prof David Protheroe Davies, vice-chancellor, said: "What he did was
    very irresponsible, foolish and very cruel to the couple involved. I'm
    sure he found himself in an awkward situation and felt he should help.
    I have no doubt it was a spur of the moment decision but it does not
    excuse what he did. It is now up to the church authorities and the
    courts to deal with the matter."
7.409IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:1831
7.410IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:1837
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    New role for ousted Paymaster General
    
    By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent 

    DAVID Willetts, the former Paymaster General forced to resign last
    month for allegedly attempting to influence the cash-for-questions
    inquiry, has been given a post at Tory Central Office that will give
    him a key role in the next election.

    He has been made chairman of the Conservative Research Department, an
    honorary title vacant for 16 years but whose previous holders included
    Rab Butler, former deputy Prime Minister, and Sir Ian Gilmour, former
    Lord Privy Seal. It marks a rapid rehabilitation for Mr Willetts and is
    a recognition of the high regard for his strategic and political
    skills. In addition to the title Mr Willetts will be given a central
    election role linking up the press office and the research department.

    Senior Tory sources made clear after his resignation that they would
    want to continue to harness Mr Willetts's talents in the run-up to the
    election. However, by according him the historic title held by eminent
    Tories, the Conservative Party has demonstrated its attitude to the
    outcome of the select committee hearing which cost him his job.

    Mr Willetts was forced to quit after a Standards and Privileges
    Committee report said he had "dissembled" in his evidence to them. He
    had been accused of seeking to tamper with an earlier Commons inquiry
    into the cash-for-questions affair, two years earlier while still a
    junior whip.

    He continues to deny the charge and the new appointment chimes with a
    feeling at Conservative Central Office that he was unfairly scapegoated
    in what one party figure called "a political show trial".

    Mr Willetts said: "I am delighted to be taking up this historic post
    and look forward to working hard at Central Office."
7.412IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2150
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Gene find may help to prevent blindness

    THE discovery of a gene for glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness,
    could enable doctors to diagnose the disorder before it causes
    irreversible damage to the eyes, according to new research.

    Glaucoma progressively destroys peripheral vision, eventually leading
    to blindness. It seems to be caused by a build-up of pressure in the
    eye which damages cells in the optic nerve, but very little is known
    about the mechanism behind it.

    A team of American scientists, including the molecular geneticists Prof
    Edwin Stone and Prof Val Sheffield of the University of Iowa College of
    Medicine, have now come one step closer to unravelling that mechanism
    by identifying a gene which is defective in one form of the disorder,
    juvenile glaucoma.

    Juvenile glaucoma is a hereditary disease which can strike as early as
    the teens and is particularly virulent. Although it accounts for fewer
    than one in 100 cases of glaucoma, there is evidence that the gene
    identified by the researchers could also be responsible for some cases
    that develop in adulthood - when most cases occur. In all, it could
    account for three per cent of glaucoma.

    Four years ago the researchers found genetic markers which suggested
    that the gene for glaucoma was somewhere on Chromosome 1. They then
    studied around 100 affected people in eight families, and found that in
    five of those families the gene that codes for was mutated. Their
    findings appear in today's Science.

    The gene codes for a protein produced by cells which control eye
    pressure. So its discovery also throws light on how the optic nerve is
    damaged in glaucoma. But the clinical importance of this discovery is
    in making early diagnosis easier. "The main difficulty is in diagnosing
    this silent disease before irreversible optic nerve damage has
    occurred," the researchers said.

    The International Glaucoma Association estimates that half of all cases
    go undiagnosed. Yet if the disorder is caught early enough, drugs can
    save the eyesight by reducing pressure within the eye. Prof Sheffield
    said: "In a percentage of cases this gene can be used to make this
    diagnosis presymptomatically, and that's really exciting because
    glaucoma is really an asymptomatic disease."

    Human trials are to begin shortly on a pill that has eased or prevented
    influenza in tests on animals. Gilead Sciences in California said the
    compound relieved symptoms in 24 hours and appeared to block infection
    by major flu strains with no adverse effects.
7.413IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2228
7.414IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2329
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    'Poison pen' prank girls suspended
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 

    EIGHT girls have been suspended from a secondary school after a
    campaign of harassment against a woman teacher.

    The pupils, seven third-year teenagers and one 12-year-old in her first
    year, allegedly sent abusive letters, daubed offensive graffiti on
    school walls and threw a stone at the teacher's home. The graffiti was
    said to have been written by pupils considered "good, decent and almost
    above suspicion".

    The six-week campaign at Dingwall Academy, Ross-shire, was aimed at
    Sandra Reid, 29, a history teacher. A police report has been sent to
    the Reporter to the Children's Panel, who will decide on any further
    action.

    Sandy Glass, the school's rector, said the campaign was a prank which
    went too far. He denied a claim from one member of staff that
    harassment was "endemic" at the academy and that teachers were afraid
    to punish pupils for fear of reprisals. He said that the girls' parents
    had supported the school's action, and all eight had written notes of
    apology.

    Alan Gilchrist, Highland Council education director, said the academy
    did not have a record of bad behaviour.
7.415IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2337
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    One child in five suffers 'glue ear'
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 

    ONE child in five suffers from "glue ear" for more than half of the
    first three years of life researchers say today.

    The findings are based on a study of 95 babies born between 1991 and
    1993 in Oxfordshire who were visited and tested at home, every month
    from birth for up to three years. Seventeen of them were were found to
    have "glue ear" at more than half of the visits and 33 at more than a
    third of the visits. Children under two were the most prone to the
    condition.

    Sarah Hogan, audiological scientist at the University Laboratory of
    Physiology, Oxford, said in the British Medical Journal that the most
    susceptible children tended to have a greater number of episodes rather
    than attacks that lasted longer.

    Glue ear is an accumulation of fluid in the middle ear which affects
    hearing. Frequently it goes undetected. One or both ears can be
    affected. Often the only sign that children have the condition is that
    parents notice some level of deafness. In serious cases a small tube
    called a grommet is inserted surgically in the eardrum to equalise
    pressure in the ear and allow it to drain.

    The condition causes concern among parents because of the suggestion
    that hearing loss in infancy could cause their children to have
    difficulty distinguishing sounds in noisy environments when they are
    older. The surgery is controversial because the condition can clear up
    by itself.

    Miss Hogan points out that current practice in Britain is "watchful
    waiting", with doctors keeping the child under review for a while
    before deciding on surgery.
7.416IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2528
7.417IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2738
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Village fights for its 'killer ducks'
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A PADDLING of ducks has been banished from a village pond because they
    have been breeding too fast.

    Two Khaki Campbell drakes and a mallard duck were placed in the pond in
    Creigiau, near Cardiff, two years ago and multiplied rapidly until 24
    ducks were crowding the water. But the Caerphilly Mountain Countryside
    Service became concerned that they were damaging plant and insect life
    in the pond. To the consternation of residents the ducks were moved
    last week from the village to ponds at Creigiau golf club.

    Villagers learned of the move when they took their children to the pond
    to feed the ducks only to find that the birds had gone - with a notice
    from the countryside service attached to a lampost.

    Under the heading "We've moved" it said: "The domestic ducks have
    changed their address and are now living at Creigiau Golf Course. This
    is because they were eating all the creatures in this wildlife pond. We
    hope that true wild ducks will visit the pond in the future. The pond
    now has a chance to be beneficial for wildlife and the domestic ducks
    can improve their golf. (They are already scoring birdies!)!"

    Carol Schuler said her seven-year-old daughter was in tears when she
    discovered that the ducks had gone. "This is conservation gone too
    far," she said. "What is a duck pond without ducks on it?"

    Beryl Dummett, who has launched a Bring Back The Ducks campaign, said:
    "They were spirited away in an underhand way without anyone being asked
    their views."

    David Workman, a spokesman for the countryside service, said: "The
    ducks were killing all life in the pond and we have moved them to give
    it time to recover."
7.418IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:2923
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    Restorer cheats at marbles
    
    By Tim King 

    SPECIAL paint effects used by 19th-century decorators are being
    restored and copied at a National Trust estate in Suffolk.

    Conservators are overhauling the interior of Ickworth House, an
    Italianate rotunda built by the fourth Earl of Bristol at the end of
    the 18th Century. The entrance hall was decorated between 1820 and 1840
    with a rich array of classical columns and terracotta friezes. On one
    side of the hall the restorers have been peeling away layers of yellow
    and white paint from the columns to expose their state in 1840, painted
    to look like Siena marble.

    A specialist decorator has been painting a new layer of marble-effect
    paint on top of layers of old paint. Ickworth House, near Bury St
    Edmunds, which contains the paintings and furniture accumulated by the
    Hervey family, including works by Titian and Gainsborough, re-opens on
    March 22. The Capability Brown park and gardens are open all year.
    
7.419IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Fri Jan 31 1997 16:3026
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 31 January 1997

    One-eyed cow fear 'led to factory fire'

    A SUPERSTITIOUS Filipino workman's fear of a one-eyed cow was to blame
    for a fire which engulfed an industrial park, the High Court was told
    yesterday.

    Harry Laporre's fear of the cow, which had a cataract in one eye, was
    so great that he burned off-cuts from his workshop on bare ground
    rather than in a metal skip, against which the animal used to warm
    itself.

    Sparks from the fire ignited wooden pallets nearby, causing hundreds of
    thousands of pounds damage to The Maltings, in Narborough, Norfolk.

    His employer, Broderick Whitehead, who runs a joinery business at The
    Maltings, was held liable to pay compensation to businesses destroyed
    in the fire in 1992. Mr Laporre had denied starting the fire outside
    the skip - against strict instructions - but admitted being terrified
    of the cow.

    Mr Justice Collins said: "Harry said the cow was an evil influence. It
    seems a little foolish to speak of the cow having an 'evil eye' and it
    is easy for us who have a different culture to laugh at it but, for
    him, it was no laughing matter."
7.420IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:17107
    AP 3-Feb-1997 1:04 EST   REF5235

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, Feb. 3, 1997
   
    CALIFORNIA BOMBS 

    VALLEJO, Calif. (AP) -- Police arrested two men today in the bombings
    that struck a courthouse and bank in the past week, and recovered
    explosives in a plot they believe was designed to subvert the criminal
    justice system. Police said the names of the suspects were being
    withheld as officers continued their search for at least one other
    suspect. Officers cordoned off a five-block Vallejo neighborhood and
    evacuated residents Sunday night after they discovered 500 pounds of
    dynamite at a home, police said. 
   
    CLINTON-GOVERNORS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton offered the nation's governors a
    preview of his State of the Union Address, saying he plans to cover
    topics like welfare reform and economic issues. After a day of policy
    meetings and discussions, the 44 governors in town for the annual
    National Governors' Association gathering went to the White House
    tonight for dinner with the president and first lady. Clinton also said
    his State of the Union Address will address more generally the
    direction the country is headed as it approaches the new century and
    millenium. 
   
    WORLD FORUM 

    DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
    says Israel and the Palestinians will resume talks this week with "a
    great feeling of hope" toward a wider Mideast settlement that could
    involve Syria. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat signaled a willingness
    to compromise, saying he would accept an "international presence" to
    control goods arriving in Palestinian-controlled areas. But Arafat
    complained about restrictions on Palestinians who want to work in
    Israel. Netanyahu, who spoke later at the World Economic Forum, said
    Israelis have suffered Palestinian terror attacks. 
   
    DRUG STUDY 

    DETROIT (AP) -- Marriage for young adults is a good thing when it comes
    to cutting back on drinking and using drugs, according to a study
    released Monday. The University of Michigan study of 33,000 young
    adults from 1976 to 1994 showed that young, unmarried adults usually
    increased their alcohol, marijuana and cocaine use when they left home,
    often to attend college. Those same people, however, decreased their
    drug and alcohol use when they got engaged, married and had children,
    the study showed. Conversely, those who stayed single were a high
    proportion of drug and alcohol users. "If you feel a responsibility to
    and for another person, then you are more apt to control your own
    behavior and play a role in controlling the partner's behavior," said
    one of the study's authors. 
   
    YUGOSLAVIA 

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Hundreds of riot police beat protesters
    and fired tear gas and water cannons today in the biggest show of force
    in 75 days of anti-government protests in the capital. At least 50
    protesters were injured, independent media reported. "Tonight, a crime
    was committed against the people of Belgrade," opposition leader Vuk
    Draskovic said. "We won't stop until those who gave orders for this
    crime resign." He urged people to come out again tomorrow, and to
    "bring everything they need for their defense." 
   
    SRI LANKA 

    COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) -- Rebel attacks on two government military
    bases killed at least 48 people, in the fiercest fighting in weeks in
    Sri Lanka's northeast, officials said. The fighting comes before the
    Indian Ocean island celebrates its 49th national day, and the military
    is preparing for guerrilla attacks intended to disrupt Tuesday's
    celebrations. The guerrillas are fighting for a homeland in Sri Lanka's
    north and east, claiming that Tamils are discriminated against by the
    majority Sinhalese who control the government and military. 
   
    SEX OFFENDERS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Almost 60 percent of the 234,000 convicted sex
    offenders under the supervision of corrections officials nationwide
    were either on parole or on probation, a Justice Department study of
    1994 data found. While the notion of convicted rapists and other sexual
    predators in the community may be unsettling, the study released today
    showed sex offenders less likely than other convicts to be on release
    programs. Overall, 75 percent of offenders were. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The U.S. dollar edged lower against the Japanese yen in
    morning trading Monday. The dollar was traded at 121.37 yen, down 0.76
    yen from its late level in Tokyo Friday. 
   
    PRO BOWL 

    HONOLULU (AP) -- An investment banker made a kick for a $1 million at
    the Pro Bowl, when the NFL's best couldn't buy a field goal. The
    Indianapolis Colts' Cary Blanchard, who missed two earlier field goals,
    finally hit a 37-yarder 8:15 into overtime to lift the AFC to a 26-23
    victory over the NFC. Blanchard missed a 41-yarder that would have won
    the game four minutes earlier, while Carolina's John Kasay missed three
    attempts for the NFC -- the last from 39 yards with 11 seconds left in
    regulation. For the game, the best kickers in the NFL were 3-of-8 and
    banker Lance Alstodt was 1-of-1. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.421IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1794
    RTw  02-Feb-97 20:04    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    MOSCOW - French President Jacques Chirac said he was impressed by Boris
    Yeltsin's recovery from pneumonia and declared after talks he was
    optimistic Russia and NATO could reach accord on the alliance's
    eastward expansion. Chirac was speaking at Moscow's Vnukovo-2 airport
    after an afternoon of talks with Yeltsin at his Novo-Ogaryovo country
    residence. The meeting marked the Russian president's first foray onto
    the world stage since his treatment for pneumonia. 

    - - - - 

    DAVOS, Switzerland - Israeli and Palestinian leaders, at what they
    called positive and productive talks in Switzerland, agreed to meet
    again on Thursday for detailed talks on extending Palestinian
    self-rule. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said this
    reflected "a great feeling of hope," but Palestinian President Yasser
    Arafat later complained that Israel was violating the peace agreements,
    dragging its feet on putting them into practice and stifling the
    Palestinian economy. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Moslem "terrorists" killed 31 people in an Algerian town, the
    usually well-informed Algerian newspaper El Watan said. About 60,000
    people have died in a civil conflict since 1992 when the authorities
    cancelled a general election in which Islamists had taken a huge lead. 

    PARIS - French Foreign Minister Herve de Charette telephoned Algerian
    Foreign Minister Ahmed Attaf to try to defuse a row over whether Paris
    was interfering in the violence-racked North African country. 

    - - - - 

    ISLAMABAD - Pakistani President Farooq Leghari vowed to hold free and
    fair elections on Monday but ousted prime minister Benazir Bhutto said
    she feared vote-rigging. Bhutto's main rival, former prime minister
    Nawaz Sharif, said he was confident of winning the election. Opinion
    polls put him as the front runner. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Bulgaria's beleaguered Socialist rulers invited their opponents
    for talks on Monday but warned that if they failed they would present a
    new Socialist cabinet to parliament on Tuesday. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Serbia's marathon mass protests against President Slobodan
    Milosevic showed no sign of losing steam as violence in the ethnic
    tinderbox of Kosovo posed a new challenge to his isolated government. 

    - - - - 

    AJACCIO, Corsica - Corsican separatist guerrillas exploded 61 bombs on
    the Mediterranean island on Sunday in a show of strength defying a
    French government crackdown. No one was injured in the coordinated
    pre-dawn blitz. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori, on a private visit to
    the United States, walked right back into a deadlock with Marxist
    rebels holding 72 hostages in the Japanese ambassador's residence in
    Lima. Fujimori, who earlier spoke optimistically about the group
    "implicitly" dropping its main demand for the release of jailed
    comrades, was quickly corrected by the international spokesman for the
    Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) rebels. 

    - - - - 

    GUATEMALA CITY - Hundreds of Guatemalan military police prepared to
    turn in their weapons, ending a tense, five-day rebellion over terms of
    a peace treaty, a police spokesman said. 

    - - - - 

    LONDONDERRY, Northern Ireland - Thousands of Catholics marched behind
    14 white crosses on the 25th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday" to demand a
    fresh probe of the British army slaying of unarmed demonstrators that
    ignited the Northern Ireland conflict. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Police were out in force to watch over rallies by the handful
    of Albanians bold enough to press demands for the dismissal of the
    right-wing government and compensation for savings lost in failed
    pyramid schemes. 

    REUTER
7.422IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1879
    RTw  03-Feb-97 06:09    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Brazilians hunt for lucrative cockroaches 

    BRASILIA - Brazilians are catching cockroaches with their bare hands,
    all in the name of science and a bit of extra cash, local Globo
    television said. 

    Strong-stomached residents of Rio have been selling batches of roaches
    to a laboratory for $25 per 3.35 ounces (100 grams) of the insects,
    Globo said. 

    "You give them a quick slap and then grab them by their antennae, it's
    not a big deal," said housewife Elvira Martinez de Oliveira as she
    proudly showed off her still wriggling prey. 

    The laboratory, which placed a "We buy cockroaches" advertisement in a
    local newspaper, is researching a possible vaccine for a series of
    allergies. The vaccine is based on substances found in the pests. 

    The laboratory needs 11 pounds (five kg) of the insects, or about
    600,000 cockroaches, to complete its research, Globo said. 

    - - - - 

    Woman seeks space romance as earthlings call ET 

    PARIS - "Tall female French earthling, 1.83 metres (6 ft), seeks tall,
    handsome alien, romantic if possible," Florence Dugoua, 30, says in a
    message to be carried by a rocket far across the solar system to a
    mysterious moon. 

    Her lonely hearts advertisement is one of thousands of messages,
    ranging from calls for galactic peace to invitations to share a plate
    of pasta, due to blast off on a U.S. rocket in October and bound for
    Titan, Saturn's biggest moon. 

    The Paris-based European Space Agency (ESA) is hoping that a million
    humans will seize a chance to make a mark in space by contributing to a
    site on the Internet computer network: http:/www.huygens.com. 

    Signatures, messages and drawings will be accepted until March 1 and
    stored on a CD-ROM computer disc. They will be packed on ESA's Huygens
    robot probe, alongside an array of scientific experiments to measure
    Titan's atmosphere. 

    - - - - 

    Thai snake charmer loses charm, strangled by python 

    BANGKOK (Reuter) - A Thai man who considered himself a snake charmer
    ran out of luck and was strangled to death by a 3.5 metre (11.5 foot)
    boa constrictor, police said. 

    Manee Saisin, a 35-year-old construction worker, was strangled to death
    the boa in Phetchaburi, about 150 km (90 miles) south of Bangkok,
    police said. 

    Manee, known in the area as a snake catcher and charmer, had rushed to
    see the snake after friends told him the huge serpent had been spotted
    on the side of one of the city's main roads, police said. 

    A friend of the snake charmer told police that Manee snared the
    constrictor and put it around his neck. 

    As he and his friends were walking home, Manee suddenly cried for help,
    the friend said. The friends rushed to get help but when they returned
    with police officers they found Manee strangled to death, police said. 
  
    REUTER
7.423IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1878
    AP 3-Feb-1997 0:40 EST   REF5223

    Police Make Arrests in Bombings

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    By MARK EVANS

    Associated Press Writer

    VALLEJO, Calif. (AP) -- Police arrested two men and searched for a
    third Sunday in the bombings that struck a courthouse and bank in the
    past week, and recovered explosives in a plot they believe was designed
    to subvert the criminal justice system. 

    Investigator Charles Barnett said all three face felony conspiracy,
    burglary and explosive devices charges. If convicted, each could face
    at least 160 years in prison. 

    Authorities said Francis Ernestberg, 40, was arrested in a residential
    neighborhood in Vallejo. Oston Osotonu, 24, was later taken into
    custody at a nearby motel. Police issued an arrest warrant for a third
    suspect, identified as Kevin Lee Robinson, 29. 

    "It is our belief that this was a deliberate attempt to stop the
    criminal justice system from operating in Solano County," Police Chief
    Robert Nichelini said. 

    In their search, police later evacuated a five-block area Sunday night
    after they discovered 500 pounds of dynamite in the garage of a home,
    Police Sgt. Dave Jackson said. 

    Lori Choy was walking her dog in the area when an FBI agent told her to
    leave immediately. "He told me to get out because there were explosives
    in a house," she said. "We turned around and made a quick U-turn." 

    Earlier Sunday, authorities seized a car that contained 60 sticks of
    wired dynamite. The car was parked outside an apartment complex that
    was evacuated for three hours as a precaution. If there had been an
    explosion, Nichelini said the results would have been catastrophic. 

    Nobody was injured last week in the two bombings, which tore a 3-foot
    crater in the Solano County courthouse on Thursday and damaged three
    automatic tellers outside a Wells Fargo bank last Sunday. 

    "What they thought that would accomplish, I'm not sure. What it looked
    like to us is that they didn't want the courts to be operating,"
    Nichelini said. 

    The day before the bank bombing, authorities dismantled a bomb made of
    30 sticks of dynamite and blasting caps that was found outside a
    library. The target apparently was a police evidence locker in the
    library's basement, police said. 

    Ernestberg, of Vallejo, was arrested Sunday at 2:30 a.m. in a
    residential area of Vallejo, a city 37 miles northeast of San
    Francisco. Osotonu, also a resident, was taken into custody at 3:30
    p.m. 

    Authorities said they have found no evidence that the suspects have
    connections to other groups or bombings in other cities. 

    In Southern California, meanwhile, FBI agents went to the Chula Vista
    home of a federal worker targeted by a package bomb, and left with
    armloads of rifles and cases of ammunition, a neighbor said. 

    On Saturday, Dave McGruer received a package in the mail that contained
    two pipe bombs. The bomb, the third device found in the area in as many
    days, was disarmed inside the house. There were no injuries.

    Neighbors said they were often bothered by gunshot sounds emanating
    from McGruer's back yard. It was not clear which federal agency McGruer
    works for. 

    The bomb sent to McGruer was similar to bombs sent to the San Diego FBI
    office Thursday and a waste water treatment company on Friday,
    authorities said. The bombs were dismantled and there were no
    injuries.
7.424IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1869
    AP 2-Feb-1997 18:25 EST   REF5384

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Expert To Analyze Cosby Flat

    By MICHELLE DeARMOND

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The flat tire that apparently led to Ennis Cosby's
    roadside killing has been turned over to an outside expert for further
    analysis, a police spokesman said. 

    Results of the test aren't expected for about six weeks, Cmdr. Tim
    McBride said. 

    In the meantime, investigators refuse to release preliminary results
    from their own tests or to say whether they suspect the tire might have
    been intentionally damaged. 

    Police often withhold specific crime information that they feel only
    the criminal would be likely to have. 

    "There are reasons why they want to hold information on the tire ... to
    prevent somebody from coming forward and making it difficult for us to
    determine who did something," McBride said in a Friday telephone
    interview. "Then everybody's talking about it, and then we can't use it
    to exclude or include possible suspects." 

    The tire could prove to be key evidence in the investigation of Cosby,
    27. 

    The only son of comedian Bill Cosby had just replaced the tire with a
    spare when he was shot to death on a darkened roadside early on Jan.
    16. 

    Police still suspect robbery was the motive but have yet to determine
    if anything was taken from the car. 

    On Saturday, Bill Cosby gave his first live performance since his son's
    death. Appearing before 2,200 people at a theater in West Palm Beach,
    Fla., Cosby compared his grief to the way he felt when Martin Luther
    King Jr. and President Kennedy were assassinated. 

    "Let us hope and pray we never have to meet again in circumstances like
    this for any of us," he told the audience. 

    Ennis Cosby was driving a Mercedes-Benz convertible owned by his
    father's Cosby Productions when he pulled off of the San Diego Freeway
    onto the secluded Sepulveda Pass to change the tire. 

    He called a woman he was on his way to meet and asked her to come to
    his location to help light the darkened area. 

    The woman told police she was sitting in her Jaguar behind Cosby's car
    when a man approached her and urged her to get out of her car. Her
    attorney said she sped away in fear and returned moments later to find
    Cosby dead. 

    Police released a sketch of the suspect, described by the woman as
    average in height and weight and between 25 and 32. 

    Police have logged hundreds of phone calls about the case and say they
    are still pursuing many good leads. 

    Rewards totaling $375,000 have been offered from a variety of sources
    for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Cosby's killer.

7.425IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1968
    AP 2-Feb-1997 17:29 EST   REF5139

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Africanized Bees Buzz Off

    HOUSTON (AP) -- Forty years after breaking out of a Brazilian lab and
    fleeing north, Africanized bees -- known as the "bee with an attitude
    problem" -- appear to be minding their own business. 

    Past headlines from South America to South Texas have screamed "They're
    Coming," prompting Texas beekeepers and emergency workers to pour money
    into bee suits and training programs to deal with the aggressive
    insects. 

    What happened to the dreaded invasion? What happened to all the
    equipment, the protective suits, the gearing up? 

    Where are all the bees? Making honey, mostly. 

    They did arrive -- six years ago -- in Brownsville. In fact, the first
    confirmed so-called "killer bees" captured in the United States are now
    dead, sitting in a Ziploc bag in a Rio Grande Valley freezer. 

    Their offspring are buzzing away in 88 Texas counties, but tend to
    confine themselves to a year-round existence in a line south Corpus
    Christi to San Antonio to Del Rio. 

    And, they have attacked. At least 315 stinging incidents -- and two
    fatalities -- have been reported in the southern part of the state. 

    On July 15, 1993, 82-year-old Lino Lopez, was stung at least 40 times
    while trying to kill a nest of bees in a vacant house on his ranch
    north of Rio Grande City. He had an allergic reaction to the stings and
    died, becoming the first Africanized bee fatality in the United States.
    The following year, a 96-year-old man fell victim to a hybrid of the
    Africanized bees. 

    Even non-fatal encounters with the bees have been traumatic. 

    In June 1993, John Keliehor was driving his pickup on his farm near
    Alice when hundreds of angry bees flew into the cab of his truck and
    attacked him and his 10-year-old granddaughter, Erin Terrel. 

    "She was only wearing shorts and a T-shirt and I was wearing a
    short-sleeved shirt," he said. "They just covered us." 

    Each had been stung about 200 times. The two shared a hospital room
    that night, and it was a couple of weeks before the swelling went down.

    It's true that killer bees aren't fond of cold weather. But what don't
    they like about Houston? 

    "They got to within 10 miles of Houston in Fort Bend County," said John
    Thomas, secretary of the Texas Beekeepers Association. "They just
    seemed to stop and make a left turn -- heading more to the west." 

    In the height of the killer bee craze -- with reports coming in from
    South and Central America of an estimated 1,000 deaths attributed to
    Africanized bees -- the Houston Fire Department bought 40 protective
    suits and sent firefighters and paramedics to training courses on the
    bee. 

    But by 1994, Fire Chief Eddie Corral dropped the bee program,
    proclaiming the insects don't pose much of a threat here. 

    Asked last week about the department's current philosophy, spokeswoman
    Lil Harris said simply, "We're not in the bee business." 
7.426IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1954
    AP 2-Feb-1997 17:15 EST   REF5122

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Onion Growers Sue Government

    MIDDLETOWN, N.Y. (AP) -- Onion growers who lost their crops to rain and
    hail storms last season are suing the federal government for millions
    of dollars in insurance payments. 

    Farmers who have been growing onions in the Black Dirt region of Orange
    County for generations filed the class-action lawsuit in U.S. District
    Court in White Plains last week against the Federal Crop Insurance
    Corp. and Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman. 

    Orange County produces about 40 percent of onions sold as produce in
    the eastern United States and about 7 percent of the nation's storage
    onion crop. 

    The farmers are seeking an estimated $5 million to $10 million in
    indemnities they say the government owes them because the FCIC
    incorrectly calculated their insurance reimbursements. 

    The farmers sought the insurance repayments after storms destroyed most
    of the 5,400 acres of onions planted in the county last season. 

    "We just want fair compensation," said Christopher Pawelski, a
    fourth-generation farmer and one of four onion growers who filed the
    suit on behalf of at least 40 other farmers. 

    "We're not looking to get rich. I just want to pay my bills and
    survive," he told Saturday's editions of The Times Herald-Record of
    Middletown. 

    Martin Gold, a Manhattan-based attorney who is representing the
    farmers, said the FCIC did not follow provisions of the Federal Crop
    Insurance Act, which require the government to provide enough
    compensation following a natural disaster so growers don't lose their
    farms. 

    The federal government reimburses farmers at rates far lower than the
    going market value for onions. For example, the market rate for yellow
    onions is $12 per hundredweight, but the FCIC repays farmers $4.85, the
    newspaper reported. 

    The FCIC bases reimbursement rates on historical averages driven by
    national, not local, onion prices, said agency spokesman Eric
    Edgington. 

    "We regret the hardship endured by Orange County growers," Edgington
    said. 

    The FCIC is reviewing the onion insurance policy and has proposed
    several regulatory changes, he said. 
7.427IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:1999
    AP 2-Feb-1997 17:09 EST   REF5118

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Likeable Teen Charged in Arson

    STELLA, N.C. (AP) -- An 18-year-old known as a reliable friend, soccer
    star and college student is now something very different: a man facing
    federal charges of burning a church. 

    Matthew Neal Blackburn was one of four young white people arrested last
    month and charged with burning St. James AME Zion Church in Jones
    County last June. He is the only one of the group, however, who has
    been publicly identified because the others were younger than 18 when
    the fire happened. 

    Although he is not suspected in any other church fires, people are
    looking at this case for possible motives about why other churches
    burned. 

    As the Rev. Jean Anderson, pastor of St. James, put it: "Were they full
    of hate or full of mischief?" 

    Prosecutors have refused to comment on whether they think there were
    racial or merely juvenile motives behind the burning. 

    But according to a federal indictment, he and three juvenile
    accomplices traveled from their homes in or near Swansboro to next-door
    Jones County, splashed a flammable liquid around the church and then
    hurled seven Molotov cocktails -- beer bottles filled with gasoline and
    corked with paper-towel wicks -- to set the building ablaze. 

    By the time the flames died, St. James was damaged severely, another of
    more than 70 Southern black churches to be torched in the past two
    years. 

    "I would like to talk to them and ask them what went through their
    minds," Ms. Anderson said. "I have to think they were troubled." 

    The Jones County sheriff said he received a tip soon after the fire but
    the arrests were delayed because investigators wanted time to build
    their case. 

    "I think they're in serious trouble now, and for what?" said the
    sheriff, Robert Mason, who has not spoken to the suspects. "I think
    they were a bunch of kids out playing a very stupid prank like most
    kids do, but they went way too far." 

    Blackburn and the three juveniles are being prosecuted by a task force
    appointed by President Clinton. The numerous charges include conspiracy
    to maliciously damage and destroy by means of fires and explosives; use
    of fire and using and carrying explosives to commit a felony; and
    malicious destruction by means of fire and explosives. 

    For Blackburn, the charges carry a potential prison sentence of 105
    years. 

    With three children, Blackburn's parents both worked to keep up a
    ranch-style home in a pleasant part of Stella, a town of 1,000. 

    The family was not poor, but the children were required to work for the
    extras in life. Starting in about the fourth grade, Blackburn pulled
    leaves in one of the area's tobacco fields, and he almost always held a
    job right up until he went away to school at Catawba College in
    Salisbury. 

    "We've known each other since we were 4 or 5 years old," said Brad
    Sewell, now a freshman at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
    Hill. "I always felt like if I needed anything he was there, and his
    family's nice people, all polite and proud of him." 

    At a court hearing in Winston-Salem, his parents offered their home as
    security so that their son could be released on $100,000 bail. His
    father will not discuss the case. 

    "I'm not going to talk about it. A young man's life has been ruined,"
    Barry Blackburn said last week. 

    He cared most about soccer, and he helped Swansboro High win a 1995
    state championship. He was a center-forward for Catawba's soccer team,
    attending on a scholarship, when he was arrested. 

    Reflecting the uncertainties about Blackburn, U.S. Magistrate Judge
    Alexander Dixon agreed to release him, but only with severe
    restrictions. He must wear an electronic monitoring bracelet and be
    confined to his house. 

    The crime will not stop the congregation at St. James from worshiping.
    Its members have been holding services about three miles down the road
    at the Christian Chapel Church while their own church is being
    repaired. Damage to the building totaled $55,000, and mounds of
    construction materials still sit outside the church. 

    The congregation is praying for everyone involved with the church
    burning, Ms. Anderson said. 

    "I don't know if I was surprised or not at him being so young," she
    said. "When you're a mother you understand that things go wrong, but
    that doesn't stop your heart from breaking." 
7.428IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2032
    AP 2-Feb-1997 23:41 EST   REF5134

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Italians May Have Holocaust Gold

    ROME (AP) -- The Italian government has five trunks full of gold and
    valuables apparently taken from Jewish victims of the Nazis in World
    War II, an official said Sunday. 

    The trunks are in a storage vault of the Treasury Ministry and were
    located after an inquiry by the Jewish community of Trieste, said
    Michele De Feis, prefect of the northeastern Italian city. 

    The items -- including rings, jewels, watches and gold dental fillings
    -- may have belonged to Jews who died in the only Nazi death camp on
    Italian soil, at a converted rice-husking plant in Trieste, De Feis
    said. 

    The Milan daily Corriere della Sera said the valuables came from Jewish
    homes looted by the Nazis, who occupied Trieste in the latter part of
    the war. The value of the items was unclear, De Feis said. 

    According to documents in Trieste archives, the Jewish community asked
    for the articles to be returned in 1962, but the government refused
    "because it could not be proved (they) actually belong to Jews," De
    Feis said. Some items had been returned in 1958, he said. 

    The Jewish community renewed its inquiry in December, and the Treasury
    Ministry confirmed the existence of the trunks Friday, De Feis said.
    Italy's acknowledgment follows reports that Switzerland acted as a
    major launderer of Nazi gold, much of it looted from Jews. 
7.429IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2095
    AP 2-Feb-1997 22:09 EST   REF5533

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Yugo Cops Injure 50 Protesters

    By MISHA SAVIC

    Associated Press Writer

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Hundreds of riot police beat protesters
    and fired tear gas and water cannons Sunday in the biggest show of
    force in 75 days of anti-government protests in the capital. 

    At least 50 protesters were injured, independent media reported. 

    "Tonight, a crime was committed against the people of Belgrade,"
    opposition leader Vuk Draskovic said. "We won't stop until those who
    gave orders for this crime resign." 

    He urged people to come out again Monday, and to "bring everything they
    need for their defense." 

    "There is no more Gandhi-style resistance." 

    Some protesters responded to the police assault by throwing stones, and
    at least two policemen were among the injured. Dozens of protesters
    were arrested, radio reports said early Monday. 

    The police assault indicated that President Slobodan Milosevic could be
    moving to crush the protests that have shaken his government for 2 1/2
    months. 

    Past midnight, police were still beating protesters at the central
    Republic Square. An Associated Press reporter was clubbed on the back,
    and cameramen for Associated Press Television, Reuters Television and
    CNN also were beaten. 

    Riot police badly beat Vesna Pesic, one of the leaders of the
    pro-democracy movement, opposition leader Zoran Djindjic said early
    Monday. 

    Djindjic, head of the Democratic Party, also told The Associated Press
    that police had pushed him. He was not harmed. 

    Draskovic, the third leader of the Zajedno opposition alliance, said he
    was chased by police and shots were fired at his car as he fled,
    according to the independent radio station B-92. He said he was hiding
    because he feared he either would be killed or arrested. 

    The police action came after a tense four-hour standoff Sunday morning
    on a Belgrade bridge, which began when riot police prevented Draskovic
    from leading thousands of his supporters to the daily pro-democracy
    rally. 

    "Come out, citizens of Belgrade," Draskovic said live on independent
    station Radio Index, on the 75th straight day of protests in bitter
    cold weather. The demonstrators are demanding that the government honor
    opposition victories in Nov. 17 municipal elections. 

    Milosevic's government refused to acknowledge the opposition victories
    in Belgrade and 13 other major cities, even though they were confirmed
    by international observers. 

    Other opposition leaders, who joined supporters in different districts
    of Belgrade, also marched toward the bridge. As Belgrade citizens
    converged on the bridge, opposition leaders said their supporters would
    continue facing the police until they were allowed free movement. 

    Radio Index said police reinforcements were grouping in adjacent
    streets. Hundreds of riot police first used their shields, then brought
    in two water cannons. 

    Meanwhile, editors of two independent newspapers were interrogated by
    police in what could be another crackdown on independent media in
    Serbia. 

    Police took Petar Lazic, chief editor of the satirical weekly Krmaca,
    from his home Saturday and questioned him for two hours, the paper's
    business manager Bosko Savkovic said Sunday. 

    Lazic was questioned about a satirical photomontage that compared
    Milosevic to the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. Police said Lazic could
    face slander charges. 

    Plainclothes policemen also questioned staff of the independent daily
    Demokratija in the newspaper's office, journalists there said. 

    The district attorney is investigating whether the paper acted
    illegally by publishing an advertisement that urged readers to flood
    government institutions with telephone calls and block their lines. 

    Milosevic previously shut down Radio Index and Radio B-92, another
    independent station that carries reports of the protests, but bowed to
    international pressure and allowed them to continue. 
7.430IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2167
    AP 2-Feb-1997 21:51 EST   REF5511

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Probe: Dakar Jet Engine Stalled

    DAKAR, Senegal (AP) -- The engine of an Air Senegal plane carrying
    tourists returning from a wildlife park stalled 30 seconds after
    takeoff, causing the plane to crash, break in half and catch fire,
    Senegalese radio reported. At least 23 people died. 

    The transport minister appointed a commission Sunday to determine what
    caused the engine malfunction. 

    "When we got to the end of the runway, the engines revved up and it was
    working OK. But after 30 seconds the engines stopped and we came down,"
    an unidentified survivor of Saturday's crash told Senegalese radio. 

    "The plane then crashed and broke into two. Those of us who survived
    were at the rear end of the aircraft," he said. The front end of the
    plane was engulfed in fire "like a furnace." 

    The plane smashed onto the runway seconds after lifting off from the
    central city of Tambacounda. 

    Authorities at the scene said they found one of the aircraft's cockpit
    recorders. Thirteen French, one Swiss, and two Senegalese -- the pilot
    and a crewman -- were identified as being among the dead. 

    Also killed was co-pilot Vladimir Vierra, son of the president of
    neighboring Guinea-Bissau. 

    Most of the dead were European tourists who were headed back to the
    capital, Dakar, following a holiday in Niokolo-Kobvo national park, a
    popular game- and bird-viewing area. 

    Another 29 people survived the crash. Many of them, spattered with
    blood and clutching the clothes of loved ones who were killed, were
    flown back to Dakar, 250 miles to the west, on a military plane. 

    The French foreign ministry said Sunday that a plane chartered from
    Europ-Assistance was to leave Dakar and fly to Toulouse, France, then
    to Paris to deliver two seriously wounded passengers. 

    Europ-Assistance also was sending an Air France Airbus on Sunday night
    to Dakar with a medical team and others to provide psychological
    assistance. It was scheduled to return to France on Monday with the
    rest of the injured. 

    The dead were being kept in Dakar for identification by French
    consulate authorities before being returned home. 

    The 52-seat plane was filled to capacity, and there were scuffles at
    the Tambacounda airport as several tourists trying to board were not
    allowed on because there were not enough seats. Four people were forced
    to get off the flight and drive to Dakar. 

    Transport Minister Tidiane Sylla said he had appointed a commission to
    determine why the engine failed. 

    Air Senegal, the small state-run airline of the west African country,
    flies every Saturday between Dakar and Tambacounda, a major crossroads
    town with routes to three neighboring countries. It is used as a base
    for tourists visiting Niokolo-Kobvo national park. 

    The plane that crashed was a British-made Hawker Siddeley 748, a
    twin-engine turboprop. 
7.431IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2122
    RTw  03-Feb-97 01:02    

    Soccer-Scottish club plans stock market float

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuter) - Scottish soccer club Hearts of Midlothian on
    Sunday announced plans for a listing on the London Stock Exchange by
    early May. 

    The premier league club aims to raise about five to million pounds
    ($8.0 to $9.6 million) by placing new shares with institutional
    investors. 

    The proceeds will be used to build a new, 3,500 seater stadium stand
    and reduce borrowings. 

    Hearts said it does not intend to spend the money on new players. 

    The club is being advised by stockbroker Williams de Broe.

    REUTER
7.432IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2138
    RTw  02-Feb-97 23:50    

    Kuwait says ready to counter possible Iraq threat

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuter) - Kuwait said on Sunday it was ready to counter
    any possible threat from Iraq, the Kuwaiti news agency Kuna reported. 

    The agency, monitored by the BBC, said acting Information Minister Abd
    al-Aziz al-Abdullah al-Dakhil commented at a news conference on reports
    of Iraqi threats to invade Kuwait again. 

    Kuwait was invaded by Iraq in 1990 and liberated by a U.S.-led
    multinational force in 1991. 

    "If any signs of threats were shown from the Iraqi regime's side, we
    are capable of maintaining the stability and security of our country
    relying on our trust in God Almighty first of all, then on trust in
    ourselves, our government, constitutional institutions and cooperation
    with our brothers and friends," Dakhil said. 

    "I send a message of assurance to the Kuwaitis that there is nothing to
    fear now because all matters are proceeding under the strict control,
    observation and readiness of the competent Kuwaiti authorities." 

    He said: "Kuwait will not ignore in any way whatever is raised about
    the aggressive intentions of the Baghdad regime. It will take them
    seriously and will never neglect them." 

    Iraq on Saturday denied reports it was massing troops close to its
    southern border with Kuwait. 

    The Iraqi News Agency said "a responsible military source" denied the
    existence of any movements or reinforcements of Iraqi troops in
    southern Iraq. 

    REUTER
7.433IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2223
    RTw  02-Feb-97 20:13    

    Canaries sing at British police identity parade

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuter) - Canaries, doves and budgerigars joined a
    police line-up in Wales on Sunday as investigators tried to find the
    owners of more than 52 stolen pets. 

    The birds turned a room at Barry police station into a colourful and
    noisy aviary. The birds, worth about 500 pounds ($800), were seized
    last week during a police swoop. 

    "We have had several inquiries about the viewing and during the next
    few days hope to reunite as many rightful owners as possible with their
    feathered friends," a police spokesman said. 

    Among the birds on parade were 24 budgerigars, four canaries, three
    diamond doves, three finches, six cockatiels, three Golden Mantle
    Rosella Parakeets and two redrumps. 

    REUTER 
7.434IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2366
    RTw  02-Feb-97 17:31    

    UK Labour's Cook sees 50-50 chance of EMU in 1999

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Mylrea 

    LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuter) - The British Labour Party's foreign affairs
    spokesman said on Sunday there was only a 50 percent chance of Europe's
    single currency starting on time in 1999. 

    Robin Cook, tipped to be British foreign secretary after an election
    due by May at the latest, also said Britain has not been showing the
    kind of economic performance to justify it entering the single currency
    if it did start on schedule. 

    In the end, though, Britain will find it hard to stay out once the
    single currency is up and running, he said. "I would put the chances at
    50-50 of proceeding on time," Cook, one of the most senior opposition
    figures, said in a wide-ranging BBC interview. 

    Labour, like the ruling Conservatives, says it is keeping its options
    open on the planned currency, seen by its backers as a way of building
    up the European Union's economic strength but by its enemies as a
    dangerous move towards closer European integration. 

    Both Labour and the Conservatives have also promised a referendum if a
    future cabinet decides to take Britain in. 

    But Prime Minister John Major, under pressure from so-called
    Eurosceptics in his party opposed to closer links with Europe, has all
    but ruled out entry into the single currency when it starts, saying
    such a move would be "very unlikely." 

    Cook, more sceptical about links with Europe than some of his Labour
    colleagues, in particular party economics spokesman Gordon Brown, said
    Labour's decision would be based on a "hard headed economic
    assessment." 

    After 18 years of Conservative rule, Britain still lagged countries
    like Germany in terms of competitiveness, Cook said. "Convergence of
    real economic performance is not something you have observed in Britain
    over the last 10 years." 

    But he added: "It will be very difficult for Britain or any other major
    economy to stay out of the single currency indefinitely if (it) goes
    ahead and...proves stable." 

    Cook's interview was the first of a two-part study of the views of
    Britain's two main parties on Europe. Cook's Conservative counterpart,
    Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, is due to be interviewed next
    Sunday. 

    The Conservatives -- desperately trying to present a united front for
    the looming election -- are bitterly split, with pro-Europeans fighting
    back against the party's Eurosceptics. 

    But Rifkind was due to try to bridge the divide between pro- and
    anti-European camps in a speech on Monday in Stockholm. 

    The speech is one of a series Rifkind has scheduled in European
    capitals to try to win support for Major's line that moves towards
    European integration are going too far, too fast. 

    REUTER
7.435IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 10:2344
    RTw  02-Feb-97 14:19    

    Charles wants ``honest life'' with Camilla--report

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuter) - Prince Charles is preparing to start a more
    open life with his mistress, Camilla Parker Bowles, and the couple
    could eventually appear regularly together in public, a newspaper
    reported on Sunday. 

    The Sunday Times report was dismissed as speculation by a spokeswoman
    for the Prince of Wales, the heir to the throne. 

    "It is a continuation of the media speculation that has gone on over
    the last week or so," said the spokeswoman. "I don't want to add any
    fuel to that." 

    But the story, which said Charles and Camilla were weary of their
    current furtive relationship, is one of a series of similar reports
    that have appeared in the British media in recent weeks attributed to
    "friends of the couple." 

    Earlier this month, the Daily Mirror quoted an unnamed member of staff
    at Highgrove, the prince's west of England house, saying Parker Bowles
    had been allocated a bedroom there. 

    Since Charles divorced Princess Diana last year, there has been
    speculation he would like to marry Parker Bowles. 

    But such a move could harm his chances of becoming king when his
    mother, Queen Elizabeth, dies. 

    Buckingham Palace has been reported to have launched a five-year
    campaign to try to persuade dubious Britons that Prince Charles is fit
    to be the country's king one day. Charles was reported three weeks ago
    to have admitted to failing the British monarchy and vowing to "sort
    the whole bloody mess out" by reaching out more to ordinary people. 

    Sunday's report said the prince, 48, and Parker Bowles, 49, would spend
    time at the royal family's Balmoral estate in Scotland, but there were
    no plans for her to attend official functions. 

    REUTER
7.436IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 15:5792
7.437IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:0159
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997  Issue 619
    
    Search is on to fill boot camp
    
    By David Millward 

    A SEARCH has begun for suitable young criminals to fill the Ministry of
    Defence's "boot camp" in Colchester.

    As late as last Monday, no candidates for the camp had been identified,
    The Telegraph has learned "We have had the place open for months," one
    military source said, "the question is: where are the young offenders?"

    After a long-running Whitehall battle, which had threatened the entire
    project, the Home Office and the MoD have finally reached an agreement
    which they hope will see the first occupants moving in this month.
    Ministers are determined to have the offenders starting their training
    before the election is called, as part of their drive to prove that the
    Tories are tough on crime.

    With Labour opposed to the boot camp experiment, it is doubtful whether
    any offenders could be sent to Colchester once an election campaign is
    under way and the Civil Service stops implementing new Government
    initiatives. This leaves the Government two months at most in which to
    implement a policy that it believes will be electorally popular, even
    though it has been criticised by Sir David Ramsbotham, the Chief
    Inspector of Prisons and former Army Adjutant General.

    Selecting up to 36 candidates, who must be aged 18 to 21 and in the
    last six months of their sentence, has proved difficult. Despite the
    toughness of the regime at the Military Corrective Training Centre,
    they must be suitable for an open prison. They will also have to be
    physically and psychologically capable of surviving the rigours of a
    day starting at 6am and continuing to 10pm.

    A Prison Service governor, acting as deputy to the camp commandant, is
    already searching East Anglia for possible candidates, but will almost
    certainly have to cast the net wider.

    "This is unprecedented," David Roddan, the general secretary of the
    Prison Governors' Association, said yesterday. "The problem is that the
    kind of people the public thought would be sent to Colchester are
    excluded, such as violent offenders."

    When the MoD reluctantly agreed to take some civilian offenders, it
    made clear that nothing would be allowed to detract from the "military
    ethos" of the centre. This has led to tough negotiations. The MoD was
    keen to impose a tougher regime than the Home Office wanted. The Home
    Office believes that it has seen off the other threat to the scheme
    which was whether the commandant of the camp, Lt Col Julian Crowe,
    could be legally described as a jail governor under the 1952 Prisons
    Act.

    Ministers believe his basic training in the duties of a governor and
    the appointment of a deputy from within the Prison Service will be
    sufficient to head off a legal challenge from the unions. However,
    Harry Fletcher, Assistant General Secretary of the National Association
    of Probation Officers, said: "If it gets off the ground, the whole
    thing will be politically embarrassing and tantamount to a fiasco."
7.438IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:0267
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619
    
    Don't blame working mothers, say education experts
    
    By Sandra Barwick 

    EDUCATIONAL experts reacted with scepticism yesterday to a study which
    claimed that mothers who go out to work full time damage their
    children's examination results.

    The study, highlighted in tonight's Panorama documentary "Missing Mum",
    found that twice as many children whose mothers worked full time left
    school without GCSEs than those whose mothers were part-time workers.
    It also found that only 33 per cent of those whose mothers worked full
    time passed five or more GCSEs compared with 49 per cent whose mothers
    worked part time. The full-time working mothers were not single
    parents. Prof Margaret O'Brien, who carried out the research for the
    University of north London, tells the programme that she was surprised
    by the results.

    But the study was confined to 600 families who sent children to state
    schools in the industrial, white, working class east London borough of
    Barking and Dagenham. "There are many studies which indicated there are
    more advantages than disadvantages to the children of full-time working
    women, particularly in having a fulfilled parent," said Prof Sheila
    Wolfendale, of the University of East London. "Women in the workplace
    are here to stay - or else let's rescind university places for women."

    The length of working hours, for working fathers as well as mothers,
    was an important factor, she said. And the quality of child care was
    crucial.

    The quality of the child care the Barking and Dagenham parents had been
    able to provide from the mid-1980s is not described in the synopsis of
    the study provided yesterday. However, high-income earners in Barking
    and Dagenham would be unlikely to remain in the state sector, since the
    standard of schooling is below average.

    The University of North London is therefore concentrating on a sample
    heavily weighted to relatively low-income joint earners, who are likely
    to rely disproportionately for child care on cheap, untrained
    childminders and au pairs, unless relatives are available.

    One American study showed that after a good nursery education, young
    people were five times less likely to become delinquent and three times
    more likely to own their own houses when they grew up. But the quality
    of the child care was the key.

    Prof Asher Cashdan, the director of the learning and teaching institute
    at Sheffield Hallam University, said: "I wouldn't be surprised if the
    study were true, but if it is true it would be for other reasons - it's
    not the working full time itself, but other elements which may be
    related to it."

    Another of those elements could be the nature of the work the mothers
    are doing. Women who are forced to work full time to pay bills are
    likely to have a different attitude from women who make a free choice
    to work and enjoy it.

    Dr Pat Sikes, a lecturer in social aspects of education at the
    University of Warwick, said: "I don't know of other objective studies
    on this topic. But from my own research, which is very different, I
    would have said if you were looking at the right mothers who were
    working, quite the opposite would be true. They can pay for
    high-quality child care, and they may be more contented and happy
    themselves." A mother working full-time herself, she said her children,
    aged six and five, were doing well at their state primary.
7.439IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:0640
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Patients 'left to go hungry in hospital'
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    PATIENTS may get worse instead of better when in hospital because they
    do not get enough food, a health watchdog says today. 

    The Association of Community Health Councils says some patients,
    particularly the elderly, may develop malnutrition because they fail to
    get enough to eat or drink. Its report cites instances of: 

    Patients left hungry because they cannot feed themselves and are not
    given help. Food and drink placed alongside the bed out of patients'
    reach. Patients missing meals because they fail to order in advance.
    Patients relying on relatives to make sure that they get enough to eat.

    Toby Harris, director of the association, said: "People go into
    hospital to get better. They do not expect to be weakened through
    starvation. The Department of Health must take action to address the
    issues raised so that patients do not needlessly go hungry when they
    are in hospital."

    The report found a range of reasons for patients failing to eat but it
    was not primarily due to the quality of the food, which is said to have
    improved in recent years. In some cases, meals were placed before
    patients who were unable to feed themselves - including a woman with
    both arms broken - and later removed without nurses or catering staff
    asking why they had been left untouched.

    "It seems that nursing staff no longer see it as part of their job to
    help feed patients," says the report. It cites other instances in which
    patients were given pre-packed food such as sandwiches or yoghurt but
    were unable to open the packaging. On other occasions, patients were
    unable to eat because they did not have their dentures fitted.

    The report says: "Malnourishment can delay recovery from illness or
    surgical or medical intervention and may even be life threatening
    because it can cause complications in illnesses."
7.440IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:10111
7.441IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1132
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Wine is safer than British water, says French chef 
    
    By Michael Smith 

    IT is safer to drink wine or beer than to risk the chemicals and germs
    in British water, a leading French chef said yesterday.

    Jean Conil, who trained under the great French chef Auguste Escoffier
    and is president of the Epicurean World Master Chefs Society, said tap
    water was far safer in France. "In London, you can't even drink the
    water from the tap, certainly not," said M Conil. "It smells, it has a
    bad taste and it is too hard.

    "In an island like Britain, water should be free and fit to drink. But
    in spite of the chlorination treatment, traces of lead, mercury and
    bacterial spores can still be found in the polluted rivers. This is the
    reason why it is safer to drink wine and use it in cooking. It's
    certainly safer and more hygienic."

    M Conil, author of The Food Bible, said British water was no good for
    making tea, coffee or even soup. "Beer and wine should be used more in
    cooking to provide the liquid element, and to drink them with food has
    more beneficial advantages than water."

    Thane Prince, The Daily Telegraph's cookery writer, dismissed M Conil's
    claims as a wild generalisation. "The water in the Lake District is
    totally different to the water in London," she said. "For years, the
    French had taps labelled non-potable, not for drinking. You can't make
    a good cup of tea out of French water and, if you did, it would be
    ruined by that awful milk they use."
7.442IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1351
7.443IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1330
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Improved report on schools fails to impress teachers' critic
    
    By David Graves 

    THE Chief Inspector of Schools yesterday defended his claim that as
    many as 15,000 teachers were incompetent despite his latest report
    showing some improvement in teaching standards.

    Chris Woodhead, who will publish his annual report tomorrow, said the
    improvement could be due to the impact of inspections. It could also
    reflect anecdotal evidence that some inspectors were unwilling to
    blight the careers of bad teachers by reporting them.

    Mr Woodhead rejected Liberal Democrat demands to withdraw his claim
    last year about incompetence. "We have no reason whatever to rethink
    that figure, based on the evidence at the time," he said.

    Last year's report judged two per cent of lessons to be poor or very
    poor. Ofsted, the education watchdog, calculated that, if this number
    of poor lessons were repeated across all schools, it represented 4.3
    per cent, or 15,000, of teachers.

    Don Foster, the Liberal Democrat education spokesman, said tomorrow's
    report would say that one per cent of lessons in the nine months to
    January was poor or very poor. This showed either a great improvement
    in teaching or that Mr Woodhead's previous claim had no basis.

    "Either way, Mr Woodhead has a lot of explaining to do," he said.
7.444IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1432
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Gardiner threatens to contest his seat
    
    By Philip Johnston, Home Affairs Editor 

    SIR George Gardiner, ousted Conservative candidate for Reigate, is
    defying calls from colleages to "go quietly" following his deselection
    and insisting that he will stand in the election.

    Sir George, who has represented the Surrey constituency since 1974,
    said he would not allow the 272 "stuffed shirts" who voted against him
    in his "toffee-nosed" local party to beat him. He intends to contest
    the seat as an official Conservative and is taking legal advice over
    the validity of last week's "bizarre" party proceedings.

    Sir Marcus Fox, the chairman of the Tory backbench 1922 committee, said
    the MP's decision was "very sad". Speaking on BBC television's
    Breakfast With Frost, he added: "George has had his own very strong
    views over a very long period of time, but the fact that he has now
    refused to take the decision of his constituency is regrettable".

    If Sir George mounts a legal challenge to his deselection, it might not
    be completed before the general election is called and the Reigate
    party may have to accept him as their candidate by default. Richard
    Bennett, Tory group leader on the local council, said: "There comes a
    time when the good of the party must come above individual concerns. My
    fear is that the good of the individual is now the only thing that Sir
    George is considering."

    Sir George was deselected after calling John Major "a ventriloquist's
    dummy".
7.445IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1537
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Boy found hanged after failing driving test
    
    By Simon Midgley 

    A 17-year-old boy has been found hanged in his bedroom after failing
    his motorbike test.

    Richard Alder was discovered by his mother and brother at their home at
    Sonning Common, Berks. His mother, Carol Alder, said last night: "He
    was a happy, lively soul. He had no money worries, no health worries
    and he had a family who loved him."

    Her son had bought his first motorbike only weeks before his death. "He
    took his preliminary bike test on the Sunday and failed, and then
    failed again on the Friday," Mrs Alder said. "I know people who have
    failed their driving test four times, but perhaps it was the last straw
    for Richard."

    Mrs Alder said the family had been trying to come to terms with their
    loss since Richard's death two weeks ago. She said: "There was no
    warning. We just didn't know. The ones who talk about it don't do it."
    She said her son suffered from dyslexia, but had managed to struggle
    through school. She had found him a temporary job at the firm where she
    worked in Sonning Common. "He didn't know what he wanted to do," Mrs
    Alder said. "He had considered the Army, but realised that he wouldn't
    get through the selection." 

    Mrs Alder hopes that her son's story will save some other teenager from
    a similar fate. "I want people to know," she said.

    A friend of the family said yesterday: "Richard was looking forward to
    passing his driving test, but sadly he failed it. It was the straw that
    broke the camel's back."

    A post-mortem examination has been held and there will be an inquest.
7.446IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1529
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Labour MP receives death threats

    POLICE are investigating threatening letters sent to Helen Liddell,
    Labour MP for Monklands.

    The letters were sent to her home in Renfrewshire and contained
    disturbing detail, which indicated that the writer knew her movements,
    her assistant Frank Roy said.

    Mrs Liddell entered Parliament at the Monklands East by-election after
    the death of Labour leader John Smith, and is spokeswoman on Scottish
    education. The letters ended with a reference to "SNP rule", but Mr Roy
    said that, while they were clearly written by a pro-nationalist, there
    was nothing to suggest that party's involvement.

    "Every politician gets abusive letters, but these different," he said.
    "I discussed it with her and with her husband, Alastair, and we agreed
    that we should tell the police. I can't remember exactly what they
    said, but they gave details which no one else should have known."

    The letters also mentioned a second house which Mrs Liddell uses, less
    well-known than her main address, and this was one of the features that
    prompted alarm, Mr Roy said. The letters were addressed to her home,
    but arrived at different destinations as her mail was redirected to
    various locations depending on her day-to-day movements between London,
    her home in Renfrewshire and her Lanarkshire constituency. He said the
    writer's grievance was unclear.
7.447IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1844
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Peel family crypt is found in basement
    
    By Michael Fleet 

    A FORGOTTEN crypt belonging to the family of Sir Robert Peel, the
    former Prime Minister, has been discovered beneath a church in
    Brighton, East Sussex.

    The vault had been untouched since it was sealed in 1888 after the
    death of Laurence Peel, Sir Robert's brother, who owned St George's at
    Kemp Town. Wreaths from Laurence Peel's funeral were still intact
    inside the crypt, with their roses even retaining a blush of colour,
    said Father Andrew Mansford-Brailsford, vicar of St George's.

    Candles appeared as though they had just been extinguished and cards
    from members of the European nobility were still attached to the
    wreaths. "It was like entering Miss Havisham's home. It was an
    incredible experience," said Mr Mansford-Brailsford.

    The crypt was discovered when engineers examined a basement beneath the
    church as part of a plan to turn it into a community centre. It had
    been bricked in with no clue as to what lay behind.

    "After some of the bricks were removed we found an iron gate with a
    plaque showing a lion rampant and a shuttle to represent the Peel
    family, whose money came from weaving," Mr Mansford-Brailsford said.

    The crypt also contains the remains of Laurence Peel's wife, two of
    their children and two grandchildren, who all died before him. Laurence
    Peel was himself an MP for a short time, representing Cockermouth.
    After Sir Robert died in 1850, he travelled widely in Europe before
    settling in Brighton.

    The current Earl Peel, who lives in Richmond, North Yorks, and is a
    great-great-nephew of Laurence Peel, has visited the crypt.

    He said: "I was as astonished as anybody to find it as we had no idea
    it was there. It was quite extraordinary. We crept through the passages
    and suddenly saw this wrought iron gate with the Peel crest on it and
    the tombs. It was a very exciting and moving moment."

    The crypt will remain behind doors but will be available for viewing.
7.448IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:1981
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Five-star stalemate as hotel grading negotiations fail
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 

    TWO years of talks on a common hotel grading system across Britain look
    set to fail because of opposition from Scottish and Welsh tourist
    boards.

    While Government attempts to salvage an agreement are continuing,
    frustration with the stalemate has prompted the English tourist
    authority, Automobile Association (AA) and Royal Automobile Club (RAC)
    to proceed with a scheme of their own. Details are likely to be
    announced this week.

    Absence of a uniform star system has been a source of confusion and
    complaint for hotel-users since the 1970s, when joint arrangements
    between the two motoring organisations and the Royal Scottish
    Automobile Club collapsed. Separate and conflicting ratings have
    operated subsequently.

    The situation was made more complicated in 1987 with the launch of the
    tourist board's six-level "crowns" classification intended to
    demonstrate differences in facilities, which was later extended to give
    an extra, four-grade assessment of overall quality.

    Persistent criticism from tourists, especially Americans, that
    standards of service and comfort in British hotels did not match the
    equivalent abroad has stung the boards into seeking reform.

    But protracted efforts to agree a new system for the whole of Britain
    have reached deadlock, with the Scots and Welsh refusing to endorse a
    plan that they fear would portray their hotels and guest houses in a
    poor light.

    Proposals supported by the AA, RAC and the English board involve a
    single rating of one to five stars. To be awarded, say, three stars, a
    hotel would have to meet specified standards for quality, services
    (such as room service, porterage or laundry) and facilities. Failure to
    satisfy the criteria in all three areas would mean a lower grading. If
    an establishment failed to meet the one-star criteria, it would be
    unclassified.

    AA research showed that 90 per cent of consumers expected a higher star
    rating to denote higher standards in all three areas.

    Scotland is worried that many of its establishments would not gain the
    minimum star award under the proposed scheme. While more than 4,000
    accommodation venues are currently included in the board's crown
    scheme, only 1,070 (including guest houses and bed and breakfast
    establishments) qualify for an AA rating.

    The crown scheme has less stringent standards over comfort issues such
    as bedroom sizes and bed widths. The Consumers' Association says that
    the board's system is "discredited" because hoteliers have to pay to be
    included if they want to feature in official promotional material.

    The Welsh board said yesterday it objected to the majority-backed
    scheme because it would damage the interests of many small operators,
    who "provide excellent value but cannot afford the luxuries or services
    you would find in a bigger place". They did not feel that the extent of
    services or facilities should determine the ratings of hotels below
    four stars.

    The Scots made little headway with a counter-proposal for ratings based
    simply on assessments of quality. Officials said the majority scheme
    overplayed the importance of facilities at the expense of personal
    service and ambience. 

    But one English negotiator said: "Under the Scottish plan, you could
    have a pleasantly-run guest house by a loch with half a dozen beds, no
    room service and no meals after 8pm - and it could get five stars. That
    would make the whole system ridiculous. It's very sad that we've spent
    two years on this and failed to reach a settlement. But it's time for
    those of us who want to press on to do so."

    To give hoteliers time to meet the new standards, inspections are
    expected to begin in 1999, with the system coming into force in England
    the following year. The Scots are planning to continue with a revised
    version of the present crown format.
7.449IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2031
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Heart attacks 'dismissed as indigestion'
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    HEART attack victims are putting their lives at risk by dismissing
    their symptoms as indigestion, the British Heart Foundation said
    yesterday. 

    Prof Brian Pentecost, medical director of the foundation, said they
    consequently delayed seeking medical help. But prompt action is
    essential because one in three people who suffer a heart attack die
    before they reach hospital.

    A survey of 2,000 people carried out by the foundation found little
    general awareness that a pain that felt like indigestion could be the
    start of an attack. Most associated chest pain with a heart attack but
    less than half knew that breathlessness was a symptom and fewer than a
    third mentioned pain in the left arm.

    The foundation said: "When heart patients were asked what symptoms they
    actually experienced prior to their heart attack, 40 per cent listed
    what they believed to be indigestion pain as a symptom."

    More than 300,000 people suffer heart attacks each year. About half are
    fatal. Prof Pentecost said: "It is important to recognise that having
    indigestion-like pain does not necessarily mean that you are having a
    heart attack. However, people should be wary of chest pain that does
    not go away after 15 minutes or following their usual indigestion
    medication."
7.450IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2129
7.451IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2238
7.452IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2233
7.453IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2331
7.454IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2457
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Women's fashion takes a fresh look at the bottom line
    
    By Tom Leonard 

    LEADING clothing stores are considering changing the way they size
    women's clothes after evidence that the female form is becoming more
    pear-shaped.

    A survey of British women's figures has been commissioned amid concern
    that the current system, which divides all women's clothes into sizes
    such as 10, 12 and 14, is out of date and so vaguely defined that it is
    misleading shoppers. Prof Stephen Gray, of Nottingham and Trent
    University's clothing centre, has been asked to measure 2,500 women for
    the Burton Group, which owns Debenhams, Principles, Dorothy Perkins and
    Top Shop.

    According to Prof Gray, discrepancies in clothing sizes are due to the
    rise of the pear-shape and parallel decline of the classic hourglass
    figure. The latter was more common when the British Clothing Industry
    Standard, based on a survey of women's vital statistics, was set in
    1954.

    Prof Gray, whose research is revealed tonight in the BBC1 programme
    Watchdog: Face Value, has concluded that the current system is causing
    problems for many women in trying to find clothes that fit them. He
    told the programme: "A lot of women do not know what their measurements
    are. It is true to say that, with almost no exception, the pear shape
    is alive and well and living in the UK."

    Sue Fairley, head of technical services at Debenhams, said: "Without a
    clear definition in the British standards about what a size 12 or 14
    constitutes, British retailers are left to their own devices. That
    means the customer is seeing quite a difference in sizes across the
    High Street."

    A model with measurements of 34-26-36 - a perfect size 12, according to
    British Clothing Industry figures - found that sizes varied
    considerably when she was asked by the programme makers to try on
    clothes in various High Street stores. At Miss Selfridge, she found a
    size 12 was too tight for her, while at Wallis she could fit
    comfortably into a size 8.

    The research comes three years after a similar survey for JD Williams,
    the clothing catalogue company, also noted the decline of the
    hourglass. The study revealed that women are now two inches taller in
    the body, two inches broader across the waist and hips, and rounder in
    arms, shoulders and ribcage than they were in 1954.

    One major reason suggested for the change is an alteration in women's
    fat composition. British Standard measurements showed fat typically
    settled on a woman's bottom, hips and thighs, while in the 1990s it
    tends to accumulate between the hips and shoulders. Nutritionists have
    suggested the disparity is due in part to the fact that women in the
    1950s tended to eat less fattening food and also burned up more
    calories during their more energetic daily routines. 
7.455IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2554
7.456IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2682
7.457IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2875
7.458IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2827
7.459IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Mon Feb 03 1997 16:2934
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 February 1997 Issue 619

    Male Pill 'targets wrong hormone'
    
    By Laura Spinney, Science Correspondent 

    YEARS of research aimed at devising a male contraceptive pill may have
    been wasted by scientists basing their study on a false assumption
    about fertility, it has been claimed.

    Until now, the most effective pills for men were thought to be those
    that blocked a hormone controlling sperm production. But the follicle
    stimulating hormone (FSH), which researchers had sought to block, now
    appears to have little to do with male fertility.

    Researchers led by Dr Juha Tapanainen of Oulu University Hospital,
    Finland, found evidence that FSH is not essential for sperm production
    at puberty or for maintaining it during adulthood. In a paper in Nature
    Genetics, the team described five men in whom the gene for the FSH
    receptor was mutated. Although they produced normal to high amounts of
    the hormone, the signal transmitted by FSH "did not go through". Yet to
    varying degrees the researchers found that the men's sperm was viable
    and they were fertile, although their testes were up to three times
    smaller than normal.

    In the same journal, Dr Martin Matzuk from Baylor College of
    Medicine,Texas, confirms that finding in mice genetically engineered so
    that they produced no FSH. Although female mice lacking FSH were
    infertile, the male transgenic mice were fertile but developed shrunken
    testes.

    As long as testosterone levels are normal, the researchers said, the
    absence of FSH does not affect the production of sperm. So male
    contraceptive pills that block FSH will not make men infertile.
7.460IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:49110
    AP 6-Feb-1997 0:58 EST   REF5887

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, Feb. 6, 1997
   
    WHITEWATER 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Whitewater prosecutors have compiled a memo of
    several hundred pages summarizing material involving first lady Hillary
    Rodham Clinton and President Clinton, lawyers familiar with the probe
    say. The memo reportedly details everything investigators have learned
    since the probe began 2 1/2 years ago. Sources say that independent
    counsel Kenneth Starr and his lawyers in Washington and Little Rock,
    Ark., will weigh whether any indictments or other actions are warranted
    after reviewing the document. Prosecutors said for the first time
    Wednesday that one of their cooperating witnesses, former Whitewater
    partner Jim McDougal, has provided "new and important information." 
   
    SIMPSON 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- O.J. Simpson's lawyer will probably plead
    fiscal mercy as the former football great faces a hearing for punitive
    damages Thursday. After being found liable for the slashing deaths of
    Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, Simpson was ordered by a jury
    to pay $8.5 million in compensatory damages. Robert Baker will probably
    argue that his client has nothing left to give. Estimates are that
    Simpson is now worth no more than $6 million, with nearly all of his
    worth in the form of his estate, which has been mortgaged to pay legal
    bills. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton is prepared to send Congress a
    $1.69 trillion budget for fiscal 1998 that cuts taxes and claims enough
    savings from Medicare, defense and other programs to produce a $17
    billion surplus in 2002. Clinton had promised in his State of the Union
    address Tuesday night to make balancing the budget and improving
    education his top priorities. The budget envisions savings of about
    $400 billion over the next five years, including $76 billion worth of
    tax increases hitting mostly corporations and airline travelers. 
   
    BOSNIA-LAWSUIT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A judge Wednesday ordered Bosnia's most wanted war
    crimes suspect to come to New York to respond to a U.S. lawsuit by
    women who say they were raped and tortured in the former Yugoslavia.
    However, Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb wartime leader, is an
    international fugitive and unlikely to travel to the United States. The
    lawsuits -- seeking billions in damages -- allege that Karadzic planned
    and ordered a campaign of murder, rape, forced impregnation and other
    forms of torture. 
   
    TRAIN ACCIDENT 

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- An Amtrak train struck a tractor-trailer
    Wednesday, causing three passenger cars to derail and injuring 15
    people. The train, on its way from Miami to New York with 187
    passengers and 16 crew members aboard, was about 13 miles north of
    Jacksonville when it crashed into a semi-trailer. The locomotive and a
    baggage car derailed and overturned while three passenger cars derailed
    but remained upright, Amtrak officials said. 
   
    AOL-OUTAGE 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- America Online was hit with a new technical snag
    Wednesday, heightening frustrations among customers just one week after
    the online service agreed to give them refunds for poor service.
    Customers nationwide were unable to log on to the online service for
    about 2 1/2 hours because technicians were upgrading computer software
    to accommodate the recent surge of members that has overwhelmed its
    network. 
   
    JUNK E-MAIL 

    Online users who hate "junk" e-mail got a break from two federal court
    rulings against a Philadelphia company. A federal judge in Columbus,
    Ohio on Monday barred Cyber Promotions Inc. from sending unsolicited
    e-mail advertisements -- better known among computer buffs as
    "spamming" -- to CompuServe's 5 million subscribers. On Tuesday, a
    federal judge in Philadelphia forbid the bulk e-mailer from falsifying
    return e-mail addresses, which kept America Online members from
    blocking the unsolicited messages. And AOL said the court order will
    prevent Cyber Promotions from circumventing a tool available to AOL
    members designed to block junk e-mail. 
   
    SECURITIES MERGER 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Dean Witter, the big brokerage and credit-card
    company, plans to merge with investment banking giant Morgan Stanley in
    a $9.9 billion deal. It will create the world's biggest securities
    firm. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The U.S. dollar was changing hands at 123.56 yen late
    Thursday morning, up 0.54. The Nikkei fell 124.28 points to 18,061.69.
    On Wall Street, the Dow lost 86.58 points to end at 6,746.90 even
    though the Federal Reserve decided to keep interest rates unchanged. 
   
    NBA ALL-STARS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Chris Gatling of the Dallas Mavericks, Kevin Garnett
    of the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Washington Bullets' Chris Webber
    were picked to replace three injured players in the NBA All-Star game
    Sunday. They will replace Western Conference stars Clyde Drexler of the
    Houston Rockets, Shaquille O'Neal of the Los Angeles Lakers and the New
    York Knicks' Patrick Ewing. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.461IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5047
    Updated at Wednesday, February 5, 1997, at 8:00 pm Pacific time.

    Reuters World News Highlights 

    BELGRADE - Serbia's autocratic President Slobodan Milosevic lost no
    time in pushing through a new law recognising his opponents' victories
    in local elections after three months of domestic protests and foreign
    pressure. 

    SOFIA - Bulgaria's opposition parties have celebrated non-stop since
    forcing the ruling Socialists to quit and call elections but the
    euphoria may wear off quickly when the extent of the devastated economy
    sinks in. 

    VLORE, Albania - Penniless Albanians who took on police in this port
    city vowed to stage a second day of protests on Thursday to press for
    the return of money trapped in failed investment funds and the
    government's resignation. 

    KINSHASA - Rebel advances in the east have caught Zaire's demoralised
    army off guard and put tens of thousands of Rwandan Hutu refugees to
    flight once again, sources on both sides and relief workers say. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States said it had urged Uganda, Rwanda and
    Burundi to stay out of fighting in eastern Zaire between Tutsi rebels
    and Zairean government forces. 

    WASHINGTON - Russian fears about NATO, U.S. jitters about the global
    space station and plans for a presidential summit will be prime topics
    this week in talks between Vice President Al Gore and Russia's prime
    minister. 

    LOS ANGELES - Victorious plaintiffs focused on convincing a civil trial
    jury to slap O.J. Simpson with punitive damages on top of the $8.5
    million he must pay in the deaths of his ex-wife and her friend. 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif - O.J. Simpson's wealth has dwindled from $8
    million to $500,000 in the space of a year, according to records given
    to plaintiffs' attorneys by the defence in the former football star's
    civil trial. 

    NEW YORK - Mia Farrow's long-awaited memoir on life with Woody Allen
    hit U.S. bookstores, painting the director-comedian as more neurotic
    than anyone he ever played in one of his films. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.462IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5153
    AP 6-Feb-1997 1:29 EST   REF5921

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Va. MD Indicted on Wife's Murder

    NORFOLK (AP) -- A grand jury has indicted a once-prominent Norfolk
    psychiatrist on a murder charge in the slaying of his wife, restoring a
    case that was dismissed last week. 

    Tobin Jones, 36, is expected to go on trial later this year in the
    death of his wife Megan, whose decomposing body was found May 18 rolled
    in a rug in the home the estranged couple once shared. Jones was in the
    yard cutting the grass when police arrived. 

    At a preliminary hearing last week, a judge threw out the case against
    Jones after Commonwealth's Attorney Chuck Griffith offered limited
    evidence. The tactic caused Jones' attorney, James Broccoletti, to
    complain about secrecy. 

    "This is a doctor who was a respectable member of society. He has been
    vilified," Broccoletti said. "He deserves the right to an open and fair
    hearing." 

    Griffith said he thought he presented enough evidence at the hearing to
    show probable cause against Jones, who remained in custody on unrelated
    charges. 

    "My intent was not to sand bag," he said. "I would never go in there
    and throw a preliminary hearing." 

    James Polley of the National District Attorneys Association said
    Griffith used the best strategy. 

    "You do the minimum to meet the requirements," he said. "That way I
    don't tip my hand or give away my tactics. This sounds like a low-risk
    situation. The guy's in jail so he's not going to walk away free." 

    Ron Bacigal, a University of Richmond law professor, said taking the
    grand jury route seemed like a back-door way to get a suspect charged.
    "If you don't think preliminary hearings add anything, then do away
    with them," he said. 

    Because grand jury proceedings are secret, defense attorneys cannot
    find out who the prosecution's witnesses are and other key evidence
    against their clients. 

    "Is this a game?" Brocoletti asked. "When someone's liberty is at stake
    ... we shouldn't close the courtrooms." 

    Jones, who with his wife performed in local theater productions, was
    medical director of Norfolk's Community Services Board until he took
    leave last March. 
7.463IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5127
    AP 6-Feb-1997 1:11 EST   REF5898

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Robbed Tourist Lauds Hawaii Aid

    HONOLULU (AP) -- A British tourist stabbed during a robbery at a bus
    stop thanked Hawaii residents for their thoughtfulness and support
    during the ordeal. 

    Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris on Wednesday honored Janet Mansfield, 41,
    her husband, and lifeguards who came to their rescue and held the
    suspects until police arrived. 

    "We were very pleased with the outcome of the trial," Mansfield said.
    "The two boys have had the maximum that they judiciary can give
    them...This is what we wanted. This is why we stayed on." 

    The couple was at a bus stop at Waimea Beach Park last month when two
    15-year-old boys attacked and robbed them. 

    Mansfield said she started screaming, and people pulled out cellular
    phones to call police, while others called lifeguards, who ran down the
    two youths and held them until police arrived. 

    Both of the boys were convicted of robbery and assault. One will be
    confined until he is 18, the other until he is 19. 
7.464IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5149
    AP 6-Feb-1997 0:12 EST   REF5654

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Arrest Made in 1992 Deaths

    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- A convicted rapist wanted for murder in the
    deaths of five women whose bound, gagged and stabbed bodies were found
    in a drug house in 1992 has been arrested in California, police said
    Wednesday. 

    Police and FBI agents in San Jose, Calif., arrested Danny Keith Hooks,
    38, shortly before midnight Tuesday in a hotel lobby. 

    The five women were found in one room of an Oklahoma City drug house
    that one of the women was renting. Hooks was mentioned once in the many
    reports on the investigation but was never a suspect, Police Chief Sam
    Gonzales said. 

    Police got a break in the case last week when California authorities
    called to say that a DNA sample found at the crime scene matched one
    that Hooks gave in California. Police then linked a bloody palm print
    found at the scene with a print taken from Hooks in a drunken driving
    arrest in Oklahoma. 

    Last week, Hooks was charged with five counts of murder in the slayings
    of Sandra Thompson, 35, Phyllis Adams, 47, Lashawn Evans, 30, Carolyn
    Watson, 37, all of Spencer, and Fransill Roberts, 34, of Midwest City. 

    Many people in the neighborhood thought police had forgotten about the
    case, said Clarence Holland Jr., who grew up in the area and knew some
    of the victims. And despite the arrest, some still worry that more
    killers are out there. 

    "I can't see how one man could have done this by himself," Holland
    said. "Some of the women who were there could whip a man by themselves.
    There has got to be more than just one in on it." 

    Hooks was booked into the Santa Clara County jail and Oklahoma
    officials will seek to have him brought back to the state to face the
    murder charges. 

    Hooks, a transient with relatives in Oklahoma, went to prison in
    California in 1988 for rape, kidnapping and assault with a deadly
    weapon. He was released in 1991. 

    He was arrested again in 1992 in Oklahoma on a parole violation and
    returned to California. Authorities there said he was released from
    prison again in August. 
7.465IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5129
    AP 5-Feb-1997 23:32 EST   REF5532

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Darlie Routier Imprisoned

    KERRVILLE, Texas (AP) -- Darlie Routier arrived at the prison Wednesday
    where she'll undergo a series of social and psychological tests before
    joining the six other women now on Texas' death row. 

    Mrs. Routier, 27, will await execution in a 6-by-9 cell at the Mountain
    View Unit of the state Department of Criminal Justice about 40 miles
    west of Waco. 

    The former homemaker, accused of fatally stabbing her two young sons on
    June 6, 1996, was sentenced Tuesday to die by injection for killing her
    5-year-old son Damon. 

    A charge covering 6-year-old Devon's death likely will be dismissed,
    prosecutor Greg Davis said. 

    Defense attorneys said Mrs. Routier's fate may have been sealed the day
    her capital murder trial was moved from Dallas to Kerr County. 

    Court testimony indicated Mrs. Routier gave marijuana and alcohol to a
    16-year-old baby sitter -- evidence that didn't sit well with the jury. 

    "This is the wrong place to try a case like this," defense attorney
    Richard Mosty said. "Kerr County is just too conservative." 
7.466IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5147
    AP 5-Feb-1997 23:31 EST   REF5523

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Calif. Jail Finally Opens

    By DENNIS ANDERSON

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Los Angeles County built a $373 million jail to
    hold 4,200 inmates more than a year ago. It's been empty ever since --
    not for a lack of prisoners, but because the county couldn't afford to
    open it. 

    Twin Towers, completed in October 1995, was finally dedicated on
    Wednesday after a deal was approved to provide state and federal money
    to offset annual operating expenses of $75 million. 

    About 300 dignitaries and elected officials turned out to celebrate the
    opening of the facility, with a handful of protesters saying more jails
    are not the answers to society's problems. 

    Attorney General Dan Lungren called Twin Towers "a monument to
    reality." "I hope sometime in the future that we won't have to build
    jails and prisons, but that time has not come," he said. 

    Not everyone agreed. A small group of protesters carried placards with
    messages that said, "Educate, Don't Incarcerate." 

    The demonstrators included a nun, Sister Lisa Nolette, who said the
    politicians failed to grasp the connection between poverty, a lack of
    educational opportunity and crime. 

    "How do we spend our money?" she asked. "Do we spend it on jails, or
    solutions?" 

    Late last month, the Board of Supervisors approved a plan that calls
    for state and federal law enforcement agencies to lease about 1,900
    beds at other county jail facilities, generating about $37 million for
    Twin Towers. 

    Gov. Pete Wilson said he will appeal to the Legislature for money to
    help pay for its operation. 

    "I'm confident they will agree with everyone here today that this
    facility must go forward." 
7.467IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:51107
    AP 6-Feb-1997 1:37 EST   REF5938

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Belgians Enjoy Horsemeat Dishes

    By RAF CASERT

    Associated Press Writer

    VILVOORDE, Belgium (AP) -- Sitting under yellowing posters glorifying
    the mighty Belgian draughthorse, gourmets from far and wide have come
    to De Kuiper's to savor sweet, pungent horse tenderloins braised in
    their own fat. 

    "If you love horses, you should eat them, too," said Alfons Gulickx,
    owner of De Kuiper's restaurant. Customers here indulge heartily in the
    great Belgian culinary tradition -- though they acknowledge having
    mixed emotions about it. 

    "It hurts to eat such a nice animal, but yes, a horse is made to die,"
    said Rik Eylenbosch, sinking his knife into a thick, dark prime cut. 

    Last month, the U.S. government began investigating a government
    adoption program for wild horses after The Associated Press reported
    that many of the animals were winding up in slaughterhouses for export
    to countries -- including Belgium. 

    De Kuiper is situated in the heart of Belgium's Brabant region, where
    people have long taken pride in the sturdy local carthorses. A bronze
    statue of the animal graces a city square. 

    Playing off its reputation for reliability and industriousness,
    Jean-Luc Dehaene campaigned as "Your Brabant Draughthorse" in his
    successful bid for prime minister. 

    But adoration of the animal does not get in the way of dining on it --
    along with a side of fries. 

    "De Kuiper: Major specialist of horse steaks since 1859," a wooden sign
    above the red-brick restaurant proudly proclaims, drawing everyone from
    local pensioners to Belgian celebrities. 

    Considered repugnant in many countries, horsemeat is a delicacy in
    parts of the world. 

    In Japan, horsemeat recipes date back at least four centuries. Raw
    slabs are eaten with soy sauce, wasabi paste, ground ginger, chives and
    other garnishes to produce a horse sashimi. 

    Horsemeat also is a tradition in France and Switzerland, but so
    ingrained is its Belgian reputation that a Polish horse meat sausage is
    called "Belgijska." 

    Apart from the tender steaks, Belgians turn the horsemeat into stews
    cooked in beer or vinegar with onions and carrots, and an array of
    sausages and smoked hams. 

    "It is the summit of red-meat perfection," said Dirk De Prins, a
    culinary expert and writer on Belgian cooking. Fans point out that
    horse has less fat than beef, while some European consumers note that
    horsemeat contains no risk of "mad cow" disease. 

    But for every nation that has taken to the meat, there are plenty that
    haven't. 

    In Britain, for example, it is definitely a non-starter. Belgo Centraal
    is a trendy London restaurant featuring all things Belgian from beer
    and mussel dishes to the creamy chicken stew known as waterzooi. But
    horsemeat is not on the menu. 

    "It's quite unacceptable in Britain," said Belgo's Mary Norman.
    "They're seen more as pets as anything." 

    In India, the land of curries, many people worship "Mother Cow" and
    will not touch beef. But few see horsemeat as an alternative. 

    "There is so much to eat, why even think of the poor horse?" said New
    Delhi shipping executive Ajay Bhatnagar. 

    People have enjoyed eating horsemeat through the ages -- from the Celts
    to the Mongols, who also rode them across the steppe. Hunters in
    prehistoric France once earned their dinners by chasing horses to their
    death over Solutre rock. 

    In Medieval Europe, the Pope tried to ban the eating of horsemeat, and
    governments also have tried to stamp out the tradition. But it has
    continued partly because, until recently, it was a cheap. 

    That is changing, even in Belgium. Prices for a horse steak can now
    exceed those of prime beef. The standard steak at De Kuiper costs $16. 

    Importer Bart Teugels says U.S. imported horse steaks can cost as much
    as $14 a pound, largely because of transport costs. 

    Robert Peeters, the sole remaining horsemeat butcher in Vilvoorde,
    which long had Belgium's biggest market for draughthorses, says he'll
    close up in a few years. 

    When he started in 1946, he processed a horse a day into sausages,
    steaks and hams. He made the rounds of the local farms and had plenty
    of product. 

    But now he has to travel up to 100 miles to find his meat, as
    draughthorses steadily gave way to tractors. 

    "Tractors make lousy sausages," he said. 
7.468IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5123
    AP 6-Feb-1997 1:34 EST   REF5928

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.K. Probes Illegal Visa Sales

    LONDON (AP) -- Police are investigating allegations that British
    diplomatic staff in Nigeria have been selling visas illegally. 

    The Foreign Office says it has recalled four staff from the visa
    section of the British High Commission, or embassy, in Lagos in recent
    weeks. 

    Britain and other European countries restrict issuing visas to
    Nigerians out of concern that they will remain in the country they
    visit. 

    The Times of London reported last month that a Scotland Yard team had
    uncovered systematic fraud involving large sums of money over the sale
    of British travel visas. 

    Scotland Yard and the Foreign Office would not release details of the
    investigation. 
7.469IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5127
    AP 5-Feb-1997 21:30 EST   REF5816

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Senegal Airline Suspends Flights

    DAKAR, Senegal (AP) -- Senegal's national airline suspended operations
    Wednesday after its only airworthy plane crashed and killed 23 people. 

    In a terse statement read on national television, Air Senegal said it
    would resume operations in the future, but did not give a specific
    date. 

    Investigators believe contaminated fuel and excess baggage may have
    caused Saturday's plane crash, which seriously injured 29 people. 

    The right engine of the British-made Hawker Siddeley 748, a twin-engine
    turboprop, stalled 30 seconds after takeoff. It was carrying tourists
    returning from a wildlife park. Most of the tourists were French. 

    President Abdou Diouf was quoted in the government-owned Le Soleil
    newspaper Wednesday as saying he was "most saddened by the accident"
    and ordered an investigation. 

    Some 140 workers of the airline may be laid off as a result of the
    suspension. The HS-748 was the last of the company's three aircraft
    still airworthy. Two other, smaller planes have been grounded. 
7.470IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5175
    AP 5-Feb-1997 21:08 EST   REF5804

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mexico: Accused Woman Cries Foul

    By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER

    Associated Press Writer

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- She says she shot to stop the assault of a would-be
    rapist. The prosecution claims she invited the attack by enticing her
    aggressor. 

    Both sides make final arguments Friday in the murder trial of Claudia
    Rodriguez, whose prosecution for killing her alleged attacker has
    women's groups complaining of injustice from a macho society that holds
    women to a different standard -- even in court. 

    Rodriguez, 30, has been in jail since the night a year ago when she
    went out with a woman friend and the woman's lover for an evening of
    drinking and dancing at a bar just outside Mexico City. 

    The two women left the bar together well after midnight, apparently
    offended by something the man, Juan Miguel Cabrera, 27, had done. 

    He followed them. Rodriguez claims he made lewd comments and suggested
    the three go to a hotel. She says he attacked her and tried to rape
    her, ripping her clothing. Her friend confirmed the account. 

    Rodriguez shot Cabrera once with a pistol she had with her. He died
    hours later in a hospital. 

    She was charged with murder and could face 15 years in prison. 

    The defense says the charges are baseless and indicative of the double
    standard women face in Mexico. Rodriguez is married and the mother of
    five. Cabrera was also married, though not to Rodriguez's friend. 

    In a July ruling dismissing a defense motion to drop charges, Judge
    Gustavo Aquiles Gasca wrote: 

    "Instead of avoiding the sexual attack, by her attitude in remaining in
    the company of her aggressor despite his propositions to her, she
    provoked him to attack her so she could shoot him in some vital part of
    his body." 

    "The judge said she should have foreseen the attempt, but the
    aggression was unexpected," defense attorney Ana Laura Magaloni said
    Wednesday. "Claudia said 'no' and suspected she was going to be raped."

    Magaloni told The Associated Press that in Mexico, a shooting is
    considered a legitimate defense if someone enters your house to try to
    rob it. But "in the case of rape, it is very subjective about what is
    rape and whether the woman was inviting it or not." 

    On Wednesday, about 15 women protesters put themselves behind bars in a
    mock jail set up outside the Interior Ministry building. They paced
    inside a cage with black metal bars, vowing to remain there until
    Rodriguez is released. 

    "If Claudia is a prisoner, we are too," one sign said. 

    Integral Health for Women, one of a number of feminist groups to rally
    behind Rodriguez, considers the case significant because it symbolizes
    the "machismo that is entrenched in our society," according to
    spokeswoman Ana Maria Hernandez, who joined Wednesday's protest. 

    "That Claudia could spend 15 years in prison sends a message to society
    that women can be raped -- and if they defend themselves they can go to
    jail -- and a message to men that they can do what they want and
    nothing will happen to them." 

    The judge has 15 days to issue a verdict after Friday's hearing,
    although the process often takes longer in practice. 
7.471IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5236
    AP 5-Feb-1997 20:39 EST   REF5789

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    4 To Be Tried in Cairo Collapse

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Three engineers and the owner of an apartment
    building will stand trial for negligence in the building's collapse, a
    news agency reported Wednesday. The collapse killed 64 people. 

    The owner, Raouf Wissa Ibrahim, 60, is accused of illegally adding four
    floors atop the eight-story building and transforming apartments on the
    ground floor into shops, Egypt's Middle East News Agency said. 

    The building -- in the upscale Heliopolis district in Cairo -- was
    built on a structure that could not even withstand eight floors, MENA
    quoted unidentified prosecution officials as saying. 

    The three engineers are accused of removing columns and surrounding
    walls on the ground floor to make way for a bank. The building
    collapsed in October as the work was going on. 

    "The deaths were a result of the men's negligence and because they
    ignored building regulations," the officials said, according to MENA. 

    If convicted, Ibrahim could face life in prison at hard labor as well
    as a minimum $14,700 fine, MENA quoted prosecutor Abdel-Maguid Mahmoud
    as saying. 

    Mahmoud said the engineers, whose names were not released, could get
    three years in prison if convicted. No date has been set for the trial.

    The collapse sparked calls for tougher construction laws and stricter
    punishment for shoddy building practices. Building collapses are not
    unusual in Egypt, where rising real estate costs in the 1970s led to
    shoddy construction. 
7.472IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5224
    AP 5-Feb-1997 19:44 EST   REF5738

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Navy Suspends Jet Search

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- The U.S. Navy suspended its search Wednesday for a
    military jet that disappeared with four servicemen aboard during a
    training exercise in the eastern Mediterranean. 

    The S-3 Viking, stationed on the 6th Fleet's USS Theodore Roosevelt,
    dropped off the radar at about 8 p.m. Tuesday, the Navy said in a
    statement. 

    Search and rescue squads located some debris with squadron markings,
    said Bert Byers, a spokesman for Cecil Field Naval Air Station in
    Jacksonville, Fla., where the Navy plane was based. 

    The military offered no details about possible causes of the crash. 

    The Jerusalem Post said the American plane, a submarine-chaser equipped
    with harpoon missiles, was taking part in joint maneuvers with the
    Israeli navy at the time. It disappeared about 90 miles west of the
    Israeli port city of Haifa. 
7.473IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5240
    AP 5-Feb-1997 20:20 EST   REF5783

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S. Africa Panel Halts AIDS Drug

    PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) -- A South African medical panel banned all
    research on a new AIDS drug Wednesday until the medication's safety can
    be proven. 

    The ban by the Medicines Control Council was the latest setback to
    three University of Pretoria researchers who developed Virodene P058,
    which they presented to President Nelson Mandela's Cabinet last month
    as a groundbreaking treatment for the HIV virus. 

    While South Africa said it would consider providing money for more
    research on the drug, scientists and AIDS groups accused the
    researchers of conducting unauthorized experiments on humans and making
    sensational claims before submitting their work for peer review. 

    A special committee made up of members of the government drug council,
    the research team and the University of Pretoria medical ethics
    committee is investigating the drug's safety. 

    One of the drug's ingredients is a toxic industrial solvent, said Peter
    Folb, chairman of the council. He said the toxic ingredient --
    dimethylformamide -- can cause liver damage and may be linked to
    cancer. 

    "AIDS patients may be at special risk of developing some of these
    complications," Folb said. "The serious and unresolved safety issues in
    the use of Virodene must be sorted out before any further work can be
    considered and before patients who previously received Virodene may be
    further exposed to the drug." 

    The researchers had claimed their tests on about a dozen patients
    showed the formula in some cases reversed the effects of AIDS. 

    But Folb said initial findings by the investigating panel detected
    flaws both in the research and the interpretation of its results. 
7.474IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5264
    AP 5-Feb-1997 20:02 EST   REF5760

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Huge Ice Shelf Collapse Imminent

    SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- Deep holes and cracks several miles long are
    spreading through an Antarctic ice shelf, and a scientist who examined
    them predicted the shelf soon will collapse. 

    Two years ago, the northern section of the 620-mile-long Larsen Ice
    Shelf collapsed after a period of warmer-than-usual temperatures. 

    On Wednesday, Rudi del Valle, director of geology with the Argentinian
    Antarctic Institute, flew over the rest of the 4,600-square-mile ice
    shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula and predicted it would collapse within
    two years. 

    "It will be destroyed without any doubt," he said. 

    After spending the past seven years observing the area, del Valle said
    he was convinced that global warming was causing the dramatic changes. 

    In January 1995, a 500-square-mile section of the ice shelf collapsed
    and broke up into thousands of icebergs. Prior to the collapse it had
    become crisscrossed with deep cracks, some 30 miles long and 100 feet
    wide. 

    "We saw a lot of cracks and ice rifts -- a lot," del Valle said of his
    trip Wednesday. "We saw holes -- big holes in the ice shelf. And we
    don't have an explanation for these holes. In summer, there are rivers
    ... and small lakes." 

    Greenpeace sent two helicopters from its research ship, the Arctic
    Sunrise, over the area Wednesday. 

    Marc de Fourneaux, a climber and Antarctic expert who dropped down onto
    the ice from one of the helicopters, said he had never seen so many
    cracks in the surface of an ice shelf. He also was surprised at the
    number of lakes -- some larger than football fields -- that have formed
    from melting ice. 

    Glaciologists from the British Antarctic Survey contend that the
    disintegration of ice shelves on the Antarctic Peninsula is a sign that
    they are reaching their "limit of viability" due to increasing
    temperatures over the peninsula. 

    In a recent paper, glaciologists David Vaughan and Chris Doake said ice
    shelves on the peninsula were starting to retreat south as temperatures
    continued to increase. 

    "Ice shelves appear to be sensitive indicators of climate change," they
    wrote in Nature magazine last year. 

    Over the past 50 years, the Antarctic Peninsula has experienced a
    sustained atmospheric warming of 4.5 degrees. 

    Scientists disagree over whether the warming is due to the greenhouse
    effect of the buildup of carbon dioxide and other gases released by the
    Industrial Age, or whether it is part of the Earth's natural warming
    and cooling cycle. 

    Del Valle said in recent years it has even rained in coastal Antarctica
    -- a previously unheard-of event. 
7.475IJSAPL::ANDERSONLike to help me avoid an ulcer?Thu Feb 06 1997 10:5227
    AP 5-Feb-1997 19:44 EST   REF5739

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    21st State Joins Tobacco Suit

    MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Wisconsin sued Wednesday for smoking-related
    profits and health costs, the 21st state to sue tobacco companies. 

    The lawsuit accuses eight tobacco companies and three industry groups
    of conspiring to mislead, deceive and confuse the public about the
    negative health effects of tobacco use and secondhand smoke. 

    "We must do it to stop future generations from being misled and hooked
    by dangerous products which will lead to disease and death," Attorney
    General James Doyle said. 

    In addition to recouping money spent treating smoking-related
    illnesses, the state is seeking all profits the companies have made in
    Wisconsin since 1953, the year researchers' discovery of a possible
    link between smoking and lung cancer was first widely reported. 

    One of the defendants, Philip Morris Inc., countered that tobacco is a
    legal product licensed and taxed by the state. "It is the height of
    hypocrisy for the state to receive these funds and sue the
    manufacturers of the product they have long embraced, and continue to
    embrace, as a source of income," the company said. 
7.476IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:3371
7.477IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:3526
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Sellafield hit by second radioactive leak in a week
    
    By Roger Highfield 

    THE Sellafield nuclear complex in Cumbria suffered its second leak in
    the past few days when radioactive liquid seeped from a faulty valve,
    British Nuclear Fuels reported yesterday.

    The liquid by-products of nuclear fuel reprocessing escaped during
    transfer between two waste storage tanks on top of part of the
    Sellafield complex treating spent Magnox nuclear fuel.

    The contaminated water washed down the side of the building into a
    rainwater storage area, from which some spilled on to the ground. An
    adjacent area has been cordoned off. "No member of the workforce has
    been affected, nor is there any wider environmental consequence," a
    statement said.

    The leak was discovered early on Tuesday. On Sunday night, six workers
    were contaminated by an internal leak of radioactive dust. Both events
    were graded level two on the International Nuclear Event Scale which
    rises from one to seven. The Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, which
    is now examining both incidents, said it regarded their proximity as a
    "coincidence". 
7.478IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:3633
7.479IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:3737
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Howard to reverse gun Bill changes
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 

    MICHAEL Howard, the Home Secretary, will seek to reverse alterations
    made in the Lords to the firearms legislation introduced in the wake of
    the Dunblane massacre.

    A Home Office spokesman said that when the Firearms (Amendment) Bill
    returns to the Commons the Government would try to overturn two of the
    three changes by peers on Tuesday night. The Government will also
    challenge the amendment which would allow shooters to keep their guns
    at home so long as the active part was kept in a club.

    This "goes against the principle of the Bill, which is that you cannot
    keep guns at home," a source said. Peers voted by 153 to 139 in favour
    of this. It will also seek to overturn proposals to extend compensation
    to gun dealers, passed by 121 by 110 in the Lords.

    Labour is likely to back the Government. George Robertson, shadow
    Scottish secretary, described the Lords vote as "quite disgraceful".
    Jack Straw, shadow home secretary, accused peers of representing "no
    interest but their own". But ministers are still considering whether or
    not to seek to reverse the amendment calling for the Firearms Bill to
    provide a centralised police register of licensed firearms holders.

    The Government says it is already considering such a proposal. The
    parents of children killed in Dunblane condemned the peers yesterday.
    John Crozier, whose daughter Emma was murdered by Thomas Hamilton,
    said: "the innocence of our children shames them."

    He accused peers of "watering down" the legislation when they should
    have been tightening it up. Steven Birnie, whose son Matthew was
    injured in the massacre, said: "It just shows that a lot of peers are
    out of touch with public opinion."
7.480IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:3859
7.481IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:3945
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Boy, 10, is guilty of starting house fire
    
    By Michael Fleet 

    A BOY of 10 was found guilty yesterday of setting light to a couple's
    home after a jury ruled that he was aware of the gravity of what he was
    doing.

    The boy and a 12-year-old friend admitted kicking down a door and
    setting light to the council house of Colin and Sue Smith in Dunstable,
    Beds, but Luton Crown Court held a trial to decide whether they were
    old enough to be held accountable.

    The 10-year-old is only 4ft tall and was six days past the age of
    responsibility when he and his friend attacked the Smiths' home. He is
    thought to be the youngest person to appear at a Crown court on such a
    serious charge. He sat sucking his thumb for much of the case.

    Judge Daniel Rodwell told the children that he was adjourning sentence
    on them for reports. He added: "Grave though this offence is, I am
    unwilling to write off anyone of the ages of these defendants. I have
    my sights set more on rehabilitation than punishment."

    The boys had attacked the Smiths' home in May last year. It was the
    culmination of a two-year campaign by vandals against the couple, who
    had lived there for 13 years. The jury heard that a woman neighbour had
    lent one of the boys a lighter and watched the door being kicked in.
    Even when the fire took hold she did nothing to help.

    The 10-year-old had always admitted starting the fire, but Kate
    Mallinson, prosecuting, told the jury that they had to decide if he and
    his friend knew that what they were doing was "seriously wrong, rather
    than normal childhood naughtiness".

    Mr and Mrs Smith told the court in a statement that they had often been
    the targets of vandals and had been taunted by local children. Their
    windows were systematically smashed and by the time of the fire had
    been permanently boarded up. They lost all their possessions in the
    attack, they added, but were now happy to have been moved to another
    area.

    Judge Rodwell said that when the boys were sentenced he would order
    their parents to pay compensation to the Smiths.
7.482IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:4053
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Female GP was 'indecent with woman patient'

    A FEMALE GP behaved indecently and made rude remarks to a woman patient
    she was examining in her surgery, the General Medical Council was told
    yesterday.

    Dr Christine Keown, 46, "touched up" the 28-year-old patient and asked
    her: "Are you like this with your boyfriend?" it was claimed. The
    alleged victim, Miss A, an office worker, told the council's
    professional conduct committee in London that she was assaulted as she
    lay on the doctor's couch, naked from the waist down. The doctor asked
    whether she was "frigid or anything".

    "I kept thinking, 'This is ridiculous, she's a female doctor'," she
    said. Miss A said she consulted Dr Keown while suffering from
    endometriosis, a complaint of the uterus.

    The doctor kept suggesting she should have a smear test and eventually
    she agreed and made an appointment in March 1995. She became concerned
    when the doctor asked her if she had had any unpleasant sexual
    experiences such as being abused or assaulted.

    When Dr Keown touched her private parts, "it was long enough for me to
    worry". She added: "It made me feel that this only happened when I had
    been in bed with a man."

    Cross-examined by Miss Nicola Davies, QC, for Dr Keown, Miss A denied
    "over-reacting" to her examination because she had found the doctor
    unsympathetic.

    She was certain the doctor that had touched her sexually five or six
    times during the internal examination. She said: "It was the first
    thing she did. I don't lie, I have no reason to lie, why would I lie?"
    Miss A denied ever having had any sexual problems in the past.

    She admitted that she had been referred for counselling after the
    alleged incident, but reiterated her refusal to let the doctor's
    "defence team" see her notes. Asked why she had not complained or leapt
    up, Miss A said: "I was so shocked, I just lay there."

    Miss A said she left the surgery in tears after the doctor asked
    further questions such as "Don't you want to get married?" An
    application from Miss Davies for the hearing to be heard in private, or
    for the doctor's name to be withheld as well as that of the patient,
    was refused.

    Dr Keown, of Peaslake, Surrey, denies inappropriate and indecent
    behaviour and asking inappropriate questions during a professional
    consultation.

    The hearing continues.
7.483IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:4258
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Jail crisis deepens as prison ship plan hits rough water
    
    By Philip Johnston, Home Affairs Editor 

    THE accommodation crisis facing the Prison Service deepened yesterday
    with the thwarting of plans for the first floating jail since the
    Thames Estuary hulks were abandoned 140 years ago.

    The Home Office wants to moor the Resolution - a detention ship bought
    from New York City - in Portland Harbour, Dorset, where it would hold
    about 500 "low risk" inmates. Councillors objected when approval was
    sought from Portland and Weymouth planning committee. An emergency
    meeting of the full council will be held today to consider the scheme.

    In theory, the Prison Service does not need planning permission to
    build a jail and it cannot be refused. In practice, however, it seeks
    the support of the local community before proceeding. If the full
    council endorses the objections it will set back the search for extra
    prison places to cope with an unexpected surge in numbers.

    There has already been fierce local opposition to converting the former
    RAF base at Finningley, near Doncaster, into a jail. The council has
    objected and wants a public inquiry, claiming the jail would be a
    threat to the town's regeneration plans.

    Last week Richard Tilt, the Prison Service director-general,
    encountered local hostility when he visited the 62-acre former Pontins
    holiday camp at Heysham, near Morecambe, Lancs, which he wants as a
    temporary jail.

    The need to consider increasingly unusual settings for new prisons has
    been caused by the escalating prison population, which at almost 58,000
    is near to capacity. Mr Tilt says thousands of places must be found
    before prisons currently being built will open. Officials were sure of
    approval and had already bought the ship for an undisclosed sum. They
    were intending yesterday to appoint a governor and rename the ship -
    until the planning setback. Prisoners were due next month.

    Mr Tilt expressed disappointment but said he would await the judgment
    of the full council before deciding what to do. He could look elsewhere
    or use Crown powers to impose the ship despite the objections. Other
    sites - including Barrow and Birkenhead - have been rejected after
    local opposition.

    Roy Gainey, a councillor, said the proposal could damage tourism.
    "There are three prisons within eight miles of this borough and another
    one 15 miles away in Dorchester," he added.

    Currently moored on the Hudson, the Resolution was used to hold
    medium-security prisoners until 1994. Six storeys high, with
    bullet-proof windows, two swimming pools, a gym, mosque and four squash
    courts, it was one of several such barges in New York.

    Michael Jacobson, New York Correctional Commissioner, said that they
    had been a success though, "because of the nooks and crannies and
    corners around which people can hide" they needed extra officers.
7.484IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:4675
7.485IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:4942
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Women 'battered soldiers' after Royal Tournament
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 

    TWO 6ft Welsh Guardsmen were forced into a bloody retreat when they
    clashed with three young women wearing shorts on a hot summer night, a
    court was told yesterday.

    A jury heard conflicting accounts of what happened outside a late-night
    food store in Fulham, south-west London, where the soldiers were eating
    after appearing in the last night of the Royal Tournament. Dean Morgan,
    17, was left with a gashed head and bruising and Vincent Jones, 19,
    suffered a bloody nose and bruised jaw after the women allegedly took
    their food and played catch with it before attacking them.

    Guardsman Morgan told Knightsbridge Crown Court: "We were eating when
    three girls came walking down. I asked for a light and they just went
    into the shop. When they came out there was a scuffle between the girls
    and the boy I was with. I intervened because they were three on one. My
    friend was getting battered."

    But the court was told that 18-year-old Nina McNeil was astonished when
    she and her friends were arrested for assaulting the soldiers. "I
    cannot believe it," she said, "They called us slags and butted us."

    When asked by Michael McGowan, representing McNeil, Martina Kearney,
    21, and Chloe Marshall, 19, whether they had made any "semi-innocent"
    remarks about their legs, Guardsman Morgan replied: "No. Let me stop
    for five minutes before I say something I regret. I am getting angry."

    Kearney, Marshall, and McNeil, all of Fulham, deny actual bodily harm
    and affray last July. Guardsman Jones also denied that they had been
    the aggressors. He said they had pushed the women in self-defence. He
    said his head was cut when one of them hit him with a bottle.

    The soldiers had been celebrating the end of the tournament. Morgan
    said he had had five or six pints of beer and Jones nine or 10. The
    women had been drinking as well. All smelled of drink when arrested,
    and a doctor decided that Kearney and Marshall were too drunk to be
    interviewed on the night of the incident.
7.486IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 16:5169
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Fresh leads in 'road rage' case, claim lawyers
    
    By Maurice Weaver 

    LAWYERS for Tracie Andrews, the former model accused of fatally
    stabbing the man she lived with, claimed yesterday to have "important
    leads" that add credence to her story that the murder occurred during a
    "road rage" incident.

    But senior detectives, who attended a news conference at which details
    of the fresh evidence were disclosed, said later that they did not seem
    to alter their investigation significantly. Andrews, 27, from
    Alvechurch, Worcs, who is on bail accused of murdering Lee Harvey, 25,
    on Dec 1, attended yesterday's news conference in a Birmingham hotel
    but left the talking to her lawyer, Tim Robinson.

    Flanked by her legal team, she remained silent as her solicitors
    explained that three new defence witnesses had come forward and made
    statements backing her story of a road rage attack. She was granted
    bail on Dec 23 and has been allowed to live with her parents and
    five-year-old daughter, Karla. Andrews is due to reappear before
    Redditch magistrates a week tomorrow.

    The defence decision to hold a news conference yesterday, two days
    before Mr Harvey's funeral tomorrow, has angered the victim's family,
    who consider the timing insensitive. Mr Robinson said Andrews would not
    attend the funeral out of respect for the family's feelings.

    Yesterday's conference was ostensibly to renew the defence's appeal for
    witnesses to confirm Andrews's story that on the night of the murder
    she and Mr Harvey were hotly pursued in their car by another vehicle.
    She told police that it was the passenger in the pursuing vehicle who
    killed her boyfriend in a roadside row.

    So far neither the defence nor the prosecution have located any witness
    to that pursuit. But Mr Robinson said defence inquiries had produced "a
    number of people who have come forward with important information".

    He said Andrews had now remembered that the man who murdered Mr Harvey
    was referred to by his friend as "Jez". Details of the new leads have
    not been disclosed to the police because so far detectives had not
    revealed the substance of their own case to the defence, he said.

    "Defence inquiries are not yet completed. When the police disclose
    their case, we may well disclose the information to the police to
    enable them to think about the continuation of this case against
    Andrews. The police were unable to unearth this information yet it has
    only taken us six weeks to do so. I believe that this evidence
    establishes that there was a second car."

    Mr Robinson added: "My client has always said this was a road rage
    incident. My firm has retained as a defence expert someone who has
    published books on road rage. It does seem that this case falls into
    the general pattern of what can happen in a road rage incident."

    Det Supt Ian Johnston, who is leading the investigation, explained his
    uninvited presence at the conference, and that of his colleague, Det
    Insp Steve Walters, as being "in the interests of justice".

    Later, in a statement issued from West Mercia Police headquarters, Mr
    Johnston said it would be inappropriate to comment on evidential issues
    in advance of further court proceedings against Andrews. But he added:
    "On initial examination, it does not appear that the information
    released at today's press conference would significantly alter the
    course of our investigation. However, we are open-minded and we will be
    making all appropriate inquiries that are possible bearing in mind the
    extent of the information provided to us."
7.487IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:1331
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622
    
    Cow's milk 'humanised' by scientists
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    THE day that the doorstep pinta contains human milk has drawn closer.

    Rosie, a cow that produces "humanised" milk, is to be introduced by
    scientists tomorrow. Data on Rosie, who has been injected with a human
    milk protein gene, will be published at a symposium in Florida by Prof
    Alan Colman, research director of PPL Therapeutics, a company based in
    Blacksburg, Virginia, and Roslin, near Edinburgh.

    This is not the first example of its kind. Herman, the world's first
    "transgenic" bull, was unveiled a few years ago in Holland by the Dutch
    company Pharming. It has been trying to create a herd of cows that can
    produce milk containing another human milk protein.

    However, PPL claims that the results of an analysis on Rosie's milk are
    the first to be released, revealing that every litre she produces
    contains 2.4 grams of the major human breast milk protein
    alpha-lactalbumin. An important nutritional protein, it is produced in
    human breast milk at a much higher concentration than in cow's milk.
    Using transgenic technology, PPL is able to manufacture cow's milk
    enriched with the human protein, so producing a more nutritional
    product that is balanced in essential amino acids.

    Prof Colman said: "I am very pleased with this first result. I expect
    the expression level to be exceeded by others of our cattle that are
    reaching sexual maturity in the coming months."
7.488IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:1822
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Family unharmed as car is crushed by fish lorry

    A MOTHER and her two small children escaped unharmed when their Ford
    Fiesta was crushed under a 13-ton fish lorry.

    Alison Howes, 34, was trapped for more than an hour after ducking
    between the seats as the car was crushed to a height of 2ft 6ins. Her
    children Ben, four and eight-week-old Bethany, were lifted through a
    window by Jeremy Rake, 30, a male nurse, who had been in a following
    car.

    He then he crawled back under the lorry to hold Mrs Howes's hand as
    firemen used cutters and hydraulic lifts to free her. The accident
    happened on the A146 near Mrs Howes's home at Thurton, Norfolk.

    She said yesterday: "I remember seeing this lorry coming towards me and
    thinking it was going to crash. Then there was a loud thud as it fell
    on top of us. The roof ended up an inch from my shoulder. Bethany had
    been asleep in her baby seat in the front, but was woken up by the
    noise and was crying. Ben was all right in the back."
7.489IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:1948
7.490IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:2029
7.491IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:2148
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622
    
    Rapper 'confessed to killing in song'
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 

    A RAP musician wrote a song confessing to the murder of a teenager, a
    jury was told yesterday.

    Police found the lyrics when they raided Nadeem Janjua's home two
    months after he and two friends stabbed the young man and left him face
    down in a pool of blood, the Old Bailey was told. In it Mr Janjua, 20,
    described "another dead kid . . . it's too easy to kill someone, but
    the pain after is immense, the suspense, paranoid about people finding
    out, your heart full of regret".

    The three men "on a misguided mission of revenge" had planned to attack
    a school bully. But they picked on an innocent teenager - who had
    himself been the victim of the same bully - as he walked home from
    Kingsbury High School, Wembley, west London, said Richard Horwell,
    prosecuting.

    Hitesh Parmar, 19, "was attacked in a case of mistaken identity," he
    told the jury. "He was quite literally in the wrong place at the wrong
    time and he lost his life as a result. If he had taken a different
    route home he would have been alive today."

    Janjua, 20, of Northolt, Middlesex, his cousin Mifta Chodhury, 19, of
    Sudbury Town, and a friend Mayur Divecha, 20, of Hounslow, all deny
    murder last May. Mr Horwell said Janjua needed hospital treatment for a
    deep cut which "may be persuasive evidence he wielded the knife".

    Janjua told friends that he had been in a fight which left his victim
    badly injured, added Mr Horwell. "Janjua was a rap singer and he sang a
    song to a friend and said it was about the murder of Hitesh Parma. It
    expressed his feelings, he said. The song is plainly connected to the
    murder," he said.

    As Mr Horwell read the lyrics, members of Mr Parma's family wept in
    court. No one saw the attack on the teenager as he made his way across
    a park in Kingsbury, but a woman walking her dog heard a "piercing
    shriek".

    Another witness saw three youths run away from Mr Parma, who died
    almost immediately, and drive off in what Mr Horwell alleged was
    Divecha's car.

    The trial continues.
7.492IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:2337
7.493IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:2534
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622
    
    Arsonist who sought praise killed family
    
    By Michael Fleet 

    A SUSPECTED arsonist, who was taken in by his family after his flat
    burned down, set fire to their home and killed his stepmother,
    step-sister and another child, an inquest heard yesterday.

    Michael Binks, 21, died in the blaze that killed Susan Binks, 25, her
    daughter Mikaela, four, and Mikaela's friend, Louisa Jordan, six. He
    had been taken into the home by his father, Barrie, after he was put on
    bail on suspicion of starting five fires, including the one at his
    previous home.

    In October last year, two weeks after moving in, he set light to the
    family home in Reading, Berks. The inquest was told that he probably
    intended to act as a "hero" and save the others but was overcome by
    smoke. By the time fire crews reached the scene, the occupants were all
    dead.

    Susan Jordan, Louisa's mother, said Mrs Binks was terrified of her
    stepson and had told him to leave the house. A psychological profile
    found that Binks became distressed every September and October because
    his parents had separated around then. 

    Det Chief Insp Steve Morrison, of Thames Valley police, said of Binks:
    "He seemed to take some pleasure in being associated with finding
    fires, putting them out and being seen to be a helpful member of
    society." 

    The coroner recorded three verdicts of unlawful killing and one of
    accidental death.
7.494IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:3157
7.495IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:3240
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Life for teenager who killed cellmate

    A TEENAGER was jailed for life yesterday for the "sacrificial murder"
    of his 16-year-old cellmate.

    Terrence Rooney, 18, was convicted at Stafford Crown Court of murdering
    Christopher Greenaway, 16, and trying to murder John Jones, 17. The
    jury heard that he boasted to other inmates after Greenaway's death:
    "He had to die, he wouldn't wash my socks."

    Alan Suckling, QC, prosecuting, said Rooney, of the Beechwood estate,
    Birkenhead, Wirral, bullied the two because he had a "sadistic sense of
    power".

    In the first incident in March 1995, Rooney was sharing a cell at
    Werrington Young Offenders' Institution, Stoke-on-Trent, with Jones. He
    beat him and stole his food until Jones talked of suicide.

    Rooney then made a noose out of sheets, placed it over Jones's head and
    took a chair from under him. The victim was only saved when another
    youth raised the alarm though no complaint was made.

    The following October, Rooney shared a cell with Greenaway at Stoke
    Heath Young Offenders' Institution, near Market Drayton, Salop. Again,
    Rooney took his food, and locked him in the toilet. Greenaway was found
    hanged from a window by a warder.

    Mr Justice Rougier told Rooney: "You were prepared to sacrifice the
    lives of two unhappy and disturbed young men . . . because you enjoyed
    doing it. I find it horrifying that someone as young as you could be so
    heartless and evil."

    Michael Grey, defending, said Rooney, who denied murder and attempted
    murder, came from an area where most young men turned to crime. His
    life had been "short, hard and brutish".

    The jury were discharged from delivering verdicts on two charges of
    aiding and abetting suicide.
7.496IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 06 1997 17:3327
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 6 February 1997 Issue 622

    Schoolgirl threatens to sue over trouser ban

    A GIRL of 14 is considering taking legal action against her school
    after she was sent home for wearing trousers.

    Leigh-Anne Jones believes that she was sexually discriminated against
    by Berry Hill High School, Stoke on Trent, where the school code rules
    that girls must wear skirts. Terry Crowe, chairman of governors, said
    yesterday he was "astounded" at the pupil's attitude.

    "The school has had a dress code for 20 years and it has never been
    questioned before," he said. Miss Jones had not been suspended but
    asked to go home and change. The matter was due to be discussed at the
    monthly governors' meeting last night. 

    Cliff McDonnell, spokesman for the National Association of Head
    Teachers, said that dress codes should be adhered to.

    A spokesman for the Equal Opportunities Commission said that it
    received a "considerable number" of complaints from girls in relation
    to trousers.

    "We advise them that the best course of action is to try to resolve the
    problem informally through the governors or Parent Teacher
    Association," she said.
7.497IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:07109
    AP 7-Feb-1997 1:01 EST   REF6045

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, Feb. 7, 1997
   
    AIR ENCOUNTER 

    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -- Two F-16 fighter jets flew so close to a
    commercial airliner yesterday that alarms sounded and the pilot was
    forced to dive 4,000 feet. A spokesman for the New Jersey Department of
    Military and Veterans Affairs said the National Guard F-16s were on
    routine maneuvers when they spotted the Nations Air Boeing 727 and
    moved in to take a closer look. Nations Air president Mark McDonald
    told NBC the fighters "play(ed) games" with the passenger jet. WNYW-TV,
    a Fox affiliate in New York, said the airline would cancel its flights
    until an investigation was completed. The jet, carrying about 90 people
    from Puerto Rico, landed safely in New York. 
   
    SIMPSON 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- Plaintiffs' experts say O.J. Simpson is
    far from broke -- he has a $15.7 million fortune -- and can make
    millions more off autographs and collectibles. But Simpson's attorney
    countered that the football great is $9.3 million in debt, most of it
    because of the huge compensatory damages he was ordered to pay Tuesday.
    The same jury that found Simpson liable in the June 12, 1994, slashing
    deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman and ordered him to
    pay $8.5 million returned to hear arguments on how much he should pay
    as punishment. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republicans are complaining that President Clinton
    proposed too many initiatives in his $1.69 trillion budget for 1998.
    The GOP also said that the president sidestepped needed long-term
    changes in the growing benefits of programs such as Medicare. Clinton's
    $98 billion in tax cuts through 2002 -- mostly for college students and
    families with children -- are about half what Republicans want. Clinton
    says his plan would erase deficits by 2002 and for 20 years beyond. 
   
    WHITEWATER 

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- Susan McDougal says her former husband plans
    to lie to Whitewater prosecutors and say President Clinton met with him
    and a banker to discuss improper loans in the 1980s. McDougal made her
    comments in an interview published in the Arkansas Times, a weekly.
    Clinton has denied under oath that he attended the meeting. Jim
    McDougal, who faces a possible 84 years in prison, has been cooperating
    with prosecutors since being convicted of fraud and conspiracy with his
    wife and then Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker in May. 
   
    CRAZY PRESIDENT 

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Ecuador's Congress voted today to remove
    President Abdala Bucaram for "mental incapacity." The legislature was
    exasperated by a six-month stint in office in which the president sang
    and pulled political stunts while the country fell into economic
    crisis. Congress voted 44-34 to remove him. Bucaram, who referred to
    himself as "El Loco," said he would not recognize the vote. Congress
    named its leader, Fabian Alarcon, as interim president pending new
    presidential elections within a year. 
   
    BOMBING TRIAL 

    DALLAS (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh bombed the Oklahoma City federal
    building to take revenge for the government's 1993 raid on the Branch
    Davidians' compound in Waco, a key witness reportedly told
    investigators. Documents obtained by KTVT in Fort Worth show that
    Michael Fortier told investigators McVeigh wanted to "wake up America
    to the danger of our federal government and their intrusion on our
    rights." Fortier, who met McVeigh in the Army, pleaded guilty to
    knowing about the bombing but failing to report it, and to weapons
    charges. He faces 23 years in prison. 
   
    REAGAN-86TH 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Ronald Reagan celebrated his 86th birthday today in
    the same low-key, private way he has lived since being diagnosed with
    Alzheimer's three years ago. A Brownie Troop delivered cookies and a
    children's choir from San Fernando's Glen Oaks Primary Center sang
    "Happy Birthday" and "Battle Hymn of the Republic" at a party at his
    Century City office. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading at 123.78 yen early Friday, up
    0.06. The Nikkei fell 15.27 points to 18,023.16. In New York, the Dow
    industrials closed up 26.16 to 6,773.06. 
   
    PACERS-NETS 

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) -- The Indiana Pacers sank 14 of 15 free
    throws in the fourth quarter and beat the New Jersey Nets 104-100
    tonight. Nets center Shawn Bradley had his second triple double of the
    season with 14 points, 14 rebounds and 11 blocks. Jayson Williams, who
    decided to forego thumb surgery and continue playing for New Jersey,
    had 21 points and 21 rebounds. 
   
    SPURS-KNICKS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Allan Houston scored 22 points and Larry Johnson had
    20 as the New York Knicks beat San Antonio 96-84 tonight. The Knicks
    played their fourth straight game without All-Star center Patrick
    Ewing. They are 3-1 in that span. New York has beaten San Antonio six
    straight times at home and won 17 of its last 18 at Madison Square
    Garden. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.498IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0799
    RTw  07-Feb-97 03:23    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    BELGRADE - Serbia's opposition has promised to end its marathon street
    protests when parliament restores its municipal victories next Tuesday
    but vows to fight on for democracy and free media. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Bulgarians braced for hard times with food prices soaring,
    wages shrinking and petrol supplies cut to a minimum as the Balkan
    country plunges further into economic chaos. 

    - - - - 

    VLORE, Albania - In the square where Albania declared independence more
    than 80 years ago, thousands of people now gather to demand a different
    type of country. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russia's armed forces are in such a "horrifying state" of
    decay that the reliability of its nuclear weapons system is in
    question, Defence Minister Igor Rodionov said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton asked Congress to expand health
    care to about half of the 10 million U.S. children now without
    insurance and provide short-term coverage to millions of people between
    jobs. 

    - - - - 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif - The plaintiffs in O.J. Simpson's civil trial
    urged jurors to punish him by imposing heavy damages for the deaths of
    his ex-wife and her friend on top of $8.5 million they already awarded. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Despite worries over NATO and the global space station,
    Vice President Al Gore and Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin
    stressed business cooperation in advance of next month's U.S.-Russia
    summit. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The World Food Programme is expected to make a formal
    appeal for $38 million in new food aid for North Korea next week and
    the United States is likely to respond positively, U.S. officials said. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Rebels have extended the area under their control in east
    Zaire, capturing the town of Shabunda and pushing further west, Zairean
    defence officials acknowledged. 

    - - - - 

    QUITO, Ecuador - Ecuador's President Abdala Bucaram, facing a possible
    congressional attempt to force him out of office, said he would assume
    "all powers" necessary to quash any unconstitutional moves against him. 

    - - - - 

    ATHENS -  Greek farmers scored again in their row with the government
    after seizing national roads with thousands of tractors and embarassing
    police who stood aby, powerless to react. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The first broadcasts of Radio Free Asia to Vietnam appear
    to have been jammed, the U.S.-backed radio station said. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - British forces discovered a suspected IRA mortar and arrested
    11 people in anti-guerrilla swoops in Belfast and Lurgan, security
    sources said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The chief Senate investigator of campaign finance
    wrongdoing said Thursday there would be no vendetta against President
    Clinton and promised a sweeping investigation that would involve
    Democrats and Republicans. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton unveiled his new federal budget and
    said he seeks an "honorable compromise" with Congress to eliminate
    deficits, but Republicans gave the proposal a decidedly cool reception. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER 
7.499IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0783
    AP 6-Feb-1997 23:17 EST   REF5513

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Jets, Airliner Nearly Collide

    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -- Two F-16 fighter jets flew so close to a
    commercial airliner that alarms sounded and the pilot was forced to
    dive 4,000 feet, then climb sharply, tossing flight attendants and a
    passenger to the floor. 

    The Air National Guard F-16s were on routine maneuvers in military
    airspace Wednesday when they spotted the airliner over the Atlantic and
    moved in to see what it was, said Lt. Col. John Dwyer, spokesman for
    the New Jersey Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. 

    "They found an unidentified aircraft in the airspace and moved in to
    make identification," Dwyer told The Associated Press on Thursday,
    adding that the pilots followed proper procedures. 

    But the encounter was far from routine for the Boeing 727 pilot, who
    thought a collision was imminent and followed the proximity alarm's
    instructions to make evasive maneuvers. 

    "Our instrument indicated zero, zero, which means it was extremely
    close," Nations Air Chairman Mark McDonald told NBC. "Because it was so
    close, it did not read on the instruments." 

    Military controllers frantically radioed "Break off, break off," but
    one of the fighters kept following the Boeing 727, NBC said. 

    The airliner quickly dropped 4,000 feet, and as its alarm sounded
    again, it climbed 4,000 feet, Dwyer said. The alarm sounded a third
    time and the plane climbed again, NBC reported. 

    The pilot radioed for help to Federal Aviation Administration
    controllers on Long Island, complaining that his radar showed another
    plane as close as 400 feet. They told him the fighters were so close
    that their radar image had merged with the 727's image, and they could
    give no advice, The New York Times reported in Friday's edition. 

    Air traffic controllers said the F-16s appeared to linger near the
    Boeing 727, traveling together at 500 mph at about 28,000 feet, the
    newspaper said. 

    The encounter occurred in daylight, but clouds made the fighters were
    not visible to the civilian plane, according to controllers and
    McDonald. 

    "There's two reasons why this happened," McDonald said. "One is either
    the pilots screwed up or they were playing games with our airplane and
    they got caught." 

    Said Dwyer: "We don't play those games." 

    The military planes had reserved the airspace from the Navy to practice
    maneuvers, and the commercial jet had permission from the FAA to fly
    through the area, officials said. 

    Once the fighters determined the airliner was a civilian craft, they
    returned to their maneuvers. The Nations Air jet carrying about 90
    people from Puerto Rico landed safely a half hour later at New York's
    Kennedy airport, Dwyer said. 

    Thursday night, Nations Air's reservation line said service between
    Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Boston, and Gulfport, Miss. had been
    discontinued. 

    WNYW-TV, a Fox affiliate in New York, reported that the airline was
    cancelling its flights until the situation with the Air National Guard
    was resolved. 

    The fighters are from the 177th Air Wing, which protects U.S.
    boundaries from unidentified aircraft. The three planes were flying in
    Navy restricted airspace called Whiskey 107, where fighters can
    practice maneuvers. 

    Neither McDonald nor a spokesman for Georgia-based Nations Air could be
    reached by the AP for comment. Nations Air telephones were busy for
    hours. 

    Both the 1st Air Force Inspector General and the FAA will investigate.

7.500IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0830
    AP 7-Feb-1997 0:40 EST   REF6035

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Colo. Car Pileup Injures 22

    CASTLE ROCK, Colo. (AP) -- Cars, tractor-trailers and fire trucks
    slammed together on a slippery, snow-covered highway Thursday. As many
    as 60 vehicles were involved in the pileup, and about two dozen people
    were injured. 

    Heavy, blowing snow cut visibility and the Interstate 25 was snowpacked
    when the chain-reaction accident began at 10:40 a.m. just south of
    Denver. 

    "The bottom line is that people were driving too fast for conditions,"
    said Robin Adair of the Castlewood Fire Department. "It only takes a
    few drivers to pull everybody into the fray." 

    At least 22 people were taken to hospitals, including a woman who
    suffered a head injury and was listed in fair condition, and another
    woman who was in serious condition with facial fractures and a broken
    pelvis. 

    The accident shut down part of I-25, the state's major north-south
    highway, for at least a mile. Northbound lanes reopened at 1:15 p.m.
    but the southbound lanes didn't reopen until just before 7 p.m. 

    A molasses spill from a tanker left "a great big, huge, slimy, stinky
    mess," Adair said, adding to the task of cleaning up. 
7.501IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0820
    AP 7-Feb-1997 0:34 EST   REF6030

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Held in Stewardess Assault

    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- An Alabama man has been charged with assaulting
    two Delta Airline flight attendants on a flight from Seoul, South
    Korea, to Portland, the FBI said Thursday. 

    Jeffery Claveria, 33, put his arm around one stewardess and grabbed her
    bra strap during the flight Tuesday, FBI Special Agent Patrick Geonetta
    said. 

    When a second flight attendant tried to calm him down and have him
    return to his seat, he grabbed her breast and hit her with a pillow,
    Geonetta said. 

    He was arrested after the airplane landed at Portland International
    Airport. 
7.502IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0826
    AP 7-Feb-1997 0:33 EST   REF6029

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Dies From Radio Tower Fall

    PHOENIX (AP) -- A man climbed to the top of a 300-foot radio tower
    Thursday and perched there for about 90 minutes before falling to his
    death. 

    Investigators couldn't immediately determine whether the man jumped or
    fell accidentally from the KTAR-AM tower. 

    "We don't know if he went up there to jump. We may never know," said
    Detective Mike McCullough. An autopsy will be conducted to determine if
    the man was intoxicated. 

    The man's name was being withheld until relatives could be notified.

    A crowd had gathered below and police in a helicopter tried to talk him
    down. But officers were unable to get close enough because of high
    winds and fears that currents generated by the blades would knock the
    man off. 

    Television footage showed the man leaning into the wind and taunting
    the crowd, then grabbing onto a pole before falling backward. 
7.503IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0836
    AP 6-Feb-1997 23:39 EST   REF5813

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cops Look for Letter Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Boulder police are pleading with the author of an
    anonymous letter about the JonBenet Ramsey slaying to come forward,
    saying the letter contains information that might help them crack the
    case. 

    "We're not discussing what the letter contains," said Boulder police
    spokesman Kelvin McNeill. But he added that it included "some
    potentially significant information" about the 6-year-old Little Miss
    Colorado's killing. 

    JonBenet was found strangled in her family's 15-room home on Dec. 26. 

    The handwritten letter was mailed from Shreveport, La., and postmarked
    Jan. 27. 

    "Please come forward and contact (police)," Boulder authorities
    requested in a letter faxed to Shreveport authorities and distributed
    to local newspapers and radio and television stations. 

    Boulder Police Det. Steve Thomas told Shreveport authorities the letter
    contained details about the killing, said Shreveport police spokeswoman
    Cindy Chadwick. 

    Despite the plea, police made clear they want to hear only from the
    letter's writer and not from others with "unsolicited or psychic
    information." 

    McNeill said Boulder police have received more than 600 letters and
    1,300 phone calls about the slaying, and investigators are trying to
    follow up on leads. 
7.504IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:08135
    AP 7-Feb-1997 0:38 EST   REF6033

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ecuador President Impeached

    By CARLOS CISTERNAS

    Associated Press Writer

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Congress voted Thursday to remove President
    Abdala Bucaram for "mental incapacity," exasperated by a six-month
    stint in office in which the president sang and pulled political stunts
    while Ecuador fell into economic crisis. 

    Congress voted 44-34 to oust Bucaram, with two congressmen abstaining.
    Bucaram, a showman who cheerfully referred to himself as "El Loco,"
    called the vote on his mental incompetence a "coup by Congress" and
    said he would not recognize it. 

    "The national government condemns this attitude," he said. 

    Congress named its leader, Fabian Alarcon, as interim president pending
    new presidential elections within a year. 

    "With my life I will enforce the resolution taken tonight by this
    National Congress," Alarcon said after taking the oath of office. 

    Minutes after the vote, caravans of honking cars roared down the main
    avenues of Quito, celebrating the vote to dismiss Bucaram. 

    Later, Bucaram, surrounded by soldiers in combat uniforms at the
    national palace, told reporters he was "the only president elected by
    the poor and by the Ecuadorean people." 

    Asked what position the armed forces would take in the power struggle,
    he said that as president he was the commander-in-chief of the
    military. 

    Heinz Moeller, a member of the opposition Social Christian Party, said
    it was the military's responsibility to carry out the congressional
    decision if Bucaram refused to step down. 

    As the session opened, the army called on national authorities to use
    "dialogue and cooperation" to resolve the political crisis. 

    Helmeted police armed with assault rifles kept dozens of protesters
    chanting "Victory of the people!" from approaching the national palace,
    which was protected by rolls of barbed wire. Officers said the military
    command had ordered the troops to take up position to guarantee order. 

    Juan Jose Illingworth, an independent congressman who voted against
    Bucaram's ouster, said the vote had created a "dangerous" situation. 

    The debate comes on the heels of a nationwide strike Wednesday in which
    up to 2 million people marched through the streets of this
    Colorado-sized South American country demanding the ouster of a leader
    they call corrupt and incompetent. 

    In his third television address to the nation in as many days Thursday,
    Bucaram (pronounced boo-kah-RAHM) said he would seek every legal
    recourse to stay in power. 

    "We are on the verge of a very dangerous confrontation that we must
    avoid," he said 

    He told reporters later that the government will "vigorously apply the
    Constitution and the law to legally identify those trying to carry out
    a coup by Congress." 

    Opposition lawmaker Cesar Verduga called Bucaram's remarks a "veiled
    totalitarian threat." 

    Bucaram also announced he was firing four top Cabinet members,
    including his brother, Social Welfare Minister Adolfo Bucaram, and
    presidential aide Miguel Salem. 

    He said he planned "important" wage and salary increases for government
    and private sector workers but provided no details. 

    In a key concession, he also promised to roll back some of the economic
    austerity measures that caused utility prices to skyrocket, prompting
    angry protests nationwide. 

    Under Ecuadorean law, a simple majority, or 42 of Congress' 82
    legislators, is enough to remove the president for "mental incapacity,"
    avoiding a lengthy impeachment process. 

    Bucaram's brother Jacobo, also a member of Congress, protested that
    Bucaram's political enemies were denying him the opportunity to defend
    himself through an impeachment process. 

    They "want to depose him without giving him a right to a trial," Jacobo
    said before storming out of Congress. 

    Bucaram took office in August after a campaign that included an
    outlandish road show featuring him as singer, dancer and comedian. In
    office, he invited Lorena Bobbitt, the Ecuadorean famous for slashing
    off her American husband's penis, to lunch at the national palace. 

    Last year, Bucaram took to the stage to promote his CD, dancing with
    scantily-clad women as he belted out "Jailhouse Rock" in Spanish. 

    He also is known for his tirades against his political opponents, whom
    he has branded "gangsters," "fools" and "burros." 

    Fifty-one lawmakers signed a petition Wednesday for Congress to
    consider the issue. 

    "A declaration of 'mental incapacity' for the president does not
    necessarily refer to craziness as such, or being insane, but the spirit
    or letter of the Constitution refers to the loss of faculties to carry
    out the post," former Vice President Blasco Penaherrera said. 

    Wednesday's nationwide strike was considered the largest demonstration
    of popular discontent in 50 years. It was aided by Bucaram himself, who
    declared a national holiday in a futile attempt to defuse the protest. 

    The strike continued Thursday but with less support. While city workers
    in Quito were given another day off, many stores and businesses
    reopened. Strike leaders focused on an afternoon rally outside
    Congress. 

    About 100 demonstrators camped outside Congress on Wednesday night,
    while about 40 lawmakers spent the night in their offices because of
    rumors that Bucaram would order the building seized. 

    Security was doubled from 50 to 100 soldiers Thursday outside the
    government palace, which was protected with sandbag barricades and
    barbed wire. 

    Bucaram, 45, has faced almost daily demonstrations since early January,
    when university and high school students took to the streets to protest
    austerity measures that raised rates for electricity, fuel and
    telephone service by as much as 300 percent. 
7.505IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0860
    AP 7-Feb-1997 0:37 EST   REF6032

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Japan Reopens 1977 Kidnap Case

    By BRAVEN SMILLIE

    Associated Press Writer

    TOKYO (AP) -- North Korean agents may have abducted a Japanese girl 20
    years ago, a Japanese lawmaker claims, citing testimony by a North
    Korean defector. 

    The government pledged renewed efforts to find Megumi Yokota, who
    vanished in November 1977 while walking home after playing badminton at
    her junior high school. 

    Yokota, then 13, lived in Niigata on the Sea of Japan facing the Korean
    peninsula, 160 miles northwest of Tokyo. 

    As in several 1978 kidnappings near Japan Sea port cities, Yokota
    disappeared without a trace, leaving no clothing or belongings. There
    were no witnesses. 

    But opposition legislator Shingo Nishimura told a parliamentary hearing
    this week he has obtained testimony by a North Korean secret agent
    indicating Yokota might be living in North Korea. 

    Japanese news reports quoting the documents Nishimura obtained
    privately from South Korean military sources say a secret agent from
    North Korea indicated that a spy kidnapped the girl when she witnessed
    his preparations to escape back to his country. 

    The spy supposedly took her back to North Korea, where she was
    recruited as a language teacher. She eventually told her story to a
    roommate, who allegedly told the account to the defector. 

    Details of the story matched what is known about Yokota's
    disappearance. 

    Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto promised the government will redouble
    efforts to solve the suspected kidnapping of Yokota and of three young
    Japanese couples who disappeared in 1978 from port cities in Niigata,
    Fukui and Kagoshima prefectures. 

    Yokota's father, Shigeru, told reporters he believes the North Korean
    connection is plausible. 

    "If this turns out to be true, everything I know about the case would
    make sense," he said. "If I can get some confirmation that she's all
    right, I might get some little peace of mind." 

    Nishimura noted that Kim Hyun Hee, a North Korean woman arrested in
    connection with the 1987 bombing of a Korean Airlines jet, testified
    that she was taught Japanese in North Korea by Japanese she believed
    were kidnapped. 

    He said Yokota's is just one of about 20 unsolved abductions in which
    North Korean agents are suspected. 
7.506IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0871
    AP 7-Feb-1997 0:30 EST   REF6027

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Convicted Father Gets New Trial

    By DAVID CRARY

    Associated Press Writer

    TORONTO (AP) -- The Supreme Court ordered a new trial Thursday for a
    farmer convicted of killing his severely disabled 12-year-old daughter,
    saying jurors should not have been asked their views on mercy killing. 

    The ruling means another emotional courtroom drama in a drawn-out case
    that has divided Canadians over the issue of euthanasia. 

    The farmer, Robert Latimer, was convicted of second-degree murder in
    November 1994 for killing his daughter, Tracy, who had severe cerebral
    palsy. She could not walk, talk or feed herself, and Latimer said he
    acted out of compassion when he killed her with carbon monoxide in 1993
    at the family farm in Wilkie, Saskatchewan. 

    His plight attracted sympathy from many Canadians, a phenomenon that
    disturbed advocates for the disabled. 

    Latimer was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 10
    years, but served only one day in jail because of appeals. 

    The Supreme Court ruled that Latimer deserved a new trial because the
    prosecutor had questioned prospective jurors about their views on mercy
    killing, abortion and religion. 

    "The actions of the Crown counsel at trial were nothing short of a
    flagrant abuse of process and interference with the administration of
    justice," wrote Chief Justice Antonio Lamer. 

    However, the court rejected a second part of Latimer's appeal, ruling
    that his confession to police can be used in his second trial.
    Latimer's lawyers contended the confession was invalid because police
    did not properly advise him of his legal rights. 

    Latimer said he was prepared to face a new trial, but was angered at
    authorities' determination to prosecute him. 

    "They have no limits on how you can torture a person," he told
    reporters at his farm. "To me, they are a bunch of backwoods,
    bloodthirsty butchers," 

    He said prosecutors do not understand how much agony his daughter
    endured. 

    "How much is Tracy supposed to suffer just to please these people?" he
    said. "Is there any answer coming from these people?" 

    Advocates for the disabled said Latimer should again face a
    first-degree murder charge. 

    "He's made it very clear that he had been thinking about killing his
    daughter for some time," said Irene Feika of the Council of Canadians
    with Disabilities. "There were other options. It was not necessary to
    murder her." 

    At the original trial, Latimer's lawyers portrayed him as a loving
    father who couldn't stand to see his daughter suffer anymore.
    Prosecutors argued he did not know how Tracy felt and did not have the
    right to make a life-or-death decision for her. 

    Latimer has spent much of the past two years under a loose form of
    house arrest at his wheat and canola farm, where he lives with his wife
    and three other children. 
7.507IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0881
    AP 6-Feb-1997 21:40 EST   REF5983

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Widow Wins Step in Sperm Battle

    By EDITH M. LEDERER

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- When Diane Blood's husband died of meningitis nearly two
    years ago, her dream was to have his child. On what would have been his
    32nd birthday Thursday, a British court ruled she may be entitled to
    use his frozen sperm. 

    But the regulatory agency that so far has barred her from undergoing
    artificial insemination will have the final say. So, Mrs. Blood must
    wait until Feb. 27 to find out whether she can be impregnated by her
    late husband. 

    The Court of Appeal ruled that while Mrs. Blood could not receive
    artificial insemination in Britain since her husband had not given his
    written consent, she had the right to be treated in Belgium unless the
    regulatory agency finds valid public policy reasons against it. 

    The court also ordered the agency to pay Mrs. Blood's legal costs. The
    30-year-old advertising executive had mortgaged her home in Worksop, in
    central England, to pursue the court case. 

    Hailing the decision as a "victory for common sense and justice," Mrs.
    Blood said she is confident that the Human Fertilization and Embryology
    Authority will allow her to export the sperm to Belgium for the
    treatment. 

    "I'm just really pleased and I hope that it won't go on much longer,"
    she said. 

    Mrs. Blood's predicament has been widely publicized in Britain, and
    aroused sympathy even among those who felt the insemination should not
    be permitted. Her court victory dominated the evening news Thursday,
    and her smiling face beamed from the front pages of the early editions
    of The Times. 

    Stephen Blood died in March 1995 after falling into a coma with
    bacterial meningitis. At Mrs. Blood's request, doctors took sperm
    samples while he was on a life-support machine and stored them. 

    The regulatory authority barred Mrs. Blood from receiving artificial
    insemination because Britain's 1991 Human Fertilization and Embryology
    Act requires written consent from the donor -- which her comatose
    husband could not provide. The authority also ruled that she could not
    take the sperm abroad, fearing it would create a precedent. 

    The High Court upheld both decisions in October. 

    In its ruling Thursday, the Court of Appeal said the authority rightly
    had banned her insemination in Britain, but it had not been properly
    advised that under European Union laws, Mrs. Blood is entitled to be
    treated in another member country. 

    Calling the High Court decision "a judgment of Solomon which everyone
    can be very pleased about," authority chairman Ruth Deech said it would
    reconsider the matter "in the light of the facts that it's a unique
    case and that it does not open the floodgates." 

    Lord Justice Harry Woolf, head of the civil Court of Appeal, said it
    was impossible to say what the authority will decide, but the case for
    finding in Mrs. Blood's favor was now much stronger. 

    "It is regrettable if the agonizing situation of Mrs. Blood will be
    prolonged by this judgment," he said. 

    The government announced in December that it planned to review the
    requirement for consent to donate sperm and eggs. Leading fertility
    expert Lord Winston, who has introduced a bill to change the consent
    procedure, said he was "extremely pleased" for Mrs. Blood. 

    Baroness Warnock, head of the team of medical and ethical experts who
    drafted the law on fertility treatment, had called the lower court
    decision "a miscarriage of natural justice, if not a miscarriage of the
    law." 
7.508IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0843
    AP 6-Feb-1997 20:32 EST   REF5948

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Paris Mayor Liberates Parks

    By MARILYN AUGUST

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- For park-lovers long accustomed to being shooed away by
    Paris' poker-faced police, the day of lawn liberation is at hand. 

    Starting this spring, workers will remove the "Pelouse interdite" signs
    that bid park-goers citywide to keep off the grass, freeing them to
    walk and relax on some 7,410 acres of public greenery. 

    "I think it's a fantastic idea. It's much nicer to sit on the grass
    than on a bench," said Elin Naper Hauge, a Norwegian student who runs
    regularly in the posh Parc Monceau. 

    "I couldn't believe my eyes the first time I saw some guards chase some
    little boys off the grass," she said. "They had just gone to get their
    soccer ball." 

    The new measure, decided by Mayor Jean Tiberi, does not affect the
    city's best-known parks, the Luxembourg gardens and the Tuileries
    gardens, both of which are run by the national government, not the
    city. 

    But other famed havens such as the Parc Monceau, the Buttes Chaumont
    and the Parc Montsouris will open up areas of grass to the public,
    while sealing off other sections to let them recover from the wear and
    tear. 

    City officials insist the measure has been partially in effect for
    years. In fact, vast stretches of grass near Bercy in southeastern
    Paris and the Parc Andre Citroen along the Seine in the west have long
    been open to the public. 

    "There are a lot of misconceptions," a city hall spokeswoman said on
    customary anonymity. "But the new policy definitely tries to make the
    parks more convivial." 
7.509IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0935
    AP 6-Feb-1997 18:29 EST   REF5856

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    CDC: Lead Levels in Blood Drop

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Government researchers can't explain why the amount of
    lead in Americans' blood dropped 15 percent last year. 

    From July to September, there were 4,990 reports of adults having more
    than 25 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood, the Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. 

    That's down from the 5,888 reports of adults with lead levels that high
    during the same period in 1995. 

    Researchers speculate that either fewer people are working in lead
    industries, being exposed to lead on the job or reporting the problem. 

    CDC epidemiologist Robert Roscoe said the year-end report, due in the
    spring, should give a more accurate explanation. 

    Between 1993 and 1995, Oregon had a 44 percent drop in the number of
    reports of adults with high lead levels, New York had a 40 percent drop
    and Texas a 38 percent drop. 

    But reports from Iowa and Arizona jumped more than 200 percent during
    the same period. 

    Lead kills brain cells and has long been tied to impaired mental
    ability, especially in children. Pregnant or nursing women can pass on
    high levels of lead in their blood to their babies. 

    The CDC's goal is for all adults to have blood lead levels below 25
    micrograms per deciliter of blood by the year 2000. 
7.510IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0970
    RTos 07-Feb-97 02:52    

    U.S. Has Highest Rate of Child Murders

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    ATLANTA (Reuter) - Children in the United States are five times as
    likely to be murdered and 12 times as likely to die because of a
    firearm than those in other industrialized countries, federal health
    officials said Thursday. 

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said the United
    States had the highest rates of childhood homicide, suicide and
    firearm-related deaths of 26 countries studied. 

    "Homicide rates are five times higher in the United States, suicide
    rates are double and firearm death rates are 12 times higher" than in
    the other countries, CDC medical epidemiologist Dr. Etienne Krug said. 

    The firearm-related homicide rate was 0.94 per 100,000 children, almost
    16 times higher than the other countries' average of 0.06 per 100,000. 

    "Since 1950, the rates of unintentional injury, disease and congenital
    anomalies have decreased among children in the United States, but
    homicide rates of children under the age of 15 have tripled and suicide
    rates have quadrupled," Krug said. 

    Gun control activist Sarah Brady said the latest study underlined the
    importance of keeping guns out of homes and off the streets, citing
    studies that a handgun in the home was 43 times more likely to be used
    to kill someone in the household or a friend rather than in
    self-defense. 

    "The tragically high incidence of gun deaths among our children is most
    certainly due to them having access to firearms in their homes and on
    our streets," Brady said. 

    "We've just got to do everything we can to keep guns out of the hands
    of our nation's children," she said. 

    In 1994 homicide was the third-leading cause of death for U.S. children
    aged 5 to 14 and fourth-leading cause for children 1 to 4. The CDC
    compared childhood death statistics with figures from 25 other
    countries that had similar economies and a population of at least one
    million. 

    There were 2.57 murders per 100,000 children between 1990 and 1995, the
    CDC said. The figure was five times the rate of 0.51 per 100,000 in the
    other countries. 

    There were 1.66 firearm-related deaths per 100,000 children during the
    same period, including murders, suicides and accidents -- 12 times
    higher than the average of the other countries studied. 

    Even if firearms-related homicides were excluded, the United States had
    a homicide rate for children almost four times the other countries'
    rate, the CDC said. 

    In all of the countries studied, males accounted for two-thirds of
    firearm-related homicides, three-fourths of firearm-related suicides
    and 89 percent of accidental firearm-related deaths. Five countries --
    Denmark, Ireland, New Zealand, Scotland and Taiwan -- reported no
    intentional firearm-related deaths among children younger than 15. 

    The CDC study was statistical and did not attempt to identify a cause
    for the high rates, but Krug said researchers in other studies have
    identified high divorce rates, social acceptance of violence and low
    funding of social programs as contributing factors. 

    REUTER
7.511IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0934
    RTw  06-Feb-97 21:35    

    British nanny charged with assault on infant

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BOSTON, Feb 6 (Reuter) - An 18-year-old British nanny was formally
    charged on Thursday with battering a nine-month-old boy in her charge
    by shaking him violently, police said. 

    Louise Woodward, 18, who arrived in the United States in June from
    Chester, England, was arrested on Wednesday night at the infant's home
    in the upscale Boston suburb of Newton, Newton Police Lt. Robert
    McDonald said. 

    Woodward called for an ambulance on Tuesday afternoon saying the child
    was having trouble breathing and told paramedics she was trying to
    revive him, McDonald said. 

    The boy was rushed to Boston's Children's Hospital, where he was
    diagnosed with having head trauma consistent with shaken-baby syndrome,
    McDonald said. The child remained in serious condition, he added. 

    "It takes an extremely violent shaking to inflict these injuries,"
    Asst. District Attorney Lynn Rooney told reporters after the
    arraignment at Newton District Court. 

    Woodward remained in custody on charges of assault and battery on a
    child under 14, causing bodily injury. She was held on $1 million bond
    or $100,000 cash bail. 

    If convicted, Woodward could face up to 15 years in prison. 

    REUTER
7.512IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0931
    RTw  06-Feb-97 21:11    

    Acne drug may give smilers the blues, doctor says

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 7 (Reuter) - A common acne medication could give patients a
    blue-tinted smile and doctors should be on the lookout for it, a U.S.
    dermatologist said on Friday. 

    Minocycline hydrochloride discoloured the bones so badly in about 10
    percent of patients that it showed through their gums, Drore Eisen of
    Dermatology Research Associates in Cincinnati said. 

    Eisen was checking reports that the effect was seen in only a few
    patients. But inspection of 331 volunteers showed 33 -- or 10 percent
    -- had the discolouration. 

    "Only five patients were aware of their pigmentation, because it was
    exposed when they smiled," Eisen wrote in a letter to the Lancet
    medical journal . 

    "Approximately 10 percent of patients taking minocycline for longer
    than one year developed blue bone pigmentation in the oral cavity
    whereas the incidence increased to 20 percent after four years." 

    Gums, teeth and the tongue were unaffected, Eisen said. 

    Minocycline is known sometimes to discolour skin, bones, teeth and
    other tissues. Eisen recommended that anyone noticing it switch to
    another antibiotic.
7.513IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0920
    RTw  06-Feb-97 20:46    

    Bookmaker cuts odds on British election in March

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 6 (Reuter) - Bookmakers William Hill said on Thursday it
    had cut its odds on a British election being held in March to 6-4 from
    11-4, although it said May was still favourite at 8-11. 

    "We've seen a flurry of bets for March today," William Hill said in a
    news release. 

    An April election was the outside bet with odds of 4-1. 

    The opposition Labour Party is favourite to win the election, which
    must be held by May 22, at 1-4, the bookmakers said. 

    The ruling Conservatives, which lag Labour by around 20 points in
    opinion polls, are at 5-2.
7.514IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 10:0942
    RTw  06-Feb-97 18:45    

    MEPs to demand EU passports for Hong Kong citizens

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    BRUSSELS, Feb 6 (Reuter) - The European Parliament will urge the
    European Union to give passports to all Hong Kong citizens ahead the
    British colony's handover to Chinese rule later this year. 

    The non-binding resolution -- expected on February 20 -- is also likely
    to demand that the EU follows Washington and requires its
    representative in Hong Kong to produce an annual report on the human
    rights situation there. 

    "It will be a political signal that we won't let the people of Hong
    Kong down," Belgian Radical Alliance MEP Olivier Dupuis told Reuters. 

    Meanwhile European members of parliament also want Hong Kong's governor
    Chris Patten to come to Brussels and set out in detail the problems
    associated with Britain's handover of the territory to Beijing. 

    Dupuis said he had received no answer to a request for European Union
    trade commissioner Leon Brittan to tell parliament how the European
    Commission would react if China violated human rights in Hong Kong
    after the handover. 

    British Liberal Graham Watson is to lead a delegation of five MEPs,
    including Dupuis, to Hong Kong in March. 

    "I want to send a message to Hong Kong ... that the European Parliament
    does not regard this as a British matter but as a European matter,"
    Watson said. 

    He said the EU could make support for China's accession to the World
    Trade Organisation dependent on respect for human rights in Hong Kong. 

    "It's more in China's interest to be in the WTO than in the West's
    (interest). China needs access to Western technology, Western capital
    and Western markets," he reasoned. 

    REUTER
7.515IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:1578
7.516IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:1639
7.517IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:1667
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997 Issue 623

    Rosie's revenge killer is jailed for 25 years

    A WOMAN'S lover, who in an act of drunken revenge snatched her
    five-year-old daughter from her bed and raped and suffocated her, was
    jailed for life yesterday with a recommendation that he serve at least
    25 years.

    Andrew Pountley, 32, was told by Mrs Justice Heather Steel at
    Manchester Crown Court: "You are, and will continue to be, a danger to
    women and children."

    Pountley's 16-day trial had been told how he snatched Rosie McCann from
    her bed at her mother's home in Oldham, just over a year ago. He took
    the girl to get even with her mother, Josie Mahon, with whom he had a
    turbulent relationship.

    He took her still clad in her Thomas the Tank Engine pyjamas through
    the deserted streets to his home over a mile away. There he raped and
    murdered her before dumping her body inside a black binliner in an
    alley near his flat.

    The judge passed two life sentences on Pountley for the rape and
    murder, and a concurrent six-year sentence for the abduction. She told
    Pountley, who stood expressionless in the dock: "My duty is to ensure
    that you will not be released from custody until the danger you present
    no longer exists and to ensure no other child will ever suffer at your
    hands as Roselene did."

    Pountley had continued to deny his crimes throughout the trial. Only
    after sentence was passed did the jury learn that Pountley had also
    been charged with the attempted rape and the indecent assault of a
    13-year-old local girl. The charges were ordered to lie on the file.

    The judge told him: "This case has been about your anger and your urge
    to control and your urge to punish. On Jan 13 last year, it is clear
    Roselene's abduction resulted basically from a jealous and wicked
    motive to punish the woman you regarded as your wife."

    Rosie had gone with him trustingly because he was effectively her
    stepfather. "What was in your mind as you took her from her home to
    your home we shall never know," said the judge. "The pain Rosie
    suffered at your hands before she was suffocated can only be imagined."

    After hiding Rosie's body, Pountley had shown a "callous indifference"
    to her fate. "Your only concern was for yourself." She added: "I
    propose to recommend that you serve a minimum of 25 years."

    The judge said the pain he must have inflicted on the little girl
    during the rape must have been significantly greater than that caused
    at the time of her death.

    After Pountley was led away, the detective who headed the investigation
    described him as a "callous and evil individual". Det Supt Ron Gaffey
    said: "We are delighted with the sentence. Justice has been done on
    this occasion. This was a dreadful murder. The child must have been in
    abject agony before she was killed. I think he is extremely evil and
    dangerous. He had total disregard for this child."

    Det Supt Gaffey said the investigation had been extremely harrowing for
    his officers, many of whom had children the same age as Rosie.

    Mrs Mahon spoke of the jealousy that had cost her daughter her life.
    "He would always be accusing me of things like looking at men on buses
    and flirting. I knew all along he had taken Rosie. He is the kind of
    person who would do anything out of spite."
7.518IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:1858
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997 Issue 623

    Husband killed wife who 'hurled biblical abuse'
    
    By David Graves 

    A BUSINESSMAN who was driven to despair by his wife's religious beliefs
    stabbed her to death after she prayed, spoke in tongues and "hurled
    biblical abuse" at him during a family meeting, a court was told
    yesterday.

    Hamilton Campbell, 37, a computer consultant, told police he had
    "suffered desperately" after being effectively excluded from his family
    because his wife and four children were active evangelical Christians
    and he was a non-practising Roman Catholic.

    He stabbed his wife, Louise, 48, through the heart with a kitchen knife
    after the family meeting to discuss their problems, during which one of
    his children told him: "This is a family of five - and you."

    His wife had bought a public address system to preach to people on the
    street after becoming "almost obsessed" with religion. Their children
    kept diaries of "conversations with God", Reading Crown Court was told.

    Campbell admitted manslaughter due to diminished responsibility.

    Brian Barker QC, prosecuting, said the family rift had worsened after
    Mrs Campbell had made unsubstantiated allegations of sexual abuse
    against her husband.

    On Aug 22 last year, Campbell called a family meeting at his home in
    Chalfont St Peter, Bucks, to discuss his wife's plans to preach on the
    street.

    "The family sat down. Campbell proceeded to have a go at each member of
    the family," Mr Barker said. "He was aggressive but still in control.
    His wife started praying and singing and perhaps even speaking in
    tongues."

    After his arrest, Campbell told detectives: "I went upstairs with my
    wife and said: 'This has to end.' I didn't know how to end it. She was
    on the phone and she laughed at me with an evil face. When I saw the
    face, I went for the knife. She was not able to fight back and it all
    happened in a split second. She was hurling biblical abuse at me. I
    have suffered desperately over the last few years."

    Nicholas Jarman QC, defending, told the court that the family's
    problems started when Mrs Campbell began attending an evangelical
    church. Her husband was shocked when he attended a service and found
    people speaking in tongues and writhing on the floor.

    Mr Jarman read extracts from the children's diaries. One had written:
    "Humble him so he wants to serve." Another wrote: "I cannot forgive my
    dad for what he is. I can't forgive his evil schemes. Please grant
    salvation to dad."

    Mr Justice Gage ordered Campbell to be assessed at a secure psychiatric
    hospital before passing sentence.
7.519IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:1924
7.520IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:2636
7.521IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:2745
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997 Issue 623

    Woman doctor is cleared of indecent assault
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    A WOMAN GP was cleared yesterday of indecently assaulting a young woman
    patient during an internal examination at her surgery.

    The General Medical Council's Professional Conduct Committee also found
    Dr Christine Keown, 46, not guilty of using inappropriate and indecent
    language towards 28-year-old "Miss A" on March 13, 1995.

    Miss A, an office worker, had accused Dr Keown, of Crest Hill,
    Peaslake, Surrey, of "touching her up" during an internal examination
    and a smear test.

    She claimed that the doctor repeatedly indecently touched her genital
    area while performing tests after she had collapsed twice with back and
    internal pains. Miss A said the doctor had made remarks such as "Are
    you like this with your boyfriend?" and "Are you frigid or anything?"
    as the examination proceeded.

    Dr Keown denied the charges. She said: "I completely and absolutely
    deny setting out to indecently assault Miss A." The doctor said she had
    been very concerned that Miss A had collapsed twice with abdominal
    pains and yet had still not been diagnosed. She said any remarks she
    had made to Miss A in the surgery had been intended merely to try to
    calm her.

    Dr Keown said she asked Miss A why she seemed reluctant to have a smear
    test, because she had declined to have one on at least two previous
    occasions. She could not remember Miss A's response.

    Miss A took off her lower clothing and got on to the couch for the
    internal examination. The doctor said: "Miss A was lying, staring
    straight at me. I said, 'You are very nervous' and 'Have you had smears
    before?' I thought the patient was a bit flustered and she was very
    anxious and very tense. I was trying to calm her down but every time I
    asked her a question, she looked blank. I was still anxious to get the
    background so I asked her, 'Is everything all right with the family at
    home?' "

    She told Miss A to get dressed and, when she turned around from making
    notes, she had gone.
7.522IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:2852
7.523IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:3357
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997 Issue 623

    Pique practice
    
    By Paul Stokes 

    A DOCTORS' surgery has been split down the middle in a long-running
    dispute between three of its "partners".

    Filing cabinets and room dividers are being used as a demarcation line
    between the feuding parties' practices. Patients are met by two
    receptionists sitting at either side of a divided desk at the Denewell
    House surgery, Low Fell, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear.

    Those requiring Dr Geoff Penrice, a fundholding GP, are sent to the
    right-hand side before seeing him on the ground floor. People visiting
    his former colleagues, Dr Barbara Schumm and Dr Paul Funnerty, who are
    non-fundholders, are sent to the left before going to upstairs
    surgeries.

    The opposing partners no longer speak to one another and communicate
    through letters and solicitors. Problems mounted this week when Dr
    Schumm and Dr Finnerty took on 1,500 extra patients, from a GP who
    retired, without Dr Penrice's knowledge. New patients started arriving
    at the surgery with letters telling them to sign on at the "second
    window and not the first".

    Liz Mather, Dr Penrice's practice manager, said the partners' position
    could be compared to a bitter divorce while the parties are still
    living under the same roof. She said: "This used to be a four-partner
    practice but it split. It was to do with a clash of personalities and
    rows over fundholding and money. The partners don't speak at all now.
    It is very acrimonious and the surgery has been split down the middle.
    When we want to communicate with the other surgery we do it by letter.
    If we didn't do it that way they would deny we had ever been in touch."

    Mrs Mather, speaking with Dr Penrice's blessing, believed that the only
    way the matter could be resolved was if one or other side agreed to
    leave. She said: "The staff working for each side have to be civil to
    each other. It is a terrible shame that it has come to this and it is
    very stressful. This has gone on now for three-and-a-half years and it
    has to stop. We have offered to move out but our money is tied up in
    the buildings. The other side won't agree to stay or go so the
    situation remains very ludicrous and very confusing for our staff."

    The two sides are undergoing arbitration to decide who should move. A
    new surgery is being built nearby although it is not known who is
    planning to move there.

    As non-fundholding GPs, Dr Schumm and Dr Finnerty have no control over
    their budgets, which are met through the local health authority, unlike
    Dr Penrice who receives funding for his patients from the Government.

    Antek Lejk, head of community services and primary care for Gateshead
    and South Tyneside Health Authority, said the dispute was "not
    ideal".He said: "Short term problems at the premises will be eliminated
    by the sensible use of the appointments system."
7.524IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:3467
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997 Issue 623

    Mother seeks eviction of girl's sex attacker
    
    By David Graves 

    THE mother of a young girl sexually abused by a convicted paedophile
    yesterday called for him to be evicted from his nearby council flat
    where he returned following his release from prison.

    The woman said her daughter, now 13, had attempted to commit suicide
    three times since she was attacked by Angus Wilson, 71, who has a
    record of sex attacks dating back 55 years, and was convinced he would
    try to kill her for giving evidence against him.

    Despite repeated assurances from Labour-controlled Hounslow Council
    that Wilson would never be allowed to return to the three-bedroom flat
    in Chiswick, west London, he had been seen there four times in the past
    fortnight, she said.

    "I am terrified for my daughter's safety and for other children in the
    area as well. There is a primary school nearby and I have told the head
    teacher to warn the children that Wilson has been seen," she said.
    "Hounslow council promised us he would never return to his flat and
    haunt our daughter but he obviously still has a key and I have seen him
    there four times. On one occasion he just stood for 10 minutes staring
    at our front door."

    Wilson was jailed for three years at the Old Bailey in January last
    year after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting the girl. Similar
    allegations involving attacks on five other children and teenagers were
    allowed to lie on the file.

    Because he had spent two and a half years in prison on remand before
    the case went to court, he was released from jail shortly afterwards
    and went to live with his sister in Birmingham before returning to
    London.

    The girl's mother added: "I don't want him here any more. I've reported
    that I've seen him to the police and they have taken the matter very
    seriously.

    "I had hoped we would never see him again.

    "I told my daughter that he is back and she said, 'Mum, he is going to
    come and get me'. She has deep depression and nightmares about what has
    happened. Wilson has taken her childhood away from her."

    Jo Langton, a Conservative councillor, said Wilson should not have been
    allowed to return to his flat.

    "I have never heard of anything so dreadful," she said. "No words can
    explain it. He should not have the key and he should not be in the area
    at all."

    Hounslow council officials are now planning to take legal action to get
    Wilson evicted from his flat.

    A spokesman said yesterday: "At the moment Mr Wilson is legally
    entitled to live in the property. We are unable to comment further as
    we are involved in legal proceedings against him and to do so might
    prejudice the outcome."

    Supt David Finnimore, of Chiswick police, said: "Police are fully aware
    of this matter and I can assure the public that we will respond
    immediately to any calls for assistance from that area. The council has
    the matter well in hand."
7.525IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:3543
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997 Issue 623

    Pro-Lifers publish 'hit-list' of target MPs
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 

    CAMPAIGNERS against abortion claimed yesterday that they could
    influence the outcome of the general election by fielding up to 70
    candidates across the country.

    The Pro-Life Alliance published a "hit list" of pro-abortion MPs of all
    parties against whom they plan to stand. They also produced a manifesto
    seeking to outlaw abortions where there was no risk to the woman's
    life.

    The main targets of the Pro-Life Alliance's campaign are members of
    Tony Blair's shadow cabinet. Gordon Brown, Harriet Harman and Frank
    Dobson are among 16 shadow cabinet members deemed to be "militants in
    their position" in favour of abortion.

    The anti-abortionists also named Virginia Bottomley, the Health
    Secretary, Alastair Goodlad, the Government Chief Whip, and Tom
    Sackville, the Home Office minister, as possible targets. 

    However, Bruno Quintavalle, director of the alliance, said the main
    focus was Opposition parties. "We are very concerned by the very high
    numbers in the shadow cabinet who are pro-abortion."

    Phyllis Bowman, a spokeswoman for the Society for the Protection of the
    Unborn Child, said that campaigns on the abortion issue led to a swing
    of between 2.7 per cent and 4.8 per cent in previous elections. 

    But Marie Stopes International, the family planning agency, and the
    National Abortion Campaign produced an opinion poll showing that 69 per
    cent of people would not take abortion into account when voting. 

    Politicians from all parties attacked the campaign. Tim Wood, Tory MP
    for Stevenage, said: "As soon as we get candidates pursuing a single
    issue, we have a perversion of the normal democratic process of
    selecting candidates who represent the broad views of constituents." 

    Barbara Follett, Labour's candidate in Stevenage, said: "People are
    much more worried about jobs, housing, education and health."
7.526IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:4324
 UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 7 February 1997
  Issue 623

  Peril of young sun-lovers

    
    YOUNG children believe that it is attractive to have a suntan and they
    rate not brushing their teeth as a greater health risk than getting
    sunburn, research showed yesterday.

    A Mori poll for the Cancer Research Campaign (CRC) among eight to
    10-year-olds also found that they thought a tan was more attractive
    than being slim.

    Professor Gordon McVie, director general of CRC, said: "Unprotected
    children exposed to the sun could pay the price later in life." Prof
    Anne Charlton, director of the CRC Education and Child Studies Research
    Group at Manchester University, said research shows that excessive sun
    exposure in the first 20 years of life greatly increases the risk of
    skin cancer.

    When asked to select habits that were bad for health, the children put
    drug-taking first followed by smoking, drinking, not brushing their
    teeth, getting sunburnt and eating unhealthy food. 
7.527IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 07 1997 17:4438
7.528IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:14108
    AP 10-Feb-1997 1:04 EST   REF5588

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, Feb. 10, 1997
   
    WHITEWATER 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Convicted Whitewater partner Jim McDougal is
    reportedly changing his story about whether President Clinton knew in
    1986 about an illegal loan issued to McDougal's wife. The New Yorker
    magazine reports McDougal is now telling independent Whitewater counsel
    Kenneth Starr that then-Gov. Clinton did know. Both McDougal and
    Clinton have testified that Clinton did not know about the loan at the
    time. Meanwhile, Time magazine reports that Starr is pressuring former
    associate attorney general Webster Hubbell for more cooperation in his
    investigation of the first family's role in the Arkansas real estate
    scandal. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Clinton administration's point man on the budget
    says budget talks with Congress are off to a good start. Office of
    Management and Budget Director Franklin Raines told CNN it's all
    systems go for the budget's arrival on Capitol Hill. But Republicans
    are far from sold on Clinton's plan. Senate Budget Committee Chairman
    Pete Domenici criticized Clinton's proposed tax cuts as "too targeted
    and too small." 
   
    HIV-INFANTS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Hospitals in New York have begun mandatory testing of
    all newborns for the AIDS virus, the first such testing program in the
    United States. Dr. Barbara DeBuono, the state health commissioner, told
    The New York Times in Monday's editions that the program is being
    watched by other states and by the CDC to see if it has a significant
    impact. The state already conducts anonymous HIV tests on infants, but
    on Feb. 1, hospitals agreed to mandatory disclosure of the results, the
    Times reported. 
   
    NICOTINE PATCHES 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A person wearing a nicotine patch who smokes on their
    predetermined "quit day" is 10 times more likely to lose the battle to
    quit, North Carolina researchers say. People who can't give up
    cigarettes for one day have an extreme craving for nicotine that won't
    be satisfied with a nicotine patch alone, according to the study, which
    appears in Monday's edition of the Chicago-based Archives of Internal
    Medicine. Researchers at Duke University Medical Center and the Durham
    Veterans Affairs Medical Center studied 200 smokers who wanted to quit
    and tried nicotine patches. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    EREZ CROSSING, Gaza Strip (AP) -- Benjamin Netanyahu and Yasser Arafat
    discussed outstanding Israeli-Palestinian disputes today, and officials
    said Israel agreed to release female Palestinian prisoners soon.
    Negotiators say they will meet again soon to resolve such issues as
    Israel's claim that the Palestinians are illegally operating offices in
    Jerusalem and Palestinians' charge that Israel is stalling approval of
    a Palestinian airport and safe passage between the West Bank and Gaza. 
   
    ECUADOR-PRESIDENTS 

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Latin America now has its third female
    president. In a deal worked out with Ecuador's powerful military,
    Congress named the vice president to the top executive post today.
    Lawmakers selected Rosalia Arteaga, 40, to replace deposed chief
    executive Abdala Bucaram. Congress ousted Bucaram on Thursday for
    "mental incapacity." Latin America has seen two female presidents
    before Arteaga -- Violeta Chamorro in Nicaragua and Isabel Peron in
    Argentina. 
   
    SOUTH KOREA-CRASH 

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Rain has halted a search for two U.S. Marine
    pilots missing after their jet crashed into the Yellow Sea between
    China and South Korea. The Marines' FA-18 Delta crashed during a
    routine training mission, a U.S. military spokesman said. The missing
    officers were identified as Capt. Mark R. Nickles of Mesa, Ariz., and
    Maj. Danny A. D'Eredita of Syracuse, N.Y. The cause of the crash was
    unknown. 
   
    INTERNET VIDEO 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- People normally don't surf the Internet to watch their
    favorite rock group or sports team in action. But a developer of
    cyberspace technology is trying to change that. Progressive Networks
    plans to announce today that Time Warner, ABC, C-SPAN and others agreed
    to use its new RealVideo for live events across the Internet. The
    RealVideo software is billed as improving the quality of the Internet's
    moving images. 
   
    JAPAN MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar is trading at 122.28 yen early Monday, down
    1.92. The Nikkei is up 139.15 points to 18,006.19. 
   
    NBA ALL-STAR GAME 

    CLEVELAND (AP) -- Michael Jordan had the All-Star game's first
    triple-double, MVP Glen Rice broke two scoring records and the East had
    one of the best comebacks in All-Star history to beat the West 132-120.
    Meanwhile, the NBA saluted the league's 50 greatest players at
    halftime. Rice scored 24 of his 26 points in the second half to break
    the All-Star Game record originally set by Wilt Chamberlain. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.529IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:14105
    RTw  10-Feb-97 03:04    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    TIRANA - Weeks of protests against Albania's right-wing government by
    investors who lost their life savings in shady investment schemes have
    claimed their first fatality. 

    - - - - 

    QUITO - Ecuador's Vice President Rosalia Arteaga was appointed head of
    a caretaker government that brought an end to the political crisis
    sparked by the ouster of flamboyant leader Abdala Bucaram. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Zaire's army now plans to use aircraft and helicopter
    gunships against rebels in the east after rebel thrusts on several
    fronts blunted its much-touted counter-offensive. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Serbia's political opposition, on the eve of a triumph over
    President Slobodan Milosevic's ruling socialists, said the main battles
    for democratic reform were still to come. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean state prosecutors have summoned three politicians,
    including a close associate of President Kim Young-sam, in connection
    with controversial loans to Hanbo Steel Co, prosecution officials said. 

    - - - - 

    VITROLLES, France - France's anti-immigration National Front won a
    hard-fought municipal election, taking to four the number of southern
    towns it controls and touching off clashes clashes between youngsters
    and police. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - President Alberto Fujimori said his chief negotiator in the
    hostage crisis at the Japanese ambassador's home, Domingo Palermo,
    would meet the Marxist rebel chief's deputy in preliminary talks on
    Tuesday. 

    LONDON - Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori, almost two months into a
    stand-off with Marxist rebels, said on Sunday he remained calm and was
    optimistic he could reach a peaceful solution. 

    - - - - 

    WELLINGTON - New Zealand health authorities said a man charged in the
    killing of one of six people slain in a weekend shotgun shooting
    massacre was a mental health patient. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prepared for a trip to
    the United States this week by setting up the next peace steps with the
    Palestinians and slapping down a burgeoning debate over Israel's
    occupation of a strip of Lebanon. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - One person died and at least 40 were injured in clashes
    between anti-government protesters and police in the southern Albanian
    port of Vlore, officials said. 

    - - - - 

    CHANDIGARH, India - A pro-Sikh regional party and its Hindu nationalist
    ally, promising religious harmony and peace in India's agricultural
    hub, won a clear majority in local polls in the troubled state of
    Punjab. 

    - - - - 

    EREZ, Gaza Strip - Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu and the Palestinians'
    Yasser Arafat met at their border on Sunday to discuss expanding
    self-rule and the operation of Palestinian sea and air ports, officials
    said. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain's opposition Labour party reaffirmed that it proposed
    to hold a referendum on voting reform if it won the forthcoming general
    election, which must be held by May 22. 

    LONDON - The next British government will inherit a huge budget
    deficit, forcing it to slash public spending or raise taxes by up to 14
    billion pounds, the Independent newspaper said on Monday. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - Japan's huge trade surplus continued its long slide in 1996,
    falling more than a quarter from the previous year, government data
    showed, but economists said a sharply lower yen may soon change the
    trend. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER 
7.530IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1480
    RTw  10-Feb-97 05:15    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    Brazil Rio carnival shifts into top gear 

    RIO DE JANEIRO - Rio de Janeiro's carnival shifted into top gear as
    Donald Duck, parrot Joe Carioca and a flood of other Disney characters
    kicked off the first of two dusk-to-dawn parades by Rio's samba school
    elite. 

    The enormous cartoon-figure replicas delighted the crowds packed into
    Rio's 70,000-capacity sambadrome stadium, but the G-string-clad,
    bare-breasted dancing girls Rio's carnival orgy is famous for were
    noticeably absent from the opening act. 

    Disney agreed to finance much of the parade by the Academicos da
    Rocinha samba school from Latin America's largest shantytown on the
    condition that there would be no nudity. 

    - - - - 

    Camilla's ex says she can wed Charles - UK paper 

    LONDON - The former husband of Camilla Parker Bowles has told friends
    he hopes his ex-wife will win public acceptance and marry Prince
    Charles, heir to the British throne, the Sunday Express newspaper
    reported. 

    "Andrew Parker Bowles has confided that he believes public opinion
    should support the prince in his dream of one day making Camilla his
    wife," said the paper. 

    The paper said retired army officer Parker Bowles -- at one time the
    nation's best-known cuckold -- recently surprised friends at a dinner
    party by saying: "They would certainly have my blessing." 

    - - - - 

    Music becomes weapon of love, war in Peru siege 

    LIMA - From Mexican mariarchis to military marches, Peru's 54-day
    hostage crisis has become the unlikely setting for a variety of musical
    duels and entertainment. 

    While police and Marxist rebel hostage takers have staged a
    psychological battle via megaphone and loudspeaker, hostages have sung
    and played to pass away the hours, and relatives have used music to
    bridge the gap to their loved ones. 

    "It's like a radio hit parade here," said Reuters photographer Gregg
    Newton outside the residence. "Every day, it's a different tune." 

    Longest on the playlists of this musical medley have been the rebel
    hymns broadcast by the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement guerrillas
    every day around dawn. 

    - - - - 

    Oscar nominations - monent of truth for Madonna 

    LOS ANGELES - In typical Madonna style, the never-shy pop diva said she
    would be nominated for an Oscar. Now Hollywood will be watching to see
    if her brash prediction will come true. 

    Apart from the buzz over whether the singer wins a stamp of approval as
    a big-screen actress, the Academy Award nominations to be announced on
    Tuesday are wide open this year, with no single film or actor
    considered a shoo-in. 

    Experts predict the nod for best picture will come down to a scrap
    between films about a fascist dictator's wife, a suspected Nazi spy and
    a girlie magazine publisher defending freedom of speech. 

    REUTER 
7.531IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1435
    AP 10-Feb-1997 0:26 EST   REF5406

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: Radioactive Bullets Used

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. Marine Corps jets accidentally fired 1,520
    radioactive bullets during a training exercise near Okinawa more than a
    year ago, but the Japanese government was not informed until last
    month, The Washington Times reported. 

    The Marine AV-8B Harrier jets were improperly loaded with explosive
    25mm rounds containing depleted uranium for the exercises in late 1995
    and early 1996, the paper reported in Monday editions, citing U.S.
    military officials in Tokyo. 

    It said the Japanese government was expected to issue a statement on
    the incident soon, perhaps as early as Monday. 

    The Times said the Japanese government was notified in January of the
    training incidents at the Tori Shima gunnery range, an uninhabited
    coral island 62 miles from Okinawa. 

    Under a U.S.-Japan agreement, no nuclear weapons are to be stored on
    Okinawa during peacetime, but the Times said military said the
    depleted-uranium ammunition is classified as conventional not nuclear,
    weaponry. 

    Word of the latest incident comes in the face of growing anti-U.S.
    military sentiment on Okinawa, where approximately 28,000 U.S. troops
    are stationed. 

    Because of its density and impact, uranium ammunition can penetrate
    armored vehicles, but spent rounds present no health risk unless it is
    ingested, the Times quoted military officials as saying. 
7.532IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1439
    AP 10-Feb-1997 0:19 EST   REF5403

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: Mobsters Switch Crimes

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Mobsters are getting out of the blue-collar extortion
    and rackets businesses, and are turning to white-collar crime in New
    York and New Jersey, The New York Times reported Monday. 

    Prosecutions and tighter regulations have pushed Mafia crime families
    into three lucrative new areas: health insurance, prepaid telephone
    cards and small Wall Street firms, the paper said, citing law
    enforcement experts on organized crime. The experts based their
    conclusions on informants, surveillance and electronic eavesdropping,
    the Times said. 

    In the past, crime families concentrated on union shakedowns,
    infiltrating trash hauling, extortion at city markets, and fleecing
    pension and welfare funds. 

    But as prosecutors have shut them out of those traditional organized
    crime targets, the mobsters have turned to new businesses. 

    "They are analogous to companies in Chapter 11 bankruptcy," Lewis D.
    Schiliro, a top Federal Bureau of Investigation official told the
    Times. 

    He referred to the region's five Mafia gangs, the Genovese, Gambino,
    Lucchese, Colombo and Bonanno families. Last summer, a reputed Genovese
    associate was accused with bribing people to bring business to his
    health care management company. 

    "They are still in business but many of their old moneymaking bases
    have dried up and they are moving into new industries to fill the cash
    void," Schiliro said. 

    But law enforcement officials conceded organized crime is still
    profiting from bookmaking and loan-sharking, according to the paper. 
7.533IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1459
    AP 9-Feb-1997 23:54 EST   REF5344

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Second Gas Explosion Lights Sky

    KALAMA, Wash. (AP) -- A natural gas pipeline exploded Sunday, sending a
    fireball into the night sky, the second such explosion in Washington
    state this weekend. 

    The blast happened in a rural area north Kalama, 35 miles north of the
    Oregon border, and the glow could be seen 30 miles away, said Cathy
    Batchelor of the Cowlitz County emergency management department. 

    "We hear there's a fireball going straight up in the air," said
    dispatcher Tracy Eaton-Collins of the sheriff's department. 

    There were no immediate reports of injuries. 

    "We do have control of it. It should be out in minutes," said sheriff's
    Sgt. Charlie Rosenszweig, who was among numerous fire and emergency
    personnel at the scene. 

    A campground near the fire was evacuated. 

    Sunday night's explosion was the second break in two days in a
    Northwest Pipeline Corp. line in Washington state. 

    On Saturday night, a natural gas pipeline explosion sent a towering
    flame into the sky at the opposite end of the state, near the Canadian
    border. 

    The fire from that explosion was nearly out on Sunday. 

    A 26-inch pipeline ruptured, shaking homes in near Everson, five miles
    south of the Canadian border, and flaming gas roared 300 feet into the
    air. 

    There are no homes in the area and no one was injured. 

    The blast came from a high-pressure pipeline in a sparsely populated
    area just outside Everson, said John Nicksich, a spokesman for
    Northwest Pipeline Corp., which owns the pipeline. 

    "We don't know the cause and we may not for some time," Nicksich said
    from company headquarters in Salt Lake City. 

    The fire was visible up to 40 miles away in British Columbia and the
    explosion could be heard 12 miles to the southwest in Bellingham. 

    "I was in the living room with my cat when we heard the boom,"
    Bellingham resident Mary Alex told KING-TV of Seattle. "We thought it
    was Mount Baker blowing up." 

    "It sounds like a jet over the house," Everson resident Kirsten Long
    told KOMO-TV. 

    The Cascade Natural Gas Corp., which serves Whatcom County, did not
    have service disrupted, Nicksich said. 
7.534IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1535
    AP 9-Feb-1997 23:36 EST   REF5164

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New York Testing Infants for HIV

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Hospitals in New York have begun mandatory testing of
    all newborns for the AIDS virus, the first such testing program in the
    United States. 

    "Certainly this is a very charged issue and an extraordinary
    undertaking, politically and as a public health program," Dr. Barbara
    DeBuono, the state health commissioner, told The New York Times in
    Monday's editions. "It is being watched very closely by other states
    and by the CDC to see if it has any significant impact." 

    The state already conducts anonymous HIV tests on infants for
    statistical purposes, but on Feb. 1, hospitals agreed to mandatory
    disclosure of the results, the Times reported. 

    The hospitals last year began asking mothers for permission to notify
    them of test results. 

    The new policy will require hospitals to track down and counsel mothers
    weeks after they leave the hospital. 

    The issue of HIV testing has been controversial because the tests
    reveal not a baby's HIV status but the mother's, through the presence
    or absence of HIV antibodies in the baby's blood. Only one in four HIV
    newborns exposed to HIV in the womb becomes infected. The virus that
    leads to AIDS can not be detected at birth. 

    However, most health care professionals favor HIV testing of pregnant
    women because their treatment can help prevent transmission of the
    virus to the baby. 
7.535IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1552
    AP 9-Feb-1997 23:06 EST   REF5129

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Examines Nicotine Patches

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A person wearing a nicotine patch who smokes on their
    predetermined "quit day" is 10 times more likely to lose the battle to
    quit, North Carolina researchers say. 

    Smokers using the patch who take even a single puff of a cigarette on
    their first day of trying to quit will probably be smoking in six
    months, the researchers say. 

    People who can't give up cigarettes for one day have an extreme craving
    for nicotine that won't be satisfied with a nicotine patch alone,
    according to the study, which appears in Monday's edition of the
    Chicago-based Archives of Internal Medicine. 

    Researchers at Duke University Medical Center and the Durham Veterans
    Affairs Medical Center studied 200 smokers who wanted to quit and tried
    nicotine patches, which resembles a bandage containing varying
    strengths of nicotine. 

    Twenty-five percent of the smokers had quit after six months, the study
    said. Of those, only 3 had smoked on the first day. However, 106 of 173
    people who had returned to smoking had smoked their first day on the
    patch, the study said. 

    "Few studies have been done to determine which smokers are more likely
    to benefit from nicotine patches," said Dr. Eric Westman, the study's
    lead author. "This is important because a failed quit attempt can be
    demoralizing and discourage many people from trying again." 

    Knowing what will work early will let smokers avoid unnecessary expense
    and frustration by quitting the program, or supplementing it with
    stronger medication and counseling, Westman said. 

    The study supports previous findings, said Dr. Michael Fiore, director
    of the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention at the University
    of Wisconsin Medical School in Madison, Wis. 

    "Unfortunately, tobacco addiction by its nature mandates that for
    virtually all people trying to quit, you need to treat it the way an
    alcoholic treats booze, and that is not even a single puff," he said. 

    Nicotine skin patches double the chances of long-term success, but only
    about one in four smokers who use the patch is smoke-free after six
    months, previous studies have said. 

    Some 46 million Americans smoke and the government says smoking kills
    400,000 a year. 
7.536IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1526
    AP 9-Feb-1997 23:42 EST   REF5321

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Military Jet Crashes

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Rain halted a search Monday for two U.S.
    Marine pilots missing after their jet crashed into the Yellow Sea
    between China and South Korea. 

    The Marines' FA-18 Delta crashed during a routine training mission
    Sunday, said Jim Coles, spokesman for the U.S. military command in
    Seoul. The search was suspended at dusk Sunday and then resumed Monday
    before the weather forced its suspension. 

    The missing officers were identified as Capt. Mark R. Nickles from
    Mesa, Arizona, and Maj. Danny A. D'Eredita of Syracuse, N.Y. 

    The jet was over Korea with another FA-18 jet when it went down in the
    sea off Taean, 60 miles southwest of Seoul, Coles said. 

    Both jets are assigned to the U.S. Marine Corps air base in Iwakuni in
    southeastern Japan. The other jet safely landed at Osan Air Base, south
    of Seoul. 

    The cause of the crash was not known, Coles said. 
7.537IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1530
    AP 9-Feb-1997 21:31 EST   REF5563

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Kenya Bans AIDS Drug Sale

    NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -- The government has banned the sale and
    production of an herb-based drug that its inventor claims can reverse
    AIDS symptoms, newspapers reported Sunday. 

    The drug, called Pearl Omega, has been controversial since Arthur Obel
    announced its discovery early last year. Government and medical
    authorities have accused Obel of failing to publish the drug's chemical
    composition and his trial methods. 

    Obel has been able to sell the drug, which he says is based on an herb
    from western Kenya, because of a law that permits traditional medicine. 

    A senior police officer and the government's Chief Inspector of Drugs
    C.K. Juma questioned Obel on Saturday about his production methods, the
    Sunday Nation newspaper reported. 

    Obel said he has administered the drug to 40,000 Kenyans and 27,000
    foreigners since 1984. People with AIDS have occasionally told
    newspapers their health improved after taking Pearl Omega. 

    The drug costs $600 for a full treatment. 

    The Kenya AIDS Society has sued Obel, claiming he is selling a drug of
    no known value. The high court court has not yet ruled on the case. 
7.538IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1586
    AP 9-Feb-1997 18:50 EST   REF5466

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ecuador Has New President

    By MONTE HAYES

    Associated Press Writer

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- In a deal worked out with Ecuador's powerful
    military, Congress named the vice president to the top executive post
    Sunday, ending a political crisis that threw this small Andean country
    into chaos. 

    Lawmakers selected Rosalia Arteaga, 40, as Ecuador's president early
    Sunday to replace deposed chief executive Abdala Bucaram. Congress
    ousted Bucaram on Thursday for "mental incapacity," and his refusal to
    step down sparked a crisis in which three people claimed the
    presidency. 

    Congressional leaders and military commanders worked out an agreement
    early Sunday that puts Arteaga "temporarily" in power until Congress
    amends the constitution to clarify who succeeds a deposed president. 

    At that point, Arteaga would return to being vice president and Fabian
    Alarcon, Congress' original pick for chief executive, would become
    interim president. Elections would be held within a year and the winner
    would begin a four-year term in August 1998. 

    Bucaram, speaking in his stronghold of Guayaquil, where he flew Friday
    night after barricading himself in the national palace here for three
    days, continued to insist he is the constitutionally elected president.
    But he conceded that he had lost power to "conspirators" supported by
    the armed forces. 

    "What is being formed in Congress is a civilian dictatorship," he said.
    "Remember me," he added. "In a short time these same people are going
    to beg me on their knees to come back." 

    Arteaga's selection as president is a rarity in Latin America, which
    has seen only two female presidents before her -- Violeta Chamorro in
    Nicaragua and Isabel Peron in Argentina. 

    "She is an ambitious woman," Bucaram said after learning of Congress'
    decision. 

    The unanimous vote in Congress brought relief to Ecuadoreans, who
    watched street protests against Bucaram become increasingly violent and
    culminate in a nationwide 48-hour strike last week. People had feared
    the military might intervene. 

    Police on Sunday removed the barbed wire that had kept protesters away
    from the government palace, and families again wandered through the
    area, enjoying a quiet day in Quito's colonial center. 

    Bucaram, a fiery public speaker who campaigned as the "force of the
    poor" and called himself "El Loco," saw his popularity plunge from 65
    percent to 12 percent in the last two months. His critics accused him
    of corruption, nepotism, autocratic methods and outlandish,
    embarrassing behavior that disgraced the office of the presidency. 

    Harsh austerity measures that sent electrical, water and telephone
    rates soaring were the spark that set off violent street protests in
    January. 

    Congress dismissed Bucaram on Thursday and named Alarcon to succeed
    him. Both Bucaram and Arteaga disputed Congress' action. The armed
    forces warned of the chaotic consequences of a power vacuum and urged
    the different parties to find a peaceful solution. 

    Despite fears that the military would intervene, armed forces chief
    Gen. Paco Moncayo said the military would remain neutral. 

    On Sunday, military commanders struck the deal with Congress and vowed
    in a statement to uphold "the legitimately elected authority of the
    National Congress" and the new president. 

    The military also reaffirmed its "unbreakable democratic calling." 

    "The armed forces have given the political class a historic lesson,"
    Arteaga said as she assumed office in the national palace with Moncayo
    at her side. 

    "The armed forces were prudent, patriotic and honest in dealing with
    the crisis," she said. "They are an example to Latin America." 
7.539IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1542
    AP 9-Feb-1997 18:19 EST   REF5442

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Boxed Woman's Plight Was Known

    LA CORUNA, Spain (AP) -- Social workers say they long knew about a
    mentally and physically disabled woman who was kept in an enclosed
    cardboard box in her family's home for 40 years -- but did nothing to
    change her situation. 

    The woman, Dolores Vina Cotelo, was discovered Tuesday when social
    service volunteers visited the family's home in this northwestern city
    to tend to her elderly mother. 

    The volunteers heard a "strange howl" coming from underneath a sink in
    the laundry room, which is attached to the home. The 44-year-old woman
    was found in a small shelter made of cardboard and egg cartons. 

    Social service officials acknowledged that they knew about Vina
    Cotelo's living conditions for more than 25 years, the daily El Pais
    reported Sunday. 

    Vina Cotelo apparently had contracted meningitis as a child, and was
    left with impaired vision and mental disabilities, city officials said.

    She was taken to a psychiatric hospital for consultation over the
    weekend, which city officials said would help them decide how to care
    for her, the daily El Mundo reported. 

    The director of La Coruna's social service agency, Marian Ferreiro,
    recommended that she be allowed to return to her family. 

    She apparently was "well fed and well treated although not in a normal
    situation," Ferreiro told El Pais. 

    The family said Vina Cotelo sometimes left the shelter. But Ariadna
    Barral, director of a church social service group that also knew about
    her, said she mostly stayed inside the box and was fed through holes in
    its walls. 

    "She seemed to be in a savage state," Barral said. 
7.540IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1573
    AP 8-Feb-1997 21:24 EST   REF5578

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Zealand Gunman Kills Six

    By RAY LILLEY

    Associated Press Writer

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- A man embroiled in a domestic dispute
    opened fire on his relatives and several passers-by at a ski resort
    Saturday, killing six people and wounding five, police said. 

    The 24-year-old man, described by residents of the village of Raurimu
    Spiral as a former psychiatric patient, was naked and unarmed when
    police commandos seized him. He emerged from a dense forest about 600
    feet from the killing scene, two hours after his rampage began. 

    Inspector Geoff Holloway said Sunday that police were in the early
    stages of building a picture of the accused and so far had uncovered
    had no evidence pointing to a history of mental illness. 

    The suspect -- whom police would not identify -- was charged with one
    count of murder and faced more charges in Taumarunui District Court in
    a nearby farming town, police said. 

    The violence began with an argument during a family reunion. It
    appeared that the gunman's relatives, including his parents, bore the
    brunt of his rage, police said. But passers-by also were hit by fire
    from the 12-gauge shotgun. 

    The man's wife, father and four other relatives were believed to be
    among the casualties, Australia's Sunday Telegraph of Sydney reported. 

    It took authorities more than an hour to reach the village, 250 miles
    north of the capital, Wellington. The nearest police station was 30
    miles away. 

    Police searched for more bodies in and around the village. 

    Residents of Raurimu Spiral, a village with a few dozen houses mainly
    used as winter holiday homes for access to nearby ski areas, saw a man
    and a woman lying wounded on the town's main road early Saturday.

    Gordon Stewart said he was at school when he heard shots. 

    "At first, it was thought to be hunters out in the nearby bush. But
    then a car drove up with a man inside pleading for help. He had been
    shot in the head. He said that someone had gone berserk with a shotgun
    and was shooting at random," Stewart said. 

    Prime Minister Jim Bolger said he was "shocked and dismayed" by the
    violence, and expressed sympathy for the family and friends of the
    victims. 

    A nurse who aided a dying man during the shooting spree is being hailed
    for her heroism. Anna Dawson ignored the gunfire to cradle an elderly
    man slumped on the roadside. 

    "He was alive initially, but he died soon after," her husband told the
    Sunday Star-Times. "We knew the person." 

    After police lifted the blockade on Raurimu village, Dawson rushed to
    Taumarunui Hospital, where she is a nurse, to help tend to survivors. 

    Raurimu is two miles north of the National Park township, near the
    Mount Ruapehu volcano. 

    New Zealand's deadliest shooting rampage took place Nov. 13, 1990, when
    David Gray slaughtered 13 people during 24 hours of terror in the tiny
    Otago seaside settlement of Aramoana. He was finally shot and killed by
    police. 
7.541IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1542
    RTw  10-Feb-97 01:46    

    UK's Labour to press on with electoral reform vote

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 10 (Reuter) - Britain's opposition Labour party reaffirmed
    that it proposed to hold a referendum on voting reform if it won the
    forthcoming general election, which must be held by May 22. 

    Monday's Times and Telegraph newspapers said Labour leader Tony Blair
    was expected to drop the referendum plan but a party spokesman said
    this was "pure fantasy." 

    Labour is holding talks with the minority Liberal Democrats, whose
    support it may need after the election, on how to reshape Britain's
    political map. 

    The Liberal Democrats have made clear that no deal on future
    cooperation can be struck unless there is an agreement on a referendum
    on voting reform. 

    "Following the recent discussions between the two parties in the
    constitutional committee, a statement is expected shortly announcing a
    referendum on electoral reform in the first term of a Labour
    government," a Blair spokesman said. 

    Two of the main ideas under discussion are a switch from the current
    first-past-the-post electoral system to proportional representation and
    giving Scotland and Wales a greater say over how they run their own
    affairs. 

    Conservative Prime Minister John Major says Blair's plans could turn
    Britain into another Italy, where governments have changed more than
    once a year on average since World War Two, or even break up the
    country. 

    Labour and the Liberal Democrats have also been discussing reform of
    the House of Lords upper chamber of parliament and whether to introduce
    a freedom of information act. 

    REUTER
7.542IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:15137
    RTw  10-Feb-97 03:34    

    FEATURE - Dutch flower market loves Valentine's Day

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Christine Lucassen 

    AALSMEER, Netherlands, Feb 10(Reuter) - Red is always the dominant
    colour at Aalsmeer's flower auction, but in the run-up to Valentine's
    Day the 75-hectare (185-acre) site is awash with deep scarlet blooms. 

    "Roses account for one third of the 4.5 billion flowers we sell
    annually, but at this time of the year, rose sales double," said
    Adrienne Lansbergen, spokeswoman of the world's biggest flower market
    with 60 percent of global trade. 

    "Obviously, it's the red roses that top the list at this time."

    But while rose sales soar ahead of February 14, prices do not always
    follow suit. 

    Some of the country's big rose growers plan their planting scheduleto
    harvest up to half their flowers shortly before Valentine's Day --
    increasing supply to meet demand. 

    "And we have between 200 and 300 kinds of roses, divided into different
    stalk lengths and degrees of quality. You'll still find something for
    every budget," Lansbergen added. 

    $5 FOR A ROSE 

    Yet sometimes, prices for the year's favourites explode.  Last year,
    rare "Grand Gala" roses were sold for the record price of nine guilders
    ($5) each in February, far above the average price for "a bouquet of
    romance." 

    But Valentine's Day is about more than just red roses, said Lansbergen,
    noting there was no fixed trend this year. 

    "Of course it's red, but preferences differ from region to region.
    There's also more interest in red flowers other than roses." Packaging
    also plays an important role. "Plants with little heart-ribbons do
    well...," she said. 

    "Two flowers are struggling for a place on the honour stage. Some
    experts insist the red tulip has been the symbol of love for centuries,
    others swear by scarlet roses." 25 MILLION BLOOMS DAILY 

    Approaching February 14, some 25 million blooms are shipped from the
    Aalsmeer market every day, heading for all corners of the world. 

    It is the market's busiest time, followed by Mothers' Day -- celebrated
    on different days in several countries -- Easter, when yellow
    dominates, and Christmas. 

    Americans brought Valentine's Day, and the commercialisation that goes
    with it, to Europe and exports to the United States surge in February. 

    But Europe has risen in importance as a market in the last few years. 

    "Sales to the U.S. still peak in February, but throughout the year
    other countries are far more important for our business," said
    Lansbergen. 

    Germany receives half of Aalsmeer's flower exports while France and
    Britain account for a further 20 percent. 

    "We have a strong international history. In 1912, we flew our first
    flowers to the United States," Lansbergen said. 

    AALSMEER FLOWERS AT MIDDLE EAST WEDDINGS 

    Aalsmeer's flowers go to the entire world. There is almost no country
    that does not buy them once in a while. 

    "Oil sheikhs' wedding bouquets in the Middle East are often made with
    Dutch flowers. A flower arranger I met in China didn't speak English
    but could say 'Aalsmeer,"' Lansbergen said. 

    Not only Dutch-grown plants and flowers pass through Aalsmeer but
    domestic produce makes up 86 percent of the total. 

    "Israel is a big supplier, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Colombia,..." Lansbergen
    added. 

    In normal times, an average of 17 million flowers and two million
    plants are auctioned at the market every day. This generated a turnover
    of 2.5 billion guilders in 1996, up six percent on the previous year. 

    AUCTION SITE STILL GROWING 

    Already covering 75 hectares (185 acres), the vast Aalsmeer flower
    sheds continue to grow. 

    "The auctioning complex is being expanded on a continuous basis. This
    side of the road is now fully used, so we'll go to the other side this
    year to build an extra five hectares of warehouses to satisfy demand,"
    Lansbergen said. 

    Aalsmeer also aims to break new ground in transport and technology. 

    Although its auctioned flowers can currently cover the distance to
    Schiphol airport in 20 minutes, a tunnel under study might soon link
    Aalsmeer to both the airport and a railway transit terminal to be built
    nearby. 

    The tunnel should increase the accessibility of auctions, crucial in
    reducing the time between the moment a flower is sold and the time it
    is arranged in its final vase. 

    "Speed is essential and traffic gets very heavy over here," Lansbergen
    said. 

    The auctions are also set to enter the next century in a more high-tech
    form. 

    A "distant buying" system, giving product information on screens, and
    an electronic order system, to be launched on a trial basis this year,
    will enable buyers and growers to get a better overall view of the
    market. 

    "With these systems and the information they give us, the market will
    be directing production instead of the other way around," Lansbergen
    said. 

    In spite of the march of technology, the traditional sights are
    unlikely to fade away. 

    Electronic trolleys will still pull flower-loaded wagons into the halls
    where grandstands host up to 600 professional buyers, ready for the
    auction. 

    "The auctions on the spot won't disappear. To part of our customers,
    they are the tailored service they need." Lansbergen said. 

    REUTER
7.543IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1543
    RTw  10-Feb-97 00:58    

    Next UK government facing big budget deficit-paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 9 (Reuter) - The next British government will inherit a
    huge budget deficit, forcing it to slash public spending or raise taxes
    by up to 14 billion pounds, the Independent newspaper said on Monday. 

    It said an independent think tank had calculated that the ruling
    Conservative government's plans to bring down the deficit to 19 billion
    pounds by 1997/8 would not stop interest payments on government debt
    from running out of control. 

    The opposition Labour party, favourite to win the next election, has
    said it will stick to the current government's targets. The poll must
    be held by late May. 

    "The choice lies not between adjusting fiscal policy and not adjusting.
    It is simply between adjusting now and adjusting in the future," said
    the report by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research. 

    The report said financial plans laid out in last November's budget -
    which showed government borrowing falling gradually to zero -- were
    implausible because expenditure was likely to grow faster without
    additional measures. 

    "The new government will have to raise at least seven billion to 10
    billion pounds in extra tax," said Treasury adviser Martin Weale, who
    heads the think-tank. 

    He told the newspaper that the problem arose from the fact that the
    shortfall between government spending and tax receipts had been very
    slow to fall despite more than four years of economic recovery.

    Weale said there was a "structural deficit" equivalent to two percent
    of Gross Domestic Product, or about 14 billion pounds. 

    Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke last year cut taxes despite
    tax revenues some five billion pounds less that predicted. 

    REUTER
7.544IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1623
    RTw  09-Feb-97 22:34    

    Ireland's first nurses' strike averted

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBLIN, Feb 9 (Reuter) - Ireland's first nursing strike was averted on
    Sunday when nursing unions postponed a stoppage which would have hit
    hospitals from Monday. 

    The unions are to consider an improved pay package which has been
    increased to 80 million punts ($128.6 million) from 50 million after
    recommendations by the nation's Labour Court. 

    Unions will vote on the package over the next two weeks and are
    expected to approve the deal, which will also establish a separate
    commission on nursing conditions. 

    The country's 16,000 nurses were to have gone on strike on Monday in an
    action the government said would have created chaos in hospitals and
    probably closed all but emergency wards. 

    REUTER
7.545IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1681
    RTw  09-Feb-97 13:47    

    Shaky UK Conservatives face fresh blows

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Lyndsay Griffiths 

    LONDON, Feb 9 (Reuter) - Britain's ruling Conservatives, only weeks
    away from a general election, suffered fresh setbacks on Sunday with a
    poll predicting defeat in a by-election and embarrassing news that a
    top party strategist had labelled Prime Minister John Major a wimp. 

    The MORI opinion poll said Britain's opposition Labour Party --
    charging ahead in national opinion polls - looked set to win the
    February 27 by-election in Wirral South with a 17.5 percent swing
    against the government. 

    The poll, published on Sunday, said 54 percent of the electorate in the
    north-west England constituency would vote Labour, 35 percent
    Conservative and 10 percent Liberal Democrat. 

    One percent were undecided in the survey, which questioned 601 adults
    by telephone on February 6 and 7. 

    The Wirral South seat was held by the Conservatives in 1992 with a
    majority of more than 8,000. A Labour win would put Major's already
    weakened government into a minority and could hasten the date of
    national elections, which must be held by May 22. 

    According to the Independent on Sunday newspaper, Labour leader Tony
    Blair plans a vote of no-confidence in the government if the
    Conservatives lose the Wirral by-election. 

    Such a threat could force the Conservatives to bring forward the date
    of the election, currently expected to take place in early May, and
    face voters eager for change at the top. "If the opposition wins a
    convincing victory in Wirral South, as expected, failure to table a
    motion of no-confidence could be seen as a sign of timidity," said the
    paper. 

    Labour strategists have so far resisted calling a no-confidence vote,
    fearing they might lack the numbers to topple the government decisively
    and thereby undermine their healthy lead in pre-election opinion polls. 

    The latest polls put Labour 15 to 20 points ahead of the Conservatives,
    who have held power for 18 years. 

    After so long at the helm, the Conservatives' faith in their own leader
    was under question on Sunday, even as ministers rallied round the
    beleaguered prime minister. 

    "John Major's standing is rising," insisted Defence Minister Michael
    Portillo, a past rival of Major's who is tipped as a possible future
    leader of the party. 

    "This is going to be a massive effort to turn around this opinion poll
    deficit and in the next couple of months...produce a suprise and
    spectacular Conservative victory." 

    Home Secretary Michael Howard, too, threw his weight behind Major,
    saying all that interested him was a Conservative victory in the
    forthcoming election, not his own political ambitions. 

    The ministers' display of unswerving loyalty followed a report that a
    top party strategist had branded Major weak and admitted the party lied
    about the results of its private polls. 

    Steve Hilton -- an advertising executive who is one of the top
    strategists in Major's uphill struggle to retain power -- made the
    remarks in a 1994 interview to a student, according to papers handed to
    the Observer newspaper. 

    Asked how Major rates, Hilton reportedly said: "He is undoubtedly our
    weakness. I expect that the Labour Party will go for Major in a big
    way, portraying him as a wimp." 

    Hilton, 27, dismissed the newspaper report as a distortion, saying much
    had changed since his loose-lipped interview. 

    REUTER
7.546IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 10:1671
    RTos 09-Feb-97 13:41    

    NCR Unveils Do-It-Yourself Retail Checkout

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    NEW YORK (Reuter) - NCR Corp. has unveiled the prototype for a
    do-it-yourself retail checkout system designed to speed supermarket
    checkout times and substantially reduce the frustration of shoppers
    waiting in line to pay for goods. 

    The company said the automated check-out system will allow shoppers to
    scan, bag and pay for groceries in express lanes, without cashier
    assistance, making shopping transactions as easy as banking at an
    automated teller machine. 

    Following in-store consumer testing this year, NCR said it plans to
    introduce the self-checkout system in 1998. 

    NCR estimated there are more than 175,000 food store checkout lanes in
    the United States, with about 30 percent of those lanes operated as
    cashier-assisted express lanes. 

    "We are trying to serve the frequent shopper who has just a few items
    to buy on the way home from work," said Joanne Walter, NCR's vice
    president of future retailing systems. 

    The initial system is targeted at food store express lanes. Future
    versions will target consumer checkout in other retail environments. 

    Walter said initial versions would be aimed "express service" customers
    who have 15 items or less to buy. 

    Walter said the company's market research shows that 65 percent of all
    retail purchases involve 20 items or less. 

    She said the system is an extension of her company's expertise as a
    world-leader in retail automation. NCR was origanally known as National
    Cash Register. 

    The Dayton, Ohio-based company, the former computer equipment arm of
    AT&T Corp., is now the No. 1 supplier of self-service automated teller
    machines used in banking and the bar-code scanners used at retail
    checkout counters. 

    "This is a product that will replace the retail checkout line. We are
    using all of our existing (retail automation) research and development
    to combine it into one product," Walter said. 

    The automated checkout system is known as SCOT, for Self Checkout
    Terminal. The name is also a playful reference to the national origin
    of the product prototype. The engineering team that developled the
    system is based in Dundee, Scotland. 

    Building on existing ATM banking machines, shoppers will be able to
    purchase groceries and even make cash withdrawals, without cashier
    intervention. 

    Shoppers using the system touch selected points on an automated teller
    menu. A screen leads them through the checkout process, prompting them
    to scan items and complete the checkout by inserting a debit or credit
    card, or cash. 

    The company said the system was designed to cut reduce labor costs and
    allow checkout staff to be deployed in other areas of the store. 

    "Shoppers are looking for ways to avoid checkout lines, and grocers are
    focusing on enhancing customer service while reducing front-end labor
    costs," Walter said.

    REUTER
7.547IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:1355
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Clinton poised to recall ambassador in Ireland
    
    By Toby Harnden, Ireland Correspondent, and Hugo Gurdon in Washington 

    JEAN Kennedy Smith, the American ambassador to the Irish Republic, is
    expected to be recalled by President Clinton because her strongly
    pro-nationalist views are now at odds with White House policy on
    Ireland.

    Sources on both sides of the Atlantic said Mrs Kennedy Smith, 68,
    sister of President Kennedy, was likely to be replaced by the summer.
    Her support for Gerry Adams, the Sinn Fein president, and the search
    for a peace deal has been an embarrassment since the IRA ceasefire
    collapsed.

    President Clinton is understood to support London and Dublin's tough
    line on Sinn Fein's admittance to talks and now accepts that the IRA is
    unlikely to abandon its campaign of violence in the short term.
    Responsibility for American policy on Ireland is likely to be
    transferred from the National Security Council to the State Department.
    With the departure of Anthony Lake and Nancy Soderberg from the
    council, Mrs Kennedy Smith has lost two of her key supporters.

    Madeleine Albright, the new Secretary of State, is said to believe that
    the policy of aligning America with Mr Adams and John Hume, the SDLP
    leader, while maintaining a distance from London, has failed. Her
    predecessor, Warren Christopher, was unable to prevent Mr Adams from
    twice being granted a visa to travel to America. Mrs Albright is likely
    to be tougher and is to hold talks with Sir Patrick Mayhew, the
    Northern Ireland Secretary, in 10 days.

    President Clinton, who was bitterly disappointed and angered by the
    ending of the IRA ceasefire a year ago, now intends to delegate
    negotiations on Northern Ireland to Mrs Albright.

    Mrs Kennedy Smith, who was widowed in 1990, has regularly hosted
    dinners for Mr Adams. Her close friends include the author Tim Pat
    Coogan, who wrote a history of the IRA that was highly sympathetic to
    the republican cause. Mrs Kennedy Smith was censured by Mr Christopher
    for her treatment of two embassy officials who had opposed the granting
    of a visa to Mr Adams. An inquiry concluded that she had engaged in "a
    clear pattern of retaliation". A number of embassy employees told the
    inquiry that "they saw the embassy under her as more attuned to Irish
    rather than American interests".

    In The Greening of the White House, by Conor O'Clery, it is disclosed
    that Mrs Kennedy Smith was codenamed "Speir Bhan" or "Woman of
    Mythology" during contacts with Sinn Fein. Mr Adams was known as the
    "chairman of the board" and the IRA was referred to as "the local
    football team". President Clinton is said to believe that Mrs Kennedy
    Smith and Mr Hume allowed themselves to be duped by Mr Adams. In
    O'Clery's book she is quoted as telling a friend: "I was convinced the
    ceasefire would hold for ever."
7.548IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:1496
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    'Snatch squads' to seize Bosnia war criminals
    
    By Christopher Lockwood, Diplomatic Editor 

    A SERIES of "snatch operations" designed to abduct some of Bosnia's
    most wanted men and deliver them up to the war crimes tribunal in The
    Hague has reached the detailed planning stage, diplomatic and military
    sources have disclosed.

    The favoured scenario involves squads of American, British and French
    elite troops striking simultaneously across the country to pick up most
    of the 66 indicted war criminals still at large.

    Logistic support, and back-up if needed in an emergency, would be
    provided by SFOR, the 30,000-strong Stabilisation Force for Bosnia, but
    soldiers of the Nato-led operation would not be directly involved for
    fear of reprisals. The British contribution would be likely to involve
    the SAS.

    Although formidable difficulties still have to be resolved, the West is
    no longer arguing about the principle but only about the
    practicalities. With Bosnia peaceful now for more than a year, the fear
    that grabbing indicted war criminals would destabilise the Dayton peace
    accords seems to have almost evaporated.

    Instead, there is a growing recognition that the continued liberty of
    men charged with organising and committing the slaughter, torture and
    rape of innocent civilians now poses a greater threat to reconciliation
    in Bosnia than a move to arrest them. "Their presence poisons the peace
    process," said a source close to Carl Bildt, the man charged with the
    civilian reconstruction of the war-torn state.

    A senior British source said: "There have been intensive discussions on
    how to do it between the three most involved capitals - Washington,
    London and Paris - in the last month. There is a determination to do
    it, but still no final decision yet." Detailed discussions have also
    taken place at Nato headquarters in Brussels.

    The tribunal has issued 74 indictments, but only seven of these alleged
    war criminals are now in its custody. One of the seven has already been
    sentenced, following his confession, but is appealing against his
    10-year prison term. An eighth man is being held in a Croatian jail
    pending extradition to The Hague. The other 66 are at large.

    In many, probably all, the cases, the West's intelligence agencies know
    exactly where the wanted men are. The Washington-based Coalition for
    International Justice, a human rights group, has posted the whereabouts
    of 37 of the 66 on the Internet, often detailing the bars where they
    drink.

    Picking up the smaller fry would be no more difficult than apprehending
    any other murderer; and even the greatest prizes of all, Radovan
    Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb president, and Ratko Mladic, his
    former commander, are thought to be much less heavily guarded than they
    once were.

    Dr Karadzic's claims to have 2,000 men ready to fight for him were
    dismissed as ludicrous by one senior Western official. "We think the
    truth is more like a couple of dozen. It's just like saying we can't go
    and arrest a serial killer in case anyone gets hurt."

    Senior British sources accept all this but worry about what happens
    after a successful snatch mission. "It is still the case that the SFOR
    troops would be liable to become targets for retaliation. They are
    spread out over the whole country. It is not a mark of excessive
    caution to worry about how to explain what had happened to the parents
    of dead soldiers."

    One proposed way around this, according to Nato sources, is to ensure
    that the mission is even-handed: that Serbs and Croats are all taken.
    This factor has inclined planners towards grabbing as many as possible
    of the 66 all at once, and not just the most notorious ringleaders, who
    are mostly Serb.

    That would also prevent the others from going into hiding, though there
    is certain to be a difficulty in making arrests in Serbia proper or
    Croatia, where the Western powers have no mandate to deploy.

    A final problem relates to who would control the snatch squads. One
    early theory, floated in December by William Perry, then US Defence
    Secretary, was that the squads would in effect be "sheriff's posses"
    under the control of the tribunal.

    But that would require UN authorisation and raise all sorts of delicate
    legal issues. The idea seems to have been replaced by the proposal that
    squads would come directly under the authority of the three main
    countries.

    The continuing discussions mean the snatch operations do not look
    imminent. Nor are the obvious preparations, such as the withdrawal to
    base of lightly-armed UN observers, yet being made. Analysts point to
    May as a possible date. Then, as SFOR troops rotate at the half-way
    point of their mandate, the SFOR presence in Bosnia will be at a
    maximum.
7.549IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:1778
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Bishops decry Runcie attack
    
    By Victoria Combe, Churches Correspondent 

    THE blistering attack by Lord Runcie on "clappy and happy" worship was
    dismissed by senior churchmen yesterday as "nonsense". They said that
    it was veiled and unjustified criticism of Dr George Carey, his
    successor as Archbishop of Canterbury.

    Traditionalist and evangelical leaders, frequently at odds on other
    issues, were united in their criticism of Lord Runcie, who described
    much of the modern liturgy of the Church of England as "inadequate".

    His highly critical comments, in an interview with The Sunday
    Telegraph, followed the announcement that Church of England attendance
    on Sundays had suffered the worst decline in 20 years. However, several
    bishops rounded on Lord Runcie, who was at Lambeth from 1980 to 1991,
    claiming he was over-simplifying the Church's problems and undermining
    its areas of strength.

    The Bishop of Durham, the Rt Rev Michael Turnbull, said Lord Runcie was
    wrong to relate the fall in churchgoing to styles of worship. He said
    churches that attempted to experiment with the liturgy and use modern
    music were winning more worshippers and "reaching people".

    "Decline happens when churches become lazy about the liturgy and
    maintain an unthinking reliance on tradition." He said that the
    strength of the Anglican Church was its variety, which allowed it to
    adapt services to suit "a university church in a Cambridge college and
    a housing estate in Stockton". The bishop claimed disaffection with the
    Church came instead from the clergy's "preoccupation with internal
    affairs".

    The in-fighting over issues such as women priests and homosexuality, he
    said, was more damaging than choices of music made in a church.

    The Archdeacon of York, the Ven George Austin, said that Lord Runcie's
    comments were "nonsense".

    "He is condemning the sort of worship that is bringing young people
    into the Church and the congregations that are increasing in numbers.
    It is a thinly veiled attack on his successor, which I think is
    unjustified."

    Previously Lord Runcie criticised Dr Carey's ambitious plan to overhaul
    the organisational structure of the Church, but his outburst at the
    weekend struck at an area where Dr Carey believes he is strong. Dr
    Carey is an evangelical who has encouraged informal worship, which
    often means replacing the choir and organ with rock bands and lasers.
    Decline continues apace in traditional Anglican churches, but Dr
    Carey's spirits have been lifted by the boom in evangelical churches,
    which open at the rate of one every two weeks.

    Lord Runcie claimed that encouraging alternative worship is "dangerous"
    if services are altered purely to attract people.

    He said that he was against the "clappy-and-happy, huggy-and-feely
    worship which, along with the overhead projectors, seem to reduce God
    to a puppet".

    Any attack on "happy-clappy" worship normally wins immediate applause
    from traditionalists, but yesterday many disagreed with Lord Runcie's
    judgment. The Bishop of Kensington, the Rt Rev Michael Colclough, a
    traditionalist, said it was wrong to discourage adaptations of worship.
    "The Church has always used the culture of the day to present the
    truths of the Gospel. My experience in west London is that lots of
    young people are coming to faith."

    He used the example of Holy Trinity Brompton, Knightsbridge, which has
    more than 1,000 mostly young, middle-class worshippers at its Sunday
    services.

    The Bishop of Salisbury, the Rt Rev David Stancliffe, said: "I think
    where Lord Runcie is right is in saying that happy-clappy services will
    not do forever. People need to be stretched and often they can do this
    best in traditional worship."
7.550IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:1967
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7.552IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:2190
7.553IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:2360
7.554IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:2428
7.555IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:2629
7.556IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:2829
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Hubble to weigh up Universe
    
    By Laura Spinney, Science Correspondent 

    ASTRONOMERS will no longer have to guess the weight of the Universe
    after a new instrument that will enable them to calculate it accurately
    is installed on the orbiting Hubble space telescope this week.

    The space shuttle Discovery is scheduled to blast off from Florida
    tomorrow, carrying seven astronauts on a 10-day mission to service the
    telescope. The space telescope imaging spectrograph to be installed on
    Hubble will allow Dr Max Pettini, of the Royal Greenwich Observatory,
    and Dr David Bowen, of Edinburgh's Royal Observatory, to measure how
    much deuterium, a heavy form of hydrogen, was generated during the Big
    Bang.

    As no more deuterium has been produced, the ratio of the element to
    normal hydrogen is a very sensitive measure of the total amount of
    matter in the Universe. By measuring that ratio, researchers can
    effectively "weigh" the Universe.

    "How much matter there is in total will determine the ultimate fate of
    the Universe," said Dr Pettini. If there is more than about four atoms
    per cubic yard, that matter will create enough gravity to stop the
    Universe from expanding as it is now. Having stopped expanding, it
    would then start contracting towards a "Big Crunch" and astronomers
    would be able to predict when that would happen.
7.557IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:3281
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Splitting heirs: peers to untangle Lord Moynihan's exotic legacy
    
    By Sandra Barwick 

    IN a scene worthy of a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta, the House of
    Lords Committee for Privileges will meet later this month to identify
    the successor to the third Lord Moynihan, a brothel owner in the
    Philippines.

    The committee is likely to be asked to consider whether barring a child
    from a barony because of his illegitimacy is a breach of the European
    Convention on Human Rights. Whether DNA evidence of illegitimacy can
    prevent a child from inheriting a title is also to be considered for
    the first time in the House of Lords.

    There are three potential successors to the disputed title. The first,
    and most likely to succeed, is Colin Moynihan, 41, the former
    Conservative minister who is the younger son of the second Lord
    Moynihan. The other two candidates are both children resident in the
    Philippines.

    One is Andrew Moynihan, seven, son of the peer's fourth marriage, to
    Eduarda, whom their lordships must rule out in order to let Colin
    succeed. The other is Daniel Moynihan, six, a son from the third Lord's
    fifth, and bigamous, marriage to Jinna Sabiaga,

    The Legitimacy Act, which gives an illegitimate child some rights of
    inheritance, specifically excludes the right to inherit a title. Though
    DNA evidence suggests Andrew is not Lord Moynihan's son, he was born to
    Eduarda, Lady Moynihan, while she was lawfully married to the peer. As
    such, he would be assumed in law to be legitimate until proved
    otherwise.

    Their Lordships must decide whether they accept DNA tests as sufficient
    to exclude a child born of a peer's marriage, possibly through
    fertility treatment carried out with the peer's consent. The
    circumstances surrounding Andrew's conception are, to the say the
    least, complex. The third Lord's sperm count was so low at the time
    that it was nearly non-existent.

    Andrew was born after Eduarda had IVF treatment, at the fraudster
    peer's wish, in a fertility clinic in Los Angeles. It is not clear
    whether other sperm was mixed with Lord Moynihan's at the time. Lord
    Moynihan later appeared to renounce the boy, claiming to an English
    divorce court that he was dead, in order to speed his marriage to
    Jinna, who was pregnant with a boy.

    Before his death he left blood samples behind, apparently in case
    Andrew mounted a claim to the title. Eduarda, Lady Moynihan, said after
    the court case in July last year, and in the light of DNA tests, that
    she was happy for Colin to succeed to the title.

    However, Eduarda Moynihan's opinion of Andrew's legitimacy is not
    likely to affect the case. Lord Mansfield ruled in 1777 that the
    declaration of a father or mother cannot be admitted to bastardise
    issue born after marriage.

    So far, only Colin Moynihan has petitioned the committee to succeed to
    the title. Jinna Moynihan has been taking legal advice on the question
    of whether the European Convention on Human Rights could aid her son to
    succeed despite his illegitimacy.

    So far, she has not petitioned the committee on his behalf.

    Should she do so, it is likely that DNA samples from Daniel would also
    be requested in the light of Lord Moynihan's past infertility.

    Twenty peers, some hereditary and some life peers, are to consider the
    issue in a public hearing. Eduarda, Lady Moynihan is still disputing in
    the courts in the Philippines her right to her husband's inheritance
    with Jinna Moynihan. His estate in Britain is thought to have been
    entirely consumed in legal fees arising from last summer's court case.

    Colin Moynihan has repeatedly said that his only aim is to see the
    succession settled so that his future is clear. A seat in the House of
    Lords might see him return to politics from that chamber. With his wife
    Gaynor-Louise, he has two sons. After hearing evidence, the Committee
    for Privileges will advise the Queen through the House of Lords whether
    to accept his petition.
7.558IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:3328
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Trafalgar Square is sealed off in gun scare 
    
    By A J McIlroy 

    TRAFALGAR SQUARE was sealed off for nearly six hours yesterday while
    armed police surrounded a man reportedly carrying a pistol.

    A woman had flagged down a police car at 1.45am after spotting the man
    on one of the square's lion statues, apparently holding a gun. Scotland
    Yard said trained negotiators were unable to get a word out of him for
    four hours. He was a white man, and he sat in silence, his anorak hood
    pulled over his head, a spokesman said.

    At 5.45am he began to talk, but he refused to throw down what police
    still believed to be a gun. It was not until 7am that the hooded figure
    was persuaded to climb down from the lion. Officers established that
    what had appeared to be a weapon was a cigarette lighter shaped like a
    pistol. 

    "Obviously, whenever we have reports that someone has a gun we have to
    take them very seriously," a police spokesman said. "We took this man
    to Charing Cross police station where he is still refusing to say why
    he climbed on to the statue and why he let us believe that he was
    armed."

    Police said later that a 21-year-old man was being questioned.
7.559IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:3446
7.560IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:3531
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Aerial setback for Channel 5
    
    By Robert Uhlig, Technology Correspondent 

    MILLIONS of television viewers will need to change their aerials to
    receive Channel 5 programmes and many others will receive poor pictures
    or miss out, test transmissions have shown.

    Britain's fifth terrestrial channel has been conducting tests to find
    out how many homes still need their equipment re-tuned before
    broadcasts start on March 30. The tests by NTL, which operates ITV,
    Channel 4 and Channel 5 transmitters, have determined that tens of
    thousands of homes in the London area alone require re-tuning.

    Yet according to the terms of its licence, Channel 5 must re-tune 90
    per cent of homes that can receive the service before it can begin
    broadcasts.

    Peter Kemble, head of the Channel 5 project team at NTL, said:
    "Existing aerials were intended to go up to channel 34 only. The
    response above that tails off dramatically. Many people will need to
    change their aerial even though they have been re-tuned. It's
    impossible to know how many, but it will be a lot."

    Industry estimates have put the number of households that will require
    new equipment to receive the channel at up to five million. Some areas
    will not be able to receive C5 at all either because broadcasts will
    clash with continental stations or because transmitters will not be
    powerful enough.
7.561IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 10 1997 16:3679
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 10 February 1997 Issue 626

    Gore trips up on road to the White House
    
    By Hugo Gurdon in Washington 

    THERE are only four years of campaigning to go until the next American
    presidential election, and already Al Gore is getting that sinking
    feeling.

    The Vice-President, or Veep, as he is known, faced a jeering, booing
    crowd at the weekend during a characteristically wooden publicity stunt
    in America's heartland.

    Appearing with the Russian Prime Minister, Viktor Chernomyrdin, at a
    motor show in Chicago, Mr Gore - widely credited with as much charisma
    as a lamp post - found his speech barracked with shouts of "Refund!
    Refund". 

    "We apologise for being late," said Mr Gore sheepishly over the din,
    before handing the microphone to Mr Chernomyrdin.

    If Mr Gore thought he recognised the chill finger of political death
    feeling his collar, it is hardly surprising. The incident was eerily
    similar to one in New York eight years ago when the Veep was running
    for the Democratic nomination to take on George Bush. Then, he waited
    at a subway exit to shake hands with rush-hour commuters coming up the
    escalator. Predictably the burly Tennessean candidate became an
    obstruction and irritable office workers passed him not with friendly
    outstretched hands but with comments of "Huh! Great place to stand, Al"
    and "Move over, Al, you're in the way".

    The whole blush-making, campaign-quashing incident was lovingly
    replayed on local and national television and Mr Gore's presidential
    bid never recovered. He was dismissed as not the first country boy to
    arrive in New York with a million dollars to spend (on political
    advertising) and, after being promised a good time, leaving in shame
    and defeat.

    Turning up late at the Chicago motor show, and bringing with him a man
    who intended to make a speech in Russian, has turned into another
    inglorious moment in Mr Gore's political career.

    Chicago is called the Windy City not because of the weather but because
    the locals are talkative; and they quickly gave vent to their feelings
    about being kept waiting outside on Saturday during a howling prairie
    snow storm while Mr Gore and his dignitaries, whose aircraft had been
    delayed, were given a private tour.

    President Clinton has promised to do all he can to help Mr Gore to win
    the presidency in 2000 and thanked his vice-president several times by
    name during the State of the Union address last week.

    Cartoonists and pundits know that the 2000 presidential race has begun.
    Coverage of Mr Clinton's return to the White House for a second term
    has included several ironic cartoons - one showing Mr Gore beginning
    his first campaign speech before Mr Clinton had finished swearing his
    oath of office on the Capitol steps.

    Mr Gore - who has a passion for technical details of policy and is an
    extreme environmentalist of the "tree hugging" variety - accepts that
    he will never be a jazzy character or stirring orator. But he has
    cannily sought to make a virtue of woodenness. Recently he has been
    asking audiences whether they would like to see him do the Macarena, a
    fizzy Latin American dance. After standing motionless for a few
    moments, he asks them whether they would like to see him do it again.
    It was a pretty good joke once, but it has been repeated so often that
    it, too, is being taken as evidence of Mr Gore's leaden style.

    Despite this, and despite the weekend's blunder in Chicago, Mr Gore is
    certain to be a strong candidate in four years. He will have all the
    gravitas and public recognition that go with his present job, plus his
    present boss's support.

    After his public relations disaster with Mr Chernomyrdin, however,
    there will be many Democrats hoping fervently that someone with a dash
    of charisma - not to mention better timing - will step into the
    limelight before the presidential campaign clock ticks down too close
    to the end of the millennium.
7.562IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:15113
    AP 11-Feb-1997 1:02 EST   REF5500

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1997
   
    SIMPSON 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- O.J. Simpson was munching on a chili dog in a golf
    course bar and barely looking at the TV as a jury ordered him to pay
    $25 million in punitive damages. That's in addition to $8.5 million in
    compensatory damages awarded last week for the 1994 slashing deaths of
    his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Ronald Goldman. Ms. Simpson's
    estate, whose beneficiaries are her two children now living with
    Simpson, was allotted half the punitive damages. The other half goes to
    Goldman's estate, whose beneficiaries are his long-divorced parents. 
   
    SIMPSON-JURORS 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- The O.J. Simpson civil trial jurors say
    they carefully examined the evidence, deliberated with logic and
    compassion, and never let race influence their decision that Simpson is
    a killer. But the only black member, a woman in her 40s, said Simpson
    got a bad deal, police probably planted evidence and a real killer is
    probably on the loose. Jurors all said the most compelling pieces of
    evidence were the blood evidence and the photos of the Bruno Magli
    shoes. They also said Simpson could not be believed. 
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Space shuttle Discovery is scheduled to
    blast off early Tuesday with a crew of seven astronauts and new science
    instruments, recorders and other improved equipment for the Hubble
    Space Telescope. The near-infrared camera and two-dimensional
    spectrograph to be installed by Discovery's spacewalking crew should
    allow Hubble to see even farther into the depths of the universe and
    with greater detail. 
   
    ECUADOR-PRESIDENTS 

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Ecuador's new president has accepted Congress'
    authority to replace her with an interim president, her advisers say.
    Rosalia Arteaga earlier had challenged the terms of her emergency
    appointment, insisting she would step down only when the constitution
    is amended. The crisis threatened to deepen the country's political
    instability. Arteaga ascended from Ecuador's vice presidency to the top
    position after Congress dismissed President Abdala Bucaram for "mental
    incapacity." 
   
    ADELPHI 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The state Board of Regents has removed 18 out of 19
    members of the Adelphi University's board of trustees, including
    university president Peter Diamandopoulos. Regents chancellor Carl T.
    Hayden announced that the search committee has found 18 successors.
    Diamandopoulos stays on as president, at least for now. The regents
    were acting on a petition of a faculty-led Committee to Save Adelphi
    that sought to oust all 19 of the university's trustees. 
   
    ARMY-SEX HARASSMENT 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Army suspended its top-ranking enlisted soldier
    after the woman who accused him of sexual misconduct publicly
    complained of a "different system of justice" for the service's upper
    tier. Publicity about Sergeant Major of the Army Gene C. McKinney made
    it difficult for him to do his job, the Army said. Meanwhile, a
    military official said the Army has begun investigating a second case
    involving McKinney and a female sailor. 
   
    CROWN HEIGHTS-SLAYING 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A black man acquitted by a state jury of murdering a
    Jewish scholar during a 1991 riot in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, was
    convicted in federal court of violating the victim's civil rights.
    Lemrick Nelson Jr., 21, cried as he heard the verdict that will likely
    bring him 6 to 20 years in prison. Also found guilty was another black
    man, Charles Price, 43, who was accused of inciting a black mob to "get
    Jews." 
   
    ESPY AWARDS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Comedian Bill Cosby, in his first live TV appearance
    since his son was killed, honored baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson
    during the ESPY awards show. Former heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali,
    slowed by Parkinson's Syndrome, was given the Arthur Ashe Award for
    Courage. The ESPN cable network show also celebrated memorable sports
    moments of the past year like Ohio State's last-minute Rose Bowl
    victory. 
   
    LENDING SURVEY 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Many lenders wary about mounting consumer debt are
    toughening standards for credit cards and other unsecured loans, and a
    few are promoting home equity borrowing instead, the Federal Reserve
    says. The banks' responses to a poll were reported in a quarterly
    survey of senior loan officers at institutions representing roughly 40
    percent of the commercial banking business. 
   
    MARKETS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Dow industrials fell 49.26 to 6,806.54. NYSE
    decliners led advancers 1,344-1,132. The Nasdaq was at 1,335.39, down
    22.32. 
   
    PARCELLS-JETS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bill Parcells can take over as coach of the New York
    Jets immediately. In their deal, his former team, the New England
    Patriots, will get New York's first-round draft pick in 1999, the Jets'
    second-round pick in 1998 and their third- and fourth-round picks this
    year. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.563IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1585
    RTw  10-Feb-97 20:14    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    VLORE, Albania - Two people died when demonstrators battled riot police
    in the Albanian port of Vlore, pinning them down in the main police
    station. A duty nurse at Vlore hospital said a 30-year-old demonstrator
    had been shot and died after an operation. The second victim, a man of
    51, died of heart failure before reaching hospital. 

    - - - - 

    SARAJEVO - Bosnian authorities imposed a curfew in the divided city of
    Mostar after one person was killed and 22 were wounded in ethnic
    violence in which Bosnian Croats fired shots towards Moslem pilgrims
    trying to visit a local cemetery. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Britain threw its weight behind 20,000 protesting Belgrade
    students who kept up pressure on Serbia's authoritarian President
    Slobodan Milosevic as parliament prepared to reinstate opposition
    election gains. The official news agency Tanjug reported that a
    parliamentary legislative committee had approved a draft law
    recognising the disputed poll results ahead of Tuesday's vote. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - Chinese authorities have imposed a curfew on a town in the
    restive northwestern Xinjiang region after at least 10 people were
    killed in a separatist Moslem riot last week, officials and local
    residents said. 

    - - - - 

    QUITO - Ecuador faced new political uncertainty because interim
    President Rosalia Arteaga raised doubts about a military-backed deal to
    hand over power to the head of Congress as early as Tuesday. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - An explosion followed by several gunshots were heard at the back
    of the besieged Japanese ambassador's residence in Peru., witnesses
    said. Earlier, the Peruvian Marxist rebels holding 72 hostages in the
    residence confirmed they were prepared to restart face-to-face talks
    with the government on Tuesday. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - An opposition strike call closed down much of Zaire's
    capital Kinshasa, drawing far wider support than the last such protest
    in 1995. The main opposition Sacred Union of the Radical Opposition
    (USOR) of Etienne Tshisekedi called the protest to demand the removal
    of Prime Minister Kengo wa Dondo. 

    - - - - 

    BUKAVU, Zaire - Zairean rebels advanced on three fronts towards a
    heavily fortified eastern airport and army base at Kindu, a senior
    rebel official said. 

    - - - - 

    MADRID - Basque ETA separatists struck twice in Spain, killing a
    Supreme Court judge and an airbase worker in attacks aimed at taking
    deadly revenge for the recent jailing of leaders of ETA's political
    wing, officials said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. economy's nearly six-year expansion shows no
    signs of slowing down, with the country well placed to enjoy continued
    low unemployment and low inflation, the White House said. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - Italy's highest court ruled that a military court should hear
    the war crimes re-trial of former Nazi SS captain Erich Priebke.
    Priebke, 83, is accused of complicity in multiple murder for his role
    in the massacre of 335 men and boys at the Ardeatine Caves near Rome on
    March 24, 1944. 

    REUTER
7.564IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1529
    AP 11-Feb-1997 0:02 EST   REF5372

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New York Removes Georgia Flag

    ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- Georgia's state flag was removed from New York's
    Capitol Monday after some lawmakers complained that the Confederate
    symbol emblazoned on it is offensive. 

    In a brief ceremony, Republican Gov. George Pataki said the flag
    contained a "symbol of hatred" for all Americans. He watched as
    Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry, chairman of the state's Black and Puerto
    Rican Legislative Caucus, climbed a ladder in the cavernous Hall of
    Flags and took it down. 

    For about 20 years the Georgia flag had hung about 100 feet away from
    the governor's office at the Capitol, but it went largely unnoticed
    until recent renovations that made the Hall of Flags more accessible. 

    Black lawmakers complained to the governor last week that they wanted
    to flag removed. 

    Georgia Gov. Zell Miller, a Democrat, mounted a push to get the
    Confederate symbol removed from the state flag in 1993 but lawmakers
    blocked the move, his press secretary said Monday. 

    New York will review the hall's other 12 colonial flags to see if they
    contain anything that might be deemed inappropriate. 
7.565IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1537
    AP 11-Feb-1997 0:00 EST   REF5345

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    L.A. Schools Reject Ebonics

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The school board on Monday rejected motions to
    accept ebonics as part of its curriculum after black and Hispanic
    groups said racism was one of the driving forces behind bringing black
    English to the nation's second-largest school district. 

    Board member Barbara Boudreaux said she was "somewhat disappointed" in
    the vote, but promised to make sure that programs in Los Angeles are
    expanded to help all children master standard English. 

    Last month, Boudreaux introduced motions to train all teachers to
    understand ebonics, or black English, and provide better teaching
    methods to help students learn mainstream English. 

    Her draft resolution would have made the district acknowledge ebonics
    -- the combination of the words "ebony" and "phonics" first coined in
    1973 to describe black speech patterns -- as a distinct language. 

    The district's teachers also would have had to spend up to 18 hours
    learning ebonics, and would have had to treat ebonics-speaking children
    as if they spoke a distinctly different language, like Spanish. 

    After the motions were voted down, a substitute motion to review the
    district's language programs was approved. 

    Two months ago, ebonics was thrust into the national spotlight after
    the Oakland Unified School District approved a proposal to declare
    distinctive black speech patterns a separate language and to teach
    students in that language when necessary. 

    Ebonics was "the worst thing that can possibly happen to black people,"
    said the Rev. Jessie Lee Peterson. 
7.566IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1531
    AP 10-Feb-1997 23:28 EST   REF5275

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rev. Jesse Jackson Arrested

    CHICAGO (AP) -- The Rev. Jesse Jackson was arrested Monday during a
    protest against a white-owned construction company that is a member of
    his own civil rights coalition. 

    Jackson was charged with disorderly conduct after he and a group of
    protesters tried to block access to a construction site at the Museum
    of Science and Industry. Two other people were arrested, police said. 

    Jackson was protesting a decision by Paul H. Schwendener Inc., the
    general contractor working on an underground parking garage, to
    terminate its subcontract with Carter's Excavating & Grading, a black
    trucking company. 

    Schwendener denied a racial motive in terminating the contract. It said
    Carter's failed to fulfill its contract, including failing to get
    required government permits for dumping. 

    Jackson, president of the Rainbow-PUSH Coalition, turned down an offer
    to be released Monday night. "I am conscientiously acting in a civil
    disobedient manner," Jackson told the judge. "It allows working people
    a chance to be heard." 

    Schwendener said his company is a business member of the Rainbow-PUSH
    coalition and said it strongly supports minority and female
    participation. 
7.567IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1556
    AP 10-Feb-1997 22:49 EST   REF5097

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ten Commandments Flap in Alabama

    By JESSICA SAUNDERS

    Associated Press Writer

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -- An Alabama judge was ordered Monday to modify
    or remove a plaque of the Ten Commandments from his courtroom, a
    religious display Gov. Fob James has promised to defend with force if
    necessary. 

    The wooden display hung by Etowah County Circuit Judge Roy Moore was
    "purely religious," decided Montgomery County Circuit Judge Charles
    Price, who changed his mind after viewing the display for himself. 

    Moore "has unequivocally stated that the plaques are not in the
    courtroom for a historical, judicial or educational purpose, but
    rather, and clearly to promote religion," wrote Price, who previously
    said the plaque could remain. 

    The plaque, which Moore made himself, violates the U.S. and Alabama
    constitutions, but it can remain if Moore adds nonreligious items to
    create a larger display, Price said -- otherwise, it must come down. 

    Price gave Moore 10 days to comply. Attorney General Bill Pryor, who is
    representing the state, said the ruling would be appealed. 

    "I think this shows poor judging on Judge Price's behalf," said Dean
    Young, executive director of the Christian Family Association. 

    The American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, which sued Moore over
    the plaque and his habit of opening courtroom sessions with a prayer,
    called the ruling "a major victory for the Constitution and the rule of
    law." 

    However, the governor, a staunch ally of Moore, vowed again Monday to
    use state troopers and the National Guard to prevent the plaque's
    removal. 

    Price earlier ordered Moore to stop opening his court sessions with
    prayers, a decision Moore is appealing to the Alabama Supreme Court.
    The justices last week allowed the prayers to continue while they
    decide. 

    Price noted that he had been deluged with calls and letters from people
    urging him to "save the Ten Commandments," but he wrote the Old
    Testament laws "are not in peril." 

    "They may be displayed in every church, synagogue, temple, mosque, home
    and storefront. They may be displayed in cars, on lawns and in
    corporate boardrooms," he said. "Where this precious gift cannot and
    should not be displayed ... is on government property." 
7.568IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:15129
    AP 10-Feb-1997 22:15 EST   REF5037

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Air Force Halts Training Flights

    By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER

    AP Military Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Air Force suspended all training flights over
    the Gulf of Mexico and the East Coast on Monday after two new reports
    of close encounters between F-16s and commercial aircraft over New
    Mexico and Texas. 

    Both of the close encounters occurred on Friday, Air Force officials
    said. 

    The latest reports bring to four the number of incidents that occurred
    over a three-day period last week between the highly maneuverable
    fighter jets and passenger airliners. 

    Air Force officials were at a loss to explain why the rash of incidents
    had occurred, but the publicity has focused attention on a situation of
    which most people are probably unaware -- that such so-called
    deviations from assigned flight plans occur often, including more than
    1,200 times last year. 

    Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation Administration and the National
    Transportation Safety Board have all four incidents under
    investigation. 

    The two new cases are in addition to incidents off the coast of
    Maryland on Friday and off New Jersey on Wednesday. 

    Late Friday, Air Force Chief of Staff Ronald Fogleman suspended all
    training missions along the East Coast and extended that ban on Monday
    to include the Gulf of Mexico. 

    The incident over New Mexico involved two F-16s and an American
    Airlines passenger jet that came too close near Clovis, N.M., said Air
    Force spokesman Capt. Leo Devine. At 2:37 p.m. EST, two F-16 fighters
    flew out of a military training area without authorization. 

    The military aircraft had just left a military operations area at the
    time of the incident. 

    A collision warning was triggered aboard an American jetliner, which
    was en route from Dallas-Fort Worth to Palm Springs, Calif. The pilot
    of the McDonnell Douglas Super 80 descended to avoid going close to the
    military planes. The aircraft carries about 150 passengers, but it
    wasn't clear how many were on board. 

    American Airlines spokesman John Hotard said the warning told the pilot
    to descend. "He notified air traffic control. They told him he could
    climb back up," Hotard said. 

    "This descent was such that the passengers in the back probably didn't
    even know it. The cockpit crew did see two F-16s. This was not what you
    would call a near miss or anything," he said. 

    The planes were about 3 1/2 miles from the airliner and flying within
    300 feet of the airliner's altitude at the time, authorities said.
    Regulations call for a separation of five miles horizontally and 1,000
    feet vertically. Only one of the F-16s was considered to have violated
    the FAA regulations, said Sgt. Gayle Ornong, a spokeswoman at Cannon
    Air Force Base, where the planes are based. 

    The second incident involved one F-16 and a Northwest Airlines Airbus,
    said Air Force spokeswoman Lt. Col. Virginia Pribyla. It occurred about
    70 miles southwest of Palacios, Texas, at 4:47 p.m. EST.

    The F-16 climbed above its assigned altitude over Texas, coming within
    4.6 miles horizontally and 300 feet vertically of the Airbus, which was
    flying at 33,000 feet. The limits at that altitude are supposed to be
    five miles and 2,000 feet. 

    The Northwest plane was en route from Mexico City to Detroit. 

    Northwest spokeswoman Marta Laughlin said the Northwest pilots had the
    F-16 in visual sight the entire time and were never concerned. 

    "There was never any point where there was any danger to either
    aircraft. Our pilots were not required to file a report and they did
    not," Laughlin said. 

    A government aviation source said deviations from assigned flight plans
    occured more than 1,200 times last year and air traffic controllers
    usually advise pilots and have them correct their position.

    The Air Force, in a statement issued at the Pentagon, said training
    operations will be suspended over the East and Gulf Coasts "until all
    units review procedures," expected to be completed by Tuesday. 

    David Stempler, a former executive director of the International
    Airline Passengers Association, said he sees "no reason why military
    and civilian planes have to share the same air space." 

    Stempler, who is an aviation attorney, also said he believed the
    incidents reveal that military aircraft have been wont to practice
    their intercepting techniques with commercial aircraft. 

    "They have been doing this all along, but they've just never been
    caught," Stempler said. 

    The attorney said the military has a right and duty to conduct its
    exercises, but the country has enough air space for both commercial and
    military uses. 

    "They are putting people at risk and it must stop," Stempler said. 

    A senior military aviator said the rash of incidents may well be due to
    the increase of air traffic since deregulation of the airlines, as well
    as improvements in radar in recent years that have increased the
    "fidelity" of tracking capabilities, allowing more incidents to be
    documented and reported. 

    "It's been going on for years," the military pilot said of the
    encounters. He also cited the fact that there are fewer former military
    pilots now flying for the commercial airlines, and less of a tendency
    for the FAA to forgive any missteps by the military. 

    "There used to be more of a fraternal brotherhood in the air," the
    pilot said. He contended the brotherhood has been eroded in recent
    years due to additional pressure being placed on air traffic
    controllers. 

    "Everybody is just much less flexible today," said the officer, who
    spoke on condition of anonymity. 
7.569IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:15104
    AP 10-Feb-1997 22:05 EST   REF5836

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Sgt. Maj. Suspended in Sex Probe

    By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER

    AP Military Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Army suspended its top-ranking enlisted soldier
    Monday after the woman who accused him of sexual misconduct publicly
    complained of a "different system of justice" for the service's upper
    tier. 

    In explaining its decision, the Army said publicity about the
    allegations against Sergeant Major of the Army Gene C. McKinney made it
    difficult for him to perform his job. 

    Meanwhile, a military official said the Army has begun investigating a
    second case involving McKinney and a female sailor. The woman reported
    an allegation of harassment by McKinney to her supervisor, who then
    reported it to the Army, said the source, who spoke on condition of
    anonymity. 

    "We don't know if there's anything to it. It's being investigated,"
    said the military source. 

    A second military source, also speaking privately, confirmed that an
    incident involving a Navy sailor is being investigated. The sailor is
    on active duty and wants no publicity regarding her allegations, said
    the military officer. 

    "The Army Criminal Investigation Division has it," said the military
    officer, confirming that the Army's investigators were looking into the
    sailor's allegations against McKinney. 

    On Sunday, Army Secretary Togo West had argued the case for letting
    McKinney continue in his duties, although West said the issue was not
    fully settled. 

    On Monday, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Dennis Reimer issued a statement
    saying McKinney -- his senior enlisted adviser -- had been assigned to
    the Military District of Washington "pending resolution of the
    allegations." 

    The step was taken one day after the accusing woman, retired Sgt. Maj.
    Brenda Hoster, and two senators said in television interviews that
    McKinney should be suspended until the charges against him are
    resolved. 

    Hoster, who had worked on McKinney's staff, last week publicly accused
    him of having asked her for sex, grabbed her and kissed her in a hotel
    room in Hawaii last April during a business trip. McKinney denied the
    accusation. 

    The two senators, Republicans Olympia J. Snowe of Maine and Rick
    Santorum of Pennsylvania, said it was not enough that the Army had
    removed McKinney from a panel that is reviewing the Army's policies
    against sexual harassment. They said it was unjust that Army drill
    sergeants were suspended immediately after they were accused of sexual
    misconduct but that McKinney was allowed to stay on. 

    "Certainly, everybody should be treated the same," Ms. Snowe said. "If
    they're facing charges, they should be placed under suspension." 

    In her TV appearance Sunday, Ms. Hoster complained about what she said
    was the Army's unequal treatment of McKinney and the drill sergeants at
    Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. 

    "It seems like people in a higher position and at a different level are
    exempt from those kinds of things because the sergeant major of the
    Army is still performing his duties," Ms. Hoster said. "I don't
    understand why he gets a different system of justice." 

    In his announcement Monday, Reimer said the decision to suspend
    McKinney was taken "in the best interest of the individual and the
    institution because continued public attention made it increasingly
    difficult for McKinney to fulfill his responsibilities." 

    At the White House, spokesman Mike McCurry declined to comment on the
    McKinney case. He said President Clinton was "fully supportive" of the
    Army's stated policy of zero tolerance toward sexual harassment. 

    McKinney, the first black man to serve in the influential post, has
    been the senior enlisted adviser to the chief of staff of the Army
    since June 30, 1995. 

    The post is considered one of the most prestigious in the service,
    since it represents the vast majority of all soldiers at the highest
    levels of the Army. Only 10 men have held the job, which is considered
    one for a role model. 

    The McKinney case has shaken the Army, coming on the heels of a series
    of rape and harassment allegations that emerged last fall at Aberdeen
    Proving Ground. 

    "The Army is aggressively taking all necessary measures to eliminate
    sexual harassment and improve the Army's ability to work effectively as
    a team, in a manner compatible with traditional values, equal
    opportunity and mutual respect," Reimer said. 

    The McKinney case is being investigated by the Army's Criminal
    Investigation Command.  
7.570IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1547
    AP 10-Feb-1997 22:02 EST   REF5833

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Army-Germany Sex Flap Report

    BONN, Germany (AP) -- U.S. Army investigators are looking into
    allegations that three male instructors at an Army training center in
    Darmstadt sexually assaulted or harassed female students, a newspaper
    reported Monday. 

    The Stars and Stripes, the unofficial U.S. military newspaper, said
    authorities are looking into allegations of rape, sodomy, cruelty and
    maltreatment of subordinates. 

    The Army instructors, who were not identified, have been removed from
    their jobs at training center in Darmstadt, the newspaper reported. 

    The training center is a two-week school attended by soldiers assigned
    to the 233rd Base Support Battalion in Darmstadt, south of Frankfurt,
    or from attached units. The school has about 30 students at a time and
    instructors are usually non-commissioned officers, Stars and Stripes
    reported. 

    The newspaper said it learned of the allegations from Darmstadt
    military police documents. 

    Two women students claimed that on Dec. 27 they were drinking at a
    military club and agreed to go with two instructors to another club.
    Instead, the four went to the barracks room of one of the instructors. 

    The two students drank with the instructors. One of the women said she
    was tired and went to sleep. The other woman had consensual sex with
    one of the instructors. That woman has accused the instructor of
    sodomizing her despite her objections. 

    The other woman awoke later and found herself naked with the other
    instructor on top of her "engaging in sexual intercourse." That woman
    also alleged she was forcibly sodomized. 

    The report comes as the U.S. military has been rocked by sex-abuse
    scandals. This month in Washington, a retired female sergeant major
    accused Army Sgt. Maj. Gene C. McKinney of sexual assault and
    harassment. 

    McKinney, the Army's top enlisted man, was appointed in November to a
    panel studying sexual misconduct complaints. 
7.571IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1557
    AP 10-Feb-1997 21:59 EST   REF5828

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Artist's Rendering Is Junk

    By JAY REEVES

    Associated Press Writer

    BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- Art experts say the open-air gallery in folk
    artist Lonnie Holley's hillside yard is worth $500,000, but a real
    estate commission decided Monday that his sculptures and other works
    fashioned from junkyard scraps are nothing more than, well, junk. 

    Holley, who transforms items as commonplace as animal skulls and scraps
    of plastic into museum-quality art, was offered $14,000 for the land
    and his ramshackle house, which may be condemned to make way for an
    expansion at Birmingham International Airport. 

    He wants at least $250,000 for the immovable trash-to-treasure pieces
    that adorn his quarter-acre lot. But a condemnation appeal commission
    ruled that his art works are basically rubbish, not worthy of
    compensation. 

    Much of the art is supported by trees and fences on a hill overlooking
    a newly extended runway, and will be destroyed when the airport
    bulldozes the hill to comply with federal regulations. 

    Now a probate judge must review the decision and set the land price,
    which Holley can appeal. 

    Holley's creations sell for thousands of dollars and his work has been
    displayed at galleries and museums including the Smithsonian
    Institution, as well as in the White House. 

    But some observers believe his greatest work is his land, which is
    dotted with hundreds of paintings and sculptures, many of which can't
    be moved. 

    An expert who testified for Holley at a commission hearing last week
    said forcing him to move would destroy artwork worth $500,000. 

    The director of the Birmingham Museum of Art called the ruling a "real
    tragedy" and said she knew plenty of people who would help Holley move. 

    "We can galvanize volunteers," said Gail Trechsel, a longtime friend of
    Holley. "But what can he buy for $14,000?" 

    Holley could not be reached by telephone for comment. His attorney, Joe
    Strickland, did not immediately return a phone call. 

    Bob Jones, a lawyer for the airport authority, said Holley could
    receive federal funds available to help people forced to relocate. 

    "In this case we have a little unique situation," Jones said. "I think
    the airport authority would be willing to help him within reason." 
7.572IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1526
    AP 10-Feb-1997 23:29 EST   REF5298

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cuban Train Crash Kills 13

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- A passenger train crashed into a locomotive in
    eastern Cuba on Monday, killing at least 13 people and seriously
    injuring 65, a news agency reported. 

    The Mexican government news agency Notimex quoted the Cuban Interior
    Ministry as saying the crash occurred outside the village of Caguasal,
    280 miles east of Havana, the Cuban capital. 

    The train, headed from Santiago to Havana, was carrying a large number
    of conscripts doing their military service, the report quoted Cuban
    state television as saying. The train crashed into a locomotive
    belonging to the sugar ministry. 

    No further details were available. 

    The report, monitored in Mexico City, said firefighters, army troops,
    police and civilian volunteers rushed to the scene to aid survivors. 

    Train derailments and other accidents are common in Cuba's state-owned
    railroad network, which is antiquated and in disrepair.
7.573IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1527
    AP 10-Feb-1997 22:54 EST   REF5121

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man's Fall Broken by Cafe Sitter

    TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -- A man trying to jump to his death landed on a
    cafe patron, breaking that man's back but suffering only minor injuries
    himself, according to reports Monday. 

    "We were drinking, eating, laughing -- and suddenly someone fell onto
    me from above," Max Dadashvili, 26, told the Yediot Ahronot newspaper.
    "I fell back with my chair, got a tough blow in the back and lost
    consciousness." 

    The 72-year-old Tel Aviv resident jumped headfirst from the third floor
    of a shopping mall Saturday night, the newspaper said. He suffered only
    a light injury to his head, got up and was about to walk away when
    Dadashvili's friends stopped him, the report said. 

    Police were considering possible charges against the jumper. 

    Dadashvili reportedly fractured several vertebrae in his neck and back,
    but was not paralyzed. 

    "I am not angry at him, (but) I can't understand my rotten luck," he
    told the newspaper. 
7.574IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1541
    AP 10-Feb-1997 22:40 EST   REF5066

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    German Entertainer in Racial Flap

    BERLIN (AP) -- Berlin authorities said Monday they are looking into
    allegations that one of Germany's most popular entertainers made racial
    insults toward a black hotel employee in California. 

    The newspaper Bild am Sonntag reported that actor Harald Juhnke told a
    security guard last week at Hollywood's Mondrian Hotel: "You filthy
    nigger. Hitler was right. The likes of you should have been gassed
    before." 

    The 67-year-old Juhnke has a huge following in Germany, but his image
    has been badly damaged by his reportedly drunken and hostile behavior
    during the hotel visit. 

    Three German television stations said Monday they are suspending all
    projects with Juhnke. A number of German politicians said his behavior
    was inexcusable; one called for a boycott of Juhnke. 

    At the hotel on Feb. 2, according to Bild am Sonntag, a drunken Juhnke
    harassed customers at the bar, swore at a waitress, was thrown out of
    the bar and a chased a woman through the lobby. Hotel security guard
    Robert Ferrell grabbed Juhnke to keep him from shoving the woman, the
    paper said. 

    "When Juhnke noticed that Ferrell was black, he completely lost
    control" and made the racist insult, the newspaper said. 

    Ruediger Reiff, spokeswoman for the Berlin prosecutor's office, said
    prosecutors are examining the accusations. 

    Juhnke, now in the Dominican Republic, faxed a letter to a Berlin
    newspaper saying he does not remember much because he was drunk. 

    "Whoever knows me, knows I am anything but a racist. If I have injured
    someone's honor, I ask for forgiveness with deepest regret," Juhnke
    wrote. 
7.575IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1566
    AP 10-Feb-1997 19:47 EST   REF5769

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Probes HIV Immune Response

    By ELIAS WOLFBERG

    Associated Press Writer

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- In a study that could have implications for AIDS
    research, Israeli scientists have discovered an enzyme that plays a key
    role in activating the body's immune system. 

    The study on their work was published this week in the British journal
    Nature. 

    Researchers at the Weizmann Institute found that an enzyme called NIK
    is a catalyst in triggering the body's immune responses in ways that
    can be harmful in people with HIV or autoimmune diseases such as
    multiple sclerosis or juvenile diabetes. 

    In theory, drugs that block NIK's effects could be developed to inhibit
    the development of HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS -- as well as
    unwanted immune responses in people with autoimmune diseases. 

    Scientists discovered earlier that a protein called NF kappa B -- which
    exists within every cell -- "switches on" specific genes responsible
    for fighting infection and disease. 

    In certain cases of HIV infection, the virus accelerates its
    reproduction when it "senses" the activation of the NF kappa B. 

    Dr. David Wallach and his colleagues at the Weizmann Institute found
    that it is the NIK enzyme that tells the NF kappa B protein to activate
    the disease-fighting genes. 

    Usually the immune responses triggered by the NF kappa B are helpful.
    But in the case of autoimmune diseases, where the body attacks itself,
    or in HIV, they become destructive. 

    Researchers hope that by suppressing NIK, they might be able to stop
    HIV from replicating itself and stop, or at least slow, the development
    of AIDS. In some cases there might be benefits to boosting NIK activity
    to fight other diseases. 

    "What we have done now is identify the critical molecule," Wallach
    said. "Now others, and maybe us with them, can develop a drug that
    suppresses the immune responses without causing unwanted side effects."

    While the isolation of NIK has stirred interest within the medical
    community, the application of the findings, especially in regards to
    HIV, is only theoretical. 

    According to Dr. Zvi Bentwich, head of the AIDS center at the Kaplan
    Medical Center in Rehovot, it will take at least a year for a drug to
    be developed and for clinical tests to begin on patients. It could take
    several years for a drug to reach the market. 

    "The distance between the laboratory, the clinical study and a
    potential drug is very big," Bentwich said. "The principle is very
    attractive, but the distance from the application of this principle is
    still quite a long distance." 

    Wallach discovered the enzyme with help from doctoral students Nikolai
    Melinin, Mark Bodkin, and Andrei Koblenki. 
7.576IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1647
    RTw  11-Feb-97 03:56    

    Weak bridges could hit many UK firms -MPs' report

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 11 (Reuter) - The all-party Transport Committee of
    Britain's parliament on Tuesday published a highly critical report on
    road maintenance, saying that many firms will suffer soon because work
    on bridge strengthening is too slow. 

    "The overwhelming message from the evidence we have received is that
    spending on national and local road and bridge maintenance has been
    insufficient to maintain these important national assets in good
    condition," a committee report said. 

    The committee said the Transport Department itself estimated that 300
    million pounds a year needed to be spent on maintenance of trunk roads
    in England to keep their condition at present levels. Yet the
    provisional spending total for 1996/7 was just 250 million pounds. 

    In addition, the Transport Supplementary Grant which pays for major
    capital works, has been cut to 80 million pounds from 220 million in
    1993/4, and many local authorities are diverting funds for local road
    maintenance elsewhere, it said. 

    The report said that although maximum weight limits for goods vehicles
    were to be raised to 40 tonnes from 38 tonnes in 1999, the assessment
    and strengthening of Britain's road bridges to prepare for this was
    likely to take until at least 2005. 

    It said the Transport Department had assured the committee that
    temporary strengthening measures mean that 40-tonne vehicles will be
    able to use all trunk roads from 1999. 

    "This is unsatisfactory, and in any case leaves a large number of
    bridges on local roads which will not have been strengthened," its
    report said. 

    "If bridges are unable to cope with heavy lorries, they will have to be
    closed or weight-limited in some way. 

    "Such measures could isolate many businesses from the road network, and
    there are likely to be many instances where firms will suffer as a
    result." 

    REUTER
7.577IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1634
    RTw  11-Feb-97 01:53    

    Dole signs with sports agent Mark McCormack

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON, Feb 10 (Reuter) - Calling former Senate Majority Leader Bob
    Dole "one of the world's most-admired men," top sports agent Mark
    McCormark said Monday his agency would represent him. 

    McCormack is chairman, president and chief executive officer of IMG,
    which bills itself as the world's premier sports management and
    marketing agency. 

    He said he would represent Dole for literary, broadcasting,
    international speaking, commercial endorsements and other corporate
    relationships. 

    His other clients include golfer Tiger Woods, tennis player Andre
    Agassi and violinist Itzhak Perlman. 

    Dole has wasted no time cashing in with commercial appearances since
    his defeat in the 1996 presidential election. 

    Dole made a light-hearted appearance in a VISA checkcard commercial
    that debuted during the Super Bowl, as well as showing up on Jay Leno's
    "Tonight Show," "The Late Show with David Letterman," and Brooke
    Shields' NBC-TV sitcom "Suddenly Susan." 

    In addition to athletes, McCormack also represents top supermodels and
    has done work in the past for the Vatican, Pope John Paul II and former
    British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. 

    REUTER
7.578IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1676
    RTw  11-Feb-97 00:30    

    Trial gives insight into soccer lifestyle

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Helen Smith 

    WINCHESTER, England, Feb 11 (Reuter) - Former Wimbledon goalkeeper Hans
    Segers, on trial on match-rigging charges, has given an intriguing
    insight into the lifestyle of a soccer player. 

    Segers told on Monday of a life of extra-marital affairs, tax dodging
    and financial deals although he denies that he accepted bribes to throw
    matches in England's premier league. 

    He said he had told police a concocted tale that he made money from
    stealing and selling luxury cars, rather than have them discover he had
    been forecasting the outcome of soccer matches. 

    Although match-forecasting is not illegal, it contravenes English
    Football Association rules and the Dutchman said he feared being
    suspended. 

    "To come to play football in England was a dream come true and to put
    that in jeopardy..." Segers, 35, said. 

    Segers is on trial for match-rigging along with former Liverpool goalie
    Bruce Grobbelaar, former Aston Villa striker John Fashanu and a
    Malaysian businessman, Heng Suan Lim. 

    All deny the charges and say that they were merely forecasting the
    outcome of games for a group of wealthy Asian gamblers. 

    Segers said he had declined the offer to have a lawyer present when
    police interviewed him after his arrest last year, leaving his lawyer
    in court to unravel what he described as the "absolute rubbish" he had
    told police. 

    He said he had denied to police that he knew Fashanu well, even though
    Fashanu was Wimbledon's team captain when Segers was vice captain. 

    But Segers said he and Fashanu had been in constant telephone contact
    because they were covering for one another's extra-marital affairs and
    he didn't want his wife to find out about his infidelity. 

    Segers' wife already knew of an earlier affair and he feared he would
    lose his family. He has a daughter aged 11 and a son aged eight. 

    "I was booked (after the previous affair)," Segers said. "We managed to
    scrape through though and hang in there," he added, sounding, as on
    many occasions during his evidence, as if he were describing a soccer
    match. 

    Like other top class footballers, Segers earned a huge amount from his
    club. As well as his 1,000 pounds ($1,634) a week wages, he got an
    annual 30,000 pound signing-on fee and a 50,000 pound annual loyalty
    bonus. 

    Segers branched out into a business venture, manufacturing ties and
    scarves with a fellow Dutchman, and he said he was engaged in property
    speculation with Fashanu. 

    Segers said Fashanu, himself an extremely wealthy businessman, had
    introduced him to a bank where he could open a tax-evading Swiss
    account. 

    But the 100,000 pounds he paid in were the proceeds of his business
    ventures, not, as the prosecution alleges, bribes for throwing matches. 

    Fearing he would be caught for tax evasion, Segers had told police that
    the money in his Swiss account had been transferred from Jersey,
    another tax haven. But he decided to reveal all to the court to try to
    save himself a maximum seven-year prison sentence. 

    REUTER
7.579IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1630
    RTw  10-Feb-97 23:14    

    Sotheby's launches internal review after scandal

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 10 (Reuter) - The auctioneers Sotheby's on Monday launched
    an internal review of its practices after allegations that it smuggled
    art treasures from Italy to Britain. 

    Sotheby's European arm admitted last week that the law had been broken
    and suspended senior staff after a television report. 

    The programme unearthed evidence of Sotheby's Old Masters expert in
    Milan offering to smuggle a Giusseppe Nogari painting to Britain and
    apparently admitting it was illegal for the portrait to leave Italy. A
    Sotheby's employee in London is filmed being given the painting. 

    The Board of the world's oldest auction house announced after a meeting
    on Monday that it had "created a committee of Sotheby's independent
    directors." 

    "They will conduct an internal review of the firm's practices and
    review the firm's compliance and its strict code of conduct," the board
    said in a statement. 

    Sotheby's will also appoint a director of compliance who will lead a
    new department working with the internal audit department.

    REUTER
7.580IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1690
    RTos 10-Feb-97 22:14    

    Students Mass in Belgrade Streets Ahead of Vote

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BELGRADE (Reuter) - One day ahead of action by parliament to reinstate
    opposition election gains, 20,000 Belgrade students Monday continued to
    pressure Serbia's authoritarian President Slobodan Milosevic. 

    The official news agency Tanjug reported that a parliamentary
    legislative committee had approved a draft law recognising the disputed
    poll results ahead of Tuesday's vote. 

    Hours before thousands gathered in central Belgrade for 83rd opposition
    demonstrations, witnesses said at least 20,000 students took part in an
    eight-km (five-mile) march, blewing whistles and horns, beating drums
    and waving flags. 

    They vowed to keep up their daily rallies, now in their 12th week,
    until all demands for political reform were met. 

    "If tomorrow the protests were to stop they would not have been
    protests of tolerance, but of weakness," said Cedomir Jovanovic, a
    student organiser. 

    In yet another of their daily imaginative actions against the
    authorities, hundreds of deans and professors blocked the central
    administration office of the University of Belgrade. 

    They inundiated the secretariat by each submitting an individual
    official demand that the socialist-appointed diehard rector resign. 

    In more evidence of Western displeasure with Milosevic, British
    Ambassador to Yugoslavia Ivor Roberts visited the student leadership
    and handed them two personal computers. 

    "There is a democratic deficit in the region and without democracy we
    are not going to see a stable Serbia and a stable region. We... try to
    do what we can to rectify this problem. We will support the
    democratisation of Serbia," he said. 

    "The Gonzalez report is not just the return of the election results but
    is also about free media, democratisation in Serbia. It was very
    disappointing and unhelpful that it took weeks and weeks for Mr.
    Milosevic to launch his initiative." 

    Roberts was referring to Felipe Gonzales, the former Spanish prime
    minister who headed a mission by the Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe last December which endorsed Zajedno victories. 

    Roberts' show of support for the students was another blow to the
    beleaguered Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic who once basked in
    international support after the Dayton peace accord he helped engineer
    ended the war in Bosnia in December 1995. 

    Now the West has turned against the autocratic president. France hosted
    the three opposition Zajedno (Together) coalition last week prompting
    an outcry by the state media and the United States has snubbed its
    one-time reliable negotiating partner. 

    The parliament is expected Tuesday to swiftly approve the bill
    reinstating opposition gains in municipal elections last November as
    ruled by the OSCE mission. 

    Even if it does so, Zajedno and the students, sceptical of Milosevic's
    sincerity, plan to keep up their daily demonstrations at least until
    their mandates are officially verified in about 10 days time. 

    For weeks Milosevic ignored the rallies that routinely drew tens of
    thousands of people onto the streets. 

    Then nine days ago he ordered paramilitary police to clear central
    Belgrade, and in repeated baton charges scores of people were injured.
    But the action backfired as the West rose in condemnation and thousands
    of undaunted Zajedno supporters showed up again the next day. 

    The foremost casualty of the crackdown was the unity in the ranks of
    the police and his party, political sources said. 

    The bleak situation prompted Milosevic last Tuesday to cave in and
    order the parliament to reinstate the opposition's election successes
    in 14 towns and cities, including Belgrade. 

    Zajedno co-leader Zoran Djindjic said Milosevic had no intention of
    raising the white flag, but only of consolidating his strength and
    intending to further marginalise local councils by stripping them of
    their sources of revenue.

    REUTER
7.581IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 10:1694
    RTos 10-Feb-97 19:35    

    AOL Aims at Million Non-US Members in 1997

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    CANNES, France (Reuter) - America Online Inc said Monday it aimed to
    have more than a million members outside the United States in 1997 and
    expected Japan to become the second biggest Internet market. 

    "We were the first $1 billion interactive services company and we aim
    to be the first $2 billion company," AOL International President Jack
    Davies told Reuters during the MILIA multimedia fair that runs until
    Wednesday. 

    He said the aim of AOL studies was to become "platform independent" and
    make content that can be available on the AOL service, but also on the
    Internet or via digital television. 

    "This is a whole new medium, there are no rules," he said, 

    "Being realistic, looking at the European market we believe that the
    preferred method of access for interactive services for the foreseeable
    future is going to be PCs," he said, adding the company was doing
    research and had discussion with other kinds of access providers and
    aimed to be "a major player in that area as well." 

    At the moment subscription fees form the bulk of AOL income but Davies
    said the company was increasingly looking at advertising and
    transactions as revenue streams. 

    "The advertising world is looking for an audience and with our eight
    million subscribers we have the largest audience in cyberspace," he
    said. 

    "The World Wide Web is very fragmented. We believe that at AOL we
    generate more advertising revenue than the whole World Wide Web
    combined," he said. 

    In Europe, AOL is still building up its audience to get to a size that
    is interesting enough for advertising and he said that it would take
    two or three years before advertising in Europe became a substantial
    revenue source. 

    "Our goal is to have 10 million members (worldwide) at the end of this
    fiscal year (end June) and we are on our way to achieve this," he said. 

    "France has been a difficult market but clearly the biggest market is
    Germany, followed closely by the U.K. and Scandinavia. Fifteen months
    after the launch of our first European service we expect to pass the
    500,000 members in the next few weeks." 

    In Canada, AOL has 100,000 members and will launch a French-Canadian
    service in the spring. 

    "Our goal is to have a million members outside the U.S. by the end of
    September. We will be launching a Japanese service in the spring (with
    Mitsui and Nikkei) but that will not be a big contributor in 1997 while
    we do believe that Japan will become the second biggest national market
    after the U.S. within a matter of years," Davies said. America Online
    has 7.5 million U.S. members. 

    In Latin America, AOL is looking at Argentina, Brazil and Mexico for
    good local partners. Beyond that it is looking at Australia and some
    other Asian markets. 

    "In Germany we are reaching critical mass with 270,000 members," he
    said. 

    He said that the black-out and overload problems in the U.S. would be
    solved by adding capacity and the problem showed a big pent-up demand
    and not a failure by the system. 

    "It's not a telecom system problem, it is the number of modems
    installed and in Europe we are also quickly building it out and we do
    not see that being a limiting factor in Europe in the near-term," he
    said. 

    He said that he did not see a risk in the proliferation of Internet
    access providers. "What we see is that the consumer prefers a packaged
    product, with easy access and one bill," he said. "Certainly a section
    of the market will find that (raw Internet access) interesting but that
    is not a mass market." 

    He said that new developments with digital television and WebTV would
    increase the awareness of the Web and turn it from a luxury to an
    essential thing. 

    "The jury is still out how the various technologies that are being
    developed will be embraced by the consumers. We want to be at the
    forefront of that, but in the end consumers will decide whether it is
    interesting or not," Davies said.

    REUTER
7.582IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4360
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Rebuke for Dorrell on Scottish assembly
    
    By George Jones, Political Editor 

    A FUTURE Tory Government would not be able to abolish a separate
    Scottish parliament set up by Labour, Michael Forsyth, the Scottish
    Secretary, said yesterday.

    "A Scottish parliament is not just for Christmas - it is for life,"
    said Mr Forsyth in what was seen as a public rebuke to his Cabinet
    colleague, Stephen Dorrell. Mr Dorrell, the Health Secretary, had
    created confusion over the Government's stance on devolution by hinting
    that an incoming Conservative government might try to get rid of a
    Scottish parliament if it damaged Britain.

    His comments appeared to be at odds with the stance of Mr Forsyth, who
    has consistently argued that Labour's devolution plans would do
    irreversible damage to the unity of the United Kingdom and, once in
    place, could not be unscrambled. Mr Dorrell has been given a
    wide-ranging brief by the Prime Minister to attack Labour's plans for
    constitutional change. Mr Major intends to make the threat to the unity
    of the United Kingdom from a devolved Scottish parliament and a Welsh
    assembly a central plank of the Tory election campaign. 

    Interviewed in The Scotsman newspaper, Mr Dorrell said a parliament
    that damaged the union of the United Kingdom was "not something a later
    Conservative government could leave unchanged". Asked by the newspaper
    if he meant that the best way of preserving the Union would be to get
    rid of a Scottish parliament, rather than seek to tackle issues like
    the West Lothian question, he replied: "Yes, absolutely."

    Labour and the Scottish Nationalists seized on Mr Dorrell's remarks as
    evidence of disarray within the Government over how to respond to
    devolution. George Robertson, the shadow Scottish secretary, accused Mr
    Dorrell of a "monumental gaffe". It was "arrogant and dangerous", to
    suggest reversing a parliament that would have been set up with the
    consent of the people in Scotland, Mr Robertson said.

    Tony Blair, the Labour leader, said the Tories were in complete "chaos
    and confusion". Mr Dorrell had enough problems in the NHS rather than
    "rampaging through the territory of other Cabinet ministers", he said.
    Mr Dorrell immediately launched a damage-limitation exercise and denied
    saying that a future Tory government would "abolish" a Scottish
    parliament.

    It would be "unsustainable" to have Scottish MPs voting on English
    transport, health and education matters in England when English MPs
    would have no vote on such issues in Scotland. "But if such a
    parliament were established it is true, I think, that a later
    government could not leave it unchanged. That is the phrase I used,
    'unchanged', not 'abolish'," said Mr Dorrell.

    Mr Forsyth, interviewed on BBC Radio 4's World at One programme, denied
    that there was any rift between him and Mr Dorrell, but emphasised that
    devolution was an irreversible process. "Once Humpty Dumpty falls off
    the wall, he will not be put back together again no matter how many
    king's horses and king's men turn up. What Labour are flirting with is
    the break-up of the United Kingdom."
7.583IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4361
7.584IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4475
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Doctor suspended in Ashworth child sex investigation
    
    By Robert Shrimsley and Nigel Bunyan 

    A CONSULTANT psychiatrist at Ashworth special hospital in Merseyside
    yesterday became the fourth member of staff to be suspended amid the
    allegations of paedophile abuse and pornography at the unit.

    News of the latest suspension was given by Stephen Dorrell, the Health
    Secretary, who also admitted to MPs yesterday that a junior health
    minister visited the hospital last autumn after the allegations broke
    but had been told by staff that the claims were groundless.

    Erville Millar, the new acting chief executive, said the suspension was
    in the un-named doctor's "best interests" and was not a sign of "guilt
    or responsibility".

    On Friday Mr Dorrell announced a judicial inquiry into the management
    of the Ashworth personality disorder unit, after the hospital suspended
    its chief executive, Janice Miles, and two male nurses. It was also
    announced on Friday that the eight-year-old daughter of an ex-patient,
    from Bradford, had been taken into care after reports that she had been
    taken into the unit and played with convicted sex offenders.

    Yesterday Mr Dorrell said the inquiry, by Peter Fallon, a retired
    senior circuit judge, would report within a year. The visit to Ashworth
    by Simon Burns, health minister, came after allegations of drug misuse,
    financial irregularities, the availability of pornographic material and
    possible paedophile activity had been made by Stephen Daggett, a
    patient. Mr Daggett, 36, made his claims after absconding from care
    during a visit to Liverpool last September. His allegations are thought
    to include claims that inmates, including convicted paedophiles, were
    able to video pornographic activity and child abuse.

    He was moved to Rampton where he wrote a 60-page dossier and submitted
    it to the head of his new unit. Yesterday Alice Mahon, Labour MP for
    Halifax, said the dossier was sent back to Ashworth and not acted upon.

    On Jan 17 a search of Lawrence ward found a substantial quantity of
    pornographic material but still no action was taken. The inquiry was
    announced only after Mrs Mahon sent a copy of the dossier to the Home
    Office at the end of January.

    In a statement to the Commons yesterday Mr Dorrell sought to defend his
    department against charges of inaction. He said Mr Burns had visited
    the hospital in October "during the period in question and did discuss
    these questions with the management". Despite the availability of
    evidence the hospital had continued to maintain that the reports were
    unfounded.

    Mr Dorrell also admitted that a large amount of pornography had been
    found in the hospital last month but that hospital officials had
    continued to say the allegations were "unfounded".

    Mr Millar said yesterday that he had imposed a series of new
    restrictions. Patients were having personal computers confiscated and
    would have restricted access to telephones. Ward searches would be
    stepped up, and visits either by former patients or children would no
    longer be allowed.

    In his Commons statement Mr Dorrell said that as well as investigating
    the allegations the inquiry would be looking at why ministers were
    continually reassured that there was nothing to worry about. He told
    MPs that the allegations began to circulate last October.

    Tessa Jowell, Labour's health spokesman, said the revelations exposed
    "the dreadful inadequacy of the monitoring systems supposed to ensure
    safety at high-security hospitals".

    Ian Brady, the Moors murderer, has said that he wants euthanasia to be
    made available to patients in high-security mental institutions such as
    Rampton, Broadmoor and Ashworth, where Brady has spent the last 11
    years.
7.585IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4550
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Defiant Princess makes TV call for ban on landmines
    
    By Robert Hardman 

    DIANA, Princess of Wales makes her debut as a television presenter
    tonight with an unapologetic documentary about her recent visit to
    Angola.

    While admitting that political criticism of her stance on land mines
    makes her "want to burst into tears", she draws a defiant conclusion:
    "The only way forward is for a worldwide ban on anti-personnel
    landmines."

    The 30-minute film for the BBC's Heart of the Matter series follows the
    Princess through grisly scenes in Luanda and outlying areas of Angola
    where thousands of civilians continue to be killed by mines left over
    from years of civil war. Despite adopting a workmanlike approach to the
    subject, she is clearly disturbed by much of what she sees. "Being in a
    place like this has a tremendous impact on me," she says on her
    arrival. "It makes me realise just how fortunate we are in the West."

    The sight of a child whose intestines have been blown out by a mine
    leaves her particularly moved. "When you see little children like that
    in that situation it just brings it all to the surface," she says.

    She has little time for those who do not support a total ban on
    landmines. At one point, the director of the British Red Cross, Mike
    Whitlam, observes: "It's quite interesting listening to politicians
    talking about landmines."

    At this point, the Princess makes a crisp interjection: "They don't
    actually know what they're talking about." For the first time, we see
    her private reaction to a minister's description of her as a "loose
    cannon" after her call for a total worldwide ban on landmines.

    "I'm about to burst into tears," she tells Mr Whitlam after hearing of
    the row unfolding at home. "Who said I'm a loose cannon?" She does not
    burst into tears, but goes on to say: "I'm not a political figure, nor
    do I want to be one. But I come with my heart. I want to bring
    awareness to people in distress whether it's in Angola or any part of
    the world."

    For much of the trip, the Princess wore a microphone to record her
    immediate observations. She then pieced together the rest of the
    programme in a London studio with Karina Brennan, the producer. A
    shortened version of the Princess's film will be shown tomorrow night
    before the premiere of In Love and War she will be attending in
    Leicester Square.
7.586IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4776
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Archdeacon's wife describes 'life-or-death' struggle in prison cell
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    AN ARCHDEACON'S wife told a court yesterday how a prisoner attacked her
    with a home-made weapon after warning her: "Touch that alarm button and
    you're dead."

    Julia Flack, 50, who worked at Wakefield Prison as a probation officer,
    said she quickly realised that she was in "extreme danger" from Michael
    Sams. She told the jury at Durham Crown Court that when Sams, 54,
    entered the converted cell where she was holding one of her regular
    surgeries she immediately noticed that he was smiling.

    "He spoke to me and said, 'Touch that alarm button and you're dead'. I
    remember thinking it was almost a joke. I could not understand why he
    was doing this. I was in a state of disbelief. I saw he had a long
    metal object in his hand that was sharpened to a point. It looked like
    a long screwdriver.

    "The spike and some tape appeared as if by sleight of hand, and when I
    saw the point of the metal object I had a split-second realisation of
    the extreme danger I was in. I decided that I was in grave danger and I
    felt very fearful, and so I did press the alarm. Mr Sams got hold of me
    and physically overcame me with his arm and started to wield the metal
    object."

    Mrs Flack, whose husband, the Ven John Flack, is the Archdeacon of
    Pontefract, went on: "I was desperate to make sure that it did not get
    near me. I remember screaming very very loudly and began to feel I was
    losing control. He was beginning to take physical control of the fight
    . . . Both he and I were on the floor of the cell and at one point he
    was on top of me.

    "I was acutely aware I had to keep that weapon away from me because I
    knew it was going to hurt me or cut me or stab me. I was trying to hold
    out my hands to deflect it away from my body. Each time I made a move
    to push it away he made another move to wield it towards me and it
    became a constant battle. My impression was he was determined to use
    that weapon."

    Sams, who denies false imprisonment and attempted murder on Oct 23,
    1995, is representing himself. Handcuffed and flanked in the dock by
    four prison officers, he stood impassively as Peter Collier, QC, told
    the jury how he had allegedly prepared a sharpened rod and a length of
    tape with which he tried to strangle Mrs Flack.

    In the weeks leading up to the incident, said Mr Collier, Sams had been
    complaining about his treatment in Wakefield's B wing. He had decided
    to imprison a probation officer so that police would be called and his
    grievances heard. He made inquiries as to when a woman probation
    officer would be next on the block. On Oct 23 he was sixth or seventh
    in line to see Mrs Flack. Once seated at the same side of a table, Sams
    allegedly produced the weapon and issued his warning that the probation
    officer, who had 27 years' experience, would die if she touched the
    alarm.

    "Sams expected that she, as a mere woman, would melt with fear," said
    Mr Collier. "He didn't reckon with Mrs Flack. He didn't know her. What
    she did was to feel for the panic button. He saw her reach out and he
    said, 'Right, you're dead'."

    Guards and inmates rushed to help Mrs Flack, forcing the door. Mr
    Collier said: "When he entered that cell his intention was to hold her
    as some kind of hostage until his grievances were heard. When she went
    for the panic button his plan quickly changed. At that point his
    intention was not less than to kill."

    After her evidence Mrs Flack faced Sams for 10 minutes as he
    cross-examined her in a faltering voice. Mr Justice Morland reminded
    the jurors that they should ignore anything they might have read or
    heard about the case or Sams's convictions.

    The trial continues.
7.587IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4826
7.588IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4845
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Racehorse kicks baby out of pram
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A BABY is being treated in a specialist head injuries unit after being
    kicked from his pram by a racehorse.

    Doctors say Jordan Finch, who was thrown into a drainage ditch, could
    have permanent brain damage. His condition at Frenchay Hospital,
    Bristol, was described yesterday as stable. Jordan, aged 14 weeks, was
    being pushed by his mother, Jane, 27, along a farm track at Charlton
    Adam, near Yeovil, Somerset, when they met two racehorses being
    exercised from nearby stables.

    Mrs Finch ushered her two older children, Daniel, seven, and Naomi,
    five, close into the hedge as the second horse, Smiling Chief, became
    agitated. The horse's rider struggled to control it and the animal
    suddenly bucked, catching the side of the pram, throwing the baby into
    a ditch.

    Mrs Finch realised the seriousness of the situation only when the
    horses had passed and she saw that Jordan was not in the pram. She
    found her son several yards along the lane, lying on his back in a
    ditch. She gathered up the baby and rushed back to the main road from
    where she telephoned for an ambulance.

    Jordan was taken to Yeovil District Hospital but was discharged after a
    check-up. But later that day his condition deteriorated rapidly and he
    suffered severe swelling. His parents drove him 50 miles to Bristol,
    where the Frenchay has a renowned neurological unit. Steven Finch, 37,
    a shopkeeper, who has been at his son's bedside since he was admitted
    to the hospital, said the wait for news about the boy's recovery was
    nightmarish.

    "The doctors do not know what will happen to Jordan," he said. "They
    are doing everything they can but it is too early to say. Jane has been
    under sedation since the incident. She is finding it hard to cope."

    Smiling Chief, a 10-year-old chestnut gelding, is owned by a consortium
    and trained at the Cedar Lodge stables in Charlton Adam. Ron Hodges,
    the horse's trainer, said: "It was a terrible freak accident and we all
    deeply regret what happened. In all my 25 years of training horses this
    has never happened before."
7.589IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:4946
7.590IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5037
7.591IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5057
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Britain allows race murders, says mother
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 

    THE mother of Stephen Lawrence, the black teenager stabbed to death by
    white youths as he waited for a bus, told an inquest yesterday she
    believed the judicial system allowed racist murders.

    Mrs Doreen Lawrence claimed at the reopened hearing that police
    investigating the killing had initially stereotyped her 18-year-old son
    as a member of a criminal gang and allowed evidence to be lost. She
    described Stephen at Southwark coroner's court as a friendly and quiet
    A-level student who was "loved by everyone". 

    Stephen Lawrence was stabbed as he waited for a bus in Eltham,
    south-east London, in April 1993. Last year three white men were
    acquitted when a private murder prosecution brought by the family
    collapsed at the Old Bailey. The Crown Prosecution Service had decided
    not to pursue the case because of insufficient evidence.

    "My son was murdered nearly four years ago. His killers are still
    walking the street," Mrs Lawrence told the inquest. "When my son was
    murdered, the police saw my son as a criminal belonging to a gang.

    "My son was stereotyped by the police. He was black, then he must be a
    criminal, and they set about to investigate him and us. Their
    investigation lasted two weeks, that allowed vital evidence to be
    lost." Her son's crime, she said, "was that he was walking down the
    road looking out for a bus that would take him home".

    "Our crime was living in a country where the justice system supports
    racist murders against innocent people. The value that this white
    racist country puts on black lives is evident to see since the killing
    of my son."

    Mrs Lawrence added: "In my opinion what happened in the Crown Court was
    staged, meaning it was decided long before we entered the courtroom
    what would happen, that the judge would not allow the evidence to be
    presented to the jury."

    She said she and her husband searched for their son after a neighbour
    told them he had seen the attack. They drove to the local hospital.
    Staff refused to let them see Stephen, who died of a haemorrhage due to
    stab wounds to the chest and arm.

    Mrs Lawrence claimed police at the hospital failed to talk to the
    couple until the next morning. "No one told us anything at that stage."
    She accused officers of being "very patronising" and dismissive of her
    information.

    On her first visit to a police station she tried to present an officer
    with a list of names of possible people involved. "He folded the paper
    and rolled it into a ball in his hand. I asked him if he was going to
    put it in a bin. They were not taking my son's death as seriously as
    they should have done," she said. The hearing continues.
7.592IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5136
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    'Delays' hindering lung cancer cures
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 

    LUNG cancer patients may miss the chance of a cure because of delays,
    poor standards and variations in treatments, according to a hospital
    consultant.

    Jeremy George, of the Department of Thoracic Medicine, Middlesex
    Hospital, London, said a significant number of sufferers never saw a
    specialist. Writing in today's issue of the medical journal Thorax, he
    said this meant they were less likely to be offered chemotherapy or
    radiotherapy.

    Lung cancer kills 40,000 people a year in Britain and cases are rising
    in women. It is the most common cancer in men and the third most common
    in women. Dr George said the average time between diagnosis and surgery
    was 109 days when national guidelines said that surgery should be
    carried out within six to eight weeks. He added that treatments in
    Britain were falling behind those in other countries - with some
    patients who had operable tumours being denied surgery.

    In 1995 the Department of Health called for cancer services in Britain
    to be reorganised around specialist centres. Dr George said this would
    help to raise standards and make care more uniform. But he warned that
    sophisticated screening methods being developed in America would only
    increase demand on "our already stretched lung cancer service".

    Services needed to be arranged so that patients could be assessed and
    treated promptly and effectively, he said. Dr George added: "At the
    very least, this will reduce the anxiety that patients suffer and may
    also ensure that more are offered curative surgery. If we can develop
    effective methods for early diagnosis, prompt management may also
    improve the outcome."
7.593IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5232
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Doctor used heroin he stole in ward

    A DOCTOR who stole heroin and injected himself while treating patients
    was given a suspended prison sentence yesterday.

    Leonard Warne, 35, an anaesthetist, took Diamorphine - used to ease a
    mother's pain after a caesarean section - and injected it into his
    hand. Warne walked into a ward where women were being treated and took
    the drug from syringes, claiming he wanted to check it, Manchester
    Crown Court was told.

    When arrested Warne, of Stoke-on-Trent, said: "I had a habit of sorts.
    The drug was easily available to me and it gave me a slight buzz." He
    was given a nine-month jail sentence, suspended for two years, after
    admitting 15 instances of stealing the drug at The Royal Oldham
    Hospital, Greater Manchester.

    Miss Tina Landale, prosecuting, said Warne was arrested after patients
    told nurses that he had removed the drug from syringes.

    Alan Conrad, defending, said that Warne became "unhappy and unsettled"
    after starting at the Royal Oldham and there was "evidence of loss of
    confidence and self esteem.

    "There were long hours, he felt he was an outsider, he had written off
    his car and there were difficulties in a relationship with a woman.
    Against that background it might explain his behaviour. No doubt as an
    anaesthetist he knew of the short-term euphoria obtained by using this
    drug. A police officer linked his case to someone working in a
    sweetshop."
7.594IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5328
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Random checks on coach seatbelts
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 

    PLANS for roadside checks to see if coaches carrying children are
    complying with the new requirement to fit seatbelts will be announced
    next month.

    The Department of Transport said it was likely that random inspections,
    which already take place to assess standards of maintenance, would be
    extended to cover seatbelts. In addition, belts would be included in
    annual vehicle checks. 

    The legislation making the safety equipment compulsory in minibuses and
    coaches carrying three or more children came into force yesterday. But
    safety campaigners criticised the absence of inspection procedures and
    the fact that coach operators were not being made legally responsible
    to ensure that belts were worn.

    Industry surveys have found that more than 50 per cent of coaches
    registered since 1988 have already fitted belts, although the
    requirement does not affect vehicles used for non-school contracts.
    Belts are rarer on older coaches, which have been allowed an extra year
    to satisfy the legislation. Some schools have refused to use vehicles
    without belts after the school minibus crash on the M40 in the west
    Midlands in 1993 in which 12 children and a teacher were killed.
7.595IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5323
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Country life is no calmer for Buddhists
    
    By Michael Fleet 

    MONKS who moved from London to Sussex to seek peace and quiet have
    found their solitude spoiled by ramblers using a footpath next to their
    estate.

    The Sangha order of Buddhists live a life of "celibacy, frugality and
    harmonious conduct" on a 150-acre estate near Midhurst, West Sussex.
    But a footpath that borders their estate has become popular with
    walkers, causing the monks to apply for it to be re-routed.

    West Sussex county council has agreed to move the footpath further away
    from the monastery. John Kilford, a council planning officer, said that
    ramblers would also benefit because a new path offered better walking
    conditions and more attractive views.

    The monks were unavailable for comment yesterday. An answering machine
    message said they were in silent retreat until the end of February.
                                                                       
7.596IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5415
7.597IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5432
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Killer may be offered deal in hunt for body
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A CHILD killer may be given immunity from prosecution over the murder
    of a girl 19 years ago if he provides information leading to the
    discovery of her remains.

    The body of Genette Tate, who was 13 when she disappeared while on a
    newspaper round in Aylesbeare, near Exeter, Devon, in August 1978, has
    never been found. 

    Detectives suspect that Robert Black, who is serving 10 life sentences
    for the murders of three other girls, may have killed her. Black has
    been linked by petrol receipts to the area where Genette disappeared. A
    van of the kind he was driving was also seen.

    John Tate, whose daughter is still officially listed as a missing
    person, said yesterday that police were considering the possibility of
    offering Black immunity in an effort to resolve the case.

    "We have had lots of discussions about it with the police and in the
    beginning we said we would go along with it," said Mr Tate. "But it
    would not simply be a question of the killer confessing to it and
    putting his hands up. I want to know where Genette is so that we can
    lay her to rest."

    Mr Tate said that if Genette's body was found it would be difficult,
    after almost 20 years, for forensic scientists to discover anything
    about who killed her.
7.598IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5557
7.599IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5637
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Boring road puts drivers to sleep
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 

    A STRETCH of dual carriageway suspected of being so boring that it
    makes drivers fall asleep is to be investigated by the Government's
    Highways Agency.

    The eastbound route of the A180 between the outskirts of Scunthorpe and
    Grimsby Docks has a sleep-related accident rate two-and-a-half times
    the national average. Research carried out by Loughborough University
    for Humberside police suggested that drivers tended to relax because
    they were nearing the end of their journey, and then had difficulty in
    staying awake because the road was so unstimulating.

    Prof Jim Horne, head of the university's sleep research team, said that
    the view along the 20-mile road was exceptionally tedious. "It's pretty
    dull and boring, and often not very busy, so drivers don't even have
    the stimulation of other traffic to keep them going," he said. "It's
    also very flat, and a lot of it has embankments running alongside. At
    night, it's not lit, so you can't see much."

    Sleep-induced incidents account for a quarter of all collisions on the
    road, and caused four deaths in 1995. Nationally, sleep is thought to
    be a factor in 10 per cent of road accidents. Prof Horne said another
    possible reason for the A180's high number of accidents was the fact
    that motorists joining it from the M180 did not always realise they had
    moved from a three-lane to a two-lane carriageway. "The road has a lot
    of lay-bys, and some drivers may mistake them for the slow lane. If
    they then move into what they think is the slow lane, they have a
    problem."

    Researchers also found that risks were increased because some of the
    lay-bys were positioned on right-hand bends. Drivers who fell asleep
    would carry straight on and crash into vehicles parked in them.
7.600IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5640
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Six survive 700ft fall, swept by avalanche

    A MOTHER described yesterday how she watched helplessly as an avalanche
    engulfed her two children and their four companions during a weekend
    climb on a mountainside.

    The party of friends had been scaling the notorious Cinderella route
    3,000 feet up on the Cliffs of Coire Ardair, part of the 3,700ft Creag
    Meaghaidh, near Laggan, Inverness-shire, when a huge block of snow
    broke away from the summit.

    Janet Wedgewood, 55, said: "We were walking below when suddenly I saw
    the six of them tumbling down the mountain. When they came to rest they
    were all motionless and I was really worried."

    Christopher Poole, 32, one of the climbers, found his five companions
    still alive after the avalanche pushed them 700 feet down the
    mountainside. Mr Poole, who owns a ski shop in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffs,
    said: "The snow simply engulfed me from above. 

    "It swept me down and then hit my colleagues behind me. When we reached
    the bottom 700 feet below, I began to shout to find the others. It took
    me around five minutes to find them. Luckily they were all on the
    surface. It was only later that I found out that the pain in my leg was
    a broken ankle."

    Mr Poole said that when the accident happened he had been roped to
    27-year-old Malcolm Lewis, a physiotherapist from New Zealand, who has
    been working in Britain for four years. Mr Lewis, who has spinal
    injuries, said: "It seemed to take an eternity on the way down. It was
    an absolutely terrifying experience."

    Behind them were two pairs of brothers and sisters, Donald and Penny
    Naylor, and Tom and Ruth Wedgewood. Ruth Wedgewood, 26, a teacher in
    Lancaster, and her brother Tom were both being treated for leg
    injuries. Another member of the party, Donald Naylor, was transferred
    to a spinal injuries unit in Glasgow. His condition was described as
    "comfortable". His sister Penny was being treated for leg injuries.
7.601IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5747
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    High Court judge tries a case of whiskey
    
    By A J McIlroy 

    A JUDGE has been asked to decide what is whisky in a High Court battle
    between two of the world's biggest drink companies and an independent
    distillery on the Isle of Man.

    The question was put to Mr Justice Rattee yesterday by counsel acting
    for Allied Domecq and United Distillers which, with the Scotch Whisky
    Association, have challenged the right of the Glen Kella independent
    distillery to label its product "Manx Whiskey".

    After handing the judge eight bottles containing conventional whisky
    and another of the Glen Kella product, Simon Thorley, QC, opening the
    case, said: "This is not an action about Scotch whisky. It is an action
    purely about whisky, whether spelled whisky or whiskey. The fundamental
    question that is going to arise is 'What is whisky - and is what the
    defendant is selling properly described as whisky?' "

    The judge observed before he was handed the whisky bottles from the
    barristers' "bar" in Court 18 at London's Royal Courts, where lawyers
    usually pile their papers: "You appear to be well stocked down there."

    The judge, who is expected to be invited to sample the evidence at some
    point during the proceedings, scheduled to last 10 days, was told by Mr
    Thorley that the Glen Kella White Manx Whiskey did not comply with the
    European regulations. These laid down the legal requirements for a
    product to be called "whisky" or "whiskey".

    Mr Thorley also claimed that the Glen Kella Distillery, which is based
    at the village of Sulby on the Isle of Man, and which produces around
    30,000 bottles a year, mainly for export, was guilty of "passing off"
    its product as whisky when it was not.

    He said the product was known in the trade as a "water white liquid".
    The defendant's process resulted in changing the yellow Scotch whisky
    into a water white product. He said that true whisky was made by
    maturing a spirit distilled from fermented cereals, and that no product
    could call itself whisky if it had been redistilled after it had been
    matured.

    Glen Kella's managing director, Andrew Dixon, who is also an Isle of
    Man sheep farmer and a microbiologist at the island's hospital, was in
    court. The hearing continues.
7.602IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5853
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Radox bath secret is out of the bottle
    
    By Fiona McPhillips 

    A STUDENT has attempted to manufacture a version of Radox bubble bath
    after noticing - while taking a bath - that its "secret ingredients"
    were listed on the back of the bottle in Latin.

    Trinj Masal, 36, took advantage of an EU directive brought in this year
    which says that all contents must be listed on cosmetics and toiletries
    to protect people who have allergies.

    With the aid of a dictionary of herbs, Mr Masal, an information
    technology student at Leeds University, translated the 13 herbs and
    minerals in the Radox formula before calling family friends in the
    pharmaceuticals industry in India with his idea.

    "It was fairly simple to translate the ingredients," said Mr Masal. "I
    knew they would be a lot cheaper to buy in India and that my friends
    could make up the formula for a fraction of the cost. If we got the
    right result then we could sell the bubble bath here in Britain at a
    lot cheaper price than Radox."

    His partners in India found all the ingredients, including camomile,
    horse chestnut, comfrey, jasmine and rosemary. The first batch of
    sample bubble bath, which Mr Masal calls Raymond Docks, has now arrived
    in Britain. Although an application to the Patent Office has not yet
    been made, Michael Lander, a business consultant working with Mr Masal,
    is confident it will sell.

    "We don't envisage any problem with the name," Mr Lander said
    yesterday. "We are confident that Raymond Docks is of a superior
    quality to Radox." However, a spokesman for Sara Lee, makers of Radox,
    doubted yesterday whether Mr Masal's bubble bath would match their
    standards.

    "Although cosmestics and toiletries ingredients are listed, they do not
    give the measures of each ingredient. It will be very difficult to
    reproduce the Radox formula," she said. "We believe our products are
    better than others. The big companies have not been able to take our
    position as number one, so we are not unduly worried."

    Although the formula for Radox is not protected by a patent, Mr Masal
    may face legal obstacles over his choice of brand name. Michael Ajello,
    a patent's expert, said yesterday: "Even without a patent on their
    formula, the Radox people could take action against him for
    plagiarising their product."

    A spokesman for Radox said yesterday: "If anyone comes out with a name
    that is extremely similar, we will protect our intellectual property
    rights. Radox is a registered trade mark."
7.603IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 13:5971
7.604IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 14:0041
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Sweet singer Connolly dies aged 52
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 

    BRIAN Connolly, 52, the leader of Sweet, the "glam-rock" band that
    outraged 1970s parents by appearing decked in glitter and caked in
    heavy make-up, died yesterday from kidney failure.

    The half-brother of the late actor Mark McManus, who played Taggart in
    the television detective series, Connolly enjoyed the excessive
    lifestyle of a 1970s rock star. At the height of his success he had
    eight cars, a yacht and a mansion, but was most recently living in a
    council house and drawing unemployment benefit.

    He made no secret of the rock-and-roll lifestyle he had enjoyed,
    saying: "They were wild, crazy days and nights, but booze was my
    downfall rather than drugs."

    Sweet sold 50 million records worldwide, with a No 1 in England,
    Blockbuster, and a No 3 in America, Little Willy. They had other hits
    with Wig Wam Bam and Ballroom Blitz. In 1974 the band ended their
    association with the RCA songwriters Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman and
    the hits dried up. Connolly left Sweet in 1979, but did not enjoy solo
    success.

    He renounced alcohol after two heart attacks. While recovering from the
    second, his heart stopped six times. Doctors said it was miraculous he
    had survived. Connolly was planning to revive the band for a stage show
    next year, but he had another heart attack in January. He died in
    hospital in Slough, Berks.

    The singer Suzi Quatro said: "They were great days, when music was fun.
    But Brian did live the rock-and-roll lifestyle. Some people didn't know
    how to separate that and real life. But I admired the way he went out
    there. He wasn't in good condition, and he had the shakes, but he still
    wanted to do it."

    Sweet's guitarist Andy Scott said: "Everybody's image of Sweet was
    Brian. It was what he was put on this earth for."
7.605IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 14:0148
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    30 shot dead by Chinese after race riot killings

    AT least 30 ethnic Uighurs have been killed by Chinese troops after a
    march by 1,000 youths demanding independence for the remote Xinjiang
    province turned to rioting in which ethnic Chinese were beaten to
    death.

    Quoting Uighurs arriving in Kazakhstan, a spokesman for the exiled
    United Revolutionary National Front said a dusk-to-dawn curfew had been
    imposed on the border town of Yining after the riots, in which
    protesters were gunned down by Chinese soldiers. A Hong Kong newspaper
    reported that more than 10 ethnic Chinese were killed and 100 others
    were injured in Yining by rioting Muslim separatists of the Uighur
    majority population.

    The Ming Pao daily quoted a resident as saying that the violence last
    Wednesday and Thursday in the city of Yining was the worst since the
    1949 Communist revolution. Some 1,000 Muslims, mostly aged 17 and 18,
    had beaten up, killed and burned their victims before police quashed
    the violence, it said.

    The Front described the riots as "a spontaneous movement by Uighurs in
    the face of discrimination imposed by the Chinese". It denied that the
    demonstration had been organised by Uighur separatist political
    movements. "These violent demonstrations were unexpected, even for us."

    A Xinjiang government official confirmed that police had quelled
    protests last week in Yining. "There was a protest . . . It was
    illegal. Illegal protests are curbed." Clashes are periodically
    reported in Xinjiang, where the Turkic-speaking Uighurs face an influx
    of ethnic Chinese.

    The Uighurs had their own Republic of East Turkestan from 1944 to 1949.
    Xinjiang, covering one-sixth of China and with a population of 16.6
    million, is now one of five autonomous regions. Mining, also known as
    Gulja, was the site of Sino-Soviet clashes in the 1960s and is still
    run like a garrison, with few Chinese daring to venture out at night.

    A resurgence of separatist sentiment throughout Xinjiang in the past
    year has been largely blamed on the collapse of the Soviet Union in
    central Asia and the resurgence of Islam through Kazakhstan and its
    neighbours. The Yining riots came as Xinjiang's top government official
    gave warning that separatism and illegal religious activity are to be
    the main targets of law enforcers. "We will form a united front against
    separatists, isolating and attacking those who take that road," said
    Abdulahat Abdurixit.
7.606IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 14:0250
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    'Black Widow' denies killing companions

    AN Austrian widow accused of murdering an elderly male companion for
    his $100,000 inheritance and widely suspected of other killings went on
    trial yesterday.

    Labelled the "Black Widow" by the tabloid press, Elfriede Blauensteiner
    swept into court carrying a crucifix and proclaiming: "I'm innocent. My
    hands are clean." She fielded reporters' questions for half an hour
    before entering a not guilty plea on charges of murder and attempted
    fraud. Her former lawyer, Harald Schmidt, 40, also pleaded not guilty
    to the same charges.

    The courtroom in Krems, 30 miles west of Vienna, was crammed with
    reporters attracted by lurid publicity that depicted Blauensteiner as a
    multiple murderer who poisoned several elderly companions to finance
    her gambling habit.

    After she was arrested early last year, police claimed she had
    confessed to five murders. She now denies any wrongdoing. State
    prosecutors who ordered several exhumations found traces of a drug that
    lowers blood sugar in the body of Alois Pichler, 77, a widower who died
    in November 1995, months after meeting Blauensteiner through a
    newspaper advertisement. She had then moved in to care for him.

    Friedrich Kutschera, the state prosecutor, accused Blauensteiner of
    giving Pichler at least 70 doses of a drug known as euglucon in his
    milk. A day before Mr Pichler's death, she then allegedly gave him 20
    tranquillisers before putting him in a cold bath so that he died of
    heart failure.

    The prosecutor accused Schmidt of helping Blauensteiner to put the
    pensioner in the tub and of falsifying Mr Pichler's will so that it
    appeared she inherited his savings. Blauensteiner is said to have
    learned about drugs to lower blood sugar when she treated a diabetic
    male friend who died in 1986.

    Her second husband, Rudolf Blauensteiner, died in August 1992 after
    being in a mysterious coma for 10 days.Four months later, a wealthy
    woman who was Blauensteiner's neighbour in Vienna died after being
    cared for by her. She had changed her will in favour of Blauensteiner.
    In June 1995, a 65-year-old man whom Blauensteiner also got to know
    through a newspaper advert died after more than a year in her care.

    Blauensteiner, who was born in poverty, has admitted to a passion for
    gambling, which she says gave her the cash to raise and educate a
    daughter by a short-lived first marriage. The trial is expected to last
    two weeks.
7.607IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 14:0427
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Child's footprints marks a step back in time for man
    
    By Laura Spinney, Science Correspondent 

    THE discovery of a 12,500-year-old footprint in Chile has undermined
    theories of how and when the earliest human beings first arrived in the
    Americas.

    An archaeological expedition to Monte Verde, 500 miles south of
    Santiago, has confirmed that thousands of artefacts found alongside the
    child's footprint, which was impressed in layers of sediment, are
    relics of early mankind. Previous work has dated the site from 12,500
    years ago.

    At a press conference yesterday, the 10 American, Chilean and Colombian
    experts who took part in the expedition agreed that the artefacts are
    probably around 1,300 years older than the oldest human tools found to
    date. The time from which the spear-heads date - around 11,200 years
    ago - is known as the "Clovis horizon", thought to mark the time when
    man first set foot in the New World. Controversy has raged over whether
    humans could have existed in the Americas before then.

    According to Alex Barker, curator of archaeology at the Dallas Museum
    of Natural History, there is genetic evidence to suggest the earliest
    Americans were descendants of humans in Asia.
7.608IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 11 1997 14:0595
7.609IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:05104
    AP 12-Feb-1997 1:01 EST   REF5632

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1997
   
    ECUADOR-PRESIDENT 

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- A week-long political crisis that started with
    the ousting of the country's elected president may be resolved.
    Congress selected its own leader as Ecuador's interim president and
    Fabian Alarcon has been sworn in. He is to call elections within 12
    months and govern until August 1998. Alarcon replaced caretaker
    president Rosalia Arteaga. She resigned after initially insisting that
    she would stay in office until the constitution was amended to permit a
    replacement to be chosen for her. The situation beagn when Congress
    voted out President Abdala Bucaram, known as "El Loco," for "mental
    incapcity." 
   
    ARMY-SEX HARASSMENT 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A senior official says there are two more
    allegations of sexual harassment against the Army's top enlisted man
    and there could be a third. The official said the new allegations
    against Sergeant Major of the Army Gene McKinney were made after those
    by retired Sgt. Maj. Brenda Hoster. Hoster has accused McKinney of
    kissing her, grabbing her and demanding sex during a trip to Hawaii.
    McKinney has denied the allegations and the matter is under
    investigation. McKinney has been suspended pending the outcome. The
    official said he understood the new complaints were "not as grievous"
    as Hoster's, and that they involved verbal incidents and "kissing." 
   
    ASSISTED SUICIDE 

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -- A man who is dying of AIDS and wants the
    right to commit suicide with his doctor's help must wait at least
    several more months. The state Supreme Court has reinstated a stay
    today and said it would hear arguments May 9. Charles Hall, 35, is the
    lone survivor in a 1996 lawsuit seeking the right to have a doctor
    prescribe him a lethal dose of drugs without interference from the
    state. The other men died before a ruling. The state had appealed that
    decision, automatically triggering a stay of the judge's ruling, before
    another judge lifted the stay. 
   
    AMERICAN PILOTS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- American Airlines and its pilots' union are keeping
    up negotiations aimed at heading off a weekend strike. The Allied
    Pilots Association and American's parent company, AMR Corp., met
    directly with each other Tuesday night after a federal mediator
    shuffled information back and forth between then during the day. If an
    agreement is not reached by midnight Friday, the end of a federally
    mandated cooling-off period, the pilots say they will strike and the
    airline says it will shut down, putting about 90,000 employees on
    unpaid furlough and grounding its fleet. 
   
    SIMPSON 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- The focus for O.J. Simpson's lawyers now
    shifts to fighting the financial penalties a jury levied on their
    client. While Simpson played golf, his chief lawyer Robert Baker began
    formulating strategy to combat the $33.5 million in damages the
    football great was ordered to pay the families of Nicole Brown Simpson
    and Ron Goldman. Within two weeks, Baker is expected to ask the judge
    in the case to set aside the verdict, order a new trial or reduce the
    award as excessive. 
   
    PENA CONFIRMATION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Questions over Federico Pena's role in a Coast Guard
    decision to cancel a procurement contract with a Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
    company has delayed his confirmation as the next energy secretary. A
    Senate source said members of the Committee on Energy and Natural
    Resources have lingering questions on whether Pena intervened in the
    Coast Guard decision when he was transportation secretary. Pena's
    confirmation was supposed to go before the committee Wednesday for a
    vote. That vote is now delayed, possibly until Feb. 26. 
   
    OSCAR NOMINATIONS 

    BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) -- Madonna, who proclaimed herself Academy
    Award-worthy for her role in "Evita," did not receive an Oscar
    nomination today. The musical, based on the life of the wife of
    Argentine dictator Juan Peron, was also passed over in the best-picture
    category. "The English Patient" led with a total of 12 nominations. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar traded at 124.14 yen, up 0.90 yen in
    mid-morning. The Nikkei gained 230.09 points to 18,411.26. In New York,
    the Dow industrials closed up 51.57 to 6,858.11. The Nasdaq finished at
    1,331.51, down 3.83. 
   
    HORNETS-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Dennis Rodman tripped over a cameraman, but got his
    kicks by helping the Chicago Bulls beat the Charlotte Hornets 103-100
    on Michael Jordan's 3-pointer at the buzzer. Jordan scored 43 points
    and Rodman, in his return from an 11-game NBA suspension for kicking a
    cameraman, grabbed 14 rebounds. Muggsy Bogues hit a 3-pointer with 9.5
    seconds left to tie the score 100-100. The Bulls didn't call timeout
    and got the ball upcourt to Jordan, who hit the shot. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.610rIJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0726
    Updated at Tuesday, February 11, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.

    *Reuters World News Highlights*                            

    VLORE, Albania - Tens of thousands of mourners poured through the
    Albanian port of Vlore in an explosion of outrage at the funeral of an
    anti-government demonstrator killed in clashes with police.  

    BELGRADE - The Serbian parliament approved a new cabinet as embattled
    President Slobodan Milosevic sought to shore up his power base after
    months of civil unrest.  

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin is making a slow recovery from
    pneumonia and will not return to the Kremlin in the near future, his
    press secretary said.  

    DUSHANBE - A rebel Tajik group holding several United Nations officials
    hostage released an Austrian military observer who was in poor health,
    a U.N. official said.  

    TEL MOND, Israel - Israel freed eight of 31 Palestinian women prisoners
    slated for release as part of its peace deals with the PLO, witnesses
    said. In Jerusalem, the High Court of Justice considered a last-minute
    petition to delay the release of nine women.  

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
7.611IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0855
    AP 12-Feb-1997 0:42 EST   REF5619

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FBI Lab Error Cited in Bomb Case

    By TIM KLASS

    Associated Press Writer

    SEATTLE (AP) -- FBI crime lab errors led to dismissal of an explosives
    charge Tuesday in the conspiracy trial of seven people accused of
    plotting to kill federal agents. 

    The charge was dropped after an FBI lab technician, Robert Heckman,
    testified about the errors and was grilled on a still-secret draft
    report by the Justice Department that criticized his work on other
    cases. 

    Heckman acknowledged that some explosives evidence had been mislabeled
    on lab reports issued in December in the militia case, and said the
    reports were corrected last week. 

    Heckman was the last prosecution witness before the government rested
    its case. Six Washington State Militia and Freemen activists and a
    sympathizer are charged with plotting to kill, attempt to kill or
    otherwise attack federal agents. Some of them also face weapons
    charges. 

    The FBI's handling of evidence in the militia case came under scrutiny
    after the draft report into a whistle blower's accusations prompted
    transfer of three supervisors from the lab at FBI headquarters in
    Washington, D.C. 

    U.S. District Judge John C. Coughenour released the sealed report to
    the defense to question Heckman and another FBI agent, and defense
    attorney Tom Hillier used it to attack Heckman's credibility. 

    Referring to accusations against Heckman, "the report has concluded
    that you made improper additions to lab reports," Hillier asked. 

    "That's what the current draft says, yes," Heckman replied. 

    In his testimony about the lab's handling of the militia evidence,
    Heckman said a detonator had been mistakenly listed with an apparent
    pipe bomb, other evidence had attributed to the wrong defendant and a
    second detonator was listed with the wrong apparatus. 

    Assistant U.S. attorney Susan B. Dorhmann later agreed to drop one
    count against defendant John Lloyd Kirk, who is identified as a Freemen
    member. 

    Robert M. Leen, attorney for defendant William Smith, said the militia
    and Freemen had been wrongly linked in the case, and that FBI agents
    had been misled by an informant. 
7.612IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0829
    AP 12-Feb-1997 0:26 EST   REF5614

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Nazi Suspect Faces Recovery

    KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -- A man accused of being a Nazi death camp
    guard who was wounded in a shootout with police in December probably
    will never recover enough to live independently, a doctor said Tuesday.

    Michael Kolnhofer, 79, suffered brain damage from gunshot wounds. 

    He was taken off a respirator over the weekend and upgraded from
    critical to stable condition, said Dr. Norman Estes, chief of staff at
    the University of Kansas Medical Center. 

    Kolnhofer now can respond to simple verbal commands by squeezing a
    hand, but probably will not recover enough to live outside a health
    facility or without nursing help, Estes said. 

    Police shot Kolnhofer Dec. 31 outside his home in Kansas City, Kan.,
    after he threatened reporters with a gun and fired at officers. 

    The shootout came as federal officials moved to strip Kolnhofer's U.S.
    citizenship. He is accused of failing to report that he was a guard at
    death camps in Germany during World War II. 

    His attorney said Kolnhofer was drafted into the German Army but denied
    working as a death camp guard. 
7.613IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0873
    AP 12-Feb-1997 0:03 EST   REF5605

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: Scientist Loses Bet

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Cambridge University theorist Stephen W. Hawking --
    regarded by some as one of Albert Einstein's intellectual successors --
    has conceded defeat in a famous six-year-old bet. 

    Hawking bet two professors at the California Institute of Technology
    that naked singularities -- variations on a cosmological phenomenon
    believed to lurk at the hearts of black holes -- could not exist. 

    Now it seems they could -- maybe. 

    The New York Times reports Wednesday that during a visit to Caltech
    last week, Hawking conceded defeat "on a technicality" to fellow
    physicists John P. Preskill and Kip S. Thorne. The stake was 100 pounds
    (about $164), plus clothing "embroidered with a suitable concessionary
    message." 

    Hawking, Preskill and Thorne are leaders in the study of relativity as
    applied to cosmology, and they meet often at scientific symposiums,
    discussing conjectures about time machines, wormholes, the origin of
    the universe and other questions. 

    Although he was unable to prove his disbelief in naked singularities,
    Hawking, the author of "A Brief History of Time," proposed his bet at
    one such meeting in 1991. Because of its far-reaching theoretical
    implications, news of the bet spread widely among physicists. 

    For the unititiated, a singularity is a mathematical point at which
    space and time are infinitely distorted, where matter is infinitely
    dense, and where the rules of relativistic physics and quantum
    mechanics break down. 

    Singularities are believed to lurk at the center of black holes, which
    conceal their existence from the outer world. A naked singularity would
    be a singularity bereft of a concealing black-hole shell, and therefore
    visible, in principle, to outside observers. 

    Although neither light nor any other kind of signal can escape from
    them, a half-dozen or so black holes have been revealed by their
    gravitational effects of nearby stars. Black holes also have betrayed
    their presence by sucking matter from nearby space. As the matter
    spirals toward the hole, it is heated to incandescence, and the
    emission of X-rays and other radiation has been detected by
    observatories in space and on the ground. 

    Preskill and Thorne won the bet last week on the strength of
    supercomputer calculations by Matthew Choptuik of the University of
    Texas in Austin. Choptuik concluded from his mathematical analysis that
    there could be special circumstances in which a naked singularity might
    be created from a collapsing black hole, either by nature or perhaps
    even by some advanced civilization. 

    The chance of this happening, Choptuik told the Times, would be
    comparable to standing a pencil upright on its sharpened tip --
    improbable, yet theoretically possible. 

    Hawking declined to yield unequivocally -- he made another bet with the
    Caltech physicists that although a very limited set of conditions had
    been found for creating naked singularities, no general conditions
    would be found. 

    And the concessionary message Hawking had printed on T-shirts hardly
    conceded defeat. The shirts read: "Nature Abhors a Naked Singularity." 

    "All this has a very serious undertone," Preskill told the Times. "If
    we are ever to understand singularities we must do so in terms of some
    yet-to-be-discovered theory of quantum gravity, and that would be a
    revolution in physics. We're not there yet." 
7.614IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0857
    AP 11-Feb-1997 23:27 EST   REF5420

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Wants to Try Diplomat

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The State Department asked the Republic of Georgia
    on Tuesday to waive diplomatic immunity for an embassy official whose
    car crash last month in Washington resulted in the death of a
    16-year-old girl. 

    Department spokesman Nicholas Burns said the request was conveyed to
    the Georgian Embassy in Washington and to the government in Tbilisi.
    Georgian officials also were told what charges the U.S. attorney's
    office intends to file against Geuorgui Makharadze, the No. 2-ranking
    official in the embassy, but Burns refused to publicly disclose them. 

    Fox News' WTTG-TV reported Tuesday night that U.S. Attorney Eric
    Holder's letter to the State Department said prosecutors have
    determined that the appropriate charge against Makharadze is
    involuntary manslaughter. 

    It quoted the letter as saying, "We do not expect to change our views
    as to the appropriateness of this charge. Absent new evidence, we will
    not consider a plea to a lesser charge." 

    The station also cited unidentified sources as saying the prepared
    charges also contain four counts of aggravated assault for the four
    persons injured in the crash. 

    Burns said the Georgian government reserved a final decision but
    "reaffirmed its intention" to waive the diplomat's immunity from
    prosecution, allowing him to stand trial here. 

    Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze has ordered Makharadze to remain
    in the United States until local officials complete their investigation
    of the crash. 

    Police say Makharadze's car slammed into another car waiting at a red
    light in downtown Washington on Jan. 3. The impact sent the second car
    into the air, and it landed on a third car in which Joviane Waltrick
    was a passenger. She died a short time later. 

    Makharadze, 35, had been drinking, according to the official police
    report. Police also said speed may have been a factor in the crash. 

    Police did not ask Makharadze to submit to a sobriety test, citing his
    diplomatic status. 

    Kevin Ohlson, a spokesman for Holder, said no charges could be filed
    until diplomatic immunity is waived. "Diplomatic immunity is an
    absolute bar to indictment, arrest or any charges being filed," he
    said. 

    Waltrick's mother, Viviani Wagner, has not been notified by U.S.
    officials about the formal request to waive immunity, said Michael
    Poor, a family spokesman. 
7.615IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0827
    AP 11-Feb-1997 23:21 EST   REF5314

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ariz. Boys Saved from Tower

    MESA, Ariz. (AP) -- A 10-year-old autistic boy and his teen-age brother
    spent two hours Tuesday atop a 120-foot-tall electrical tower before
    rescue crews got them down. 

    The tower carries 230,000-volt power lines for the Salt River Project,
    which cut off electricity to allow crews to reach the boys with a
    crane. 

    John McNeil, 10, scaled the tower Tuesday afternoon, said his mother,
    Saundra McNeil. A neighbor saw him and called the fire department. 

    James McNeil, 17, climbed up in hopes of coaxing his little brother
    down, his mother said. "He's afraid of heights, but he climbed up
    there," she said of her older son. 

    A cherry picker hoisted two rescue workers halfway up the tower. Then
    they climbed to the top to harness the boys and loaded them into the
    bucket, which was lowered to the ground. 

    Local TV stations skipped the national evening newscast to broadcast
    the rescue as it was happening. 
7.616IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0872
    AP 11-Feb-1997 22:48 EST   REF5092

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    More Women Accuse Army Sgt. Mjr.

    By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER

    AP Military Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- At least two more women have come forward with
    allegations of sexual harassment against the Army's top enlisted man,
    Sergeant Major of the Army Gene McKinney, a senior official said
    Tuesday. 

    "There are two more and there could be a third," said the official, who
    spoke on condition of anonymity. 

    The official said the new allegations have been made in the wake of
    those by retired Sgt. Maj. Brenda Hoster, a former member of McKinney's
    staff. 

    Hoster has accused McKinney of kissing her, grabbing her and demanding
    sex during a trip to Hawaii. McKinney has denied the allegations. 

    The matter is under investigation by the Army's Criminal Investigation
    Command. On Monday, Army Chief of Staff Dennis Reimer ordered McKinney
    suspended pending the outcome of the investigation. 

    The official, who is knowledgeable about the case, said investigators
    are looking into the new complaints. He said he was aware of two formal
    investigations in addition to the one related to Hostler's allegations
    but it was unclear whether the third had been opened at this juncture. 

    The official said it was his understanding that the new complaints were
    "not as grievous" as Hoster's, and that they involved verbal incidents
    and "kissing." 

    He declined to be more specific about the allegations, except to say
    that "they are being taken seriously." 

    On Monday, a military source reported that the second accuser against
    McKinney had emerged. She was identified only as an active-duty Navy
    sailor who had reported an incident through her commander, who passed
    it on to the Army. 

    The other individuals also passed on information through the military
    chain of command, the official said. 

    Defense Department spokesman Kenneth Bacon, queried Tuesday about the
    McKinney case, stressed that the allegations "are only charges,
    accusations. They are not proof" of any guilt. 

    "He has denied the allegations," Bacon said of McKinney. 

    In explaining its decision Monday, the Army said publicity about the
    allegations against made it difficult for McKinney to function in his
    job. 

    The suspension came one day after the woman who made the accusation
    publicly complained of a "different system of justice" for the
    service's upper ranks. She noted that drill sergeants recently accused
    of sexual misconduct were suspended immediately, while McKinney had
    been allowed to stay on. 

    McKinney, the first black man to serve in the influential post, has
    been the senior enlisted adviser to the chief of staff of the Army
    since June 30, 1995. 

    The post is considered one of the most prestigious in the service,
    since it represents the vast majority of all soldiers at the highest
    levels of the Army. Only 10 men have held the job. 
7.617IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:09109
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:14 EST   REF6025

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Coastal Training Flights Resume

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Air Force resumed training flights over the East
    and Gulf coasts Tuesday after a four-day suspension that included a
    quick course in the dangers of shadowing airliners with sensitive
    collision avoidance systems. 

    One of the things investigators discovered was that many commercial
    planes' alerts can be triggered by fighter jets at distances the
    military pilots may not be counting on, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth
    Bacon said. 

    In two cases last week, collision alarms sounded in airliners when jet
    fighters came too close, causing one airline pilot to maneuver so
    sharply that three people were thrown to the floor. In the other case
    the pilot went into a descent to avoid the military planes. In two
    other cases alarms did not sound. 

    "The military needs to remind their pilots of the effect of close
    approaches to aircraft like that," said Tony Broderick, an industry
    consultant who formerly headed the Federal Aviation Administration's
    regulation and certification office. 

    Air Force Secretary Sheila Widnall, asked about the rash of incidents
    on a visit to Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico on Tuesday, said:
    "It may be that controllers are afraid to challenge pilots who are too
    close to civilian aircraft." 

    Bacon, the Pentagon spokesman, said the Air Force is redesigning its
    training to take into account the sensitivity of collision avoidance
    systems on civilian planes. 

    Training in areas along the East and Gulf Coasts was suspended Friday
    for a review of safety procedures, but Air Force spokesman Capt. Leo
    Devine said many units have now resumed flying. 

    Authorities insist that none of the planes was in danger. But the
    incidents raised concern about close calls in the sky -- particularly
    since all four cases involved F-16 fighter jets. 

    The case causing most concern occurred last Wednesday when two Air
    National Guard fighters doing interception training off the coast of
    New Jersey discovered a Nations Air flight nearby and one fighter
    approached it. 

    Like all airliners with 30 or more seats, the Nations Air Boeing 727
    had a collision alert system. It went off and the pilot followed
    instructions to dive. 

    The military pilots may see an airliner and think they can practice
    interceptions by flying in behind without being seen, said Jim Burnett,
    a former National Transportation Safety Board member and now an
    aviation consultant. "They may not know there is a computerized radar
    that will pick them up and advise the commercial pilot to do a recovery
    maneuver." 

    David Stempler, an aviation attorney, said the incidents indicate
    military aircraft have been in the habit of practicing their
    intercepting techniques with commercial aircraft. 

    "They have been doing this all along, but they've just never been
    caught," Stempler said. 

    Bacon said, "The flying public, I believe, has nothing to worry about.
    The military is trained to stay well away from civilian airliners." 

    Eliot Brenner, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration,
    said the recording of four incidents in three days was "just a
    statistical anomaly and probably drew attention only because the media
    is focused on it at the moment." 

    Pilot reports would have led to disclosure of the Nations Air incident
    and one Friday involving military jets passing above and below an
    American Eagle flight. But information on the other two cases -- one
    over Texas and the other over New Mexico -- was made public only when
    reporters asked if there had been other cases. 

    It is relatively common for planes to get closer than specified in
    regulations, and air traffic controllers routinely direct them to
    change course or altitude to correct the problem. Called pilot
    deviations, there were 1,277 incidents in 1996 when planes strayed in
    that way from their assigned course or level, the FAA reported. 

    While that indicates an average of 3.5 incidents a day, aviation
    experts point out that things don't happen that smoothly and incidents
    tend to occur in bunches for no apparent reason. 

    The FAA also records what it calls "near midair collisions," which are
    reported by pilots. There were 202 last year, down from 241 a year
    earlier. 

    Even here, though, the report is subjective and FAA officials say it
    may not indicate a real hazard. Factors that influence whether a pilot
    submits a report include how close the airplanes were, whether the
    pilot was surprised and "heightened alertness of the flight crew ...
    because of publicity surrounding a near or actual midair collision,"
    the FAA reports. 

    Planes are supposed to get no closer than 5 miles horizontally and
    1,000 to 2,000 feet vertically, and coming closer than that triggers
    the collision warning. 
7.618IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0925
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:05 EST   REF6019

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Simpson Case Spurs Custody Bill

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- In a proposal inspired by the O.J. Simpson
    case, a state lawmaker wants to prevent a parent found guilty or liable
    in the other parent's death from getting child custody. 

    "This is obviously not in the child's best interest," said
    Assemblywoman Barbara Alby, a Republican from Carmichael. 

    Alby said she is working on the bill with attorney Gloria Allred, a Los
    Angeles women's rights attorney who has been a spokeswoman for the
    family of Nicole Brown Simpson. 

    After Simpson's murder acquittal, his custody of children, Sydney, 11,
    and Justin, 8, was challenged by grandparents Louis and Juditha Brown.
    But a judge in December ruled in favor of Simpson. 

    Marjorie Fuller, the court-appointed lawyer for the Simpson children,
    said Tuesday the wrongful death verdict against Simpson shouldn't
    affect custody, since the judge took into account the possibility he
    could lose the civil trial. 
7.619IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0936
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:05 EST   REF6018

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Video Spoofs San Francisco Mayor

    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Some of San Jose's supporters have taken video
    vengeance against San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown for his comments
    trashing his southern neighbor. 

    In a "Mission Impossible"-style video produced for the San Jose Chamber
    of Commerce, an actor portraying Brown is kidnapped and forced to learn
    about San Jose's achievements. 

    "I think they just demonstrated what I said they were like -- a sleepy
    little town," Brown said when asked about the video on Tuesday. 

    San Jose's bustling high-tech economy is contrasted with San
    Francisco's tacky tourist wares. Its opera and theater are compared
    with San Francisco's sex shows, its light-rail system with
    disintegrating cable cars. 

    As a final indignity, the video's ersatz mayor is told to learn the
    lyrics to "Do You Know the Way to San Jose?" or his white limo will
    self-destruct. But he stumbles over the words, and smoke billows out of
    the car. 

    "It's pretty obviously a joke," said Mark Waxman, a public relations
    and advertising executive who produced the video shown at a Chamber of
    Commerce luncheon two weeks ago. 

    "It was just a way to respond to some rude comments about San Jose and
    get a laugh about it," he told the San Francisco Chronicle. 

    Not everyone in San Jose thinks the tape is funny. A spokesman for San
    Jose Mayor Susan Hammer said the tape appeared to be "in poor taste." 
7.620IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0967
    AP 11-Feb-1997 20:43 EST   REF6008

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FBI Arrests Alleged Panderer

    By JEFFREY GOLD

    Associated Press Writer

    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- FBI agents arrested a 400-pound man Tuesday after
    he allegedly enticed a 13-year-old girl to mail him pornographic videos
    without ever leaving his home. 

    Paul Brown Jr., 47, was arrested in Cleveland on a single charge of
    coercing a minor to engage in sexually explicit acts for the purpose of
    producing a picture. 

    The girl was 12 when Brown first made contact, posing as a 15-year-old
    pen pal and exchanging e-mail on the Prodigy online service in the
    spring of 1995, federal officials said. 

    Last summer, he sent her instructions on sex acts he wanted her to
    perform in front of a camera, and the girl complied beginning in
    November, sending him four tapes that depicted "lascivious exhibition,"
    they said. 

    The girl's mother alerted authorities last month after discovering a
    pair of men's underwear -- size 48 -- in her daughter's room in their
    northern New Jersey home. It wasn't clear how the underwear got there. 

    Federal agents tracked Brown down using telephone bills from the girl's
    home and searched this apartment in the basement of his ex-wife's house
    in Cleveland. There, they uncovered correspondence with more than 10
    other girls, ages 14 to 16, from Los Gatos, Calif.; Jacksonville, Fla.;
    and Saginaw, Mich.; according to court papers. 

    A federal magistrate ordered him held until a Friday bail hearing.
    Brown waived extradition to New Jersey. Agents needed a van to
    transport Brown because of his weight, FBI officials said. 

    Court papers, identifying the girl, now 14, only by her initials, gave
    this account: 

    Brown responded in spring 1995 to the girl's ad asking for a computer
    pen pal, identifying himself as a 15-year-old boy who lived with his
    mother. 

    They began exchanging e-mail, speaking on the telephone, and writing to
    each other. 

    Brown told her he loved her in an Aug. 2, 1995, letter and also asked
    for photographs of her. "Some sexy if possible. Please. Baby, for me." 

    The next month, Brown sent a letter decorated with animal stickers,
    telling the girl she was "doing a fantastic job moving from childhood
    into womanhood." 

    "By the time we meet, you should be an expert at everything in the bed,
    on the couch, table, chair ... everywhere, girl." 

    In a July 31 letter, he told her to make a videotape of herself
    masturbating on a bed, with a "lot of close ups." He also requested
    "one more weird thing," a jar of her urine and two pairs of her
    underwear. 

    The court papers didn't say whether she honored that request. 
7.621IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:0991
    AP 11-Feb-1997 20:21 EST   REF5998

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Illegal Crossers Face Peril

    By DANA CALVO

    Associated Press Writer

    CAMPO, Calif. (AP) -- Martin Facio can thank the U.S. government for
    reminding him of the proper way to dress when sneaking across the
    border. 

    Because of a U.S. border crackdown in the balmy San Diego area, illegal
    aliens have been trying to cross into the United States by trekking
    through the cold, windswept mountains to the east. As a result, at
    least 14 immigrants have died of exposure in the past month.

    To prevent more deaths, the U.S. and Mexican governments are
    broadcasting public service announcements warning illegal immigrants to
    stay away from the area. 

    "Well, I'm not saying we should tell them how to get here, but
    sometimes we find them wearing trash bags they've found -- like that's
    going to keep them warm and dry," said Ronny Kastner, a Border Patrol
    agent in Campo, where an average of 125 immigrants are arrested each
    night. "This year we found them after it was too late, or we found
    people real cold." 

    Facio, a 33-year-old auto repairman from Mexico City, heard radios
    crackling in Tijuana with helpful hints for would-be crossers. 

    He and his nephews bought long underwear and flannel shirts and stayed
    in a Tijuana way station until the weather, which had been around the
    freezing mark, broke. As temperatures climbed to the mid-50s, Facio and
    his nephews set out on their journey, heading more than 50 miles east
    of Tijuana. 

    "I heard the warnings, but I don't care," Facio said from behind bars
    recently. "In Mexico, there is no work." 

    By the time Border Patrol agents caught them and put them in a
    detention cell just after nightfall on the same day they set out, the
    temperature had dipped to 38 degrees. 

    In the next 24 hours, 126 other immigrants were detained by agents
    based at Campo, an enforcment area that encompasses an Indian
    reservation, the Cleveland National Forest and the site of most of the
    14 deaths -- the Laguna Mountains. 

    Although the international border and the main highway are only two
    miles apart, impassable mountains turn the trip into a 22-hour
    marathon. And that's if the aliens don't stop to rest or eat. The
    average illegal immigrant logs three to four days between the border
    fence and downtown Campo. 

    Several years ago, immigrants sneaking into Southern California crossed
    over from the booming city of Tijuana into San Diego, where even winter
    temperatures overnight are in the mid-40s and 50s. 

    It's a straight 20-minute sprint from the streets of Tijuana to the
    closest San Diego highway -- so easy that some teen-agers used to run
    back and forth between countries several times in one night just for
    kicks. 

    But a federal program called Operation Gatekeeper tightened up the
    border in urban San Diego. Launched in 1994, Operation Gatekeeper
    bolstered the U.S. side of the border with night-vision equipment and
    more than 600 additional Border Patrol agents. 

    To avoid the fortified region, illegal immigrants have shifted their
    crossings eastward to the more treacherous mountains where Border
    Patrol reinforcements are just now arriving. The results have been
    tragic. 

    Protected only by thin jackets, jeans and sneakers, some of the 14
    victims had spent days walking through calf-high snow without food or
    water. With temperatures in the low 30s and a stinging wind in their
    faces, two other men were nearly delirious from cold and hunger when
    they approached Border Patrol agents, begging to be rescued. One was
    barefoot because his shoes had gotten lost as he stumbled up the
    mountain. 

    Facio and his nephews had less than $300 between them, so they heeded
    the public service announcements and used their money to buy warm
    clothes instead of hiring a smuggler who could help lead them across. 

    While Facio was disappointed the Border Patrol had caught him, the trip
    wasn't entirely worthless, he said: "Next time I am going to wear
    gloves." 
7.622IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1079
    AP 12-Feb-1997 0:34 EST   REF5618

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ecuador President Sworn In

    By MONTE HAYES

    Associated Press Writer

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Congress selected its own leader, Fabian
    Alarcon, as Ecuador's interim president Tuesday night, a move aimed at
    ending a week-long political crisis that started with the ousting of
    the country's elected president. 

    Alarcon smiled when he received the yellow, blue and red presidential
    sash during his swearing-in ceremony. He is to call elections within 12
    months and govern until August 1998. 

    In his acceptance speech, he defended Congress' decision to depose
    President Abdala Bucaram, saying "the country was on the verge of
    collapse" because of his policies and actions. 

    The flamboyant Bucaram, who calls himself El Loco, or "the crazy one,"
    was sacked Thursday by Congress for mental instability, accused of
    corruption, nepotism and embarrassing behavior during his six months in
    office. 

    As an emergency measure, Congress installed vice-president Rosalia
    Arteaga as a caretaker president until it could chose a new leader. It
    chose Alarcon to replace her by a vote of 57-2. 

    Arteaga had threatened not to leave the post, saying the constitution
    made no mention of the role of an interim president. She changed her
    mind Monday, after meeting with military leaders, who have managed the
    recent crisis from behind the scenes. 

    Before she resigned Tuesday, she issued a decree calling for a national
    referendum on whether the country's vice president should succeed the
    president if the position becomes vacant. 

    "I will return to the presidency of the republic only if that is the
    determination of the referendum," said Arteaga. 

    Political instability started when Bucaram refused to step down after
    Congress voted him out; that sparked a fight for the presidency among
    Bucaram, Arteaga and Alarcon. 

    The turmoil raised fears of a military coup. While that did not happen,
    the crisis served to underscore the power and influence of the armed
    forces in the fragile democracy. Ecuador's military -- the ultimate
    arbiter of power -- had to step in and negotiate a solution. 

    Speaking from the president's office in the national palace, Arteaga
    also denied that the armed forces had a role in resolving the political
    crisis, which began with Congress' dismissal of Bucaram. 

    "The role of the armed forces is internal and international security,
    but not acting in politics," she said when asked if she had the support
    of the powerful military. 

    Bucaram left the country to spread the word that "a civilian
    dictatorship has been imposed." 

    "I am President of the Republic. I never resigned and never will
    resign," Bucaram, dressed in jeans and a sports shirt, told reporters
    and a small group of curious onlookers after arriving at Panama City
    airport Tuesday night. 

    He said his trip would include stopovers in other Latin American
    countries. He denied that he was going into exile, although Bucaram
    went into self-imposed exile in Panama twice in the 1980s while facing
    fiscal mismanagement charges as mayor of the city of Guayaquil. 

    Speaking in Panama, he said he will leave for Buenos Aires, Argentina,
    on Friday to meet with Argentine President Carlos Menem, whom he
    claimed had offered him support during the crisis. He then will visit
    Peru and Colombia, among other Latin American countries, before
    returning home, he said. 
7.623IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1058
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:31 EST   REF6030

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Swiss Gov't Urged on Gold Fund

    BERN, Switzerland (AP) -- A government committee urged the Cabinet on
    Tuesday to move quickly in deciding whether to contribute public money
    into a fund to compensate Holocaust victims. 

    Switzerland's three big banks announced last week that they would
    donate $70 million to a humanitarian fund to help families of Jews who
    lost assets in the Holocaust. 

    Swiss businesses -- many of whom have been accused of profiting from
    the war at the expense of Jews -- also plan to contribute to the fund,
    which will be set up later this month at the Swiss National Bank. 

    The banks and businesses have made it clear it is up to the
    seven-member Federal Executive to decide how the fund will be managed
    and who its specific beneficiaries will be. 

    They also have pressured the government to come up with its own
    contribution. The government has said it did want to decide on that
    until summer, after the preliminary results of an independent
    investigation into the Swiss wartime past. 

    But three of the four parties in the governing coalition have said they
    favor a quick resolution. Parliament's Foreign Policy Commission on
    Tuesday also urged the federal executive to make up its mind rapidly. 

    The government has said hasty action would be a premature admission of
    guilt. It is also wary of using taxpayers' money for the fund, at a
    time when the country is in recession and has a large budget deficit. 

    Jewish groups say Swiss banks have as much as $7 billion in World War
    II-era bank accounts from Jewish depositors. The banks maintain those
    accounts contain only a few million dollars, although they have begun a
    joint investigation with Jewish groups to check further. 

    In France, in the latest attempt to right the wrongs of the World War
    II Vichy regime, the city of Lyon promised to investigate assets seized
    from Jews who were deported to Nazi camps, a newspaper said Tuesday. 

    Lyon Mayor Raymond Barre, a former prime minister, wants to establish a
    commission to inventory property confiscated by pro-Nazi officials, the
    daily Le Figaro reported. 

    "It's in everyone's best interest to clarify the situation, without
    malice or acrimony," said Alain Jakubowicz, head of Lyon's Jewish
    community, which called for the investigation. 

    The commission would determine if property taken from deported Jews is
    still under city control. It then could be returned to the rightful
    owners or their heirs, Le Figaro said. 

    About 75,000 Jews were arrested in France and sent to Nazi death camps,
    and only about 2,500 survived. 
7.624IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1087
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:12 EST   REF6023

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Yeltsin Slow to Recover

    By SERGEI SHARGORODSKY

    Associated Press Writer

    MOSCOW (AP) -- In a departure from his usual rosy reports, Boris
    Yeltsin's spokesman acknowledged Tuesday that the president is
    recovering "quite slowly" from his ailments and will not be back full
    time at the Kremlin for some time. 

    Spokesman Sergei Yastrzhembsky did not provide details of the
    president's prognosis, but the change of tone was striking in contrast
    to his previous upbeat assessments of Yeltsin's health. 

    Yeltsin had a heart attack last summer, then quintuple bypass surgery
    in November. Just two weeks after going back to work at the Kremlin, he
    came down with pneumonia. 

    "The post-operation period at that moment was far from completed,"
    Yastrzhembsky explained at a news conference. 

    He described Yeltsin's pneumonia as a "very serious illness," but said
    the president "is gradually gaining (strength) and physical activity,
    as his schedule can testify." 

    Yeltsin's doctors are exercising "double caution," said Yastrzhembsky,
    adding: "Do not expect the president's speedy return to the Kremlin." 

    The 66-year-old president has been at his Kremlin office only
    sporadically over the past seven months. 

    On Tuesday, he met with Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin at the
    country home where Yeltsin has done much of his recuperating. 

    They discussed the premier's visit to the United States last week and
    preparations for a March 20-21 summit with President Clinton in
    Helsinki, Finland. 

    Yastrzhembsky denied suggestions that there are preparations to move
    the summit to Moscow if Yeltsin's health worsens. 

    Dr. Michael DeBakey, the American heart surgeon who was a consultant on
    Yeltsin's bypass operation, said he was puzzled by Yastrzhembsky's
    negative tone. 

    He said Yeltsin's surgeon had told him the Russian president suffered
    from the flu, followed by a "mild case of pneumonitis." 

    "If you have a severe flu, it takes you about a month to get over it,"
    DeBakey said in a telephone interview from Houston. 

    DeBakey does not get detailed reports on Yeltsin's health anymore, but
    he said he speaks with the president's surgeon occasionally. They last
    spoke about 10 days ago, he said. 

    According to DeBakey, Yeltsin's surgery was successful and free of
    complications, and the Russian president's heart was "functioning
    virtually normally now." He also said Yeltsin had lost weight because
    doctors put him on a low-fat diet and exercise program. 

    A former Yeltsin confidant ousted from the Kremlin in June and elected
    to parliament over the weekend accused Yeltsin's government of
    "impotence." 

    In his first public comments after his election Sunday, Alexander
    Korzhakov, former head of Yeltsin's security guard, hinted he would use
    his new position to lay bare Kremlin wrongdoing. 

    "Many people have a lot to fear," Korzhakov told the daily newspaper
    Izvestia in a story published Tuesday. 

    Asked what he learned from meeting with voters, Korzhakov said: "In one
    phrase -- the current power is powerless. To put it straight, like a
    man: This is state impotence." 

    Yastrzhembsky said the president had no comment on Korzhakov's
    election. 

    Yeltsin, meanwhile, has been keeping to a consistent if non-taxing
    schedule of meetings. He plans a national radio address Friday and will
    meet with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat on Feb. 18 in Moscow,
    Yastrzhembsky said. 
7.625IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1061
    AP 11-Feb-1997 20:51 EST   REF6012

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cuba Cabinet Official Replaced

    By JOHN RICE

    Associated Press Writer

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Cuba's veteran minister of culture has been
    replaced by the more youthful head of the writers' union, Cuban
    officials said Tuesday, in an apparent trend toward younger government
    leaders. 

    Abel Prieto, 46, replaces 67-year-old Armando Hart as head of the
    Culture Ministry, which has broad authority to approve art and
    publications in the Communist nation. 

    The succession is not likely to cause significant policy changes. Both
    men have supported relatively open debate, within the limits of
    supporting Cuba's Communist system. 

    Cuban state news media, monitored in Mexico City, said the Cabinet had
    decided to "free Hart of his responsibilities." 

    Hart, one of Fidel Castro's early allies, had been culture minister
    since 1976 and prior to that was education minister. 

    But his political influence has faded in recent years while that of
    Prieto has risen. Prieto has been a member of the Communist Party's top
    Political Bureau since 1991, the same year Hart left that committee. 

    For most of his career, Hart has taken a middle road between party
    hardliners who insist on rigid ideological conformity and liberals who
    favor more open debate. He sometimes cracked down on dissidents while
    protecting some writers and artists seen as critical but loyal to
    Communism. 

    Since March 1996, when the Political Bureau issued a report warning
    intellectuals not to fall into what it described as U.S. traps, Hart
    "has been on the side that favors open debate, that thinks that open
    debate is central," said Carollee Bengelsdorf, a Cuba specialist at
    Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass. 

    Hart's ministry also hired social scientists who were removed from the
    Center for the Study of the Americas, a research body with a relatively
    free-thinking approach until it came under attack by hardliners last
    year. 

    Prieto, noted for his long hair and informal manner, has taken a
    similar position and his promotion to replace Hart "is a good sign" for
    those favoring open debate in Cuba, Bengelsdorf said. 

    Hart joined Castro's rebel "July 26 Movement" in 1955, only two years
    after Castro led a failed raid on the military's Moncada Barracks in
    Santiago, Cuba. 

    The raid cost the lives of many followers but its boldness -- and
    Castro's speech at the trial that followed -- brought him to national
    attention. 
7.626IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1041
    AP 11-Feb-1997 20:13 EST   REF5996

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Uganda Denies Plane Crash

    KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) -- A Ugandan plane carrying military equipment and
    soldiers crashed in eastern Zaire and several survivors were taken
    prisoner, the military said Tuesday. 

    In Paris, a Ugandan official denied the report. 

    "The report is false," said Uganda's permanent secretary for foreign
    affairs, Stephen Nabeta. "As we have said, we have no Ugandan troops at
    all there." 

    According to the Zairian military statement, some soldiers were killed
    in the crash, which occurred Monday night in the Ruwenzori mountains
    close to the Ugandan border. 

    There was no independent confirmation of the report and the military
    did not release further details. 

    It claimed the crash backed its allegations that Uganda is supplying
    arms and soldiers to Laurent Desire Kabila's rebel army, which has
    seized 620 miles of territory along Zaire's eastern border. 

    In Paris, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni denied that his troops were
    in Zaire and offered to have international observers provide
    verification. 

    Museveni spoke Tuesday at a news conference after a meeting with
    President Jacques Chirac that centered on the conflict in Africa's
    Great Lakes region. 

    Zaire's government also accuses Rwanda and Burundi of being involved in
    the rebel war, which was launched in September and is now inching
    closer to the main city in eastern Zaire, Kisangani. 

    Kabila wants to overthrow Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko, who he
    claims is corrupt. 
7.627IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1067
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:53 EST   REF6041

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Shuttle Closes In on Hubble

    By MARCIA DUNN

    AP Aerospace Writer

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Space shuttle Discovery and its
    mechanic-astronauts chased after the Hubble Space Telescope on Tuesday
    for a service call that took on new urgency with the failure of one of
    its components. 

    A science instrument aboard Hubble conked out last Friday. The seven
    astronauts are bringing its replacement, a top-of-the-line spectrograph
    that they will install this Friday. 

    "This is an example, you could say, of just in time," NASA payload
    manager Kenneth Ledbetter said after Discovery's spectacular liftoff in
    the dark early Tuesday. 

    Once Discovery was on its way, ground controllers pivoted Hubble into a
    safe position for Thursday's rendezvous and began shutting down the
    telescope, one component after another. By Tuesday night, Discovery had
    narrowed the gap from 7,500 miles at the start of the chase to 3,000. 

    This will be the second Hubble visit by spacewalking astronauts in
    three years. 

    The astronauts' No. 1 priority, during the first of four spacewalks on
    consecutive days, will be to install the new $125 million imaging
    spectrograph and a $105 million near-infrared camera. Scientists hope
    to peer back even farther in time and space with these instruments,
    which will bring the 1970s-era Hubble up to date. 

    "With a little luck in a couple weeks, the best telescope in the
    universe will be even better than it is now," shuttle commander Kenneth
    Bowersox said. 

    The $2 billion telescope -- considered the world's premier optical
    observatory -- was launched from the same shuttle in 1990. 

    In 1993, a repair team had to fix Hubble's blurred vision -- the result
    of a flawed mirror -- and replace its shaky solar panels, broken
    gyroscopes and failed computer memory boards. 

    This crew will install 11 major components. Among the upgrades: new
    data recorders, pointing-system devices and a computer "switchboard." 

    "It's clear that the last mission was probably the toughest shuttle
    mission ever," said NASA's chief Hubble scientist, Ed Weiler. "This may
    be No. 2 or No. 3. It's not every day we launch a shuttle and try to do
    four six- or seven-hour spacewalks." 

    The fear is that the four spacewalkers could inadvertently make the
    telescope worse. 

    During the last repair visit, the Hubble's fragile, 40-foot solar
    panels were rolled up. On this flight, however, they will remain
    outstretched because they're too twisted to retract. 

    "It's all the little things that add up, that make you worry," Weiler
    said. "We're going up there and docking and playing around with a
    spacecraft that's working beautifully, even though it's designed to be
    done." 
7.628IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1095
    AP 11-Feb-1997 21:34 EST   REF6032

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Chafee Fires Shot Across EPA Bow

    By H. JOSEF HEBERT

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A controversial Clinton administration proposal to
    tighten air quality standards prompted a warning Tuesday that it could
    lead to an unraveling of the nation's key air pollution law. 

    Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I., a moderate who has had wide support among
    environmentalists, said he was deeply concerned about the Environmental
    Protection Agency proposal and urged that key parts of it be postponed.

    "With the tighter standards, you're going to find a revolt against the
    Clean Air Act," Chafee told reporters on the eve of hearings on the
    proposal by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, which he
    chairs. 

    The EPA plan to impose more stringent standards on smog-causing ozone
    and soot, largely from combustion, has attracted strong opposition from
    the business community, which claims the change will cost tens of
    billions of dollars and provide minimal health improvements. 

    EPA Administrator Carol Browner, who is scheduled to appear before
    Chafee's committee Wednesday, reiterated her determination to tighten
    the air pollution standards, saying that 130 million Americans would
    benefit, including 33 million children. 

    "The best available science calls for action," she insisted in a
    meeting with reporters at EPA headquarters. Rejecting criticism from a
    business coalition that the EPA was relying on incomplete and "junk"
    science, Browner said the agency based its proposal on more than 240
    peer-reviewed scientific studies. 

    Comments are still being heard, but Browner said she is confident the
    agency will produce a final regulation on the new standards by summer.
    It would be years before the new standards, which would establish the
    minimum pollution levels states and communities must strive to achieve,
    would actually be implemented. 

    But the proposal has sparked a firestorm. 

    Chafee, one of the leaders of the long, contentious fight for tougher
    clean air legislation in 1990, urged the EPA to back off from its
    proposal and take a more modest approach. 

    He said if the standards go into effect, pressure would grow in
    Congress to reopen the 1990 Clean Air Act, which could allow opponents
    to press for numerous changes in the law that is the linchpin to
    government efforts to improve air quality. 

    "You overload the horse ... and you get the whole program in jeopardy,"
    Chafee said. "I want to preserve the Clean Air Act and I don't want to
    see it cut back and attacked because we've overloaded the circuits." 

    Last year House Republicans talked about overhauling the law, but those
    efforts gained little widespread support. Even so, grumbling about an
    EPA automobile inspection program caused enough political turmoil that
    the Congress ordered the program stopped. 

    The EPA's new soot and ozone standards could prompt a similar revolt,
    Chafee suggested. 

    The EPA wants to require states and local communities to develop
    pollution controls so that ozone levels will not exceed 0.08 parts per
    billion in any eight-hour period, instead of the current 0.12 parts per
    billion during any one-hour period. The agency also for the first time
    would begin to regulate microscopic particles, or soot, that comes
    largely from combustion down to 2.5 microns in diameter, less than
    1/28th the width of a human hair. 

    Chafee suggested splitting the ozone and particulate proposals --
    something Browner has rejected. 

    As a compromise, Chafee suggested postponing specific pollution levels
    for fine particles until studies on health impact can be completed over
    the next five years, although a general intention to regulate such
    particles could be issued. As for a new ozone standard, Chafee said
    "the benefits ... are very modest" and the EPA's proposal should be
    largely scrapped. 

    Browner gave no indication Tuesday that the agency will back away from
    the proposal. She insisted that the ozone and soot standards must be
    linked and said she is obligated under the Clean Air Act to review the
    adequacy of the standards. 

    "The science is clear and compelling," said Browner. She said large
    segments of the population -- children, the elderly and people
    suffering from respiratory problems such as asthma -- are not protected
    under the current standards. 
7.629IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:11100
    AP 11-Feb-1997 20:14 EST   REF5997

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Circadian Rhythm, Moods Linked

    By BRENDA C. COLEMAN

    AP Medical Writer

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Changing the timing of when you are awake and when you
    sleep can profoundly affect your mood, according to scientists who have
    for the first time linked mood changes to the predictable and enduring
    internal rhythms of the human body. 

    Two studies released Tuesday tease apart the complex relationships
    between daily biological rhythms, sleep choices and whether people feel
    cheerful or blue. 

    The studies suggest, for example, that even if a person has gotten
    enough sleep, he is likely to be irritable or blue if his waking hours
    center on a time when his biological clock tells him he "should" be
    asleep. 

    Conversely, even if a person stays awake 36 hours straight and is
    seriously sleep-deprived, he may say he feels terrific if you ask him
    about his mood at an hour when his biological clock tells him he is
    supposed to be awake, findings suggest. 

    The studies show that "some hours of the day, we're happier than
    others, and it's occurring inside us, not just in reaction to the world
    around us," said psychologist David F. Dinges of the University of
    Pennsylvania. 

    He called the work a "tour de force." 

    The findings will pave the way for research that one day could help
    millions of depressed people live happier lives and aid people whose
    sleep patterns are disrupted by shift work or travel, said Dinges,
    chief of sleep and chronobiology in the psychiatry department. 

    "We don't really understand whether (sleep) disturbances ... are
    leading to some of the mood disturbances associated with night shift
    work or chronic exposure to time zone changes," he said. 

    But since depression, anxiety disorders and manic-depression "are so
    widespread in humankind and so debilitating to so many people, and lead
    to self-medication with alcohol and so many other problems, being able
    to identify the fundamental processes in every human that may go awry
    in producing them is hugely important," Dinges said. 

    The studies, conducted independently in Boston and in Manchester,
    England, are described in a report in the February issue of the
    Archives of General Psychiatry, released Tuesday by the American
    Medical Association. 

    A total of 24 healthy young volunteers were confined to laboratories
    and regimented to artificially long sleep-wake cycles -- 30 hours or 28
    hours instead of the usual 24 hours -- for about a month. 

    The subjects experienced highs and lows in mood corresponding to a
    combined effect of two things: the amount of time a subject had been
    awake and the subject's body temperature, which is usually lowest in
    the early morning of a 24-hour sleep-wake cycle. 

    "This is very exciting, because it leads us to believe that similar
    mechanisms could be involved in depression," said Dr. Diane B. Boivin,
    who led the Boston research at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's
    Hospital. 

    Dr. Thomas Wehr, chief of the Psychobiology Branch at the National
    Institute of Mental Health, said he is preparing to use the "ingenious"
    design of the studies to explore whether altering sleep patterns can
    combat manic depression, which afflicts about 1 percent of the
    population. 

    Manic depression and major depression, which afflicts 8 percent to 10
    percent of the population, are often typified by worse moods in the
    morning and steadily improving moods throughout the day, said Wehr, who
    was not involved in the new studies. 

    It is known that about 60 percent of major depressives will respond
    favorably -- if temporarily -- to sleep deprivation, such as being kept
    up all night, Wehr said. 

    German researchers are now trying to make that improvement permanent by
    depriving depressives of sleep and then shifting their bedtimes to much
    earlier in the evening, Wehr said. 

    The biological clock is an area of the brain that serves as a pacemaker
    for rhythms in biological functions ranging from sleeping and waking to
    digestion, Dinges said. 

    "Over the years, it has seemed fairly clear that in people who have
    mood disorders, their mood varies depending on when and how much they
    sleep relative to their circadian (daily) rhythms," Wehr said. 

    With the two new studies, scientists now have at least a theoretical
    way to predict how someone's mood will be affected by his sleep timing
    as it relates to his own biological clock. 
7.630IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 10:1171
    AP 11-Feb-1997 17:51 EST   REF5465

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FDA Launches Tobacco Crackdown

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Food and Drug Administration is hiring state
    inspectors to catch stores that illegally sell tobacco to teen-agers --
    the first phase of a crackdown that the government will explain in a
    "national town meeting" in 25 cities next Tuesday. 

    Most of the cities will hold Tuesday afternoon's interactive broadcast
    in United Artists cinemas, utilizing the theaters' satellite equipment
    to let the crowds question FDA officials stationed here. 

    Ten other cities will get separate visits from FDA officials to
    introduce retailers, local government officials and average citizens to
    a regulation that takes effect Feb. 28 forcing stores to get photo
    identification proving young customers are old enough to buy tobacco. 

    But the FDA's outreach is under fire from a congressional opponent, who
    questions whether the briefings, particularly next Tuesday's video
    broadcast that features a speech by Vice President Al Gore, are really
    politics designed to drum up anti-tobacco support. 

    "I will appreciate a detailed summary of the costs to the taxpayers of
    these 'town meeting' events," Sen. Lauch Faircloth, R-N.C., wrote FDA
    Commissioner David Kessler, giving him until Monday to respond. 

    FDA Associate Commissioner Mitch Zeller called the meetings necessary
    for confused communities. 

    "Some people didn't understand the rationale behind carding people,"
    Zeller said Tuesday after hundreds of people crowded into the first
    briefings, in Baltimore and Boston, to learn about the new law. 

    Nationally, it is illegal to sell tobacco to anyone under age 18.
    Beginning Feb. 28, the FDA says retailers must get proof of age from
    anyone who looks younger than 27 -- much as stores demand photo ID from
    people in their 20s who are buying alcohol. 

    Zeller showed the crowd a poster with two similar models, one age 16
    and one 25, to illustrate how easy it is to sell tobacco illegally to a
    mature-looking minor. 

    Stores caught selling to teens, in undercover inspections the FDA is
    hiring states to perform, get a warning the first time, but will be
    fined $250 for each additional violation. 

    The FDA last year announced new regulations of tobacco designed to cut
    teen smoking in half. In addition to requiring photo IDs, the FDA plans
    in August to begin curbing tobacco advertising seen by teen-agers.
    Additional rules would kick in next year. 

    The tobacco industry opposes the regulations and on Monday asked a
    federal judge in North Carolina to invalidate them. U.S. District Judge
    William Osteen said he will rule on the issue no sooner than mid-March.

    But the regulations' legal future aside, the FDA can afford just $4
    million in tobacco funding this year, meaning it may hire inspectors in
    fewer than a dozen states to enforce the first rules. The FDA is asking
    Congress for $34 million for fiscal 1998 to enforce the regulations
    nationwide. 

    The FDA frequently holds public meetings to explain new regulations,
    but the tobacco outreach is the agency's largest. Officials couldn't
    immediately say how much the city briefings will cost. 
7.631IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:07102
    RTw  12-Feb-97 06:16    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 20 million scramble for 10-pound Concorde tickets 

    LONDON - British Airways said it had sold 190 Concorde tickets for only
    10 pounds ($16) each in 30 minutes, as 20 million people phoned its
    sales centre hoping to be among the lucky few . 

    The return tickets for flights on the luxury aircraft between London's
    Heathrow airport and New York were offered at a 5,400 pound discount to
    mark the 10th anniversary of BA's privatisation. 

    - - - -

    Tortoise takes a breather through its backside 

    BRISBANE - Australian scientists said they were studying a rare
    freshwater tortoise which breaths through its bottom when underwater
    and through its mouth when on land. 

    The Rheodytes Leukops, commonly known as the Fitzroy River tortoise,
    breathes oxygen through special gills lining its rear passage (cloaca),
    enabling it to stay under water longer, said zoologist Craig Franklin
    from the University of Queensland. 

    Franklin said the unique breathing technique enabled the tortoise to
    stay underwater for up to five hours, compared with the maximum two
    hours for other tortoise species. 

    - - - - 

    U.S. space shuttle to carry Irish golf pennant 

    DUBLIN - The coats of arms of some of Ireland's best-known golf courses
    are to be blasted into space. 

    The next U.S. space shuttle will be taking a pennant of the South West
    of Ireland Golf Company with it, carried by Lt. Jim Halsell, an
    astronaut of Irish descent. 

    The pennant features the heraldic emblems of nine major championship
    golf courses including Ballybunion, where U.S. President Bill Clinton
    says he is determined to play. 

    The shuttle Columbia, which takes off on a scientific mission on April
    3, will also be carrying a medallion featuring a 19th century Irish
    emigrant ship, the Jeanie Johnston. 

    It never lost a passenger in 16 voyages from Tralee to Baltimore, New
    York and Quebec during the Irish famine when more than a million people
    left for new lives in the "New World." 

    Both items were put on display in Dublin on Tuesday at a ceremony
    attended by Irish Foreign Minister Dick Spring and U.S. ambassador Jean
    Kennedy-Smith. 

    - - - - 

    Pigs not far from equalling Belgians - in number 

    BRUSSELS - In terms of numbers, pigs are not far from being equal to
    people in Belgium, and with good reason: pork is a key export. 

    Provisional data has showed the pig population grew by 270,000 to 7.4
    million in 1996, closing in on the human population of 10 million
    people. 

    Flanders, in Belgium's northern half, is home to 96 percent of the
    country's pigs, making it the most densely-populated part of the
    European Union in pig terms after neighbouring southern Netherlands.

    Pork exports were worth 60 billion Belgian francs ($1.74 billion) last
    year, up 18 percent from 1995. 

    - - - - 

    Kansas town takes lead in Anglo-U.S. pancake race 

    LIBERAL, Kansas - An annual trans-Atlantic contest was settled as
    Kansas schoolteacher Christina Wilbers won the Pancake Day footrace in
    58.57 seconds, a time that beat the winner of a similar race held
    earlier in Britain. 

    Wilbers' victory meant Liberal, Kansas, took the lead in the series
    with Olney, England, which has held the Shrove Tuesday footrace on and
    off since 1445. Prior to Wilbers' win, the series had been tied at 23
    wins apiece. 

    Housewife Avril Soman won this year's race in Olney with a time of 63.5
    seconds. 

    The approximately 1/4-mile race tends to be dominated by women, who
    must follow a strict dress code of skirts, aprons and headscarves.
    Competitors must be able to whip up a pancake that can be tossed at the
    beginning and end of the race. 

    REUTER
7.632IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:0758
    RTw  12-Feb-97 07:56    

    Australian anthrax outbreak threatens dairy exports

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    SYDNEY, Feb 12 (Reuter) - Australia's worst outbreak of the cattle
    disease anthrax in decades is threatening A$1.8 billion (US$1.4
    billion) in dairy product exports and has taken the unusual turn of
    infecting an abattoir worker. 

    Dairy industry and government officials on Wednesday were shaken by the
    rapid spread of the disease in recent days, with 68 animals killed on
    about 31 farms in the state of Victoria. 

    A 40-year-old abattoir worker has been hospitalised and is undergoing a
    penicillin treatment, said Dr Rosemary Lester of the Victoria's public
    health department. 

    Lester said the unnamed abattoir employee, from a yard which handled
    animals with the disease, now has no symptoms. 

    Anthrax, a bacterial infection, causes rapid death in cattle, sheep and
    goats which eat contaminated material. It rarely affected humans but
    can be contracted through a small cut or scratch. 

    The cause of the anthrax outbreak is not known, but the disease usually
    appears following rain and hot, humid weather -- conditions Victoria
    has recently experienced. 

    Officials said the worst of the outbreak appeared to have been
    contained by the vaccination of 9,000 cattle and the quarantining of
    farms. 

    "We're hopeful its (the anthrax outbreak) under control," Steve Tait,
    senior veterinary officer of Victoria's Department of Natural Resources
    and Energy, told Reuters. 

    But with finicky Asian markets now the biggest customers for Australian
    exports of milk powder, butter, cheese, milk and other products, the
    local diary industry is concerned the outbreak will have an impact on
    sales. 

    "Obviously it's a serious matter (but) from everything we hear people
    (know) the matter is under control and the product is safe," David
    Loutit, chief executive officer of the Victorian Dairy Industry
    Authority, told Reuters. Loutit added only "fairly minor" effects on
    exports are expected. 

    The dairy chief's statement was despite fresh memories of a Japanese
    consumer boycott of imported beef during last year's "Mad Cow" disease
    outbreak in Britain. 

    Australian dairy products are sold around the world, with Japan, the
    Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand and other customers in Asia the biggest
    market, ahead of the Middle East and Euro

    REUTER
7.633IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:0872
    RTw  12-Feb-97 06:56    

    Earphones proposal dogs Elton John HK concert plan

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Peter Humphrey 

    HONG KONG, Feb 12 (Reuter) - Hong Kong politicians have proposed fans
    wear earphones at two outdoor Elton John concerts to keep down the
    noise, sparking a row in a city not known for its peace and quiet. 

    If legislators have their way, the British superstar's concerts could
    look like mime shows when he performs at the outdoor Hong Kong stadium
    in late June to mark the colony's handover to China. 

    "If we want to comply with noise regulations, there's really no
    alternative," lawmaker and urban councillor Fred Li told Reuters on
    Wednesday, after raising objections to the concerts. 

    Li, who said he is "not exactly a pop fan but I enjoy concerts,"
    proposed the headphone idea on Tuesday at a meeting of the stadium's
    governors, saying John's superstar status should not exempt him from
    noise restrictions. 

    Li told Reuters he had seen headphones work fine at a concert in
    January. "It doesn't affect the enjoyment. They can see the performers,
    they can see the screen," he said. 

    John's office has not commented on the controversy. 

    The 49-year-old singer and songwriter is the first big-name entertainer
    Hong Kong claims to have lined up to perform at the handover. 

    Urban councillors threatened to veto the concerts unless they were
    satisfied the star could keep the volume down. They can block a request
    for a waiver of noise rules, designed to keep concerts below 70
    decibels. 

    The controversy stirred up sarcastic editorials in Hong Kong
    newspapers. 

    "The city with noise pollution that shatters the nerves of citizens on
    364 days of the year is now going to turn a pop concert on the 365th
    into a mime act during celebrations of one of its most historic events
    of the century," the South China Morning Post remarked. 

    "But why stop there? To ensure the success of the scheme, gags and
    gloves should be included to deaden the noise in case fans are tempted
    to sing along to the music on their headsets or clap to the rhythm." 

    Two years ago an attempt to make concert-goers wear white gloves to
    muffle applause at a concert was a failure. 

    Music promoter Dale Rennie of the Australasian Entertainment Corp said
    the headphones idea was disastrous. 

    "It would be the utmost embarrassment for our business. It's absurd,"
    he told reporters. "You might as well sit at home and listen to a CD." 

    Organisers say John will hold two concerts, on June 28 and 29, and that
    they hope 40,000 people will pack Hong Kong stadium for each of the
    shows. 

    Governor Chris Patten, an avid music lover, is said to be a big fan. He
    invited John to lunch at Government House in 1993. 

    Hong Kong plans to spend HK$233 million (US$30 million) on glitzy
    ceremonies to mark the territory's return to China at midnight on June
    30, ending a century and a half of British colonial rule. 

    REUTER
7.634IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:08102
    RTos 12-Feb-97 07:41    

    'The English Patient' Leads Oscar Nominations

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LOS ANGELES (Reuter) - The romantic epic "The English Patient"
    dominated the Academy Award nominations Tuesday, while the musical
    "Evita," starring pop icon Madonna, was virtually frozen out of
    competition. 

    Never one to endear herself to the Hollywood establishment, Madonna had
    brashly predicted she would win her first-ever best actress nomination.
    But the Oscar voters snubbed her. 

    In a glittering pre-dawn ceremony, "The English Patient" captured 12
    nominations, including best picture, best actor for Ralph Fiennes, best
    actress for Kristin Scott Thomas and best director for Anthony
    Minghella. 

    The other contenders for best film also fared well with other
    nominations. "Shine" and "Fargo" each claimed seven while "Jerry
    Maguire" and "Secrets & Lies" earned five apiece. 

    Nominated along with Fiennes for best actor honors were Tom Cruise for
    "Jerry Maguire," Woody Harrelson for "The People vs. Larry Flynt,"
    Geoffrey Rush for "Shine" and Billy Bob Thornton for "Sling Blade." 

    Together with Scott Thomas, the nominees for best actress were Brenda
    Blethyn for "Secrets & Lies," Diane Keaton for "Marvin's Room," Frances
    McDormand for "Fargo" and Emily Watson for "Breaking the Waves." 

    Fiennes, in London starring in a stage play, said he was "particularly
    delighted" with the nominations piled up by "The English Patient," a
    story of romantic intrigue set in Nazi-era North Africa and Italy. 

    Blethyn, little known outside her native Britain, spoke candidly on
    NBC's "Today" show, saying: "There's no way I'm going to win it." 

    Kenneth Branagh, who was nominated for best screenplay adaptation for
    his four-hour epic "Hamlet," said: "It is a tribute to everyone who
    worked on the film, especially William Shakespeare."

    But Madonna, one of the world's biggest pop stars, was conspicuously
    absent from the list. "Evita," based on the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical
    about the life of Argentina's Eva Peron, picked up five nominations but
    mostly in minor categories. 

    Musicals tend to fare badly among Oscar voters, but Madonna may also
    have hurt her own cause with her unrepentant bad-girl image. 

    Also missing were Debbie Reynolds for her comeback role in "Mother" and
    singer Courtney Love for "The People vs. Larry Flynt" -- both of whom
    were widely expected to be nominated. 

    The big surprise was double-nominee Billy Bob Thornton, a relatively
    obscure actor and screenwriter who has finally made his mark with
    "Sling Blade," about a retarded man released from a mental institution
    25 years after killing his mother and her lover. 

    Thornton, a former country singer who moved to Hollywood from Arkansas
    in 1983 and struggled for years to make a living at acting, admitted
    feeling strangely out of place on the list of nominees. 

    "I look at it and I say good grief," he said. He boasts a cult
    following for one of his more offbeat projects, "Chopper Chicks in
    Zombie Town," a spoof on horror films. 

    The contenders for best supporting actor are Cuba Gooding Jr. for
    "Jerry Maguire," William H. Macy for "Fargo," Armin Mueller-Stahl for
    "Shine," Edward Norton for "Primal Fear" and James Woods for "Ghosts of
    Mississippi." 

    Film legend Lauren Bacall, a first-time Oscar nominee, was considered
    the sentimental choice for best supporting actress for the "The Mirror
    Has Two Faces." She is up against Juliette Binoche for "The English
    Patient," Joan Allen for "The Crucible," Barbara Hershey for "The
    Portrait of a Lady" and Marianne Jean-Baptiste for "Secrets & Lies." 

    Along with Minghella, the nominees for best director were Milos Forman
    for "The People vs. Larry Flynt," Joel Coen for "Fargo," Mike Leigh for
    "Secrets & Lies" and Scott Hicks for "Shine." 

    Legendary playwright Arthur Miller topped the list of nominees for best
    adapted screenplay for his film version of "The Crucible." He is
    competing against Minghella for "The English Patient," Kenneth Branagh
    for "Hamlet," Thornton for "Sling Blade" and John Hodge for
    "Trainspotting." 

    The nominees for best original screenplay were Ethan and Joel Coen for
    "Fargo," Cameron Crowe for "Jerry Maguire," John Sayles for "Lone
    Star," Mike Leigh for "Secrets & Lies" and Jan Sardi for "Shine." 

    In the best foreign-language film category, Oscar voters picked "Kolya"
    from the Czech Republic, "Prisoner of the Mountains" from Russia,
    "Ridicule" from France, "The Other Side of Sunday" from Norway and "A
    Chef in Love" from Georgia. 

    The Oscars will be handed out March 24 at the Los Angeles Shrine
    Auditorium. 

    REUTER
7.635IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:08112
    RTw  12-Feb-97 04:08    

    FEATURE-Ozone hole starts taking its toll in ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE-Ozone hole starts taking its toll in Antarctica 

    By Roger Atwood 

    PALMER STATION, Antarctica, Feb 12 (Reuter) - Starfish embryos develop
    ugly deformities and die before they are born. Sea urchins stop
    reproducing and some plants are producing their own "sunscreen." 

    Wildlife in Antarctica is starting to show the subtle but unmistakeable
    effects of the ozone hole, the gap in the Earth's atmosphere that lets
    the sun's ultraviolet rays bombard the frozen continent for about four
    months every year. 

    With plants and simple animals being damaged by the ozone hole, can
    humans be far behind? That is a question scientists would rather not
    answer yet, but at the simpler evolutionary levels of life the effects
    are all around and seem to be growing worse. 

    Research by scientists at Palmer Station, a U.S. scientific base on
    Anvers Island, shows high ultraviolet radiation damages lower forms of
    life such as plankton and molluscs and could start working its way up
    the food chain. No one dares guess at the implications higher up the
    food chain, such as plankton-eating whales and shellfish-eating
    seabirds. 

    Biologists Isidro Bosch and Deneb Karentz have found that embryos of
    limpets, starfish and other invertebrates do not grow properly when hit
    by the springtime assault of ultraviolet rays through the ozone hole.
    The embryos float by the millions near the surface of the ocean, where
    they are easy prey for predators -- and ultraviolet rays. 

    "What we see is that they don't form in the normal pattern. The entire
    structure is essentially deformed," said Karentz, of the University of
    San Francisco. "If it's supposed to form in a sphere, it forms in a
    sphere with a big lump." 

    Adults do not seem to have the same problem because they have
    protective shells and live at much greater depth, she said. 

    ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION DAMAGE 

    Field and lab work by Karentz and Bosch show that high ultraviolet-B
    (UVB) radiation damages the chromosones of the animals, and "we can
    correlate the amount of damage to the amount of UVB exposure," Karentz
    said. 

    In other words, the more radiation, the more damage to the animals'
    whole reproductive system. 

    Scientists discovered the fraying of the stratosphere's ozone layer in
    the 1970s and quickly tied it to the effects of man-made chemicals,
    mainly chlorofluorocarbons used in air conditioners, refrigerators and
    aerosol sprays. Governments agreed to phase out CFCs under the 1987
    Montreal Protocol and in 1995 developed countries stopped producing
    them. 

    But CFCs take up to eight years to reach the stratosphere, where they
    trigger a chemical reaction that eats away ozone. So no improvement may
    be seen in the layer until 2010 although there is already evidence the
    damage is growing no worse. 

    The effects of the ozone hole on humans are still largely in the realm
    of speculation, but studies suggest they are felt far from Antarctica.
    In Britain, for example, the risk of developing skin cancer has risen
    by as much as 10 percent because of higher ultraviolet radiation, the
    Department of the Environment said last year. 

    In southern Chile and Argentina, the only populated areas directly
    under the ozone hole, UVB radiation levels have been rising for years.
    Chile began an aggressive media campaign to get people to stay out of
    the sun and use hats and sunblock during the hole's worst months from
    September to December. 

    Some creatures in Antarctica seem to taking their own protective
    measures of sorts. Arizona State University researchers found that the
    Antarctic pearl wort, a velvety, moss-like plant that thrives on rocky
    islands, develops a pigment known as a flavenoid that seems to make it
    more tolerant of heavy UV radiation. 

    UNKNOWN REACTION 

    How and why this happens is unknown, but the study "suggests these
    plants adapt to UV in ways that some plants can do, and some can't,"
    said Chris Ruhland, one of the researchers. 

    "Ultraviolet radiation damages DNA replication, that's clear. But what
    these studies show is that this species is quite tolerant of UVB,"
    botanist Xiong Fushen said. 

    Some molluscs have been found to carry a UV-absorbing amino acid that
    may protect them from the ultraviolet assault "in the same way that we
    use sunscreens," said Karentz. 

    Studies are hampered by the fact that there was little detailed
    microbiological research going on in this area before the hole was
    discovered. So scientists have little baseline data and are studying an
    already altered environment. 

    Work is only starting on how ozone depletion will ripple through the
    whole, delicate food balance in Antarctica. 

    "We can still only speculate about what might be happening in Antarctic
    populations," Karentz said. "The answer to the big question, the
    effects of UV on the complex interaction of species, is still unknown." 

    REUTER
7.636IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:0829
    RTw  12-Feb-97 01:17    

    Major to make election decision soon - newspaper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 11 (Reuter) - British Prime Minister John Major intends to
    hold out for a May 1 general election if he has not called one within a
    week, Wednesday's Independent newspaper said. 

    The newspaper quoted senior officials from the ruling Conservative
    Party as saying Major might decide to call by next Wednesday for an
    election, in order to avoid a crucial by-election in northwest England
    where his party is expected to lose a safe seat. 

    That would mean a general election would be held on March 20. 

    If he does not do that, he will wait for "his favoured date" of May 1,
    the Independent said. 

    "If Mr Major cannot be certain of getting the by-election called off,
    he would be better off soldiering on until May 1," the newspaper quoted
    Conservative officials as saying. 

    The Conservatives have consistently lagged Labour in opinion polls by
    around 20 percent for the past two years, and their hopes of narrowing
    the gap in time for the general election are considered minute. 

    REUTER
7.637IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 12:0837
    RTw  12-Feb-97 00:49    

    Tabloid leaks news of 57,800 drop in UK jobless

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 11 (Reuter) - A British newspaper published leaked figures
    it said showed unemployment fell a seasonally-adjusted 57,800 in
    January, hours before they were due for official release on Wednesday. 

    The Daily Mirror said government officials planned to hail the 11th
    consecutive monthly fall in unemployment at a news conference after the
    figures were released at 0930 GMT. 

    The unemployment total in January was 1.8 million, the Daily Mirror
    said. 

    If correct, the January fall far exceeds market expectations of a drop
    of around 30,000. 

    Unemployment fell by a seasonally-adjusted 45,100 in December to a
    six-year low of 1.88 million unemployed. 

    The left-leaning Mirror said raw figures showed that unemployment had
    in fact risen by 39,000 over the last month and it accused Britain's
    Conservative government of massaging the figures. 

    The employment ministry declined to comment on the leak or the accuracy
    of the figures. 

    Last November, a large part of the government's annual budget statement
    was leaked to the Daily Mirror, but the tabloid declined to publish it. 

    The newspaper's editor said then that he felt it would have been
    irresponsible to publish market-sensitive information. 

    REUTER
7.638IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 14:58108
7.639IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:0854
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997
    Issue 628

    A mellow  Mr Meldrew? I don't believe it!
    
    By Sandra Barwick 
    
    DEBATE is bordering on tetchiness in America - land of the increasingly
    long-lived - as to whether grumpy old men are born cantankerous, or
    simply grow that way.

    The Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Ageing, after assessing more than
    2,000 volunteers, claims that time does not wither the personality.
    Grumpy old men are just grumpy young men grown old, says James Fozard,
    director of the study. According to his findings, characters such as
    Victor Meldrew in One Foot in the Grave merely demonstrate attitudes
    preserved in aspic, rather than what irreverent juniors call "Old Git
    Syndrome".

    This contradicts the findings of Ruben Gur, Professor of Psychology at
    the University of Pennsylvania, who claimed last year that men lose
    brain tissue three times faster than women. His thesis was that male
    mental powers decline in old age as the left frontal lobes of their
    brains shrink. "Grumpy old men may be biological," he concluded.

    Cantankerous old men are a cherished feature of British life,
    particularly in the judiciary and the arts, most of them bearing out
    the Baltimore theory that their performance has been refined over a
    lifetime of practice. Evelyn Waugh, infamously crusty novelist and
    diarist, was detested at the age of 11 by his playmates for his
    sarcastic repartee and when Hilaire Belloc met him, as a young man, he
    believed he was diabolically possessed.

    Philip Larkin's diaries reveal that, if anything, he softened slightly
    in old age, while the careers of Kingsley Amis, novelist, and John
    Osborne, dramatist, suggest that "Angry Young Men" are later
    rechristened "Crusty Old Devils".

    Richard Wilson, the 60-year-old who plays Victor Meldrew, and receives
    letters saying that he is the image of viewers' husbands, supports this
    theory. "He's over-sensitive to life," he has often said. "If anyone's
    long-suffering, it's him."

    Lord Russell, 59, historian and a Liberal Democrat spokesman in the
    Lords, was more doubtful. He said: "When we were young the man we all
    thought would be Prime Minister was Brian Walden. We didn't realise you
    can't be PM if you don't suffer fools gladly. I'm sure Brian wouldn't
    like anyone to think that he did."

    Elizabeth Mills, director of the charity, Research Into Ageing, said
    she broadly agreed with the Baltimore study. "In general terms . . . if
    you are out-going and friendly in middle age you will be a cheerful old
    person, and if you are mean and inward-looking, you are likely to be
    even more selfish."
7.640IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:1085
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Priest stabbed in back by visitor to his church
    
    By Tom Leonard and Victoria Combe 

    A ROMAN Catholic priest was stabbed in the back with a kitchen knife
    after he went to make tea for a man who had entered his church asking
    for help.

    The attacker left Father Edward Carroll, 63, with the knife buried
    between his shoulder blades after following him into the rectory
    kitchen at the Sacred Heart Church in Holloway, north London, on Monday
    night.

    Fr Carroll managed to reach an intercom and summoned a colleague, Fr
    Mark Mathias, who found him slumped on the floor. He was taken to the
    Whittington Hospital with the knife still lodged in his back and later
    transferred to the Middlesex Hospital, where he was said to be in a
    "serious but stable" condition.

    A Scotland Yard spokesman said a 27-year-old man was being questioned
    at Islington police station and charges were expected to follow. He
    said that the church, which ministers to a run-down part of north
    London, received regular visits from homeless people and others in
    trouble who wanted help.

    Cardinal Basil Hume, the Archbishop of Westminster, said in a
    statement: "I am proud of the fact our priests carry out their pastoral
    duties even when at times it means risking danger."

    Ann Widdecombe, a Home Office minister and devout Catholic, said she
    was "appalled" by the attack. "It is as if the man by the roadside had
    stabbed the Good Samaritan," she said.

    But a Roman Catholic spokesman said the Church would not be following
    the Church of England's lead in drawing up guidelines on clergy safety.
    "There's nothing we can do apart from hope that people have common
    sense. You can't work out guidelines for situations like this," said a
    Church spokesman, Fr Kieran Conry. "It comes down to your judgment at
    the time. In this case, Fr Carroll was probably right to let the man
    in. A priest, by the nature of his work, has to be accessible and
    available. So the risk will always be there."

    Fr Conry said he believed Fr Carroll, the parish priest for six years,
    had felt it safe enough to turn his back on him.

    Ben Deignan, pastoral assistant at the Sacred Heart Church, said such
    attacks were "a fact of life for priests". He said: "People come to the
    church with a disturbed state of mind and they can't walk away from
    them."

    Fr Carroll, known by his Irish name, Taeve, was described as a friendly
    and dedicated priest. Margaret Cook, his housekeeper, said she did not
    believe the attack would deter him from keeping the church doors open
    to those who needed help.

    "I hope it's a one-off," she said. "We must be more security conscious.
    But what are we going to do: cement the doors?" The attack comes amid
    increasing concern about the safety of clergy, particularly those in
    inner-city areas.

    An Anglican vicar, Christopher Gray, was fatally stabbed outside his
    church, St Margaret's in Anfield, Liverpool, last August.

    In the same month the Rev Ndundai Mpunzi, an Anglican clergyman in
    Walsall, West Midlands, was attacked with a tomahawk after giving
    marriage counselling to a parishioner. Another minister in Brixton,
    south-east London, was attacked and temporarily blinded outside his
    home.

    The Church of England is currently reviewing a diocesan report on
    clergy security, Knocking at Heaven's Door. It proposes that priests be
    given money to buy guard dogs and build porches where they can receive
    visitors. It also advises them to position themselves nearest the door
    and to install panic buttons.

    The study, published by the London diocese, addresses what is a new
    problem for the Church, namely that "people who call at the vicarage
    are no longer the gentlemen of the road who called in the past". It
    added: "We are dealing with people who are mentally ill, on drugs,
    people carrying weapons."

    The attack on Mr Gray prompted the Peterborough diocese to hold
    self-defence workshops for clergy last month.
7.641IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:1262
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    'Wall of silence' by white witnesses at Lawrence inquest
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 

    FIVE young white men called as witnesses at the inquest on Stephen
    Lawrence yesterday refused to answer questions in connection with his
    death.

    They repeatedly claimed the common law right of privilege at Southwark
    coroner's court in south London. The coroner, Sir Montague Levine,
    explained to the men that they were allowed to claim privilege on
    questions which might tend to incriminate them.

    Their refusals to answer led Michael Mansfield, QC, acting for the
    family, to allege that there was a "wall of silence" around the
    stabbing to death of Stephen, an A-level student, as he waited for a
    bus in Eltham, south London, in April 1993.

    Sir Montague asked each witness if they were present when the incident
    took place, if they could assist the court on how the black teenager
    came by his injuries, and whether they knew of anyone who could aid the
    inquest. To most questions they replied: "I claim privilege." The five
    included Neil Acourt, 21, Luke Knight, 19, and Gary Dobson, 21, who
    were formally acquitted on a charge of murdering 18-year-old Stephen
    when a private prosecution brought by his family collapsed at the Old
    Bailey last year.

    Two others called were Jamie Acourt, 19, and David Norris, 20, against
    whom the private case was dismissed at the magistrates' court. At one
    point Mr Mansfield asked Norris: "Are you called David Norris?" The
    20-year-old replied to laughter: "I am claiming privilege on that
    question." When Norris claimed privilege to the question of whether he
    was willing to listen, Sir Montague said: "You have to be prepared to
    listen. Otherwise it's a mockery."

    Mr Mansfield told Sir Montague: "It's completely pointless. These young
    men have decided to say absolutely nothing on any occasion to
    absolutely anything."

    Mr Mansfield said to Knight at one stage: "What I suggest to you then
    is that you all decided to come here and say nothing at all."

    "I claim privilege," repeated Knight, who also refused to answer an
    inquiry from Mr Mansfield about whether he was "prepared to even think
    about the question". After prompting, he said: "I wasn't there."

    Sir Montague agreed to re-call Neil Acourt to the witness box after Mr
    Mansfield complained of his refusal to answer any questions. However,
    Acourt said: "I am not prepared to answer any questions involving the
    case. I have been proved innocent in a court of law."

    When Mr Mansfield asked him if that meant he had nothing to do with the
    death of Stephen Lawrence, Acourt said: "I didn't say that I wasn't
    there or that I had nothing to do with it - I said I have been proved
    innocent in a court of law."

    The refusal of Jamie Acourt to answer prompted Mr Mansfield to say:
    "There has been a wall of silence about this case."

    The hearing continues.
7.642IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:1338
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Howard considers naming of paedophiles
    
    By Philip Johnston, Home Affairs Editor 

    THE prospect that neighbours could be alerted to the presence of sex
    offenders in their community is now under active consideration, Michael
    Howard, the Home Secretary, said yesterday.

    Government officials and police chiefs are discussing ways in which
    information held about convicted paedophiles could be made more widely
    available. But Mr Howard said the issue was one of the most difficult
    with which he had to contend, given the risk of a public backlash
    against offenders.

    Pressure has been growing for Britain to bring in community
    notification orders similar to the so-called Megan's Law introduced in
    America last year. It is named after seven-year-old Megan Kanka, who
    was raped and murdered by a convicted paedophile who had moved into the
    street in New Jersey where she lived. The measure requires the public
    notification of the name and address of any convicted sex offender.

    A Bill now going through parliament sets up a national register of sex
    offenders, enabling the police to track the movements of convicted
    paedophiles and rapists. At present, it is intended that only the
    police should have access to the information.

    Mr Howard, addressing the Prison Service conference in Manchester, said
    there was a risk that a convicted sex offender could be "hounded" from
    his home. Ministers fear this would force an offender to move without
    telling the police, providing the anonymity for further attacks.

    He said that he had yet to reach a decision on the matter but confirmed
    that Home Office officials were discussing the issue with the
    Association of Chief Police Officers. He stressed that it would not be
    easy to reconcile the civil rights of someone who had served their
    sentence with the rights of parents.
7.643IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:1527
7.644IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:1849
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Children left to live in squalor
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A MAN who left his three children alone in their home for three months
    when he moved in with a new girlfriend was jailed for two years
    yesterday.

    The children, two girls aged 14 and six and a 12-year-old boy, were
    left to fend for themselves on little money and lived in squalid
    conditions. Their mother had left the family home in a village near
    Newport, South Wales, two years ago and the eldest child had been
    responsible for all the cooking and housework since then.

    The children told police that after their mother left, their father
    spent most of his days drinking and returned to the house only to
    sleep. The father, who cannot be named to protect his children's
    identity, later deserted them to live with a woman who had a flat above
    a pub in the village. He visited them irregularly and spent only one
    night in the family home during the three months before the situation
    was discovered.

    The man admitted three charges of cruelty to children at Newport Crown
    Court. Judge John Prosser said he had shown "cruelty almost beyond
    belief." The court was told that the elder girl had tried to make sure
    her brother and sister were washed, dressed and fed and that they
    attended school. She often went without food herself and weighed six
    stones when social services arrived at the house.

    She told police: "I found this so hard. I could not do anything, I had
    no life of my own. We had school money and that was it. I had to ring
    dad up for food sometimes because he forgot to bring any.

    "Sometimes I would go without because there was not enough food for us
    all and it was more important for the younger children to eat than me.
    I lost a lot of weight. I was angry at our father for leaving us.
    Everybody was telling me to report him but I did not want to and I just
    carried on the best I could."

    Richrad Twomlow, prosecuting, said social workers found the house
    "totally uninhabitable". Rubbish was strewn around the floors and the
    fridge and freezer were covered with black mould. The six-year-old girl
    had made herself a makeshift bed on top of open rubbish sacks.

    Mr Twomlow added: "The house reeked of damp and the gas fire could not
    be switched on. Every room in the house was filthy." The children are
    now living with foster parents and were said to be "doing well".
7.645IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:1928
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    The toy box soldiers that kill germs
    
    By Robert Uhlig, Technology Correspondent 

    YOUNG children's toys made of a plastic which staves off germs have
    been launched at a toy fair in America and are expected to come to
    Britain.

    Using a technology called Microban, the toys have tiny bacteria-busting
    pellets bonded permanently into the plastic structure. These prevent
    mould, mildew, fungi and bacteria, including E coli and salmonella,
    from multiplying.

    "You cannot stop children putting toys in their mouths, but you can
    make it safer," said Sarah Howard at Hasbro UK, makers of the 15
    Playskool toys that use Microban. "If the toy falls on the ground, is
    licked by a pet or carried in dirty hands, germs transfer to it.
    Microban minimises the infections."

    Independent laboratory tests have determined that Microban is safe and
    will not cause allergic reactions. The active ingredient is triclosan,
    which is found in acne creams and toothpaste. It can kill microbes,
    including those that cause meningitis, dysentry, stomach upsets,
    pneumonia, tetanus, tuberculosis and sore throats. The product is also
    to be used in sports shoes, with Microban claiming that athlete's foot
    and foot odour are reduced by 99 per cent.
7.646IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2051
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Screening of wild animals urged in Crohn's link
    
    By David Brown, Agriculture Editor 

    SCIENTISTS called yesterday for the nationwide screening of wild
    animals to track down an illness which can kill cattle, sheep and deer. 

    It follows the discovery that many wild rabbits carry Johne's disease,
    a chronic bacterial infection, which some doctors believe is linked
    with Crohn's disease in people. The cause of the illness, also known as
    irritable bowel syndrome, is still a mystery but there are up 4,000 new
    cases a year in Britain. The disease has been found in so many rabbits
    in Scotland that the Ministry of Agriculture is deciding whether to
    launch wider checks on wildlife throughout Britain.

    The Scottish Agricultural College, an independent organisation funded
    mainly by the government, led the team which has called for intensive
    tests. The Ministry said last night that it was studying the results
    before deciding whether to broaden the investigation. 

    Symptoms of the human and animal illnesses are similar. They include
    fever, painful spasms in the abdomen, anaemia, chronic sickness,
    diarrhoea and loss of appetite. Up to 10 per cent of some cattle herds
    have been infected by the illness which, in its early stages, can be
    misdiagnosed as tuberculosis carried by badgers. 

    The Scottish survey shows that Johne's disease is widespread in
    rabbits. Some 67 per cent of rabbits in Tayside were found to have the
    disease which they excrete on farms. The findings suggest that rabbits
    throughout Britain are infected and a strain of the disease has already
    been recorded in several species of wild deer. In experiments by the
    Scottish researchers, cattle are being infected with the rabbit strain
    to discover the level of risk. 

    Veterinary scientists state in the current issue of Veterinary Record,
    the official journal of the British Veterinary Association, that the
    findings have "important implications" for the future control of
    Johne's disease, known as paratuberculosis. 

    "Future surveys should not be confined to ruminants and should include
    other species of wildlife that inhabit pastureland or interact with
    livestock, such as rabbits, hares rats, mice, foxes, badgers and
    birds," they state.

    Alastair Greig, assistant director of veterinary services at the
    Scottish Agricultural College, Perth, who led the team, said: "There is
    a need for more research involving other wildlife once the funds become
    available. We should look next at rats and mice because they penetrate
    animal sheds and food stores."
7.647IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2133
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Sotheby's may cut antiquity sales
    
    By Godfrey Barker 

    SOTHEBY'S may cut Greek and Roman antiquities sales by half as a result
    of recent accusations of smuggling, Diana Brooks, the chief executive,
    said yesterday. 

    There would be no total ban on sale of antiquities but Sotheby's would
    be "looking at" whether it should sell only objects for which valid
    export papers and known provenances existed. 

    "There is an enormous number of antiquities that are absolutely fine,"
    said Mrs Brooks. "The question is: are they enough for the number of
    sales we have? We may have to relook at where we sell, what we sell and
    how we sell. We will be talking to a number of departments which give
    us concerns about export issues and issues of patrimony."

    Obvious candidates are Chinese art, pre-Columbian art from Latin
    America, Asian and Indian Buddhist sculpture, Russian paintings and
    tribal art. Peter Watson, author of the book Sotheby's Inside Story,
    which Mrs Brooks claims contains "six, 10 or 16 libels", reacted
    cautiously to news yesterday that he would not be sued for that or his
    Channel 4 television programme.

    Mrs Brooks said that Sotheby's management had been accused of full
    knowledge that its experts were smuggling art from Italy and Asia in
    the 1980s or that "we should have been aware of it".

    She replied: "This company is so far-flung, in so many places, that we
    can't police every single country and every single person."
7.648IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2251
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Boy in car chase taught to drive by social workers
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    A BOY who was taught to drive by social workers while aged 10 later
    used his skills to escape police in high-speed car chases, a court
    heard yesterday.

    The boy, now 14, became so adept that he once dodged around a police
    Stinger device by swinging into oncoming traffic on a dual carriageway.
    On other occasions he evaded pursuing traffic officers for up to two
    hours at a time.

    His solicitor, Allan Cobain, told a youth court in Blackpool, Lancs,
    that under cross-examination at an earlier magistrates' court hearing a
    social worker had admitted the boy was taught to drive "as some form of
    reward for good behaviour."

    The driving lessons were given while while the boy was at Fylde Farm,
    an institution for young offenders and difficult children. He committed
    his first driving offences when he was 12 and last July was
    disqualified for a year.

    Yesterday the boy admitted to three offences of aggravated vehicle
    taking, taking a moped without consent, burglary and driving without a
    licence or insurance.

    He was given a three-year supervision order and a further 12-month
    driving ban. In one chase the boy drove a stolen car through two sets
    of traffic lights on red and later drove on the wrong side of a dual
    carriageway before the car tyres were punctured by the police Stinger.

    One police officer involved in the motorway pursuits said: "The lad
    drives like a real pro. We could not believe it when he got out from
    behind the wheel and it was this weedy youngster."

    The boy's mother later condemned the decision to give her son driving
    lessons - initially on a tractor, later in cars - as "an absolute
    disgrace." A spokesman for Lancashire county council's social services
    department said: "Teaching a 10-year-old to drive would not be done in
    any official capacity." The council did not have a policy "which
    provides for children and young people it looks after to be taught to
    drive," the spokesman added.

    "While at the home he was involved in a programme of farm skills taught
    by appropriate home staff. Like other skills programmes, it gave
    opportunity to prepare for seeking work. The acquisition of skills can
    often be an important feature in the development of confidence and
    self-esteem for damaged young people."
7.649IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2350
7.650IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2422
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Second care assistant has contracted E coli

    A SECOND member of staff at a nursing home at the centre of an E coli
    0157 outbreak has become infected.

    Tayside Health Board said last night that the female care assistant at
    Cairnie Lodge Nursing Home, Arbroath, gave a positive test of E coli
    during staff screening. A spokesman said the woman has shown no
    symptoms so far and will remain at home until she is clear of the
    infection. A 34-year-old nurse has already been infected.

    He said there were three confirmed cases of E coli among patients at
    the nursing home, with three probable cases. In the Arbroath community,
    two people have been confirmed as having the infection, with one person
    possibly infected.

    One of those pensioners who became infected at the home was Catherine
    Hebenton, 94, who died last week. Another elderly woman from the home,
    who has not been named, remains critically ill in King's Cross
    Hospital, Dundee.
7.651IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2671
7.652IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2765
7.653IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2874
7.654IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:2929
7.655IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:3187
7.656IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:3327
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Millfield boy taken ill with TB
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    STAFF and pupils at Millfield are to be tested for tuberculosis after a
    15-year-old pupil fell ill with the disease.

    The boy, a fourth-year American boarder at the school in Street,
    Somerset, was diagnosed as having the lung disease on Thursday. One of
    his parents has flown to Britain to be at his bedside at Musgrove Park
    Hospital, Taunton, where his condition was stable.

    The school has written to the parents and guardians of its 1,200 pupils
    informing them of the circumstances of the outbreak. A telephone
    helpline has been established to give further information. Chest
    experts are conducting skin tests and X-rays on 400 people who came
    into close or regular contact with the infected pupil.

    Among those who may have to be tested is the 15-year-old grandson of
    Boris Yeltsin, the Russian president, who enrolled at Millfield last
    year.

    The school is attended by boys and girls from 54 countries. Nicky
    Pearson, a public health specialist with Somerset Health Authority,
    said there was "a very small risk of anyone else becoming infected".
7.657IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:3332
7.658IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:3471
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997 Issue 628

    Star of Seventies sitcoms is found dead at home 
    
    By Maurice Weaver 

    THE actor Barry Evans, whose career declined after starring in the
    1970s television comedies Doctor in the House and Mind Your Language,
    was found dead at his home yesterday.

    Mr Evans, who was 52 and had been working as a taxi driver, was found
    in the sitting room of his bungalow at Claybrooke Magna, near
    Lutterworth, Leics, where he had lived alone for the past four years. A
    police spokesman said: "We are treating his death as suspicious. There
    is a possibility that he was murdered but at present it goes no further
    than that." A post-mortem examination was carried out yesterday. The
    cause of death was not announced.

    Sheila Young, his neighbour in Bell Street, Claybrooke Magna, said: "He
    was a very quiet man who kept himself to himself. Nobody really knew
    him. He didn't mix with people in the village."

    Susan Middleton, who worked with him at a taxi firm, Crest Taxis, said:
    "He was quiet but everyone liked him. I remembered him from Mind Your
    Language and was gobsmacked when I saw him sitting in one of our cabs.
    At first people knew him as Barry the actor but over the years he just
    became Barry the taxi driver."

    As an actor, Mr Evans was best known for his performance as the naive
    Dr Michael Upton in Doctor in the House, based on the books by Richard
    Gordon, and as the long-suffering English teacher Jeremy Brown in Mind
    Your Language. In films, his debut appearance as Jamie, the
    sex-obsessed grammar school boy in the 1960s farce Here We Go Round the
    Mulberry Bush won critical praise.

    There were rumours of a romance with his co-star Judy Geeson but he
    said at the time: "I love her but there is not the remotest possibility
    of marriage. I don't think marriage is what I want." He never did marry
    and his career faded with his good looks. He made only a few theatrical
    appearances in the early 1980s.

    An orphan brought up in Twickenham, south west London, Mr Evans went
    into acting as a young man and quickly caught the attention of
    producers keen to exploit the 1960s obsession with youth. His career,
    at first meteoric, fell victim to the problem of type-casting. He also
    had a reputation for being "difficult" to work with.

    His London agent, Malcolm Knight, of Malone and Knight, said: "Having
    been so immensely well known as a cheerful charmer he never shook off
    that image. He wanted to be accepted for roles more in keeping with his
    real age but whenever people heard his name they had a fixed picture in
    their mind. Eventually, he decided he wanted to give up show business,
    though recently he had been talking about trying to make a comeback."

    George Layton, the actor-writer who played Dr Paul Colyer in the Doctor
    comedies, said: "I find it difficult to take the news of his death on
    board. He had an endearing quality to which audiences instinctively
    warmed. As a person he was a bit of a loner. None of his fellow actors
    got to know him well. He was stuck with a reputation for youthful
    charm. It is very difficult when a career depends on that."

    While Mr Evans continued to receive regular royalties as his television
    shows were repeated, Mr Knight said political correctness had caused
    problems for Mind Your Language. Part of the show's comedy was based on
    stereotypical foreigners and there were fears that it might raise
    hackles today in a more racially-sensitive climate. The show, however,
    is popular in the Third World.

    Last night, two teenage boys and a girl, all from Hinckley, were under
    arrest on suspicion of murder after being stopped in Mr Evans's Montego
    taxi.
7.659IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:3528
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 12 February 1997
    Issue 628

    Cuban surgeons brought in to operate on Saddam's son

    A CUBAN medical team led by President Castro's doctor is in Baghdad
    treating President Saddam Hussein's wounded son, Uday, Iraqi sources
    said yesterday.

    The sources said that the doctor, named only as Dr Cardinas, is heading
    the team of two surgeons, orthopaedic doctors and an anaesthetist who
    arrived several days ago overland from the Iranian border. The team
    brought a mobile operating theatre for Uday, who was injured in an
    assassination attempt on Dec 12.

    Uday, 33, Saddam's eldest son, was shot 14 times while driving through
    Baghdad. His doctors say he needs an operation to remove two bullets
    from his spine.

    Iraqi sources have said that the operation, which carries the risk of
    paralysis or death, is unavoidable because of Uday's deteriorating
    health. His pancreas is badly damaged and he has another two bullets
    lodged in the pelvic area, the sources said, adding that surgery could
    only be performed abroad because Iraqi hospitals lacked the necessary
    equipment.

    At least three European countries contacted discreetly by Baghdad have
    declined to admit Uday to their hospitals.
7.660IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 12 1997 15:3627
7.661IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:44105
    AP 13-Feb-1997 1:01 EST   REF5680

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, Feb. 13, 1997
   
    CAMPAIGN FUND-RAISING-CHINA 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Justice Department is investigating evidence
    that representatives of China sought to direct contributions from
    foreign sources to the Democratic National Committee before the 1996
    election, The Washington Post reported in its editions Thursday. The
    newspaper said the Chinese Embassy in Washington was used for planning
    contributions to the DNC. The new information gives the ongoing Justice
    Department inquiry into fund raising in last year's campaign a foreign
    intelligence component and will likely raise anew calls for Attorney
    General Janet Reno to seek the appointment of an independent counsel, a
    move she has resisted so far. 
   
    SIMPSON OFFER 

    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- O.J. Simpson says he would never confess
    to a crime which he did not commit no matter how much money he was
    offered. Fred Goldman earlier had told The Associated Press that if
    Simpson signed a public confession, he would forgo a $21 million civil
    judgment. Goldman had acknowledged that the chance of Simpson taking
    him up on the offer was slim to none. Simpson swore on the witness
    stand it was "absolutely untrue" that he slashed Nicole Brown Simpson
    and Ronald Goldman to death on June 12, 1994. 
   
    TEEN PREGNANCY 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Teen pregnancies are down worldwide but the United
    States has by far the highest rate of any industrialized nation,
    according to a report from the Alan Guttmacher Institute. The
    eight-page report to be released Thursday found a strong correlation
    between improving educational opportunities for girls and a decline in
    teen pregnancies in developing countries compared to their mothers'
    generation. On Thursday, Congress was to consider a proposal by
    President Clinton to provide more money for family planning programs
    overseas. 
   
    AMERICAN-FLIGHTS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- American Airlines, bracing for a pilots' strike, is
    canceling Friday overseas flights so none of its planes will be
    stranded. Negotiations continued, a mediator said, but "slowly and with
    increasing difficulty." The White House said a strike would have major
    economic consequences for the nation, but it stopped short of saying
    President Clinton would try to step in. The federal mediator said even
    the suggestion of presidential intervention was hurting the talks. 
   
    TERM LIMITS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House rejected a proposed constitutional
    amendment that would have limited federal lawmakers to 12 years on
    Capitol Hill. The term limits measure, backed by a 217-211 majority,
    was well short of the two-thirds necessary for approval. 
   
    NORTH KOREA-DEFECTOR 

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- A top associate of North Korean leader Kim
    Jong II has defected. He is seeking asylum in South Korea, the Foreign
    Ministry said. Hwang Jang Yop -- the highest-ranking official ever to
    flee the communist North -- escaped to the South Korean Embassy in
    Beijing and asked for asylum, officials said. 
   
    RUSSIA-NUKES 

    MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia says it would consider using nuclear weapons in
    defense, even if its attacker were using conventional arms. "In case of
    a direct challenge, we'll respond with a full program, and we are the
    ones who will choose the elements of the program, including nuclear
    weapons," Ivan Rybkin, head of Russia's Security Council, said in an
    newspaper interview. Other officials downplayed the comments, which
    reflect anxiety about Russia's place in the post-Cold War world and
    NATO's expansion. 
   
    JACKSON-BABY 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Is Michael Jackson a father? KNBC-TV, citing
    hospital sources, said Jackson's wife gave birth to a baby boy
    Wednesday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. However, a source close to
    the hospital who requested anonymity told The Associated Press that
    Debbie Rowe Jackson had not yet given birth as of this afternoon. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar rose against the yen early Thursday, buying
    124.22 yen, up 0.06. The Nikkei closed the morning up 343.18 points at
    18,753.14. In New York, the Dow gained 83.90 to close at a record
    6,961.63. 
   
    BRUINS-OILERS 

    EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) -- Rem Murray scored with 4:58 left in the third
    period to give the Edmonton Oilers a 4-3 victory over the Boston
    Bruins. Two rookies combined on the winning goal as Mike Grier worked
    the puck deep into the Boston zone and then spotted Murray unguarded in
    the slot. Murray's low wrist shot was kicked away by goaltender Rob
    Tallas, but he gathered the rebound and lifted a backhander over
    Tallas's shoulder for the game-winner. The Oilers completed a key
    six-game homestand with a 5-1 record. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.662IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4445
    Updated at Wednesday, February 12, 1997, at 9:00 am Pacific time.

    *Reuters World News Highlights* 

    MOSCOW - The Kremlin accused NATO and its Secretary-General Javier
    Solana of pursuing a covert anti-Moscow policy, prompting swift denials
    by the alliance and raising tensions over its eastward expansion plans. 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin is still ``somewhat weak''
    after his bout of pneumonia and he needs at least 10 or 15 more days to
    make a proper recovery, Itar-Tass news agency quoted heart surgeon
    Renat Akchurin as saying. 

    TIRANA - Hundreds of riot police swarmed through the center of Tirana
    to prevent Albania's opposition from staging new anti-government
    protests, confining several top politicians to their headquarters. 

    VIENNA - Europe's security forum, the OSCE, said it was deeply worried
    about the increasing violence in Albania and warned that the potential
    for a serious crisis was at hand. 

    BELGRADE - The Serbian opposition celebrated victory in its battle for
    recognition of local election gains -- but in a move that was bound to
    raise tensions warned it was only a first round in the fight for more
    democracy. 

    SOFIA - Bulgarian President Petar Stoyanov named an interim cabinet led
    by Sofia's respected mayor Stefan Sofianski to govern until after
    elections in mid-April, the presidency said. 

    BEIJING - Chinese police have arrested the suspected ringleader of a
    riot in the mainly Muslim northwestern region of Xinjiang last week
    that left at least 10 people dead and 144 injured, local officials
    said. 

    SEOUL - One of the chief architects of North Korean communism has
    become the highest ranking Pyongyang official ever to seek asylum in
    South Korea, indicating cracks in the Stalinist heirachy. 

    SEOUL - South Korean Prime Minister Lee Soo-sung is ready to resign to
    take responsibility for a loan scandal involving the failed Hanbo Steel
    Co., an official at Lee's office said. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.663IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:45112
    RTw  13-Feb-97 06:39    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    King of pop becomes father; wife has son in L.A. 

    LOS ANGELES - Pop singer Michael Jackson's wife told a Los Angeles TV
    station on Wednesday that she gave birth to a baby boy earlier in the
    day. 

    Debbie Rowe, 37, who married Jackson last November, told KNBC she had
    given birth after doctors had induced labour. 

    "Debbie Rowe called us just literally two minutes before we went on the
    air this afternoon (midnight GMT) to tell us 'yes indeed' she had a
    little baby, a baby boy," KNBC anchor Chuck Henry said on the air. 

    "She gave us this little caveat ... they're going off to a private
    airport somewhere and they're going to leave the state shortly. Where
    they're going she didn't say, but she said they did want to kind of
    have their privacy and have their time," said the television newsman. 

    Security was tight around the hospital and a spokeswoman for
    Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre declined to even confirm the couple were at
    the hospital. 

    There was no immediate confirmation either from Jackson's publicists
    and reporters and camera crews outside the Beverly Hills hospital did
    not report any sightings of the reclusive entertainer.

    - - - - 

    Michigan rooster to get "drumstick transplant" 

    JACKSON, Michigan - In what could be a first- of-its-kind procedure, a
    central Michigan rooster who lost his feet to frostbite will soon
    receive prosthetic replacements. 

    "We're calling it a drumstick transplant," said Dr. Timothy England,
    who runs the Crossroads Animal Hospital in Blackman Township, outside
    of Jackson. 

    England took the fowl under his wing when a local woman rescued the
    near-frozen animal from her yard shortly before Christmas. Thin and
    sickly, the bird, named Mr Chicken, turned out to have severely
    frostbitten feet. 

    England allowed the frostbite to run its course, while treating the
    legs with antibiotics and bandages. The result is Mr Chicken stands
    shorter than normal roosters, having lost his legs, in human terms,
    between the ankle and the knee. 

    A local physical therapist measured Mr. Chicken for some feet
    replacements last Sunday. Made of a maleable, plastic material, the new
    appendages will look like tiny horseshoes and be removable. Mr Chicken
    should have them by later this week. 

    "We're looking for something that's functional, not something that is
    cosmetic," said England, who is covering the cost of the prostheses --
    about $200 -- himself.

    - - - - 

    Jaywalking charges dropped again blind Ohio man 

    CINCINNATI - Jaywalking charges were dropped against a blind man who
    suffered a cracked tailbone last month when he was struck by a pickup
    truck near a downtown intersection. 

    Charles Rubenstein, chief assistant city prosecutor, told Reuters he
    dismissed the case against Jeff Friedlander after he talked with the
    policeman who gave the blind man a traffic citation on Jan. 22 with a
    $46 fine for walking outside the crosswalk and against a red light. 

    "We decided it would not serve any public purpose to go forward with
    prosecution," Rubenstein said. "But the physical evidence showed that
    Mr. Friedlander had crossed the road 15 feet before a crosswalk and
    therefore the citation was justified." 

    Friedlander, 48, had pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to the charge and
    was scheduled for trial on March 5. 

    - - - - 

    Sweet nothings for 90s: "I Don't Think So" 

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Love may be eternal but its expression changes with
    technology and the times. 

    Those pastel-coloured heart candies still say "Kiss Me" and "Be Mine"
    but this Friday, Valentine's Day, they will also implore loved ones to
    "Page Me," "E-Mail Me" and "Excuse Me." 

    The Necco candy company, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has made
    more than 8 billion of the little hearts for the holiday. It has also
    added "Awesome," "Hello" and "I Don't Think So" to this year's 125
    sayings. 

    "Awesome is simply how some individuals would describe their
    sweethearts," said Necco's Walter Marshall. "While 'Excuse Me' and
    'Hello' with a flip intonation express the sceptical way many people
    view romance today." 

    The six sayings that are being sent into retirement as too stale are:
    "Buzz Off," "Stop," "Try Me," "Bad Boy," "Hot Stuff," and "Say Yes." 

    REUTER
7.664IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4528
    AP 13-Feb-1997 0:11 EST   REF5620

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pilot Shot By Gunman on Ground

    EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) -- A flying instructor was shot in the knee by
    someone on the ground, and the student pilot then landed the small
    plane safely. 

    The student and instructor were practicing emergency procedures in a
    Cessna 152 and were flying at about 500 feet when the instructor was
    hit. 

    "The bullet entered the fuselage under the cabin and penetrated the
    instructor's leg just behind the right knee," state police spokesman
    Joe Rhodes said. 

    Mark Lambright, 29, was hospitalized in good condition. 

    State police questioned the gunman but left without arresting him,
    television station WTVW reported. 

    Neighbors told police the man, whose name was not released, has fired
    at planes before and has also scattered nails on the road near his
    home, the station reported. 

    Student pilot George Rawlinson, 58, could not be reached. 
7.665IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4530
    AP 13-Feb-1997 0:09 EST   REF5617

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Clinton Supports Anti-Drug Ads

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton will ask broadcasters to donate
    $175 million in public service advertising aimed at urging teen-agers
    to avoid drugs, officials said Wednesday. 

    Clinton's proposed budget submitted to Congress last week requests $175
    million in appropriations for the government's share of the campaign.
    The administration wants the television industry to match it under a
    plan that Clinton is scheduled to unveil Thursday, said Bob Weiner, a
    spokesman for the White House National Drug Policy Office. 

    Although overall use of drugs has declined dramatically over the past
    15 years -- from 20 million people to 12 million, according to the
    latest government statistics, it has increased dramatically among teens
    over the past five years. 

    White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey believes one reason why is that
    broadcasters sharply reduced their airing of public service ads -- such
    as "this is your brain and this is your brain on drugs" picturing an
    egg frying -- around the time of the Persian Gulf War in 1991, Weiner
    said. 

    McCaffrey, a retired Army general, has occasionally used the term
    "generational forgetting" to explain the rising incidence of drug use
    among children of post World War II baby boomers. 
7.666IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4588
    AP 13-Feb-1997 0:02 EST   REF5584

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Teen Pregnancies Down Worldwide

    By LISA M. HAMM

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Teen pregnancies are down worldwide but the United
    States has by far the highest rate of any industrialized nation,
    according to a report from the Alan Guttmacher Institute. 

    The report, "Risk and Realities of Early Childbearing Worldwide," was
    to be released Thursday, the day Congress was to consider a proposal by
    President Clinton to provide more money for family planning programs
    overseas. A copy of the report was obtained Wednesday by The Associated
    Press. 

    The eight-page report found a strong correlation between improving
    educational opportunities for girls and a decline in teen pregnancies
    in developing countries compared to their mothers' generation. 

    Far fewer girls are becoming mothers before turning 20, especially in
    Asia, North Africa, the Middle East and parts of Latin America, it
    said. 

    However, in sub-Saharan Africa, at least one girl in two has a child
    during adolescence, and in other parts of Latin America, one-third of
    teens do. 

    "We see encouraging signs that young women are more likely to delay
    childbearing," said Jeannie Rosoff, president of the Guttmacher
    Institute. "Although this progress is uneven, much change has taken
    place within a short time period, indicating enormous potential for
    swifter change if more is done to support adolescents in their
    life-altering decisions." 

    The Guttmacher Institute is a not-for-profit organization for
    reproductive health research, policy analysis and education with
    offices in New York and Washington. It advocates a strong U.S.
    leadership role in global family planning as a way to reduce unplanned
    pregnancies and abortions and other health problems. 

    President Clinton wants Congress to advance by four months the United
    States' monthly installments for spending $385 million to distribute
    condoms, IUDs and birth-control pills worldwide. The House is scheduled
    to vote on the proposal Thursday, with the Senate voting later this
    month. 

    Population Research Institute, a conservative group, has urged Congress
    to block Clinton's push. Earmarking funds for family planning programs
    in developing countries has promoted abortions and coerced women into
    using contraceptives, Steven Mosher, president of the group, said this
    week. 

    PRI said that the risk of death from childbearing is two to four times
    higher for girls under 17 than for women 20 and older, while babies
    born to mothers ages 15-19 have a 30-percent higher risk of dying in
    their first year than those born to women in their 20s. 

    Rosoff urged better education and job opportunities, access to family
    planning and reproductive health services for girls worldwide. 

    "U.S. international population assistance, which has contributed so
    much to the progress we observed, must continue," she said. "Our global
    future is at stake." 

    The report also found that the United States leads the industrialized
    world in teen pregnancy. Fourteen percent of American girls ages 15-19
    gave birth in 1996, double that of first runner-up Britain.
    Seventy-three percent of those American pregnancies were unplanned. The
    British percentage was unavailable. 

    The report illustrated trends in Latin America, North Africa and Asia
    with these findings: Teen childbearing among women 20-24 was down to 33
    percent in the Dominican Republic compared with 52 percent of women
    ages 40-44 who had given birth as adolescents. In Morocco, it had
    dropped to 19 percent from 39 percent. In Sri Lanka, it had dropped to
    16 percent from 31 percent. 

    The report compiled data about adolescents, defined as ages 10-19, in
    44 developing and five industrialized countries comprising
    three-quarters of the world's population. Data came from national
    fertility surveys for the latest date available, or, if none existed,
    from the Demographic and Health Surveys, an international research
    effort. 
7.667IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4561
    AP 12-Feb-1997 23:31 EST   REF5295

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    17 Arrested in Injury Scam

    By BETH J. HARPAZ

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The online message offered paramedics hundreds of
    dollars for the names of accident victims, which were then given to
    attorneys who offered to file lawsuits on behalf of the injured. 

    Prosecutors call it ambulance chasing. 

    Seventeen people, including doctors, lawyers and paramedics, were
    arrested in an undercover investigation that began when an honest
    paramedic reported the offer to authorities. 

    "The crimes alleged in this case are all motivated by greed," Brooklyn
    District Attorney Charles Hynes said Wednesday. 

    Michael Torres, 31, sent electronic mail to Emergency Medical Services
    workers and asked them to supply him with the names of accident
    victims, Hynes said. He also allegedly posted the solicitation on an
    America Online bulletin board for paramedics. 

    "I run a consulting firm that specializes in injuries covered by no
    fault and workers compensation," read the AOL message. "I have a
    network of hospital workers and paramedics that refer cases to me and
    would like to extend an offer to you ... $200 per eligible referral." 

    Prosecutors said the scam worked like this: 

    A paramedic treating an accident victim with a potentially good
    insurance claim would beep the chaser and provide the victim's name,
    address and other details. The chaser would give the information to a
    lawyer, who would contact the victim and offer to file a lawsuit. 

    Paramedics would typically get $300 for referring someone with a soft
    tissue injury, and as much as $1,000 for referring someone with a
    fracture, Deputy District Attorney Joel Shapiro said. 

    Of the 17 charged, eight are lawyers, two are doctors, three are EMS
    workers, and four others described as chasers who found victims for
    lawyers. 

    The paramedics, who were suspended without pay, were charged with
    taking bribes, a felony, and violating a department rule against
    disclosing their patients' identities. 

    The lawyers were charged with using non-lawyers to solicit legal work.
    The doctors were charged with paying others to solicit patients. The
    lawyers and doctors also face possible license suspensions and other
    sanctions. 

    Hynes said the 17 were involved in "hundreds and hundreds" of insurance
    cases, most of which were settled out of court for thousands of
    dollars. By law, attorney get a flat one-third of whatever they recover
    for accident victims. 
7.668IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4537
    AP 12-Feb-1997 23:14 EST   REF5124

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh Lawyer Eyes Publicity

    DENVER (AP) -- The massive publicity in the Oklahoma City bombing case,
    including Timothy McVeigh's "perp walk," has tainted the ability of
    witnesses to accurately identify him, McVeigh's lawyer argued
    Wednesday. 

    Attorney Jeralyn E. Merritt said the witnesses' recollections were
    based "upon the massive and constant media barrage of the singular
    image of a charged defendant." 

    "McVeigh has a due process right not to be victimized by suggestive
    pre-trial identification procedures which create a very substantial
    likelihood of irreparable misidentification," she wrote in a brief. 

    The defense is asking the judge to bar the testimony of prosecution
    witnesses who are expected to identify McVeigh from encounters in the
    days prior to the blast. 

    Merritt argued that the eyewitnesses were affected by the sight of
    McVeigh -- scowling, his hands cuffed in front of him, wearing orange
    prison garb and surrounded by federal agents -- being escorted from a
    holding cell to the courthouse two days after the bombing. 

    The "perp walk," media slang for a suspect's first appearance before
    the cameras, cemented McVeigh's identity to the public, making later
    identifications suspect, Merritt said. 

    Government lawyers have defended eyewitness identifications of McVeigh
    as accurate. 

    U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch has scheduled a hearing on the issue
    for Tuesday. 
7.669IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4629
    AP 12-Feb-1997 22:41 EST   REF5010

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: 1996 Libel Awards Rise

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The average award in libel cases and related trials
    against the media in 1996 was $2.8 million, an increase of $1.6 million
    over the average award in each of the previous two years, a study
    found. 

    Among the verdicts were $10 million to a banker who accused ABC's
    "20-20" of portraying him as a crook, and $5.5 million to Food Lion
    which objected to ABC's "PrimeTime Live" use of undercover reporters
    and hidden cameras in pursuing a story that the supermarket sold
    spoiled food. 

    "The success rate at trial was low, the level of total damages was
    high, punitive damages awards rose substantially, and there was a high
    percentage of awards over $1 million," said Sandra Baron, executive
    director of the Libel Defense Resource Center. It released the study
    last week. 

    The media lost 10 out of 14 trials last year. In five of the losses,
    damages were for more than $2.3 million. In the other five, damages
    were $125,000 or lower. 

    The center, organized by media groups in 1980, is a nonprofit group
    that monitors trends in media libel, privacy and related law. 
7.670IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4736
    AP 12-Feb-1997 21:57 EST   REF6182

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mechanics Won't Remove Air Bags

    GLEN BURNIE, Md. (AP) -- At 5 feet, 110 pounds, Violet Cosgrove is
    frightened that her car's air bags may harm her, rather than protect
    her. So the 70-year-old woman got federal approval to have them
    removed. 

    Now she can't find a mechanic who will do the job. 

    "They won't touch it with a 10-foot pole," said Mrs. Cosgrove. "I'm
    literally afraid to drive my car." 

    Air bags, which inflate at speeds up to 200 mph, have been blamed for
    the deaths of 35 children and 20 adults, mostly small women. 

    With the help of her congressman, Mrs. Cosgrove got a letter from the
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to remove the air bags.
    Two dealerships and four independent mechanics have refused. 

    "This letter will relieve you of the penalty for disconnecting it, but
    it doesn't relieve you of any liability at all," said Larry Pennell,
    service manager at Wilkins Buick, where Mrs. Cosgrove bought her 1995
    Century. 

    If the car is loaned or sold and wrecked by someone who doesn't know
    the air bag is disconnected, liability questions may arise, he said. 

    But by not helping, Mrs. Cosgrove said, mechanics are forcing her to
    climb behind the wheel at her own peril. 

    "At 200 miles per hour into my chest, I wouldn't be left to talk about
    it." 
7.671IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4744
    AP 12-Feb-1997 22:26 EST   REF6193

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    EU Postpones US-Cuba Sanctions

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- Seeking more time for all sides to settle
    their differences, the European Union sought a delay Wednesday in
    naming a trade panel to judge the EU's dispute with the United States
    over trade with Cuba. 

    The World Trade Organization is expected to grant the one-week delay
    since it was the EU that had originally asked for the panel. 

    EU Trade Commissioner Leon Brittan said the delay, until Feb. 20, would
    allow more time for the parties to settle their disputes over the U.S.
    Helms-Burton Act. Under the act, foreign companies can face sanctions
    for doing business in Cuba. 

    The EU, Canada and others vehemently oppose the law, calling it an
    attempt by the United States to extend its jurisdiction beyond its
    shores. 

    The United States says the dispute over Cuba is a security matter, not
    a trade issue, and so is outside the WTO's control. 

    Brittan said the U.S. position risks undermining the dispute-settlement
    system set up under the 130-member WTO. 

    "It is not credible to suggest that protection of U.S. national
    security requires interference in the legitimate trade of European
    companies with Cuba," Brittan said. 

    "For such a system to work, it must not be possible for one country to
    evade its operation simply by proclaiming that its national security is
    involved," he said. 

    The Helms-Burton Act can deny U.S. visas to major stockholders and
    executives of companies whose dealings with Cuba involve property
    confiscated since Fidel Castro came to power in 1959. 

    Introduced last year, the law also allows Americans to sue foreign
    companies using such property, but President Clinton has suspended that
    provision. 
7.672IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4730
    AP 12-Feb-1997 22:25 EST   REF6192

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Russia Space Photos on Internet

    MOSCOW (AP) -- Once-classified photographs taken by Russian military
    satellites will be posted on the Internet under a deal announced
    Wednesday involving the American software giant Microsoft. 

    The U.S. company Aerial Images was also participating in the project
    with Russia's space association, Sovinformsputnik, ITAR-Tass and
    Interfax news agencies reported. The terms of the deal were not
    provided. 

    Mikhail Fomchenko, managing director of Sovinformsputnik, said the
    pictures depict more than 1.25 million square miles, or about 1 percent
    of the earth's surface, plus all cities with a population of more than
    500,000. 

    He said the photos are from the 1990s and are the best available to the
    general public. 

    Bob Clough, Microsoft regional manager in Eastern Europe, said the
    pictures would be available free on the Internet. But project
    participants would get a share of profits generated by any commercial
    use, Interfax quoted him as saying. 

    The first photos of cities, including Los Angeles, Washington, San
    Francisco, Rome and London are to appear on the Internet this year. 
7.673IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:47121
    AP 12-Feb-1997 22:20 EST   REF6191

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Top North Korean Defects

    By JU-YEON KIM

    Associated Press Writer

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- A top associate of North Korean leader Kim
    Jong II defected Wednesday and is seeking asylum in South Korea, the
    Foreign Ministry said, announcing what appeared to be a major
    intelligence coup for this country. 

    Hwang Jang Yop -- a member of the Central Committee of North Korea's
    ruling Workers' Party and the highest-ranking official ever to flee the
    communist North -- escaped to the South Korean Embassy in Beijing and
    asked for asylum, the South Korean Foreign Ministry said. 

    South Korean Ambassador Chung Jong-wook said in Beijing that Hwang, 72,
    had defected with an aide. The Foreign Ministry identified the aide as
    Kim Duk Hung, the president of a North Korean trading company who is in
    his 50s. 

    "Since (Hwang's) free will to defect has been confirmed, the issue will
    be handled through consultations with the Chinese government," the
    ambassador said. 

    North Korea insisted that Hwang must have been kidnapped by South
    Koreans, calling his defection "inconceivable and impossible." 

    "If it is true that Hwang Jang Yop is in the South Korean embassy in
    Beijing, it is obvious that he has been kidnapped by the enemy," an
    unidentified North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said in a report
    carried by the North's Korean Central News Agency. 

    "If it is brought to light that the South Korean authorities kidnapped
    him and describe him as seeking asylum, we will regard it as a serious
    incident without precedent and take due countermeasures," the spokesman
    said. 

    That prompted South Korea to put its entire 650,000-member military on
    higher alert. The 37,000-strong American force in South Korea was not
    affected. 

    The importance of Hwang's defection was further underscored by the
    calling of an emergency Cabinet meeting to discuss ways to bring Hwang
    and his aide to Seoul. South Korea also was sending a high-level
    government delegation to Beijing on Thursday to discuss Hwang's asylum
    plea with the Chinese government. 

    The defection -- if South Korea's account of it bears out -- could be a
    sign of a power struggle within the North's hierarchy, according to one
    South Korean official who spoke on condition of anonymity. 

    Hwang also could provide a wealth of information about North Korea's
    government, which rules one of the world's most-closed societies. 

    The Chosun Ilbo, a major national daily, said it received a handwritten
    statement from Hwang through a third party in which he complained about
    a growing dictatorship in North Korea. 

    "Today's North Korea has nothing to do with socialism," the newspaper
    quoted Hwang as saying. "How can a society in which people, workers,
    farmers and intellectuals are starving to death be a socialist
    society?" 

    Hwang's alleged defection comes while North Korea is preparing to
    celebrate its biggest holiday, the 55th birthday of Kim Jong Il, who
    became the country's de facto leader when his father died almost three
    years ago. 

    The weekend celebrations this year already had been overshadowed by the
    nation's worsening economic plight, aggravated by two years of floods
    that have devastated North Korea's food supply. For the third time in a
    year, the U.N. World Food Program issued an appeal this week for
    110,000 tons of emergency food aid worth $41 million. 

    Hwang had stopped in Beijing on his way home from a North
    Korean-sponsored international seminar in Japan. 

    Ambassador Chung declined to characterize China's reaction to Hwang's
    defection, saying "it is a very sensitive issue." China is North
    Korea's closest ally, but their relations have cooled since China
    opened its doors to capitalism and established strong commercial ties
    with South Korea. 

    Under a 1978 treaty, China is required to return any North Koreans
    found in China without visas or other valid travel documents. That
    presumably would not apply to Hwang and his aide. 

    North Korea urged China to "take appropriate measures" in the case of
    what it insisted was a kidnapping. 

    With the collapse of the Soviet Union and China's and Eastern Europe's
    embrace of capitalism, North Korea has been left with few ideological
    allies to turn to for aid, trade or diplomatic support. 

    Its efforts to improve ties with potential aid donors -- including the
    United States and Japan -- also have made little headway. And
    increasing numbers of its people are fleeing for food and other
    reasons. 

    About 180 North Koreans have defected to South Korea in the past three
    years, including 30 this year. 

    Hwang graduated from North Korea's elite Kim Il Sung University and
    Moscow University in the late 1950s. According to South Korean
    officials, he is ranked 24th in the North's power hierarchy. 

    As a key member of the North's ruling party, he served as chairman of
    the Foreign Relations Committee of the North's parliament, the Supreme
    Peoples Assembly. 

    He is known to be a key theoretician behind North Korea's ideology of
    self-reliance, and is believed to be a cousin of the nation's late
    leader, Kim Il Sung. 

    He leaves a wife, two sons and a daughter behind in North Korea,
    officials in Seoul said. 
7.674IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4838
    AP 12-Feb-1997 21:19 EST   REF6155

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    France Bans Genetic Corn

    PARIS (AP) -- France banned the cultivation of genetically-modified
    corn Wednesday despite European Union approval of its sale, saying the
    corn's long-term effects haven't been determined. 

    Research on the U.S.-grown corn will continue "in a confined situation"
    so there is no risk to the environment, Prime Minister Alain Juppe
    said. 

    Opponents contend that eating genetically altered corn may increase
    resistance to antibiotic medicines in people and animals, or that weeds
    and pests may pick up the corn's disease-resistant properties, giving
    them protection from poisons. 

    Agriculture Minister Philippe Vasseur had already said he would not
    sign a European Commission decision authorizing cultivation of the
    disease-resistant genetic corn, which poses a competitive threat to
    European producers. 

    France's Corn Producers Organization welcomed the ban, calling it "a
    great victory for all corn producers but also for fowl and pork
    producers. 

    "A crisis on the level of mad cow was to be feared," the organization
    said in a statement, referring to the disease that has shaken Europe's
    beef industry. 

    France permits the import of genetically-altered corn but requires
    special labeling to inform consumers about the grain, developed by the
    Swiss group Ciba-Geigy, now part of the Swiss company Novartis, and
    grown in the United States. 

    Austria has already banned imports of modified corn. 
7.675IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4875
    AP 12-Feb-1997 17:00 EST   REF5263

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cell Phones Raise Driving Risk

    By DANIEL Q. HANEY

    AP Medical Editor

    BOSTON (AP) -- Talking on a cellular phone behind the wheel is about as
    risky as driving close to legally drunk, a study found. 

    Using a car phone while driving quadruples the risk of an accident,
    researchers in Canada reported in Thursday's issue of the New England
    Journal of Medicine. And making a call with a hands-free model is just
    as dangerous. 

    While many people have assumed that the distraction of car phones can
    be dangerous, the study is the first to actually measure the hazard. 

    "I tell patients to avoid unnecessary calls, to keep the conversations
    brief and to suspend dialogue during hazardous roadway circumstances.
    Put the phone down for a while until things clear up," said Dr. Donald
    A. Redelmeier. 

    While the fourfold chance of getting into an accident is about the same
    as the increased risk involved in driving with a blood-alcohol level
    right at the legal limit, the researchers noted that callers' extra
    risk drops back to normal as soon as they hang up, while near-drunk
    drivers may be a menace for hours. 

    "I think this is probably something we all know in our gut. When you're
    driving, you really have to keep your attention on the road," said Tim
    Ayers, vice president of the Cellular Telecommunications Industry
    Association in Washington. 

    However, the organization also pointed out that the number of cell
    phones in the United States grew 1,685 percent from 1986 to 1995 to 34
    million subscribers. During the same time, auto accidents fell 17
    percent and fatalities dropped 26 percent. 

    Redelmeier, a researcher at Sunnybrook Health Science Center in North
    York, Ontario, conducted the study with Robert J. Tibshirani. 

    The researchers studied 699 Toronto-area drivers who had cell phones
    and were involved in crashes that resulted in substantial damage but no
    injuries. They compared each driver's phone calls on the day of the
    collision with the previous week's calling. 

    The analysis of 26,798 calls showed that having lots of experience with
    a cell phone -- or using a hands-free model -- didn't lower people's
    risk. 

    Redelmeier said the findings suggest that losing concentration, not
    fiddling with the phone itself, is what makes cell calls a highway
    hazard. 

    Brazil, Israel, Switzerland and two Australian states have passed laws
    against using hand-held phones while driving. 

    Redelmeier said his study does not suggest car phones should be banned.
    For one thing, they also have significant benefits. Indeed, 39 percent
    of the people in the study used their phones to dial 911 after their
    accidents. 

    Malcolm Maclure and Dr. Murray A. Mittleman, who developed the research
    method used by the Canadian team, calculated that if one in 10 vehicles
    has a cell phone by the year 2000, between 0.6 percent and 1.2 percent
    of all accidents may be caused by their use. 

    "We don't know if using a car phone is causing the drivers to have an
    accident or whether they are just less likely to avoid collisions. But
    there does seem to be an association," said Mittleman, a physician at
    Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. 
7.676IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:4997
    RTos 13-Feb-97 05:31    

    As Strike Nears, American Cancels Some Flights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - American Airlines and its pilots failed to make
    headway in resolving their bitter labor dispute Wednesday, leading the
    No. 2 U.S. carrier to cancel nearly all its overseas flights Friday
    night. 

    "There's no progress so far," the Allied Pilots Association,
    representing the American pilots, said after the day long negotiations.
    "A strike is more likely than not." 

    The union vowed to strike Friday at midnight if no new labor agreement
    was reached, disrupting travel for the 200,000 passengers the airline
    carries each day on its 2,200 routes worldwide. 

    With the strike prospect looming, American scrapped 129 round trips
    scheduled to leave Friday. The only flights that will go ahead are 12
    to Heathrow and two to Gatwick airport in London. 

    Return flights on Saturday were also canceled, spokesman Tim Smith said
    in Dallas. 

    He said the carrier would reschedule its international passengers to
    Europe, the Far East and Latin America on earlier American flights or
    on other airlines. 

    American's president, Donald Carty, in Washington for the negotiations,
    said "In fairness to our customers, these are big journeys, and
    important journeys, for people. We ought to give them the chance to go
    Thursday night if they choose." 

    Later, pilots spokesman David Bates said "the pilots would consider
    flying if they got an agreement on the regional jets issue without a
    formal agreement made." 

    One of the main issues has been American's plan to fly regional jets
    with the lower-paid pilots of its regional carrier, American Eagle, who
    belong to another union. American says it needs to make the move to
    compete with smaller carriers but the APA has rejected it. 

    Kenneth Hipp, chairman of the National Mediation Board which is
    participating in the talks, told reporters that the negotiations were
    going "slowly with increasing difficulty." 

    But he added that in the past labor agreements are often written in the
    close hours of negotiations. 

    Earlier, American made a new pay offer to the pilots -- increasing its
    offer to 6 percent over four years, from its previous offer of 4
    percent, but withdrawing one of two stock options it included. 

    The pilots, who had asked for an increase of 11.5 percent, rejected the
    proposal, saying its overall effect was a package reduced in value by
    $43 million. 

    At the White House, President Clinton urged the sides to use the
    mediation process to resolve their dispute, which he said had huge
    implications for the country. 

    "I want to say that the time has not yet expired and I want to
    encourage parties to make maximum use of the mediation board process,"
    Clinton said. 

    The National Mediation Board could declare that a strike would cause
    substantial damage to the economy or a region of it and urge the
    president to set up an emergency board to try to resolve the lengthy
    dispute. 

    Such a board would keep planes flying while it tried to fashion an
    agreement acceptable to both sides. But if it failed, the union would
    be free to strike. 

    In 1993, Clinton stepped into an American dispute with its flight
    attendants, ending a five-day pre-Thanksgiving Day strike by setting up
    an emergency board to find a solution. Both sides agreed to binding
    abitration. 

    A strike is certain to hit air travel hard in many major U.S. cities
    where American has hubs, including American's home base at Dallas-Fort
    Worth airport and airports in New York, Miami, Chicago, Los Angeles and
    San Juan, Puerto Rico. 

    Officials in San Juan said a strike would be devastating to the
    lucrative Caribbean tourist business, now at its mid-winter height.
    They said American and American Eagle provide 70 percent of the
    region's aviation services. 

    American has said it had made arrangements for its tickets to be
    accepted by other airlines, but travel agents say there would not
    likely be be enough free seats on other carriers to handle all the
    stranded American passengers. 

    REUTER
7.677IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:50103
    RTw  13-Feb-97 04:04    

    FEATURE-Falklands landmines are a deadly reminder ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE-Falklands landmines are a deadly reminder of war 

    By Roger Atwood 

    PORT STANLEY, Falkland Islands, Feb 13 (Reuter) - They lurk in fields,
    on hillsides and farms, behind rocks and trees, ready to blow up and
    mutilate anyone who steps on them. 

    Landmines, about 20,000 of them, still litter the Falkland Islands 15
    years after Argentine soldiers planted them in a vain effort to stave
    off British forces during their 10-week war for the islands. No one has
    been killed by the mines since the war but several people have been
    maimed and animals are regularly blown to bits. 

    The mines are a lethal reminder of a war that Falklanders, eager to get
    tourism and oil exploration going in this starkly scenic colony, would
    rather the world forget. Argentina, taking a more conciliatory tack
    lately to regaining the islands that it calls the Malvinas, has its own
    reasons for wanting to forget the war and has pledged to cooperate in
    removing the mines, island officials said. 

    But until that happens, large tracts, especially just south of the tidy
    little capital Port Stanley, are off limits to people because no one
    knows exactly where the mines are or how to defuse them. 

    "They're something the Argentines left us. We've got a lot of mines
    near the farm," said Derek Short, a worker at a sheep ranch near the
    settlement of Goose Green, site of some of the heaviest fighting in the
    1982 war. "I was here when the Argentines invaded. Naturally we were,
    you know, pretty happy when we were liberated." 

    The minefields are clearly marked with fences and warning signs, Short
    said, but with 20 workers and 75,000 sheep, keeping the livestock from
    wiggling or hopping their way into danger can be a struggle. 

    DON'T TRY TO RESCUE SHEEP 

    "We don't try to rescue the sheep if they wander in," one resident
    said. 

    Birdwatchers, one of the biggest groups of tourists, are especially
    vulnerable as they traipse around the islands' squishy soil in search
    of penguins, ducks and songbirds. The airport has posters warning
    visitors arriving on the weekly flight from Punta Arenas, Chile, to
    beware. 

    "If while out walking, you find anything suspicious -- do not touch it
    -- it may explode," one poster says. Just in case anyone misses the
    point, the warning is accompanied by a gruesome picture of the bloody
    hand of a British soldier who evidently did not heed the advice. 

    A detailed map of the islands shows exactly where not to go, with
    minefields marked in red and accompanied by pithy instructions like
    "stay to the north of the fence." 

    At the islands' sole golf course, near the village of Darwin, golfers
    who hit the ball into a nearby minefield have been known to tiptoe in
    to fetch it. Picnickers have stumbled across mines and boaters can find
    themselves in the middle of a minefield after landing at a spot where
    warning signs have been carried away by tides or storms. 

    The British military tried to clear the explosives after the war until
    a series of maimings including one officer who lost a leg and another
    who lost a foot forced a halt to removal efforts. 

    THOUGHT BEST TO FENCE THEM OFF 

    "It was thought that given the difficulty of the terrain and that we're
    not short of land, that the best policy was to fence these things off
    until someone could find a way of clearing them safely and completely.
    And that's what we've done," islands' governor Richard Ralph said. 

    Ironically, the mines have become an area of agreement between Britain
    and Argentina. Ralph said Argentina cooperated fully in locating the
    120 minefields scattered around the islands and has offered to remove
    them, literally defusing a source of deep animosity among the some
    2,000 residents. 

    "After the war, Argentina handed over all the information at their
    disposal about the whereabouts of the mines," Ralph told Reuters at his
    home near the British military base west of Port Stanley. "The
    Argentine government has offered publicly to pay for their removal.
    Discussions are going on ... but we haven't reached any agreement yet.
    We're at a preliminary stage." 

    The problems that Falklanders face with landmines -- from dead sheep to
    lost golf balls -- may seem trivial next to the toll of 25,000 people
    killed or maimed every year by landmines worldwide. 

    About 100 million mines lie buried or hidden in 64 countries. And, as
    in the Falklands, every one of them makes it harder to consign old wars
    to the past. 

    "The mines are a very unwelcome reminder of the war, and they're going
    to remain a risk," Ralph said. 

    REUTER
7.678IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:5063
    RTw  13-Feb-97 01:44    

    Duchess of York denies she is hurting royals' image

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Judith Crosson 

    DENVER, Feb 12 (Reuter) - Britain's Duchess of York defended herself on
    Wednesday against accusations she was sullying the name of the royal
    family by appearing in paid advertisements, saying she would never do
    anything to hurt the monarchy. 

    "I would never abuse my position or use it to get something, or do
    anything that would upset Her Majesty," Sarah Ferguson, now divorced
    from Britain's Prince Andrew, said in an interview. 

    Ferguson, whose eating problems and romantic interests have often made
    tabloid headlines, said she could not imagine anyone saying anything
    more hurtful to her than "Her Majesty thinks you're a disgrace." 

    Professing her enduring affection for Queen Elizabeth II, Ferguson --
    commonly known as Fergie -- declared: "I think she's a most
    extraordinary person." 

    The Duchess, who had been struggling to dig herself out of debt, signed
    on last month as spokeswoman for Weight Watchers International and was
    in Denver as part of a tour of the company's branches to talk to
    clients about weight loss. 

    She was also reportedly paid hundreds of thousands of dollars recently
    for shooting a U.S. television commercial promoting fruit juice and has
    talked to Hollywood executives about possibly hosting a TV talk show. 

    Her office announced this week that she had paid off a $6.89 million
    bank overdraft and planned to move to a smaller house to help pay a
    $2.62 million tax bill. 

    As for critics' complaints that she is hurting the image of the British
    royals by cashing in on her name, Ferguson said: "Surely, what on Earth
    can they be talking about? It is a great thing. 

    "Weight Watchers is such a good thing because you're helping people,"
    she said. "The royal family would be 100 percent behind it." 

    In Denver, Ferguson spoke to a receptive audience of some 40 women
    attending a Weight Watchers meeting. 

    "I was out of control with my eating, out of control with my finances,
    out of control with my life. In my case, they all go together," she
    later explained. 

    What she cannot control is how she is depicted in British tabloids.
    "Bad Fergie sells newspapers, good Fergie doesn't," she said. "I've
    come to terms with it, but it hurts me desperately." 

    On a stop this week in San Francisco she said she made a brief stop at
    posh Saks Fifth Avenue to say hello to a friend who works there. A
    two-paragraph item in a San Francisco newspaper said she went shopping
    for two hours and now the Duchess said she fears headlines will say she
    has fallen back on her bad habits -- a sensitive area for her. 

    REUTER
7.679IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 13 1997 10:5142
    RTw  12-Feb-97 23:45    

    Miniature planes set for battlefield role-Jane's

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 12 (Reuter) - Miniature planes the size of an adult's hand,
    which can deliver ammunition, survey targets and inspect the inside of
    military buildings, are being developed in the United States, a leading
    defence magazine said on Wednesday. 

    Jane's International Defence Review said the U.S. Defence Advanced
    Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is studying the feasibility of micro
    air vehicles (MAV) measuring about 15 cm (six ins) across. 

    "The sensors for these types of vehicle, if not here today, are within
    reach technologically and they represent a significant driver to want
    to build something small," the magazine quoted DARPA as saying. 

    Darpa hopes to spend about $20 million over three years, leading to
    field trials of possibly three candidates. 

    "We have never tried to mechanise flight at this scale before and this
    program concept is what that's all about," a Darpa official was quoted
    as saying. 

    Sketches accompanying the article showed one rectangular MAV with two
    propellers and a guidance system enclosed in a central hub. Another
    showed a missile-shaped MAV with two wings and a single rear propeller. 

    Any machine smaller than 15 cm starts hitting problems in terms of the
    physics of flight control and aerodynamics. 

    DARPA workshops have indicated MAVs capable of carrying payloads of up
    to 18 grams, flying up to an hour at cruise speeds of 30-65 kph and
    having a range of one to 10 km. 

    MAVs are expected to be particularly useful in urban warfare where they
    could be employed to carry messages and carry out surveillance, Jane's
    said.

    REUTER
7.680IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:52115
    AP 18-Feb-1997 1:01 EST   REF5463

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1997
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -- On their fifth and final spacewalk,
    Discovery astronauts fixed the Hubble Space Telescope's torn insulating
    cover with bits of foil, wire, clips, plastic twists and parachute
    cord. Astronauts stitched makeshift thermal blankets for the repair,
    scavenging supplies from within the shuttle. The blankets will cover
    rips and tears in the telescope's insulation, protecting the $2 billion
    dollar telescope from the heat and cold of space. This spacewalk ties a
    NASA record for the most spacewalks on a single mission. 
   
    CHINA DENG 

    BEIJING (AP) -- China's Cabinet says it knows of no change in the
    condition of ailing senior leader Deng Xiaoping, despite reports
    suggesting he may have taken a turn for the worse. Other sources also
    said there was no sign that Deng, 92, was near death or that government
    leaders had rushed back to Beijing because his condition was
    deteriorating. The official stance on Deng's health is that he is in
    fairly good condition for a man of his age. Not seen in public for more
    than three years, he is said to suffer from Parkinson's disease, among
    other ailments. 
   
    WHITEWATER-STARR 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr will step down
    Aug. 1 to become dean of the Pepperdine School of Law. Whether the
    investigation of President Clinton and the first lady is ending remains
    unclear. A lawyer familiar with Whitewater said Starr will decide what,
    if any, action to take against the Clintons. 
   
    SIMPSON-KIDS 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The court-appointed attorney for O.J. Simpson's
    young children denied that she served Simpson's interests in
    recommending that they stay with their father. "There was never any
    allegation that he wasn't a good dad," Majorie Fuller said. "The kids
    are crazy about him. There's no indication ... that he may be a danger
    to his kids, regardless of whatever he may have done or not done." 
   
    SOUTH AFRICA-GORE 

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) -- U.S. Vice President Al Gore has
    concluded a four-day visit to South Africa. He signed agreements to
    increase cooperation between the two countries in education, the
    environment, conservation, trade and investment. At a briefing after
    the signing, Gore played down recent disagreements between the two
    countries on South Africa's possible arms deal with Syria and its cozy
    relationship with Cuba, Libya and Iran. 
   
    ISRAEL-VATICAN 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israel's tourism minister rebuffed Vatican warnings
    that the Jewish state must improve relations with Christians before
    Pope John Paul II can visit Jerusalem. Israel and the Vatican have long
    disagreed over Jerusalem, which the Vatican wants as an international
    "open city." Israel rejects any challenge to its sovereignty over the
    city. Moshe Katsav said "the Christian world has never enjoyed better
    status ... in Jerusalem." 
   
    JAPAN-RED ARMY 

    TOKYO (AP) -- At least five members of Japan's Red Army terrorist
    group, which carried out numerous hijackings and attacks in the 1970s,
    have been detained by authorities in Lebanon, Japanese media report.
    The government has not confirmed the reports, and Foreign Minister
    Yukihiko Ikeda said officials were looking into it. Kozo Okamoto, who
    had been sentenced to life in prison in Israel for his role in the May
    1972 attack on Tel Aviv's Lod Airport, was among those detained, the
    reports said, quoting anonymous Japanese government and police sources.
   
    PERU-HOSTAGES 

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Seventy-two men have begun their third month in
    captivity in Peru, and the rebels holding them say they have "all the
    time in the world" to wait for the government to give in to their
    demands. The rebels from the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement
    reiterated that no one in the Japanese ambassador's residence would be
    released until the government frees hundreds of jailed rebels. 
   
    COMPUSERVE 

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Robert J. Massey, president and chief executive
    officer of the CompuServe computer online service, resigned suddenly.
    CompuServe's parent, H&R Block, said Massey quit to pursue other
    interests. 
   
    BOX OFFICE 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- "Star Wars" retained its first-place grip on the
    movie box office with an estimated $21.3 million in weekend ticket
    sales. "Absolute Power," a Clint Eastwood thriller, opened in second
    place with $16.8 million. "Dante's Peak" dropped to third with $14.3
    million. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was changing hands at 124.51 yen, up 0.29 yen.
    The Nikkei Average fell 47.52 points to 18,703.13 points. New York
    markets were closed Monday. 
   
    NBA TRADE 

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) -- In a nine-player deal, the Dallas
    Mavericks have sent Jim Jackson, Chris Gatling, Sam Cassell, George
    McCloud and Eric Montross to the New Jersey Nets. New Jersey sent Shawn
    Bradley, Khalid Reeves, Robert Pack and Ed O'Bannon to Dallas. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.681IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5280
    RTw  18-Feb-97 03:19    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BEIJING - World awaits news of China's 92-year-old paramount leader
    Deng Xiaoping amid reports his health has deteriorated; top party and
    state officials cut short trips to return to the capital. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - Seoul officials said North Korea was changing its attitude
    after Pyongyang suggested it may accept the defection of a top
    Pyongyang official taking refuge in the South Korean embassy in China. 

    PARIS - The United States plans to announce soon an extra $10 million
    in food aid for North Korea, considerably more than expected and well
    above last year's donation of $6.4 million, U.S. officials said. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - British Prime Minister John Major defeated a censure motion
    proposed by the main opposition Labour party on his government's
    handling of the crisis over BSE, or mad cow disease. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright attends her first
    NATO foreign ministers' meeting on Tuesday seeking reaffirmation the
    alliance is united on eastward expansion before she talks to Russian
    leaders later this week. 

    PARIS - A new U.S. study estimated that NATO expansion will cost
    America much less than earlier projections and is intended to reassure
    Russia of the alliance's non-threatening nature 

    - - - - 

    DUSHANBE - Islamic rebels in Tajikistan freed five U.N. workers, the
    last remaining captives in a two-week hostage crisis in the volatile
    former Soviet republic. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Zaire launched a bombing blitz against three rebel towns as
    faltering counter-offensive against rebel gains in its eastern
    provinces swings into life; fighting overshadows U.N. mediation. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the first
    of two ministerial meetings to discuss building a Jewish neighborhood
    in Arab East Jerusalem which is sure to upset relations with the
    Palestinians. 

    CAIRO - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said he would consider
    tougher measures against Israel unless the Jewish state ceased
    provocative actions in Jerusalem. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albanian President Sali Berisha headed for the angry town of
    Lushnje to explain his handling of pyramid investment scandal, which
    wiped out savings of thousands of investors and sparked month of
    protests and riots. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori said he was "optimistic" for
    a bloodless end to the two-month Lima hostage crisis despite the
    apparent lack of progress in renewed talks with Marxist rebels. 

    Leaked military memorandum said if negotiations fail U.S. and Peruvian
    commandos could drop onto the roof of the Japanese ambassador's home on
    a moonless night, plant explosives and end Latin America's longest
    hostage siege in minutes, but at a heavy cost of life. Fujimori denied
    the government intended to carry out such a plan. 

    REUTER 
7.682IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5267
    AP 18-Feb-1997 1:33 EST   REF5509

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    City Missed Girl's Disappearance

    By LISA M. HAMM

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- When 8-year-old Justina Morales disappeared more than
    a year ago, her school and child welfare workers failed to notice and
    her mother kept quiet. 

    Now, police are searching for Justina's body, following a confession
    from her mother's ex-boyfriend that he beat the girl to death with a
    metal pipe, investigators said. 

    The case raises questions about how Justina could have vanished without
    drawing the attention of her public school or a child welfare worker
    who had investigated why she missed so many classes. Authorities didn't
    know the girl had disappeared until last week. 

    "It seems that the system in place to keep track of children like
    Justina apparently broke down," Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Monday
    through his spokeswoman, Colleen Roche. 

    The mother, Denise Solero, 29, who now lives in a battered women's
    shelter, was too afraid of her ex-boyfriend to tell police about her
    daughter's death, said her lawyer, Michael Dowd. She has a 6-year-old
    son with the suspect. 

    "He had threatened her and other members of her family's lives if she
    ever spoke," Dowd said. 

    Acting on a tip from a friend of Ms. Solero, police on Sunday arrested
    Luis Santiago, 23. He was being held without bond on a murder charge. 

    According to the criminal complaint, Santiago confessed to fatally
    beating the girl on Dec. 31, 1995. Dowd said Santiago was trying to hit
    Ms. Solero with the pipe when he accidentally struck Justina, who had
    tried to intervene. 

    Police were searching for the girl's body in vacant lots around the
    Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, using shovels, dogs and
    sometimes bulldozers. 

    Officials at the school where Justina had enrolled shortly before her
    death apparently never investigated when she failed to show up. Board
    of Education officials did not immediately return calls for comment. 

    A child welfare employee had worked with Ms. Solero from November 1995
    through January 1996, investigating reports that Justina was skipping
    school. The case was closed after the worker determined the absences
    were not enough to keep the girl from advancing in school, said
    Nicholas Scoppetta, the city welfare commissioner. 

    "I don't know that anything that our caseworker would have done or
    could have done would have made any difference," he said. 

    As for Ms. Solero, her lawyer said he didn't think she would be
    charged. But Kathleen Wilcox, a spokeswoman for the Brooklyn district
    attorney, said Ms. Solero was still under investigation. 

    "What's she going to be charged with? Not getting hit with a pipe?"
    Dowd said. "Being paralyzed by fear of this man ... is really the thing
    that does it." 
7.683IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5386
    AP 18-Feb-1997 1:07 EST   REF5465

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fifth Shuttle Spacewalk Starts

    By MARCIA DUNN

    AP Aerospace Writer

    SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -- Making a fifth and final spacewalk,
    astronauts fixed the Hubble Space Telescope's torn insulating cover
    Monday night with bits of foil, wire, clips, plastic twists and
    parachute cord. 

    Mark Lee and Steven Smith hung quiltlike patches over splits in
    Hubble's thin, reflective insulation, apparently damaged by sun
    exposure during seven years in orbit. They clipped the six
    9-inch-by-16-inch pieces of material to rails and knobs on the
    telescope. 

    In a spot where the insulation was cracked but not yet ripped, the
    Discovery crewmen stretched two wires to prevent the material from
    tearing. 

    It was frustrating work. Twice, Lee cursed. The spacewalkers had to
    work by the light of their helmets; most of the 2 1/2-hour job took
    place in the blackness of space. 

    Mission Control added the spacewalk to shuttle Discovery's flight so
    Lee and Smith could finish the insulation repairs begun by two
    colleagues the night before. 

    The astronauts discovered the damage last week while installing
    state-of-the-art scientific gear that will allow the telescope to look
    deeper into the universe. 

    With the sort of ingenuity used on Apollo 13, the crew cobbled together
    the patches early Monday as Gregory Harbaugh and Joe Tanner installed
    the last of Hubble's replacement parts, and did a little mending, too. 

    Working 375 miles above Earth, Harbaugh and Tanner covered two gaping
    holes near the top of the 43-foot telescope with pieces of
    Teflon-coated material 3 feet long and 1 foot wide. They attached the
    blankets, brought along to repair possible pinholes, to knobs and rails
    with wire and string. 

    The task of hanging the homemade patches over the lower electronic
    compartments was considered more difficult and more critical. The
    astronauts salvaged the material, meant for just such a problem, from
    the cargo bay. 

    NASA managers were relieved at how well the first repairs went. "It was
    a good feeling," said Mike Weiss, a Hubble service manager. 

    The repairs were nowhere near as crucial as those performed during
    Apollo 13's aborted moon mission in 1970. The three astronauts saved
    their lives by using tape and the cardboard covers torn from their
    flight manuals to restore the spacecraft's system for cleansing the air
    of carbon dioxide. 

    Hubble, in fact, probably could have made it to the next service call
    in late 1999 without the insulation repairs, NASA payload manager
    Kenneth Ledbetter said. The concern was that the deteriorating cover
    might cause sensitive electronics in the $2 billion telescope to
    overheat and fail. 

    "It was something we felt was prudent to do -- not absolutely
    necessary, but prudent to do, and we did it," Ledbetter said. 

    Harbaugh and Tanner were proud of their handiwork. They spent 1 1/2
    hours attaching two blankets and adjusting them just so. 

    "What do you think?" Harbaugh asked, backing away. 

    "Like it. Looks good from here," Tanner replied. 

    Mission Control put it this way: "A masterpiece." 

    NASA plans a more permanent fix during the next service call in three
    years. The astronauts snipped off a piece of the damaged insulation to
    bring back home for analysis. 

    The astronauts are scheduled to release the Hubble on Wednesday from
    the shuttle's cargo bay, where it has been anchored since last week.
    Discovery is scheduled to return to Florida on Friday. 
7.684IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5372
    AP 17-Feb-1997 23:08 EST   REF5046

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pols Can Take Tobacco Vacation

    By PATRICK GRAHAM

    Associated Press Writer

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- For dozens of congressmen and congressional
    aides, getting caught up on tobacco-related issues meant spending the
    weekend at a lavish golf resort in a getaway sponsored by the Tobacco
    Institute. 

    The three-day annual legislative conference of the tobacco industry's
    lobbying group wrapped up Monday at The Phoenician resort. 

    Institute officials refused to say how many people attended, which
    members of Congress were there or what was on the agenda, but said the
    main topic of conversation was the new federal tobacco regulations
    taking effect Feb. 28. More regulations, set to take effect in August,
    are being fought in North Carolina federal court. 

    "This is a private meeting," said Walker Merryman, vice president of
    the institute. "Since the furthest thing from our minds is making news,
    it's not public." 

    Anti-tobacco groups condemned the meeting as a "golf junket" for
    lawmakers and placed newspaper advertisements around the country urging
    people to ask their representatives whether they attended. State
    Attorney General Grant Woods, whose lawsuit accuses tobacco companies
    of contributing to the delinquency of minors, staged a counter-event
    Monday at a miniature golf course. 

    The Tobacco Institute declined to say whether attending members of
    Congress came from tobacco-producing states such as Kentucky, North
    Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. 

    Calls to pro-tobacco lawmakers from those four states were not returned
    Monday, including one to Rep. Howard Coble, R-N.C. Coble's aide said
    Friday that the congressman would be at the resort. 

    Under new congressional ethics rules, legislators are barred from
    accepting most gifts from special interests, including recreational
    trips. However, they may accept privately paid travel for educational,
    fact-finding events that are consistent with the interests of their
    constituents. 

    Lawmakers who attend such events are required by law to fully disclose
    all expenses paid by the special interest within 30 days. 

    Merryman said The Tobacco Institute paid for attendees' coach air fare,
    hotel bills and food, but not golf. 

    Attendees on their way into a breakfast meeting Monday refused to
    comment and an Associated Press reporter was asked by hotel security to
    leave the resort. 

    A reservations clerk who declined to identify himself said there had
    been more than 100 legislators and congressional aides at The
    Phoenician over the weekend, but only about 25 aides remained by
    Monday. 

    The FDA rules taking effect next week include a requirement for
    convenience store clerks to check identification of people who appear
    to be less than 27 years old who want to buy tobacco products. 

    The more controversial rules that take effect Aug. 28 limit vending
    machine sales to places where minors aren't allowed, ban outdoor
    advertising near schools and playgrounds and prohibit selling or giving
    away promotional products like baseball caps, jackets or gym bags. 
7.685IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5325
    AP 17-Feb-1997 21:22 EST   REF5568

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Coyote Mauls Young Girl

    SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. (AP) -- A coyote mauled a 4-year-old girl as
    she played in the snow Monday near a ski resort where she was
    vacationing with her family. 

    Lauren Bridges was hospitalized in stable condition with deep cuts to
    her face. She was saved by her father, who heard the girl's screams.

    "The coyote was on top of her, ripping at her neck," Steve Bridges
    said. "I grabbed the coyote by the back of the neck and pulled it off.
    She was covered in blood." 

    Bridges said he beat the 40-pound coyote several times. A police
    officer arrived minutes later and killed the animal. 

    The attack occurred outside a rental home near the Heavenly Ski Resort
    where the Carmichael, Calif., family was spending the holiday weekend. 

    Coyotes are common in the area, although attacks on humans are rare,
    authorities said. 
7.686IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5357
    AP 17-Feb-1997 20:25 EST   REF5535

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Virginia Retiring State Song

    By LARRY O'DELL

    Associated Press Writer

    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- Not a single discordant note was sounded Monday
    as Virginia's House of Delegates voted to retire a state song that
    critics say glorifies slavery with words like "darkey" and "massa." 

    The House voted 100-0 to make "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia" the state
    song emeritus. There was no debate. 

    "This puts the song where it belongs -- in history -- and it won't be
    troubling us any further," said Del. William P. Robinson Jr.,
    D-Norfolk. 

    The first repeal attempt was made in 1970 by then-state Sen. L. Douglas
    Wilder, a grandson of slaves who became the nation's first elected
    black governor. 

    Similar legislation became an annual fixture, rejected every year by
    lawmakers who said the song was an important part of Virginia's
    heritage. 

    This year, they were persuaded by arguments that the song is so
    offensive, it's no longer taught to schoolchildren and hasn't been
    performed at an official state function in two decades. 

    The Senate, which approved the measure 24-15 on Jan. 28, now must
    consider the House version, which doesn't include a provision calling
    for a special commission to find a new state song. 

    Sen. L. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth and co-sponsor of the bill, said she
    would ask the Senate to accept the House version rather than risk
    losing the bill, which Gov. George Allen also supports. 

    "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny" was written in 1875 by James A. Bland,
    a black minstrel from Flushing, N.Y., and adopted by the General
    Assembly as the official state song in 1940. 

    The assembly changed "Virginny" to "Virginia," but left the lyrics
    intact. The song is written from the viewpoint of a freed slave who
    loves Virginia and longs to be reunited after death with "massa and
    missis." 

    "If that's not what you call Christian forgiveness, I don't know what
    is," said Larry Roller of Mount Sidney, president of a group called
    Save Our State Song. "In heaven, there are no slaves or masters." 

    Roller's group favored keeping the song, but changing the offending
    words. He said retiring the song is a disservice to Bland, the nation's
    only black composer of a state song. 
7.687IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5324
    AP 18-Feb-1997 1:29 EST   REF5506

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Animal-Rights Protesters Strip

    TOKYO (AP) -- Two American women stripped down to their panties in an
    upscale Tokyo shopping district today to protest the sale of animal
    fur. 

    The two women, who identified themselves as Violet Kelly and Tracy
    Reiman, were whisked away by police after baring bodies painted like
    leopards and shouting, "Compassion is the fashion! Fur is dead!" 

    The brief sidewalk protest drew a crowd. Police shouted at the
    activists to stop, and a woman officer tried to keep a large
    animal-rights banner wrapped around their bodies from slipping. 

    The women, from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, were
    finally taken away in a police cruiser. 

    PETA said the protest coincided with the International Outerwear
    Fashion Fair in Tokyo this week. The fair includes furriers' exhibits.

7.688IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5363
    AP 17-Feb-1997 23:56 EST   REF5349

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Lebanese Hold 5 Red Army Members

    TOKYO (AP) -- At least five members of Japan's Red Army terrorist
    group, which carried out numerous hijackings and attacks in the 1970s,
    have been detained by authorities in Lebanon, Japanese media reported
    Tuesday. 

    Kozo Okamoto, who had been sentenced to life in prison in Israel for
    his role in the May 1972 attack on the Tel Aviv airport, was among
    those detained, the reports said, quoting Japanese government and
    police sources. 

    Twenty-four people died and dozens were injured in the attack. 

    Okamoto, 49, was released from prison in May 1985 as part of an
    exchange of prisoners between Israeli and Palestinian forces. 

    Also taken into custody, the reports said, were Mariko Yamamoto, 56;
    Kazuo Tohira, 44; Masao Adachi, 57; and Hisashi Matsuda, 48. The
    national Asahi newspaper said a sixth person also might have been
    detained. 

    All of them were on international wanted lists. 

    The government has not confirmed the reports, and Foreign Minister
    Yukihiko Ikeda told reporters Tuesday that officials were looking into
    it. If the detentions are true, officials said Japan would probably
    want custody. 

    Asahi national newspaper said a sixth member may also have been
    detained, and television network NHK reported the number of those
    apprehended could total eight. Kyodo News said the detentions took
    place Saturday during raids on various hideouts in Lebanon. 

    The reports said Japan is requesting that the five be handed over.
    Tokyo has sent investigators to Lebanon, where negotiations for their
    extradition have apparently begun, the reports said. 

    Japan's largest newspaper, the Yomiuri, quoted sources as saying that
    Lebanon, which had long tolerated the Red Army's activities, felt
    emboldened to crack down on the group as a result of progress in Middle
    East peace talks. The paper also said that more of the group's members
    could be apprehended. 

    The Red Army, a violent leftist group sympathetic to Palestinian
    causes, took responsibility for several international attacks in the
    1970s, including the takeover of the U.S. Consulate in Kuala Lumpur,
    Malaysia, in 1975 and the hijacking of a Japan Air Lines plane to North
    Korea in 1970. 

    The group is also known in Japan for a violent shootout with police at
    a mountain lodge in 1972, an incident that was televised nationally.

    In recent years, the group's active membership has been depleted as
    several members have been arrested abroad and extradited to Japan. 

    In June, 49-year-old Kazue Yoshimura, a former Red Army member who had
    been a fugitive since 1974, was arrested in Peru and extradited to
    Japan. 
7.689IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5377
    AP 17-Feb-1997 23:48 EST   REF5313

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    China Says Deng's Health Fine

    BEIJING (AP) -- China's Cabinet said Tuesday it had not heard of any
    change in the condition of ailing senior leader Deng Xiaoping, despite
    reports suggesting he may have taken a severe turn for the worse. 

    Other sources contacted in the Chinese capital also said there was no
    indication that Deng, 92, was near death or that top government leaders
    had rushed back to Beijing because of a deterioration in the condition
    of the architect of China's economic reforms. 

    Rumors that Deng's health has seriously declined have been circulating
    in the Chinese capital since December. 

    The official stance on Deng's health is that he is in fairly good
    condition for a man of his age. Not seen in public for more than three
    years, he is said to suffer from Parkinson's disease, among other
    ailments. 

    Chinese officials routinely refer questions about Deng's condition to
    the State Council, or Cabinet. 

    Chinese media sources say that state-controlled media like Xinhua News
    Agency, the People's Daily and China Central Television will be given
    advance warning of Deng's death to arrange long-prepared obituaries and
    elegies. 

    A source at one of those news organizations said Tuesday he had
    received no such reports. 

    A Hong Kong newspaper over the weekend reported that Deng had suffered
    a brain hemorrhage and was in the intensive care unit of a military
    hospital in Beijing. 

    Monday, U.S. officials said they were following reports that Deng was
    critically ill and that Chinese leaders had interrupted trips to return
    to Beijing. 

    However, White House spokeswoman Mary Ellen Glynn said the government
    had no independent information about the leader's health status. "We
    have no indications that the situation has changed," she said. 

    Vice Premier Li Lanqing, a member of the Politburo of the ruling
    Communist Party, was in Israel on a visit and had not changed his plans
    to stay until Friday, said Orna Sagiv, spokeswoman for the Israeli
    Embassy in Beijing. 

    She noted that Li left Beijing on Sunday, days after rumors about
    Deng's worsening health began shaking the Hong Kong stock market. 

    Taiwan's Central News Agency reported Tuesday that Chinese Defense
    Minister Chi Haotian, now traveling in Asia, had made no changes in his
    itinerary. 

    Deng, who rose to power after Mao Tse-tung's death in 1976, has not
    played an active role in Chinese politics for most of this decade, but
    remains the patriarch of the Communist Party and no major changes in
    the Chinese leadership are likely as long as he is alive. 

    Deng's death would not likely bring about any immediate changes in the
    Chinese leadership, at least before the Communist Party congress
    scheduled for this fall, although "something could still happen on his
    deathbed" to influence China's political future, said Gerrit Gong, a
    China expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. 

    Purged twice during the Mao era, Deng helped improve living standards
    in China by opening the country to the world and allowing a degree of
    capitalism while cracking down on any political opposition to the
    Communist Party. 

    Gong said Deng has reason to hang on: he has often stated that one of
    his last missions in life is to be there when Britain returns Hong Kong
    to Chinese control on July 1. 
7.690IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5380
    AP 17-Feb-1997 22:33 EST   REF5615

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.K. Paper Mired in Race Murder

    LONDON (AP) -- The government is considering legal action against a
    tabloid that identified five young white men as the killers of a black
    teen-ager, a top law enforcement official said Monday. 

    Solicitor General Sir Derek Spencer said the Daily Mail could face
    contempt charges for printing pictures of five suspects on its front
    page, calling them "murderers." 

    The newspaper said, "If we are wrong, let them sue us." 

    Some members of the House of Commons commended the Daily Mail for its
    accusation against the five, who were acquitted in a rare private
    prosecution brought by the slain teen-ager's family. 

    "If it's right for newspapers, as indeed it is, to campaign for those
    who they believe are innocent and who are in prison, why should not a
    newspaper -- to its credit -- campaign against those who they believe
    are responsible for one of the most foul racially motivated murders in
    recent times?" said David Winnick, a lawmaker for the opposition Labor
    party. 

    Stephen Lawrence, 18, was stabbed to death by a gang of whites on April
    22, 1993. Police charged two men with murder but the state abandoned
    the case, saying there was insufficient evidence. 

    Lawrence's family won permission in 1994 to mount a private
    prosecution, and five men were named as defendants. Two were released
    before the trial, and the case collapsed in April when a judge ruled
    that testimony identifying the three remaining defendants was
    inadmissible. 

    This month, a coroner's inquest in the case resumed, but all five
    suspects refused to answer questions. The inquest jury ruled that
    Lawrence was unlawfully killed, but it did not accuse anyone. 

    Sir Montague Levine, who presided at a coroner's inquest, said the
    prosecution had failed because "a wall of silence and fear" prevented
    witnesses from coming forward. 

    Imran Khan, a lawyer for Lawrence's family, commended the Daily Mail. 

    "If those youths wish to challenge the accusations, it could bring into
    the public domain issues which have yet to come into that domain," he
    said in a BBC radio interview. 

    Lord Donaldson, the former second-ranking judge in England, said that
    the Daily Mail "has without doubt interfered with the course of
    justice." 

    In an editorial Monday, the Daily Mail said it held neither the law nor
    the courts in contempt, "although both have failed miserably on this
    occasion." 

    It pointed to the "savage murder and a legal system which failed to
    give justice to ordinary people." 

    David Osland, former deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan
    Police who was responsible for the murder inquiry, said he was
    satisfied with the department's investigation. 

    "The suggestion that any police officer would investigate a murder less
    competently because he (the victim) was black is an absolute disgrace,"
    Osland said. 

    "We don't live in a sort of Third World banana republic where you put
    people in prison or lock them up without evidence," he said. 

    Ronald Thwaites, a defense lawyer in the private prosecution, accused
    the Daily Mail of picking on an easy target. 

    "It is well known that the acquitted defendants are unemployed, without
    resources and therefore cannot take proceedings for defamation,
    regardless of the provocation offered," Thwaites said in a letter
    published Monday in The Times of London. 
7.691IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5393
    AP 17-Feb-1997 21:43 EST   REF5576

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Korea May OK Hwang Defection

    BY JOHN LEICESTER

    Associated Press Writer

    BEIJING (AP) -- Chinese police guarding the South Korean consulate
    visibly relaxed Monday, joking and chatting amiably, after North Korea
    indicated it could accept the defection of the senior official holed up
    inside. 

    North Korean agents, who had kept a public, round-the-clock vigil
    outside the consulate since Hwang Jang Yop defected last week, withdrew
    on Monday. North Korea did not say why. 

    But a spokesman at North Korea's Foreign Ministry indicated that the
    reclusive communist state had decided to accept the defection.
    Previously, North Korea had threatened to retaliate against South Korea
    for what it called a kidnapping. 

    "If he was kidnapped ... we will take decisive countermeasures," North
    Korea's official news agency quoted the unidentified spokesman as
    saying. "If he sought asylum, it means that he is a renegade and he is
    dismissed." 

    The spokesman said North Korea has asked China to investigate Hwang's
    "disappearance." 

    Kang Ho-yang, spokesman for South Korea's Unification Ministry, said
    the comment indicated that North Korea was abandoning its earlier
    position in which it had rejected Hwang's defection as "inconceivable
    and impossible." 

    The apparent softening of North Korea's position could ease the way for
    Hwang to leave the consulate, where he has been holed up since asking
    for asylum there Wednesday. 

    Hwang, 73, is the highest-ranking North Korean to defect. He is a key
    communist theoretician and once was the private tutor of North Korean
    leader Kim Jong Il. 

    After the defection, Chinese police with automatic weapons laid
    tire-shredding spikes in the streets around the consulate and guarded
    the building. Their security measures increased as the standoff dragged
    on. 

    But on Monday, after the North Koreans withdrew, the police loosened
    up. 

    One officer chatted amiably with a man curious about his bulletproof
    vest. Would it stop bullets? "The vest would be ruined but the person
    wearing it would be all right," he said. 

    At another intersection, an officer said the AK-47 assault rifle slung
    over his shoulder was not loaded. "It's to frighten people," he said,
    laughing. 

    In deciding whether to let Hwang proceed to South Korea, China finds
    itself in a delicate situation. It does not want to infuriate North
    Korea, a longtime ally it fought with in the 1950-53 Korean War. But
    South Korea is an important trading partner -- the two countries did
    about $20 billion in trade last year. 

    Chinese who gathered around the consulate to see what the commotion was
    about said the situation put their country in a quandary. 

    "In my childhood, we were taught to fight America and join North
    Korea," said Xu Nan, 24, who works in a car engine factory. "Now the
    situation has changed. South Korea has become a very useful partner to
    us." 

    The defection also worsened tensions between North and South Korea,
    which technically remain at war. On Saturday, a key North Korean
    defector living in Seoul was shot and critically wounded in an attack
    that Seoul claimed was a North Korean response to the defection. 

    Lee Han-young, 36, is a nephew of a former wife of the North Korean
    leader. South Korean police continued their investigation into his
    shooting today but said they had no evidence proving North Korean
    involvement. 

    In Bonn, Germany, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said Monday
    that she was "very concerned" about tensions between South and North
    Korea. 

    But Ban Ki-moon, national security adviser to South Korean President
    Kim Young-sam, said Monday that his country still would provide the
    North with 100,000 tons of emergency food aid and promised nuclear
    reactors despite the rising tensions. 
7.692IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:53112
    AP 17-Feb-1997 1:18 EST   REF5614

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Experts Find Fatal Asteroid Clue

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ocean core samples contain "proof positive" of a
    massive asteroid colliding with the Earth 65 million years ago and
    triggering a global extinction that probably killed off the dinosaurs,
    scientists report. 

    Richard D. Norris, leader of the international ocean drilling
    expedition, said Sunday that three drill samples have the unmistakable
    signature of an asteroid impact, including a brownish clay that he
    called the "fireball layer" because it seems to contain bits of the
    asteroid itself. 

    "We've got the smoking gun," said Norris in a telephone interview.
    "These neat layers of sediment bracketing the impact have never been
    found in the sea before. It is proof positive of the impact." 

    A team of international scientists, working on the drill ship Joides
    Resolution, spent five weeks off the east coast of Florida collecting
    cores from the ocean floor in about 8,500 feet of water. They drilled
    up to 300 feet beneath the sea bed, collecting sediments laid down at
    the time of the dinosaur extinction. 

    Norris said the deepest layers contain fossil remains of many animals
    and came from a healthy "happy-go-lucky ocean" just before the impact. 

    Just above this is a layer with small green glass pebbles, thought to
    be ocean bottom material instantly melted by the massive energy release
    of the impact. 

    Next was a rusty brown layer which Norris said is thought to be from
    the "vaporized remains of the asteroid itself." 

    The heat of the impact would have been so intense, said Norris, that
    the stony asteroid would have instantly been reduced to vapor and
    thrown high into the sky, some of it perhaps even reaching outer space.
    It then snowed down, like a fine powder, all over the globe. 

    Norris said brown deposits, like that in the core sample, have been
    found elsewhere and they have a high content of iridium, a chemical
    signature of asteroids. 

    Just above the brown layer, are two inches of gray clay with strong
    evidence of a nearly dead world. 

    "It was not a completely dead ocean, but most of the species that are
    seen before (early in the core sample) are gone," said Norris. "There
    are just some very minute fossils. These were the survivors in the
    ocean." 

    This dead zone lasted about 5,000 years, said the scientist, and then
    the core samples showed evidence of renewed life. "It is amazing how
    quickly the new species appeared," Norris said. 

    Robert W. Corell, assistant director for Geosciences of the National
    Science Foundation, called the core samples the strongest evidence yet
    that an asteroid impact caused the dinosaurs' extinction. 

    "In my view, this is the most significant discovery in geosciences in
    20 years," he said. "This gives us the facts of what happen to life
    back then. I would certainly call it the smoking gun." 

    Although the impact with the asteroid occurred in the southern Gulf of
    Mexico, Norris went to the Atlantic Ocean, near the edge of the
    continental shelf in his search to document it. He surmised that the
    violence of the impact, followed by huge waves, roiled the Gulf of
    Mexico so much that the area was unlikely to have clear sediment layers
    dating to the dinosaur era. 

    Norris theorized that waves from the impact would have washed
    completely across Florida, depositing debris in the Atlantic. That is
    where he found it. 

    The ship bearing the core samples returned to port on Friday and the
    NSF announced the findings Sunday, just hours before NBC was airing a
    movie about a fictional asteroid hitting the Earth and causing
    widespread destruction. 

    "The impact of the asteroid featured in tonight's NBC-TV show is
    peanuts compared to the real thing faced by the world 65 million years
    ago," said Corell. 

    Geologist Walter Alvarez of the University of California, Berkeley,
    first proposed in 1980 that the dinosaurs disappeared from fossil
    history suddenly because of a massive asteroid hit. At first, the
    theory had few supporters. 

    But in 1989, scientists found evidence of a huge impact crater north of
    Chicxulub, on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. Later studies found evidence
    of debris washed out of the Gulf by waves that went inland as far as
    what is now Arkansas. 

    It is now widely believed that an asteroid of six to 12 miles in
    diameter smashed to Earth at thousands of miles an hour. It instantly
    gouged a crater '50 to 180 miles wide. 

    That energy release was more powerful than if all of the nuclear
    weapons ever made were set off at once, said Norris. Billions of tons
    of soil, sulphur and rock vapor were lifted into the atmosphere,
    blotting out the sun. Temperatures around the globe plunged. 

    Up to 70 percent of all species, including the dinosaurs, perished.
    Among the survivors, scientists believe, were small mammals that, over
    millions of years, evolved into many new species, including humans. 
7.693IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5388
    AP 17-Feb-1997 1:12 EST   REF5606

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Broccoli Haters Take Heart

    By DANIEL Q. HANEY

    AP Medical Editor

    SEATTLE (AP) -- Knowing this may not make broccoli taste any better,
    but if you find the stuff disgusting the reason may be in your genes. 

    Scientists studying people's food preferences are finding a strong
    inherited tendency to like or reject all sorts of foods -- including
    many that the health gurus say are good for you. 

    "We can't just assume that people don't follow healthy diets because
    they don't have the information. Taste plays a big role in what people
    eat," said Valerie Duffy, a nutritionist from the University of
    Connecticut. 

    Foods like broccoli, brussels sprouts and mustard greens, which are
    naturally bitter anyway, can seem unpleasantly so to some because of
    the taste genes people inherited. 

    Indeed, it seems the whole world can be split up into three categories
    -- non-tasters, tasters and super-tasters -- depending on the intensity
    of the way they perceive bitterness, sweetness and other taste
    sensations. 

    Scientists working in this emerging field of research presented their
    latest findings Sunday at a meeting of the American Association for the
    Advancement of Science. 

    "Super-tasting children will probably not like brussels sprouts or
    broccoli, no matter what you do. The reasons are genetic," said Adam
    Drewnowski of the University of Michigan. 

    The researchers categorize people by the way they respond to the taste
    of a thyroid medicine called 6-n-propylthiouracil, or PROP. About 25
    percent of white people cannot taste PROP at all, so they are known as
    non-tasters. Half are considered tasters because they find it mildly
    bitter. Another 25 percent, the super-tasters, find it grossly bitter. 

    Women are more likely than men to be super-tasters, and Asians and
    blacks are more apt than whites to have this trait. 

    Many foods that are considered healthful, such as the cabbage family,
    grapefruit and some kinds of roots and berries, are also bitter. While
    clearly many people develop a taste for strong flavors -- even ones
    that at first seem unpleasant -- the researchers wonder if
    super-tasters might be more likely to avoid bitter foods with possible
    cancer-fighting properties. 

    Drewnowski is beginning a study of women with breast cancer to see if
    there is a link between the disease and inherited food preferences. 

    Experts assume that at some point in human evolution, being a
    super-taster might have improved the chance of survival in parts of the
    world where there were lots of poisonous plants, since these tend to
    taste bitter, while being a non-taster could have been an advantage in
    safer environments. 

    The field of research is so new that some of the findings seem to
    conflict with each other. But in general, here is what the studies
    show: 

    -- Super-tasters are apparently more sensitive to tastes because they
    have more taste buds on their tongues. 

    -- Super-tasters are more likely to find bitter foods to be nastily
    bitter and sweet things to be cloyingly sweet. Dairy fat tastes
    creamier, chili peppers are hotter and carbonated drinks may be
    unpleasantly bubbly. 

    -- Non-tasters are likely to say saccharin tastes fine, while
    super-tasters find it has an unpleasant aftertaste. 

    -- Female super-tasters are less likely to be obese and appear to have
    better cholesterol levels. Furthermore, they seem to enjoy cooking
    more. 

    So what about that most famous broccoli hater, former President Bush? 

    "I'd really like to know if he's a super-taster," said Linda Bartoshuk
    of Yale University, one of the field's pioneers. "There's a good chance
    he is." 
7.694IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5365
    AP 17-Feb-1997 1:05 EST   REF5322

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Alien Species Alarm U.S. Experts

    By MATT CRENSON

    AP Science Editor

    SEATTLE (AP) -- There are aliens among us, and biologists want a
    government commission to investigate the menace. 

    So many crabs, clams, worms, snails and mussels are turning up on
    America's coasts that in some places, the native inhabitants can hardly
    be found. 

    The invaders, from Asia, Europe and other distant shores, travel in
    cargo holds, ship ballast tanks and even bait shipments, yet the public
    is largely unaware and the government is having a hard time stopping
    the onslaught. 

    The problem is so severe that biologists have asked the White House to
    do something about it. In a letter that they plan to send to Vice
    President Al Gore next month, more than 200 scientists are calling for
    a presidential commission to study the threat. 

    "We are losing the war against invasive exotic species, and their
    economic impacts are soaring. We simply cannot allow this unacceptable
    degradation of our nation's public and agricultural lands to continue,"
    the scientists wrote in the letter released Sunday. 

    There are comparable problems in other environments. In the rivers and
    lakes of central and eastern North America, invading zebra mussels clog
    water intake pipes and push out native species. And on western
    rangelands, foreign weeds are crowding out thousands of acres of native
    grasses a day. 

    "A marine biologist returning to New England after an absence since
    1970 would find a very different world today," said James Carlton, a
    professor of marine sciences at Williams College. 

    When an exotic invader settles in a new environment, it competes for
    resources with native species, often with undesirable consequences.
    European green crabs, for example, crowd out the tasty blue crabs that
    are caught from the mid-Atlantic to the Gulf of Mexico. 

    The overall impact of the invasion is unknown. 

    "We really only have a handful of studies," said Edwin Grosholz of the
    University of New Hampshire. "We just really don't have any information
    about what they've done." 

    At a symposium held during the annual meeting of the American
    Association for the Advancement of Science, researchers shared vivid
    descriptions from the front lines of the war against exotic species. 

    Andrew Cohen of the University of California, Berkeley, said that in
    some parts of San Francisco Bay, rocks and piers are so covered with
    invading species that native species can no longer be found. The bay is
    thought to be the most invaded ecosystem in the world, with 234
    non-native species known and a new one moving in every 12 weeks. 

    "We will never have a natural San Francisco Bay ecosystem again," Cohen
    said. "We need to get very serious very quickly." 
7.695IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5370
    RTw  18-Feb-97 00:43    

    BBC says Hamanaka paid inflated prices in big deal

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuter) - A British television programme on Monday
    alleged that a huge copper trading deal arranged by Yasuo Hamanaka
    involved his Sumitomo Corp employers paying inflated prices. 

    The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Panorama programme quoted
    documents that it said threw new light on the 1993 deal, codenamed
    RADR. 

    It quoted an expert as saying  it appeared that a British brokerage,
    Winchester Commodities Group, made profits of about $36-$38 million
    over market prices. 

    Sumitomo's former star copper trader pleaded guilty in a Tokyo court on
    Monday to fraud and forgery charges arising out of his metals dealings
    over 10 years, during which Sumitomo has alleged that he lost it $2.6
    billion in unauthorised deals. 

    Winchester has strongly denied any role in the Sumitomo losses and has
    also said it was willing to cooperate in any investigations. A
    spokesman for Winchester was not available to comment on the BBC
    programme. 

    Founded in 1991 by traders Charles Vincent and Ashley Levett in the
    English cathedral town of the same name, it put together the RADR deal
    which involved nearly 100 inter-related trades, Panorama said. 

    Panorama based its allegation that prices were biased against Sumitomo
    on analysis by Desmond Fitzgerald, chairman and chief executive of
    Equitable House Investments. 

    "I can't think of any reason why an experienced market professional
    would want to do some of these trades at the prices they were done at.
    It's a complete mystery to me," he said. 

    "I'm very confident that the prices at which some of these trades were
    carried out were unfair. That is, miles out of line with fair market
    prices," he added. 

    Separately, prosecutors said in Tokyo on Monday that between late 1992
    and early 1993 Winchester gave Hamanaka about 15 million yen ($120,000
    at current exchange rates) as what they called a gratitude payment.
    They did not say what for. 

    Hamanaka spent money on golf club memberships, entertaining clients at
    night clubs, overseas travel and other entertainment, they said. 

    Panorama said Vincent and another Winchester director made three trips
    to Tokyo in late 1992 and early 1993 carrying $50,000 in cash each time
    to their Tokyo representative. 

    But it quoted Winchester as saying that all payments to him had been
    "in the ordinary course of business." 

    The RADR deal was put together with the assistance of Credit Lyonnais
    Rouse, a ring dealing member of the London Metal Exchange, which was
    paid commission and took a share of 20 percent in any profits or
    losses, Panorama said. 

    Rouse, the London-based trading unit of the state-owned French bank,
    has denied any wrongdoing but it apologised after an LME investigation
    at the time in case its involvement could have been interpreted as
    involving an undue influence over the market. 

    REUTER
7.696IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5490
    RTw  17-Feb-97 23:45    

    UK's Major easily fends off BSE censure motion

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Alan Wheatley 

    LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuter) - The threat of an early British general
    election faded on Monday as Prime Minister John Major easily defeated a
    parliamentary motion censuring his government's handling of the crisis
    over mad cow disease. 

    The motion, criticising Agriculture Minister Douglas Hogg for his
    handling of the crisis, was rejected in the lower House of Commons by
    320 votes to 307. 

    Defeat for the government would have triggered a vote of confidence
    that could have forced Major to hold a snap election instead of
    soldiering on until his preferred date, said to be May 1.

    The main opposition Labour Party, favoured by polls to regain power for
    the first time since 1979, needed to win the support of all the other
    opposition parties -- plus at least one rebel from the ruling
    Conservatives -- to defeat the government. 

    The Conservatives have 322 voting members in the House of Commons,
    exactly the same number as the combined opposition parties.

    But in the hours leading up to the vote, the government pulled out all
    the stops to ensure that the nine members of the Ulster Unionist Party,
    which represents Northern Ireland's pro-British Protestant majority,
    would not vote with Labour. 

    Defending himself against attacks by Labour, Hogg told parliament he
    would soon submit proposals to the European Commission for a partial
    lifting of the European Union's worldwide ban on British beef exports. 

    The pledge, coupled with a late promise of more aid for Northern
    Ireland's dairy farmers, seemed to do the trick. The Ulster Unionists
    abstained in the vote. 

    The EU imposed the ban last March because of evidence that the
    invariably fatal mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy
    (BSE), could be transmitted to humans. 

    Consumer confidence in beef plummeted as a result of the scare, which
    has so far cost Britain 3.5 billion pounds ($5.7 billion). 

    Hogg said he would probably be able to submit proposals within a couple
    of weeks for the ban to be lifted on herds that have been tracked from
    birth and have not been fed contaminated meat and bone meal, which is
    blamed for causing BSE. He said he would urge Brussels to adopt the
    plan. 

    Earlier, Irish Agriculture Minister Ivan Yates said in Brussels such an
    approach was likely to find favour in the EU. 

    "I detected a willingness amongst virtually all member states to pursue
    a regional... lifting of the ban," he said. 

    Although the "certified herd" scheme would be open to all British
    farmers, Hogg acknowledged it was "likely to be of particular benefit
    to the farmers of Northern Ireland" who he said had a powerful case to
    put forward. 

    The message was hammered home at the end of the debate by public
    services minister Roger Freeman. 

    "The case for direct and immediate relief for Northern Ireland is very
    strong -- indeed unanswerable... None will have a stronger or more
    immediate claim to relief than Northern Ireland," Freeman said. 

    Earlier, Hogg accused Labour of mounting a cheap political stunt aimed
    at forcing an early election. 

    Major can delay the election until May, and Hogg dropped a clear hint
    that Major wants to soldier on until then in the hope of a revival in
    the Conservatives' fortunes -- a poll on Sunday showed them 18
    percentage points behind Labour. 

    "They (Labour) recognise that the growing strength of the British
    economy and the increasing disagreements within their own ranks makes a
    Conservative victory in a May election extremely probable," Hogg said. 

    But Major faces more trouble on February 27, when Labour is tipped to
    win a by-election in northwest England that would put the Conservatives
    into a minority in parliament. 

    REUTER
7.697IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5439
    RTw  17-Feb-97 21:33    

    French union blocks P&O ferry terminal

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    PARIS, Feb 17 (Reuter) - The French labour union Force Ouvriere said on
    Monday it had blocked the P&O European Ferries terminal in the French
    port of Calais, shutting down P&O Channel services between Calais and
    Dover in a dispute over truck driver lay-offs. 

    "We have stopped the Ferries," union spokesman Roger Poletti told
    Reuters by telephone from the French capital. 

    A P&O spokesman said only one ferry, which he thought was the "Pride of
    Burgundy," had been affected. 

    "They are blocking the ramp at the terminal and refusing to let
    passengers off the ferry," he said. 

    The drivers in the dispute work for a P&O subsidiary, P&O Ferrymasters,
    which operates a road freight business and has offices in Calais and
    Dover. 

    Force Ouvriere's Poletti said the action was taken after P&O
    Ferrymasters asked all 18 of its truck drivers in Calais to relocate to
    Britain and accept British work rules. 

    When they refused, P&O laid them off, he said. 

    A P&O spokesman said he could not confirm whether the drivers had been
    asked to relocate, but confirmed the company was in negotiations to
    make them redundant. 

    "After using and abusing these french drivers, P&O doesn't hesitate to
    lay them off, estimating their salaries to be too costly," the
    Socialist-led Force Ouvriere union said in a statement.

    REUTER
7.698IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5427
    RTw  17-Feb-97 19:34    

    Eating animal hides costs Nigeria dearly

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LAGOS, Feb 17 (Reuter) - Nigerian tanneries are short of animal hides
    and the nation is losing foreign exchange income because people are
    buying up the hides to eat, a leather expert said on Monday. 

    Ben Dashe, head of Federal College of Chemical and Leather Technology
    in northern Zaria town, was quoted by the News Agency of Nigeria as
    saying that the country lost 80 million naira ($1 million) in 1994
    alone. 

    Animal hides are used in tanneries for producing leather shoes and bags
    but the hides can also be turned into a delicacy called "ponmo" that
    Nigerians eat instead of meat. The hides are cheaper than meat. 

    Dashe said: "Ponmo has no nutritional value. Those who eat it do so
    because it melts easily in their mouths. Most of those eating it are
    not doing so because they cannot afford meat." 

    He said in the 1960s and 1970s Britain used to import 90 percent of its
    animal hides from Nigeria. 

    REUTER
7.699IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5452
    RTw  17-Feb-97 19:32    

    Grobbelaar drunk when video shot, court hears

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WINCHESTER, England, Feb 17 (Reuter) - Former Liverpool goalkeeper
    Bruce Grobbelaar said on Monday he had been drunk when a video showing
    him allegedly discussing fixing soccer matches was secretly shot. 

    Grobbelaar told a court trying him for match-fixing that he had been
    drinking on October 6, 1994, when the video was shot and everything he
    said came off the top of his head. 

    On the tape which triggered the start of an investigation into
    Grobbelaar after it was shown on British television, the goalkeeper
    talks about making the "blinding" saves against Manchester United in a
    game he is alleged to have "thrown." 

    He said he was his own "worst enemy" on that because he does not like
    to lose. 

    Prosecutor David Calvert Smith said: "You seem to be saying they were
    blinding saves, and it was your instinct that forces you to do it?" 

    "That's what it looks like," Grobbelaar said. 

    Calvert Smith added: "But you're saying it's the drink talking?" 

    "Yes," said Grobbelaar. 

    Grobbelaar is accused in the southern English town of Winchester with
    former Wimbledon keeper Hans Segers, ex-Wimbledon and Aston Villa
    striker John Fashanu and Malaysian businessman Heng Suan Lim of rigging
    games to benefit an Asian betting syndicate. 

    All four deny the charges although both keepers admit they were paid in
    cash by Lim for providing match forecasts. 

    The case against Grobbelaar is based on secretly taped conversations in
    which he appeared to agree to a suggestion from former business partner
    Chris Vincent that he rig matches for a mythical betting syndicate. 

    Calvert Smith asked Grobbelaar about a claim he makes in one of the
    taped conversations that he had pushed the ball into the net after two
    minutes of Southampton's match with Coventry in September 1994. 

    Grobbelaar told the court: "If I was intending to throw the Southampton
    v Coventry game, I would never have thrown the ball in in two minutes.
    We've got 88 minutes still to play."

    REUTER
7.700IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5483
    RTw  17-Feb-97 19:28    

    Canada dismisses U.N. bid to ban landmine use

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved. By David Ljunggren 

    LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuter) - Senior Canadian officials on Monday said
    their initiative to ban anti-personnel mines was the only hope of
    outlawing them because a similar U.N.-sponsored bid was bound to fail. 

    Their comments represented one of the strongest attacks Ottawa has made
    on the U.N.-sponsored Conference on Disarmament in Geneva, a 61-nation
    body which is expected to set up its own landmine initiative within the
    next two months. 

    Last year Canada launched the so-called "Ottawa Process" which aims to
    achieve a legally-binding agreement by the end of this year to ban the
    production, stockpiling, export (also known as "transfer") and use of
    landmines. 

    "The Conference on Disarmament works by consensus which means that any
    country can block movement on the issue. China and Russia don't even
    support the notion of banning APs (anti-personnel mines)," a senior
    Canadian foreign ministry official told reporters.

    "The chances of this conference dealing with the AP issue in a timely
    way are very remote. We need a stand-alone process to group the
    committed and a definite community of like-minded nations to sign very
    quickly," said the official. 

    Russia and China -- the world's major producers and exporters of
    anti-personnel landmines -- say the weapons are legitimate and have
    little interest in a ban. Canada admits the task will be difficult. 

    "We're talking about doing away with an entire weapons system and
    countries don't do that easily," said the official. 

    Over 100 million landmines are buried in 64 countries around the world
    and are blamed for killing and maiming 25,000 people a year, many of
    them civilians and children. 

    The officials were speaking in the wake of a Vienna conference held
    last week as part of the Ottawa Process which was attended by
    representatives from over 100 nations. 

    Participants said the draft discussed in Vienna could be used as the
    basis for future negotiations on banning landmines. Neither Russia or
    China participate in the Ottawa Process but Moscow sent an observer to
    the Vienna meeting. 

    "Should we let China and Russia set the agenda or should those nations
    ready and committed be permitted to get on with it? We say yes," the
    official said. 

    "You don't say to yourself that if you can't do everything you won't do
    anything," said a second Canadian official, who also asked to remain
    anonymous. 

    Canada acknowledges that neither Moscow or Beijing are likely to sign
    up to the Ottawa Process soon but say pressure can be exerted on them
    by gradually persuading more and more countries to ban landmines. 

    "If we can get to the people who make demand, we can make it harder for
    those who produce," said the second official. 

    "More than 70 nations have national export moratoriums, so transfer is
    severely constrained. We have succeeded in drying up part of the
    problem." 

    Many diplomats prefer the question to be negotiated in the Conference
    on Disarmament -- in which both China and Russia are members -- but the
    Canadians said the nations which have suffered most mine damage were
    excluded from the Geneva body. 

    China has raised the possibility of ditching so-called "dumb mines,"
    which sit in the ground until detonated or defused, and replacing them
    with self-neutralising or self-detonating mines with a limited shelf
    life. 

    But the Canadians said these mines cost up to $150, compared to $3 for
    a dumb device, and had not yet been proven to be reliable enough. 

    REUTER
7.701IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 10:5461
    RTw  17-Feb-97 19:00    

    European blood cell patent unethical, groups say

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Suzanne Perry 

    BRUSSELS, Feb 18 (Reuter) - A European medical research project and a
    coalition of environmental groups have launched a campaign to revoke a
    patent granted to a U.S. company for procedures involving blood cells
    from umbilical cords. 

    The groups, arguing that the move would commercialise important
    therapies, said on Monday they had formally asked the European Patent
    Office (EPO) in Munich to reverse its decision to award the patent last
    May to New York-based Biocyte Corp. 

    The patent covers the medical uses of frozen cells obtained from the
    umbilical cord of newborns, for example to perform blood and marrow
    transplants. 

    The challengers consider such patents to be "unethical, immoral and
    against the (public order)," the Austrian environmental group Global
    2000 said in a statement. 

    "The patent holder has done nothing but show that these blood cells can
    be isolated and deep frozen," it said. "The holders of the patent could
    charge patent fees and refuse the use of those blood cells or the
    techniques to anyone unwilling or unable to pay these fees." 

    The European Research Project on Cord Blood Transplantation (Eurocord),
    which filed an "opposition" to the patent earlier this month, has
    issued a statement asking doctors and scientists to "dissociate
    themselves from patents of this type." 

    It notes that the international Society of Transplantation states that
    "no part of the human body can be commercialised and that organ or cell
    donation should be free and anonymous." 

    Another opposition was filed last week by a group of about 30
    environmental and other organisations including Friends of the Earth
    Europe, the European Environmental Bureau, the Women's Global Network
    for Reproductive Rights and a spate of national groups. 

    Judith Silveston, a lawyer in London who is representing Biocyte in its
    patent application, said the company had no immediate comment on the
    protests but would issue a statement later this week.

    Ainer Osterwalder, an EPO spokesman, said Biocyte's patent was still
    valid in Europe pending the appeal process. After proceedings that
    allows both sides to present written and sometimes oral comments, the
    EPO could decide to revoke the patent or ask that it be modified, he
    said. 

    The campaign reflects the growing sensitivity of biotechnology
    procedures that deal with living matter. A group of animal welfare and
    religious groups has also been trying to revoke a European patent for a
    genetically modified mouse that is used in cancer research. 

    REUTER
7.702IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:2483
7.703IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:2536
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Gene-engineered cereal 'safe to eat'
    
    By David Brown, Agriculture Editor 

    GENETICALLY-altered maize was declared safe to eat by the Government
    yesterday.

    The cereal is intended for use in a range of foods including crisps,
    confectionery and a variety of snacks as well as animal rations. But
    the pest-resistant varieties, all developed and grown in America,
    cannot be imported into Britain until they have been cleared by the
    European Commission.

    Ministers accepted a decision by the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods
    and Processes that four strains of the genetically-engineered cereal
    could also be used to feed livestock. The committee was satisfied that
    the varieties, produced by Agrevo, Monsanto, Pioneer Hybrid and
    Northrup King, differed significantly from a controversial
    genetically-modified maize approved by the commission last December.
    Consumer groups objected to that variety, developed by CIBA-Geigy,
    because it contained an antibiotic marker gene. Critics said this might
    cause people to become resistant to antibiotic medicines after eating
    meat from animals fed on the maize or processed foods containing it.

    Britain approved the CIBA product on the grounds that food processing
    destroyed the antibiotic marker but recommended that the maize should
    not be used raw in animal feedstuffs to avoid the possibility of
    consumers eating traces of the marker in meat. This advice was rejected
    by the commission, which cleared the product for both human and animal
    consumption.

    The Ministry of Agriculture said: "The four new strains differ from the
    CIBA-Geigy maize but they still need marketing clearance from the EU
    before they can be imported."
7.704IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:2563
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Billie-Jo told friends of strange phone calls
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 

    BILLIE-Jo Jenkins, the 13-year-old who was murdered on Saturday, had
    told friends that she feared that she was being stalked by a stranger
    in the weeks before her death.

    Billie-Jo, who died after being beaten with a metal tent stake, also
    confided to friends that there had been a number of "strange" telephone
    calls to her home in Hastings, East Sussex, since Christmas. The calls
    were often silent but police are trying to establish the content of the
    others and analyse records of calls. Detectives are seeking to build up
    a picture of her fears by questioning her foster family and fellow
    pupils at Helenswood all-girl comprehensive in Hastings.

    Two years ago Billie-Jo reported to police that she and one of her
    sisters had been followed in the park near their home by a white man
    aged in his 40s or 50s. Billie-Jo's foster father, Sion Jenkins, deputy
    head of William Park School, a boys-only comprehensive in Hastings, has
    told detectives that he and his wife, Lois, suspected that a prowler
    had watched their home from a park opposite and had been disturbed in
    their back garden. He saw a man in a leather jacket.

    Det Supt Jeremy Paine, who is heading the inquiry, said yesterday: "We
    have picked up accounts from friends of Billie-Jo that she felt that
    someone was following her. She was concerned about a man who she sensed
    was around the house. There are also accounts from people that some
    strange telephone calls were coming into the house. Within the family,
    there has been a lot of fear regarding the prowler which, I think, is
    probably linked to the feelings that Sion had and Billie-Jo had that
    there was someone paying particular attention to the house. Whether it
    is one and the same person is not clear but there was a general fear
    within the family that something strange was going on."

    Mr Paine said that they "had not picked up" suggestions that Billie-Jo
    felt that she knew the stranger. A Sussex police spokesman said last
    night that the family had confirmed to officers that they had not
    reported the recent prowler fears. He said: "They obviously now wish
    they had done, but they can't possibly be criticised for that."

    A man with a distinctive facial mark is alleged to have knocked at a
    house 50 yards from Billie-Jo's home around the time of the murder. He
    is said to have asked about accommodation and walked in the direction
    of her home. Police also want to hear from an anonymous motorist who
    called to say he saw a man aged between 40 and 50, wearing a waxed
    jacket, leaving the Jenkins's home at around the time of the killing.

    Billie-Jo had what police described as a "troubled background" in east
    London before she was fostered to Mr Jenkins and his wife, a social
    worker. Her natural parents are separated. It is believed that her
    father is a decorator.

    A MAN was arrested yesterday by police hunting Billie-Jo's killer. The
    44-year-old local man was arrested after police appealed for
    information on a man with a distinctive facial mark or scar who was
    seen acting "strangely" in the road where Billie-Jo was killed.

    Despite the arrest, detectives stressed last night that the murder
    inquiry was continuing. They appealed for any information on prowlers
    or anyone seen with blood or paint stains on Saturday afternoon.
7.705IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:26104
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Bosnian girl must stay with couple who misled court
    
    By David Graves 

    A BRITISH couple accused by a judge of "appalling irresponsibility" in
    their attempts to adopt a baby who survived a massacre in Bosnia have
    been allowed to keep the girl despite objections from her family.

    In a High Court ruling announced yesterday, Alan Fowler, 62, and his
    wife Deborah, 49, were said by Sir Stephen Brown to have given an
    earlier hearing "wholly inaccurate and misleading" information about
    the background of Edita Keranovic. The girl, now four, had survived a
    machine-gun and grenade attack by Serb soldiers.

    At the adoption hearing at Oxford county court, the couple were aware
    that Edita's grandfather was alive but they were determined to adopt
    the child, said Sir Stephen, President, of the Family Division. In his
    judgment, he said the couple had wanted to adopt a little girl to
    complete their family.

    "There is nothing wrong about such a desire but I am satisfied that as
    events developed they allowed it to overwhelm their judgment and then
    their sense of honesty," he said.

    "The fact remains, however, that in my judgment, Mr and Mrs Fowler
    submitted to the judge an account which they must have known was at the
    very least unreliable and was conveniently consistent with there being
    no known surviving family."

    Despite that, Sir Stephen ruled that the child's life "must not be
    shattered again" and agreed that she could continue living with the
    Fowlers instead of being returned to her relatives. But he said that
    effective steps must be taken to reunite the child with her grandfather
    and uncle, who wanted to care for her, and she should receive regular
    tuition in the Bosnian language and the Muslim religion.

    Afterwards, members of her family, who are now living in Switzerland
    after fleeing Bosnia, said they were devastated by the decision. They
    had argued that Mr and Mrs Fowler had no authority to adopt Edita
    because other members of her family were still alive and wanted to care
    for her.

    Her grandfather, Hasan Keranovic, 58, whose wife was killed in the
    massacre, said: "We are very, very upset and disappointed with the
    decision. When our family was massacred we could somehow come to terms
    with that as they were all gone. Edita is all that remains and we
    cannot be together. She is our child and she belongs to us."

    Mr Keranovic, who was captured by the Serbs and later rescued from a
    concentration camp, added: "We do not understand how people, who the
    judge described as using subterfuge, can be considered to be suitable
    parents to her."

    Sir Stephen delivered his 48-page judgment behind closed doors last
    Friday and then took the highly unusual decision of ruling it could be
    published because of the public interest in the case. He said Edita,
    then only nine weeks old, had been "the victim of a terrible atrocity
    committed by Serbian soldiers" on May 31, 1992 when women and children
    from her home village of Hrustovo were massacred.

    Edita and her cousin, Melvina, were "retrieved alive but injured from
    under the bodies of their mothers" by a Serbian officer who handed the
    babies over to other villagers who, in turn, gave them to former
    neighbours of the Keranovic family.

    The judge said Edita was not as severely injured as was first thought,
    although she still has three shotgun pellets lodged in her brain.
    Initially she was taken to an orphanage and reports about her in the
    British media were seen by Mr Fowler, a chartered accountant, and his
    wife, a writer.

    The couple, who had adopted a boy of two from Romania in 1990, were so
    moved by her plight that they began attempts to offer her a home.
    Edita, then seven months, was brought to Britain for medical treatment
    by a charity set up to assist casualties of the Bosnian war run by Lady
    Nott, Slovenian-born wife of Sir John Nott, the former Defence
    Secretary.

    An order was later granted at Oxford county court for the Fowlers to
    adopt Edita, but that was set aside when further investigations
    disclosed that members of the girl's Muslim family had escaped from
    Bosnia and were living as refugees in Switzerland.

    In his ruling, Sir Stephen said he was satisfied that the couple had
    known from a very early stage that their adoption of Edita should not
    go ahead at least until the end of the Bosnian war. They had dropped
    their application to adopt Edita at the start of the proceedings before
    him faced with the "determined opposition" of members of Edita's
    family, Oxfordshire county council, the adoption agency and advice from
    the Official Solicitor.

    Sir Stephen said that an attempt by the Fowlers to cast blame "in this
    matter upon Lady Nott was most unworthy" and stressed that Edita's
    "young life must not be shattered again". He said: "In my judgment, her
    welfare requires that she should remain for the present time and for
    the foreseeable future in the care of Mr and Mrs Fowler under the
    authority of the court. 

    "However, it must be fully and completely understood that she is not
    their daughter and that she is a Keranovic. Because of this, active and
    effective steps must be taken to make her acquainted with her relatives
    and to get to know her true family background."
7.706IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:2950
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Dorrell to end 'PC system' in adoption
    
    By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent 

    MOVES to rid the adoption system of "political correctness" and
    "fashionable theories" were announced by the Government yesterday.

    Stephen Dorrell, Health Secretary, published new rules which would give
    couples refused the right to adopt new safeguards against unreasonable
    decisions. The primary abuse concerning Tories is the number of cases
    where parents have been denied the right to adopt for reasons of
    education, age or race.

    Among the cases which have caused concern was that of Jim and Roma
    Lawrence, a mixed-race couple living in Cromer, Norfolk, who were told
    they could not adopt a mixed-race child because they were middle class
    and did not have enough experience of racism.

    The Prime Minister has expressed his own unhappiness with such rulings,
    believing they deny a good home to children who are often those most
    desperately in need of one. Under the measures announced yesterday,
    couples will gain two crucial new rights when their application is
    rejected by the adoption panel. 

    If the panel rules against them they would be given the right to see
    the written assessment report detailing why they were turned down and
    to appeal against the decision to the over-arching adoption agency -
    either the local authority's social services department or a voluntary
    agency - which makes the final decision.

    A copy of the assessment report would be sent to the adoption agency
    and the couple will be allowed to comment on the report in writing
    before it considers their appeal against the ruling. As a further
    safeguard against what the Government believes is the tendency of too
    many social workers towards political correctness, the measures also
    propose changes to increase the number of lay members on the panels
    from two to three - including, wherever possible, one adoptive parent
    and one person who was adopted.

    Unveiling the package, Mr Dorrell said: "Decisions about which parents
    are able to adopt children should reflect commonsense values that are
    widely shared throughout society, and shouldn't reflect the rather
    specialist and fashionable theories of a particular professional group.
    The changes I am announcing will help to remove political correctness
    from adoption and introduce more independence and transparency."

    The new measures will be tabled as regulations and should come into
    force from April 1.
7.707IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3341
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Scottish Catholics 'split on abortion'
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 

    NEARLY 70 per cent of Scottish Roman Catholics believe that pregnant
    women should have the right to choose whether to have an abortion,
    according to a poll published today.

    The findings, which have been questioned by the Catholic Church in
    Scotland, suggest that a majority of Catholics are at odds with the
    recent public stance taken by their leaders on the issue. In December,
    Cardinal Basil Hume said Catholics would find it impossible to vote for
    an election candidate who actively supported abortion, which he
    described as an evil that "strikes at the bedrock of society".

    His remarks followed the comments made in October by Cardinal Thomas
    Winning, the leader of Scotland's 800,000 Catholics, who said Tony
    Blair, the Labour leader, had "washed his hands" of the issue. Cardinal
    Winning accused the Labour Party of "almost fascist" behaviour for
    refusing to allow a pro-life group to set up a stall at its party
    conference. He added that the party had consistently avoided condemning
    abortion and could not brush aside the "absolute right to life" and at
    the same time stand up for other rights that were "less important".

    The System Three poll, for tonight's Frontline programme on BBC
    Scotland, found that 68 per cent of the 400 Catholics interviewed
    thought that women should be able to choose whether to continue or
    terminate their pregnancies. The survey also found that 51 per cent
    were opposed to the church becoming involved in political debate.

    Fr Noel Barry, Cardinal Winning's spokesman, said the results were
    suspect because of the size of the sample, and because there was no
    information on whether the respondents were "committed, practising
    Catholics". He added that the debate was "bedevilled by slogans", but
    if people had been asked whether they would vote for an election
    candidate who supported "an unborn child's right to life", the result
    would have been different. He said neither the Church nor the cardinal
    were telling people how to vote, but were encouraging voters to look at
    the "menu" on offer.
7.708IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3545
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Channel 4 under attack for spoof Ripper musical
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 

    PETER Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper, is the subject of a comedy
    musical to be shown on Channel 4's controversial Brass Eye series.

    An actor playing Sutcliffe, who was jailed for life in 1981 for 13
    murders and seven attempted murders, is shown rehearsing a song and
    dance routine entitled I'm Only A Simple Lorry Driver. The series has
    already been attacked by MPs and celebrities who have unwittingly taken
    part in spoof items. Last night, the planned broadcast of the Sutcliffe
    item was condemned as sick and tasteless by MPs and television
    watchdogs. In the programme, to be broadcast on March 5, the "director"
    of the cod West-End musical tells an interviewer that Sutcliffe is "a
    regular guy" who has served his debt to society.

    Joe Ashton, Labour MP for Bassetlaw, who lives half a mile away from
    where Sutcliffe was arrested, said: "You do not want to obliterate the
    fact that these crimes happened but you should let the victims rest in
    peace. It is bad enough when people are intruded upon for the purposes
    of a news programme, but for someone to do this to make a fun comedy
    programme is absolutely wrong. Words fail me."

    John Beyer, general secretary of the National Viewers And Listeners
    Association, said: "It strikes me that making comedy about Peter
    Sutcliffe is in pretty bad taste. I would say that Channel 4 needs to
    look pretty closely at its obligations on taste and decency. The series
    is in bad taste."


    A Channel 4 spokesman said: "This programme is called Moral Decline and
    it is about the way society is obsessed with killers. It is a spoof in
    a tradition of black humour."

    Brass Eye's creator and leading light, Chris Morris, 34, was first in
    trouble in 1994 when he said live on Radio 1 that Michael Heseltine was
    dead. He also once doctored the Queen's speech to make it sexually
    explicit. A zoology graduate, he was named Best Newcomer on TV at the
    National Comedy Awards in 1994 for The Day Today, a spoof show. The
    first programme in the series duped personalities and an MP over a
    fictitious drug, cake.
                          
7.709IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3520
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Murderer absconds from jail
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A CONVICTED murderer who twice tried to escape from custody has walked
    out of an open prison.

    Stephen Mynott, 33, jailed 16 years ago for the murder of Edward
    Cotton, 54, stabbed two prison officers in his first escape attempt
    and, five years ago, tried to break out of Channings Wood prison,
    Devon. He walked out of Leyhill open prison near Wotton-under-Edge,
    Glos, where he had been an inmate since last July, on Friday. Police
    said he should not be approached.

    Mynott and Lee Davis, who were living in a hostel in Hemel Hempstead,
    Herts, were jailed at St Albans Crown Court in 1980 for the murder of
    Mr Cotton. They beat him with a piece of wood and killed him by
    dropping a concrete block on to his head.
7.710IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3756
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    No motorway tolls before 2002, says roads minister

    MOTORWAY tolls will not be imposed until 2002 at the earliest, John
    Watts, transport minister, said yesterday.

    He said the electronic tolling system, being shown in Berkshire for the
    first time yesterday, presented "a substantial technological
    challenge". Variable charging, to encourage people to use motorways at
    off-peak times, was being considered but no figure on how much people
    would pay had been decided.

    Systems from GEC-Marconi and Bosch Telecom were demonstrated at the
    Transport Research Laboratory in Crowthorne. Vehicles from cars to
    fully-loaded articulated lorries were put through a simulated motorway
    toll test in which on-board equipment received messages from antennae
    on special gantries.

    Small receivers installed in cars would be fitted on the dashboard and
    come with a "smartcard" - a kind of rechargeable phone card the driver
    would use to pay the toll. Information gathered by the roadside would
    be passed to regional or national centres. Anyone passing through
    illegally - with no credit on their card - could be filmed and later
    penalised.

    "Tolls would provide additional sources of revenue for motorway
    improvements and could stagger motorway traffic through varying charges
    at different times of the day," said Mr Watts. "This is going to be a
    charge rather than a tax and so the money can be put back into the
    system." Dr William Gillan, in charge of the Department of Transport's
    motorway tolling project, said it would be five to six years before any
    system could go ahead.

    After 10 more weeks of tests at Crowthorne, trials will be introduced
    on the M3 at Basingstoke, Hants. Motorists could be invited to help by
    having on-board equipment put into their cars, although the trial will
    not involve anyone having to pay any charges.

    Specially-built Bailey bridges doubled up at Crowthorne as motorway
    gantries and information was fed through to Bosch and GEC cabins. Tests
    have so far involved vehicles reversing through the gantries and
    swerving as they approach. A fully-laden lorry has also gone through
    with a motorbike just behind it to check on any possible "masking"
    effect. Bosch said it had a failure rate of about one in 10,000
    vehicles but was hoping to improve that to one in a million.

    Electronic tolling was first suggested by the Government in 1993 with
    possible toll charges of 1.5p a mile for cars and 4.5p for lorries.
    Several companies were involved in the trials but only the two remain
    and the scheme's timetable has slipped considerably.

    The AA dismissed the tolling demonstration as misguided. It said tolls
    could increase pollution and congestion as traffic would divert on to
    non-motorway roads. John Dawson, AA public policy director, said
    transport funding was already in crisis and tolls were not the answer.
7.711IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3875
7.712IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3830
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Howard courts Bingham
    
    By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent 

    MICHAEL Howard has already sought the approval of Lord Bingham, the
    Lord Chief Justice, for his plan to take away the automatic right to a
    jury trial for up to 35,000 people a year.

    As disclosed in The Telegraph, the Home Secretary is expected to
    announce tomorrow that he is publishing a report on speeding up the
    criminal justice system which includes curtailing the right to trial by
    jury as its central proposal. Mr Howard will put his plans out to
    consultation, saying that he is "minded" to support them. 

    Home Office sources said Mr Howard briefed Lord Bingham on his plans
    last week. He emerged hopeful that he would not face the same sustained
    opposition as he encountered from the previous Lord Chief Justice, Lord
    Taylor of Gosforth.

    Lord Bingham has been at the forefront of opposition to Mr Howard's
    current measure which would impose minimum sentences on persistent
    burglars and rapists.

    The new proposal concerns those cases known as "either way"
    prosecutions where the defendant is given the choice between a summary
    hearing in a magistrates' court or a full jury trial. Mr Howard's plan
    will propose that the defendant will still have the right to request a
    trial by jury but have no guarantee that his wish will be granted.
7.713IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:3935
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Reports of low sperm count may be in error
    
    By Laura Spinney, Science Correspondent 

    ERRORS in counting sperm could account for reports of declining male
    fertility, say British researchers who have developed a computer
    programme to teach technicians how to count properly.

    A typical sperm sample contains between 40-to-60 million sperm per
    millilitre and sperm cannot be counted individually. Instead, fertility
    lab technicians dilute a sample, count sperm in one portion and
    multiply for an overall count.

    Recent studies have shown that semen samples sent to different
    fertility laboratories can produce counts varying as widely as three
    million to 240 million sperm. That was because technicians used
    slightly different counting techniques, said Dr Chris Barratt, of
    Sheffield University. Any small differences in their initial counts
    were then magnified to produce major discrepancies.

    That could have serious implications. "People get an inappropriate
    diagnosis and go for inappropriate treatment which is psychologically
    damaging and very expensive," he said.

    For instance, a man might be accepted as a sperm donor in one clinic
    and be diagnosed infertile in another. So the computer programme
    devised by Dr Barratt is designed to standardise counting techniques
    globally.

    It works by asking a technician to evaluate a simulated sperm sample
    stored digitally on a CD. The programme then tells the technician how
    his estimate compares to the "true" stored value and suggests steps to
    improve his procedure.
7.714IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4046
7.715IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4158
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    It's all over before the fat lady sings
    
    By Maurice Weaver 

    IF the character of Marilyn, a sultry nightclub chanteuse, conjures up
    a certain image, then amateur soprano Trayce Thomas, 5ft 3in and size
    20, did not fit the bill.

    Or so thought Graham Grammer, musical director of Long Eaton Chatsworth
    Musical Society, when Mrs Thomas presented herself at auditions and he
    frankly told her so.

    Now the 31-year-old mother of three is complaining to the National
    Operatic and Dramatic Association (NODA), the amateur thespians'
    governing body, about being a victim of "fattism". What really stings,
    she says, is that she was the only candidate for the part of Marilyn in
    the society's revue, Cafe Cabaret, which opens in the Derbyshire town
    on Thursday.

    So adamant was Mr Grammer about her unsuitability that the role, which
    involved singing three smoochy numbers, has been written out of the
    show. Mrs Thomas, who declines to disclose what her bathroom scales
    tell her, complained yesterday: "When I asked him why he turned me down
    he said, 'To be blunt, it's your size'. I was shocked because it is
    discrimination on grounds of my weight."

    Mrs Thomas, a member of the society for about a year, saw the role of
    Marilyn as her big break. She said she was specially angered because Mr
    Grammer allowed her to participate in three auditions before coming to
    his sensitive decision. When she sang Marilyn's three show numbers -
    Dancing Time, Looking All Over and Journey's End - he had said her
    voice was "okay", she said.

    "We weren't told the part called for someone slim and sexy," said Mrs
    Thomas. "Mr Grammer just said Marilyn was a youngish nightclub singer.
    It makes you wonder who he thinks he is. I think he has got ideas above
    his station."

    Yesterday Mr Grammer, a farmer, conceded that Mrs Thomas's physical
    presence was instrumental in his decision. He said: "She was unsuitable
    for the role. If someone does not suit a role then the powers that be
    have a right to say so." In the circumstances, he had decided to "give
    Marilyn a miss", he added.

    Mark Thorburn, general administrator for NODA, which has 2,000 member
    societies, said he knew of the Long Eaton skirmish but was unclear what
    he was supposed to do about it. "I think it is really a matter between
    this lady and this gentleman. It may well be that someone's appearance
    does not suit them to a particular part but, obviously, tact should
    come into these matters."

    Ethel Fiddler, another NODA spokesman, said: "We can't impose rules on
    a society. Very often in the case of very large ladies, directors will
    tend to put them in the back row of the chorus. The trouble is they do
    have a tendency to work themselves towards the front as the show goes
    on."
7.716IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4119
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Man admits abducting girl of 10
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A LODGER who took his landlady's 10-year-old daughter for a walk and
    went missing with the child for two days was convicted of abduction
    yesterday. 

    Paul Husbands, 51, a second-hand furniture dealer of Paignton, Devon,
    pleaded guilty to a charge of abducting a minor. Judge Graham Neville
    at Exeter Crown Court deferred sentence pending further reports and
    remanded Husbands on bail.

    The girl was reunited with her mother but was later taken into care.
    Geoffrey Mercer, defending, said: "However misguided Husbands may have
    been, he maintains that he was acting in the child's best interests.
    She is now with foster parents. It is a very unusual story."
7.717IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4225
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Jail for woman driver who was six times over the limit
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    A WOMAN driver found staggering along a motorway while nearly
    six-and-a-half times over the drink-drive limit was jailed for four
    months yesterday.

    Rosemary Foster, 23, was so drunk she had to be handcuffed while being
    put into a police van. She was deliberately sick over the two officers
    who arrested her and later threw a cup of coffee over a Wpc.
    Magistrates in Macclesfield, Cheshire, were told that her breath test
    reading of 225mg was one of the highest recorded. The legal limit is
    35.

    Foster, of West Coyney, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffs, had pleaded guilty at
    an earlier hearing to driving with excess alcohol near Altrincham on
    Dec 12. She also admitted three charges of assaulting police officers.

    The court was told that Foster drank a "large quantity of vodka" after
    hearing that her father had been diagnosed with inoperable cancer. She
    then decided to drive to his. Foster was also banned from driving for
    five years and ordered to take another test before she can drive again.
7.718IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4326
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Nervous start for Radcliffe and boy Lard
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 

    MARK Radcliffe and his sidekick, the boy Lard - real name Mark Riley -
    admitted to first-day nerves when they took over as DJs from Chris
    Evans on Radio 1's Breakfast Show yesterday.

    Laconic, surreal in style and older than their exuberant predecessor,
    who they referred to as "the ginger thingy," the pair arrived with
    minimum fanfare at the BBC studios in Manchester. It is the first time
    that the breakfast slot has come from outside London.

    The programme steadily improved in its second half with surprise
    appearances from Pulp singer Jarvis Cocker, the former Marillion star
    Fish, the poet John Hegley and the ironic quiz, Bird or Bloke. Official
    figures show that audiences for the Breakfast Show had started to slip
    even before the departure of Chris Evans last month. Sue Farr, head of
    Radio Marketing, recently admitted it would be "a triumph" if
    Radcliffe, 38, managed to hold the figures steady.

    Chris Evans quit Radio 1 after his request to work four days a week was
    rejected. Talks to do a radio show on Virgin foundered as have plans to
    give TFI Friday more slots on Channel 4.
7.719IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4425
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Rocket men experience highs and lows of space flight

    THE dreams of two rocket enthusiasts came down to earth with a bump
    yesterday when their home-made missiles failed in high winds.

    Thirteen-year-old Daniel Jubb, who spent more than 300 hours building
    his 12ft Falcon VII rocket, had hoped his craft would soar to more than
    5,000ft at the Otterburn Army ranges, Northumberland, but it crashed to
    the ground. Daniel, from Tyldsley, Greater Manchester, said: "The
    rocket didn't achieve its potential. The driving rain and storm-force
    winds were a big factor. It's a bit disappointing but I'll carry on. My
    ambition is to get a rocket up 62 miles so it has actually gone into
    space."

    Steve Bennett, 33, had a different problem. His 10ft Lexx missile
    roared into the clouds and vanished. He had hoped to break the sound
    barrier, but neither he nor his son, Max, heard a sonic boom. Mr
    Bennett said he was still optimistic. "It has at least been 50 per cent
    successful. If we get the rest of the rocket back it will have been 100
    per cent successful."

    The flight was a test of the top stage of a planned 22ft rocket which
    he hopes to launch in six weeks and send up to three miles.
7.720IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4481
7.721IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4553
7.722IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4655
7.723IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4726
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    New in-vitro technique hailed after baby's birth
    
    By Bruce Johnston in Rome 

    A BABY has been born in Bologna from a previously frozen egg that was
    later fertilised with the injection of a single sperm.

    Elena, weighing six-and-a-half pounds, was born by Caesarian section to
    a young housewife in a hospital near Venice, after a normal pregnancy.
    The mother has requested anonymity.

    Prof Carlo Flamigni, head of the Centre for Sterility and Artificial
    Insemination at the University of Bologna's Institute of Gynaecology,
    which carried out the in-vitro fertilisation, said it was "a victory of
    great scientific value". The Bologna University Centre said Elena was
    the third child ever to be born from an egg that had been frozen, and
    the first case in the world where the egg was then ferilised by
    injecting a sperm.

    In normal in-vitro techniques, one egg and a number of sperm are placed
    in the same test tube, in which fertilisation, if successful, is
    allowed to occur naturally. In the new technique, which doctors say
    cannot be used to determine a child's sex or other genetic factors,
    only one sperm is used.
7.724IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4835
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    The two pioneers who 'lied about walking on the North Pole'
    
    By Hugh Davies in Washington 

    TWO long-disputed claims by explorers to be the first to reach the
    North Pole were faked, according to research published yesterday.

    Admiral Robert Peary, from Maine, is credited in many history books as
    the pioneer. He said that while walking "the roof of the world" at 10am
    on April 6, 1909, he photographed the survivors of his team and buried
    two messages for posterity. Four Americans and 13 Eskimos were said to
    have died in the attempt. Almost simultaneously, Dr Frederick Cook, a
    New York milkman turned physician, claimed that he had stuck a flag in
    the icecap with two Eskimo companions on April 21, 1908.

    Now, in a 1,133 page book Robert Bryce, 50, a Maryland librarian who
    has spent two decades investigating the quarrel, concludes: "The
    evidence points to both claims as frauds. This was not self-deception,
    but purposeful."

    Working from journals, diaries and newly-discovered papers, he said
    that while both made genuine attempts to reach their goal, harsh Arctic
    conditions and poor navigational instruments forced them to turn back.
    Mr Bryce said he doubted that Peary, who was "sort of camping out for
    fame", got closer than 100 miles. He said there was evidence that Cook
    embellished entries to his logs.

    The changes indicated that he left his Greenland base a week later than
    he said, making it impossible for him to reach the Pole and return
    before the winter ice broke. The author reckoned Cook stopped 400 miles
    short of the pole. If neither explorer made it to the target, Joseph
    Fletcher, a US airman, was the first to set foot there. He landed on
    the spot in a plane in 1952.
7.725IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:4973
7.726IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:5339
7.727IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 18 1997 16:5530
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 18 February 1997 Issue 634

    Stars celebrate Elizabeth Taylor's birthday
    
    By John Hiscock in Los Angeles 

    ELIZABETH Hurley came close to stealing the show on Elizabeth Taylor's
    big night with a see-through lacy outfit that had photographers' eyes
    and flashbulbs popping.

    Miss Hurley and her partner, Hugh Grant, were among the stars who
    gathered to pay tribute to the actress at a gala to celebrate her 65th
    birthday and raise money for the Elizabeth Taylor Aids Foundation.
    "We've been huge fans of hers," said Miss Hurley. "She epitomises
    everything we'd all like to be."

    Miss Taylor, who delayed going into hospital for an operation to remove
    a benign brain tumour so she could attend, watched most of the tributes
    from the side of the stage at Hollywood's Pantages Theatre. She was
    accompanied by Michael Jackson, who escorted her into the theatre and
    sang a song, "Elizabeth", he had composed for her.

    Thousands of fans packed the streets outside the theatre to watch the
    stars arrive. Hollywood Boulevard was renamed Elizabeth Taylor Way for
    the night.

    Among those paying tribute were Madonna, Cher, Rod Stewart, David
    Copperfield and Roseanne. Christine Baranski, the Tony Award-winning
    actress from the comedy series, Cybill, was among the guests. The event
    was televised and will be broadcast later.
7.728IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:41111
    AP 19-Feb-1997 1:02 EST   REF5620

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1997
   
    CLINTON 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- President Clinton has told patrons of a $1.2 million
    dinner that the kind of fund-raising that got Democrats in trouble last
    year "will never happen again. You can rest assured." After making two
    speeches in New York about welfare reform, Clinton was the star of a
    fund-raiser in a private home for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign
    Committee. The group and its House Democratic counterpart say they will
    not heed Clinton's call for voluntary curbs on large donations until
    Republicans do so. The GOP has brushed off Clinton's bid for reform. 
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -- Astronauts are set to release the Hubble
    Space Telescope from space shuttle Discovery early Wednesday for three
    more years of uninterrupted viewing of the cosmos. After 33 weary hours
    of spacewalking, astronauts completed their tuneup of the telescope
    Tuesday along with some last-minute repairs to its sun-blistered skin.
    The telescope had been anchored to the shuttle's cargo bay since
    Thursday. 
   
    WHITEWATER-STARR 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr says his
    office's investigation of the White House is not winding down even
    though he is stepping down. Starr said the criminal investigation of
    President and Mrs. Clinton "is going to go on for some time." But he
    indicated it will continue under another independent counsel. Starr
    will leave this summer to take over at Pepperdine University's law
    school. Of Whitewater, he said: "We've made very substantial progress
    and we're very much in the investigative and evaluative stage." 
   
    MEXICO-DRUG CZAR 

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Mexico's drug czar has been fired and arrested on
    suspicion of accepting payments from one of the country's most powerful
    drug lords, Defense Secretary Gen. Enrique Cervantes Aguirre says. He
    says authorities suspect that Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, director of
    the Institute of Combat Against Drugs, has been cooperating with Amado
    Carrillo Fuentes, who is among Mexico's most notorious drug lords.
    Gutierrez was appointed to the top drug post in December after a
    42-year career in the military. He had been praised for his efforts to
    combat the drug trade. 
   
    CHINA-DENG 

    BEIJING (AP) -- Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping had suffered a stroke,
    report two Japanese media organizations, citing Chinese sources. But
    China insists Deng isn't in failing health. The Kyodo news agency said
    Deng suffered the stroke at his home in Beijing before dawn on Friday
    and was brought to a hospital. The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Japan's
    leading financial daily, said Deng was in serious condition after
    collapsing because of a brain hemorrhage. It cited a source close to a
    top official in the Chinese military. 
   
    DU PONT 

    MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -- Deliberations began in John E. du Pont's murder
    trial. In a 75-minute closing argument, Thomas Bergstrom told the
    12-member panel they should find du Pont innocent by reason of insanity
    in the shooting death of Olympic wrestler David Schultz. Assistant
    District Attorney Joseph McGettigan said that du Pont killed out of
    animosity. 
   
    INTERNET ATTACK 

    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- The FBI is investigating a flurry of forged
    e-mail messages directed at members of the Senate and House of
    Representatives that threaten to delete every file on Capitol Hill
    computers. The messages, which began appearing in government e-mail
    boxes on Feb. 3, state that they are from a "gang of cypherpunks
    dedicated to the eradication of your systems," the San Jose Mercury
    News reported Wednesday. Although the messages bear the return
    addresses of a handful of legitimate Internet users, the identities of
    those senders appear to have been forged by an unknown hacker or
    hackers. 
   
    HEART DISEASE 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- U.S. deaths from heart disease are declining mostly
    because of better drugs and other treatment -- not because people are
    warding off trouble by leading healthier lives, a study suggests. Only
    25 percent of the decline in heart disease deaths between 1980 and 1990
    can be attributed to people who have never had heart problems taking
    such steps as quitting smoking, researchers estimate. The finding is
    reported in tomorrow's issue of The Journal of the American Medical
    Association. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was lower against the yen in early trading
    Wednesday, while Tokyo stock prices fell moderately. The Nikkei fell
    85.24 to 18,385.51. In New York, the Dow closed at a record high of
    7,067.46, up 78.50. The Nasdaq was at 1,365.79, down 1.40. 
   
    BEARS-MIRER 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Rick Mirer, who lost his job as Seattle's starting
    quarterback last season, was traded to Chicago for the Bears'
    first-round choice in the upcoming NFL draft. The Bears traded away the
    11th overall pick for Mirer and an undisclosed choice. The Seahawks
    said the other pick would become Seattle's second choice in the fourth
    round. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.729IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4254
    Updated at Tuesday, February 18, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.

    *Reuters World News Highlights* 

    BEIJING - China played down fears over the health of Deng Xiaoping,
    saying there was ``no big change'' in the condition of the fragile
    92-year-old paramount leader. Rumors had spread when Chinese sources
    disclosed that Communist Party chief Jiang Zemin and Premier Li Peng
    had both cut short out-of-town trips to visit the ailing patriarch. 

    BRUSSELS - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, seeking to
    soften Moscow's strident opposition to planned North Atlantic Treaty
    Organization enlargement, offered in her first meeting at NATO's
    headquarters in Brussels to create a permanent Russia-NATO force. 

    GOMA, Zaire - Thousands fled the eastern Zairian city of Bukavu after
    at least 19 people were killed in raids by government warplanes on
    three rebel-held centers. 

    KINSHASA - Zaire announced new bombing raids on rebel-held towns in the
    east as African foreign ministers arrived in the capital for talks on
    bringing peace to Central Africa's volatile Great Lakes region.A
    defense ministry official said government planes bombed Bukavu,
    Shabunda and Walikale. 

    MADRID - Politicians in Spain's troubled Basque region agreed Tuesday
    to try to form a united front against the separatist guerrilla group
    ETA, which has been blamed for four killings in the past week, regional
    officials said. 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought to avert a
    split in his coalition over settlement policy in Jerusalem and on a
    separate front underwent police questioning on alleged government
    corruption. Netanyahu forbade a ministerial committee on Jerusalem from
    discussing a controversial project to build on a forested hill between
    Jerusalem and Bethlehem in the West Bank. 

    LIMA - Peru's Civil Defense service denied a report that between
    150-200 people had disappeared in a mudslide, saying all of them were
    evacuated from their villages before the landslip. 

    ANKARA - The Turkish parliament dropped two corruption charges Deputy
    Prime Minister Tansu Ciller faced in balloting seen as a test of the
    Islamist-led coalition's unity. MPs voted against sending Ciller, also
    foreign minister, to the Supreme Court on charges that she illegally
    interfered with the sale of state-owned carmaker TOFAS. 

    NABLUS, West Bank - Palestinians launched a stock market in the West
    Bank town of Nablus. Officials said 23 companies had already been
    listed on the exchange for trading and that 20 others were in the
    process of being listed. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.730IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4355
    RTw  19-Feb-97 05:59    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Turkish fan beats wife, tries suicide after loss 

    ISTANBUL - A Turkish soccer fan beat his wife and then jumped out a
    fifth-floor window after his club Fenerbahce lost to Istanbul rival
    Besiktas in a weekend derby, a newspaper said. 

    The Sabah daily said Ali Sirkecioglu got drunk after his team lost 1-0
    at home. He beat unconscious his wife -- a Besiktas supporter -- then
    went out onto the balcony of his flat, shouted: "I leave my children to
    my mother," and jumped. 

    Sirkecioglu suffered broken ribs and legs and was taken to the same
    hospital as his wife, Semiha. 

    She has been discharged. He is in intensive care. 

    - - - - 

    Tax agents seize Texas home of missing atheist 

    AUSTIN, Texas - U.S. Internal Revenue Service agents seized the
    $231,000 home of Madalyn Murray O'Hair, who disappeared in August 1995. 

    O'Hair, who won the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1963
    calling for an end to school prayer, owes $250,000 in back taxes, an
    IRS spokesman said. 

    Agents removed furniture and personal property from the home and
    evicted Spike Tyson, a member of O'Hair's non-profit organisation
    American Atheists Inc., who had been living there. 

    O'Hair, her granddaughter, Robin Murray-O'Hair, and son, Jon Murray,
    disappeared after telling associates they were going to New York to
    protest the visit of Pope John Paul II. 

    IRS rules call for O'Hair's property to be sold at auction in 45 days
    unless she emerges to settle the tax levy. 

    O'Hair's disappearance has spawned several theories by supporters and
    detractors, including one that she died following a deathbed conversion
    to Christianity and another that the three key officers of American
    Atheists Inc. had fled to New Zealand. 

    REUTER
7.731IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4328
    AP 19-Feb-1997 0:30 EST   REF5603

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Nobel Winner Caught Jaywalking

    SEATTLE (AP) -- Nobel Prize-winning physicist Leon Lederman has
    discovered a new law of nature: Don't jaywalk in Seattle. 

    Lederman, director emeritus of the Fermi National Laboratory in
    suburban Chicago, got a $38 ticket Friday for crossing a downtown
    street mid-block. 

    "I jaywalked just like I do in Chicago, New York, Paris or London,"
    said Lederman, one of hundreds of scientists here for the annual
    convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. 

    Seattle has a reputation for upholding jaywalking laws. 

    Lederman said he may have gotten off on the wrong foot with the police
    officer who cited him. 

    "She was already writing" when she asked him what kind of scientist he
    is, but Lederman said she started writing faster when he said he's an
    experimental physicist, saying that physics was her worst subject in
    school. 

    Lederman won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1988. 
7.732IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4329
    AP 19-Feb-1997 0:28 EST   REF5578

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fire Damages Abortion Clinic

    FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) -- Fire heavily damaged an abortion clinic
    Tuesday night and police charged a man caught inside the building with
    arson and burglary. 

    The fire at the American Women's Clinic engulfed the clinic's first
    floor and caused mostly smoke damage to the second floor, authorities
    said. 

    No one was injured. 

    Police discovered the fire while responding to reports of someone
    throwing bricks at the building, apparently to break a window to get
    inside. 

    The 38-year-old suspect was inside the clinic when the fire started,
    and gave no explanation for why he was in the building, police said. 

    Falls Church, with a population of 10,000, is a suburb of Washington,
    D.C. 

    The fire is the latest in a string of recent attacks on abortion
    clinics around the country. Clinics in Atlanta and Tulsa, Okla., were
    firebombed earlier this year. 
7.733IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4435
    AP 18-Feb-1997 23:42 EST   REF5305

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FBI Probes E-Mails To Congress

    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- The FBI is investigating a flurry of forged
    e-mail messages directed at members of the Senate and House of
    Representatives that threaten to delete every file on Capitol Hill
    computers. 

    The messages, which began appearing in government e-mail boxes on Feb.
    3, state that they are from a "gang of cypherpunks dedicated to the
    eradication of your systems," the San Jose Mercury News reported
    Wednesday. 

    Although the messages bear the return addresses of a handful of
    legitimate Internet users, the identities of those senders appear to
    have been forged by an unknown hacker or hackers. One of the victims
    was an editor at the Mercury News. 

    The attack is based on a well-known loophole in the Internet protocol
    called "mail spoofing." 

    There has been no damage to any government files in the Senate, John N.
    McConnell, a computer systems manager with the Rules and Administration
    Committee, which manages the chamber's computer systems, told the
    newspaper. 

    "We found no traffic or any attachments that could do damage," he said.
    "So we think it's just a threat by someone who seems to want to be
    disruptive." 

    The FBI's Computer Crime Squad in New York is investigating, spokesman
    Jim Margolin said. 
7.734IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4460
    AP 18-Feb-1997 22:41 EST   REF5020

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Father Admits Killing Children

    HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) -- Just as his trial was about to begin, a man
    admitted killing his two children Tuesday in a custody battle over
    their religious upbringing, crying as he described suffocating his
    daughter. 

    "I held my hands around her neck for about five minutes with my face
    pressed to hers," said Avi Kostner. "I cried ... 'Please forgive me.
    Please God forgive me."' 

    Kostner, 52, a taxi driver and Hebrew teacher, pleaded guilty to
    killing his daughter and son in 1994. The jury picked for his trial
    will hear testimony next week on whether he should be sentenced to
    death or life in prison. 

    His attorney, Kathy L. Waldor said her client was obsessed with the
    custody battle -- appearing in court 57 times in three years -- and the
    Jewish identity of his children, Geri Beth, 12, and Ryan, 10. 

    He wanted them raised as Jews. His ex-wife, Lynn Mison, who converted
    back to Christianity after their divorce in 1988, wanted the children
    to decide for themselves once they turned 18. 

    She and her new husband planned to move to Florida with the children. 

    Kostner admitted to police that he drugged his children and suffocated
    them before he took an overdose of tranquilizers. The children's bodies
    were found in the back of a car idling in a parking lot near a police
    station. 

    Kostner was slumped unconscious over the steering wheel. 

    He had discussed pleading guilty with his attorneys, but his decision
    still caught them by surprise. 

    "He leaned over and said he wanted to make a statement to the court and
    I asked the judge to allow him to make a statement," Waldor said. "We
    were not sure he was going to do this." 

    Waldor said she thinks her client wanted to accept responsibility for
    killing his children, and didn't want their lives discussed in court.
    "So out of respect and what he believes to be love for his children, he
    pleaded guilty," she said. 

    The guilty plea was not part of a deal with prosecutors. Prosecutor
    Frank Puccio said there would be no comment until the case is
    completed. 

    Waldor had planned to argue that Kostner had "diminished capacity" at
    the time of the slayings, and she will do so in seeking life in prison
    rather than the death penalty. 

    Diminished capacity is a legal defense in which it must be shown that
    the accused suffered from a mental disease or defect that prevented him
    from knowingly or purposefully committing murder. 
7.735IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4481
    AP 18-Feb-1997 22:32 EST   REF5904

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Hubble Ready To Go

    By MARCIA DUNN

    AP Aerospace Writer

    SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -- After 33 weary hours of spacewalking,
    astronauts completed their tuneup of the Hubble Space Telescope along
    with some last-minute repairs to its sun-blistered skin Tuesday. 

    "For me and for NASA, it's just like going and winning the Super Bowl,"
    chief spacewalker Mark Lee said. 

    All that remained was Hubble's release from space shuttle Discovery
    early Wednesday for three more years of uninterrupted viewing of the
    cosmos. The telescope had been anchored to the shuttle's cargo bay
    since Thursday. 

    "Externally, I have to say it's not quite as beautiful as we left it
    three years ago," Mission Control's Jeffrey Hoffman told the crew of
    space shuttle Discovery. "But we all know that beauty is only skin deep
    and the real guts of the Hubble are even better now because of the
    great work that you guys have done." 

    Hoffman thanked the Discovery astronauts for all the "TLC" -- tender
    loving care -- they gave to Hubble. 

    Astronauts Lee and Steven Smith ended the fifth and final spacewalk of
    the $795 million servicing mission with repairs to Hubble's peeling
    thermal insulation, the result of seven years of sun exposure. 

    For a while, it seemed as though the crew might have to take an
    unprecedented sixth spacewalk. 

    A wheel that is part of the telescope guidance system did not appear to
    be spinning properly. NASA kept Lee and Smith waiting in their
    spacesuits as engineers debated whether to have the men replace it. 

    After an hour, Mission Control decided to bring Lee and Smith back in
    while the discussion continued. It turned out that the wheel was in
    fine shape and no repair was needed. 

    The pilots raised Discovery -- and thus Hubble -- into a higher orbit
    to offset the telescope's natural decline in altitude until the
    astronauts' next visit in late 1999. Hubble's new orbit is 375 miles to
    385 miles high, almost 10 miles higher than before. 

    "Although its perhaps slightly premature ... to declare that this is
    all over and we can go home and drink champagne and that the fat lady
    has sung, in fact we're very close to that point," said NASA astronomer
    David Leckrone. 

    It will be two to three months before NASA knows whether the two new
    science instruments on the $2 billion telescope are working properly.
    Scientists hope to look farther back in space and in time with the
    near-infrared camera and the two-dimensional imaging spectrograph,
    installed during spacewalk No. 1 last week. 

    Altogether, Lee, Smith, Gregory Harbaugh and Joe Tanner installed 11
    major Hubble components, worth nearly $300 million, during four
    consecutive nights of spacewalking. The fifth spacewalk was added so
    Lee and Smith could hang homemade patches over tears in Hubble's thin,
    reflective insulation. 

    The astronauts' total time outside: 33 hours, 11 minutes, just two
    hours shy of the five spacewalks conducted in 1993 to fix Hubble's
    blurred vision. 

    "We did more than we set out to do," said NASA's John Campbell, a
    project director. "I'd say we're 110 percent successful." 

    The only snag in the mission: a failure in Hubble's power system
    because of an error by ground controllers. It will just slightly reduce
    the telescope's extra margin of power, Campbell said. 

    Discovery's 10-day mission is due to end with a Florida landing early
    Friday. 
7.736IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4447
    AP 18-Feb-1997 21:42 EST   REF5875

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Liz Taylor Hospitalized

    By JEFF WILSON

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Elizabeth Taylor checked into the hospital Tuesday
    for surgery to remove a benign brain tumor. 

    Miss Taylor entered Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for tests before
    Thursday's operation, said Maria Pignataro, spokeswoman for the
    Oscar-winning actress. 

    The tumor, located in the lining of her brain's left frontal lobe, was
    detected by an MRI brain scan during Miss Taylor's annual physical
    examination on Feb. 3. Her doctor expects a full recovery without
    complications, Ms. Pignataro said. 

    "The surgery is quite common and it's one of the easiest," said Gregory
    J. Rubino, associate director of the benign brain tumor program at the
    University of California, Los Angeles. 

    The surgery was originally planned for Monday, the day after an AIDS
    fund-raiser celebrated Miss Taylor's 65th birthday (which is actually
    Feb. 27). But surgery was postponed because she still had a trace of
    the flu. 

    Sunday's benefit at the Pantages Theatre raised more than $1 million
    for the Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation. 

    The violet-eyed winner of Academy Awards for "Butterfield 8" in 1960
    and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" in 1966 has suffered from a
    series of health problems over the decades. 

    She had both hips replaced in recent years, then had to return for
    surgery in 1995 because one of the operations left her with one leg
    shorter than the other. 

    Miss Taylor had been hospitalized a month earlier for an irregular
    heartbeat. 

    Serious respiratory problems nearly killed her in 1990 and kept her
    hospitalized for three months. 
7.737IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4572
    AP 18-Feb-1997 21:39 EST   REF5872

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Movie, Software Pirating Tracked

    By DAVID BRISCOE

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The most rampant piracy of U.S. movies, music,
    computer software and other intellectual properties occurs in Greece,
    Paraguay and Russia, a trade group told the government Tuesday. 

    Greece allows the broadcast of American movies without paying
    royalties; Paraguay imports and exports pirated U.S. computer and music
    discs, and 70-90 percent of U.S. intellectual properties sold in Russia
    is illegally copied, the International Intellectual Properties Alliance
    said in a filing with the U.S. Trade Representative's Office. 

    The industry estimated potential sales lost because of the copying of
    U.S. products at $10.6 billion last year in more than 50 countries
    covered in its filing. 

    The alliance, representing 1,350 American film, book, software and
    music companies, asked the government to designate Greece, Russian and
    Paraguay as "priority foreign countries" in cracking down on
    intellectual property theft. Such a listing could lead to trade
    sanctions by the end of the year. 

    "Quite frankly, given the politics of the situation, they probably will
    not do that to Russia," said Eric H. Smith, alliance president. But he
    said past government action has followed industry recommendations quite
    closely. 

    He said piracy in Russia is "a huge problem," with losses estimated at
    $1 billion. Losses in Greece are estimated at $121.2 million and
    Paraguay at $44.6 billion, with piracy at greater than 90 percent in
    both countries. 

    USTR officials confirmed receipt of the filing and said it would be
    considered with other industry comment in determining which countries
    to target under U.S. antipiracy laws. Tuesday was the deadline for
    submitting recommendations. 

    Acting U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky has until April 30
    to formally identify countries to investigate. Countries identified as
    "priority foreign countries" then become subject to up to 10 months of
    negotiations over enforcement of copyright laws. If alleged unfair
    trade practices are not resolved, retaliatory action may be taken. 

    Only China was on last year's list, but sanctions were not imposed when
    U.S. officials determined that conditions had improved. The alliance,
    in this year's filing, agreed that China has taken "laudable aggressive
    actions" to close down compact disc production plants but said it still
    should be monitored closely. 

    The alliance recommended 50 other countries to be given varying degrees
    of priority in what it said is its most comprehensive filing ever with
    the trade office. 

    It recommended that six countries be elevated to the second-tier
    "priority watch list" -- Brazil, Bulgaria, Hong Kong, Kuwait, the
    Philippines and Vietnam. It also called for Indonesia, Saudi Arabia,
    South Korea and Turkey to be kept on that list and for India to be
    removed to the lower-priority "watch list" because of advances in
    legislation and enforcement. Countries on those two lists are not
    subject to trade sanctions. 

    The alliance also announced that it would file later this month, under
    another trade program, petitions against Russia, the Philippines and
    Israel for failure to adequately protect U.S. copyright owners. 
7.738IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4598
    AP 18-Feb-1997 21:22 EST   REF5864

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The fighter jet involved in a close encounter with a
    Nations Air plane two weeks ago stayed on the airliner's tail even as
    the big jet maneuvered to avoid a collision, the National
    Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday. 

    The Air Force agreed with the NTSB conclusions, insisting that its
    pilot had followed proper procedures, even though Federal Aviation
    Administration civilian standards on separation were violated. 

    The NTSB described in a report how the Nations Air Boeing 727 went into
    a dive, then a steep climb, when its collision alert warned that
    another plane was too close. The incident occurred off the coast of New
    Jersey on Feb. 5. 

    The Air National Guard plane approached the airliner to identify it,
    said Greg Feith, an NTSB investigator. "It was a controlled procedure;
    it was done in a methodical manner," he said. 

    "The Nations Air crew responded as they were trained. ... They
    responded properly," Feith added. 

    He said the F-16 approached within 1,000 feet behind the airliner and
    within 400 feet of its altitude. FAA standards require planes in the
    same vicinity to maintain at least five miles horizontal separation and
    1,000 feet vertical separation. 

    The planes were in no danger of collision and the fighter jet broke
    away when instructed to leave by a military air traffic controller,
    Feith said. 

    In a Pentagon news conference, Air Force Maj. Gen. Donald L. Peterson
    said he would recommend against any punishment of the F-16 pilot. 

    Peterson, however, acknowledged that the F-16 pilot might have backed
    off when he was told the unidentified plane was a commercial airliner
    instead of pursuing it. 

    "He was completely legal," Peterson said. "If you asked, could he have
    done something differently, certainly." 

    Corrective steps unveiled by the Air Force include exhausting other
    means before resorting to visual identification of an unknown aircraft.

    In addition, all Air Force pilots will receive training on the Traffic
    Alert and Collision Avoidance System used by commercial liners. The
    F-16 pilot was apparently unaware that by pulling close to the
    airliner, he would be setting off alarms in the airliner's cockpit. 

    An Air Force cockpit video tape shown to reporters confirmed that the
    F-16 approached the airliner from behind gradually and, after a few
    minutes, slowly drew away from the airliner. 

    Air Force officials have described the F-16 pilot's actions as an
    attempt to visually identify the plane. But a Navy air traffic
    controller informed the F-16, code-named "Smash One One," that the
    aircraft was a civilian 727 before the fighter pilot drew in close for
    a look. 

    "Smash One One, you have traffic twelve o'clock, less than five miles,
    seven twenty-seven, descending to one four thousand," the controller
    told the F-16 pilot. Three minutes later, the Navy controller ordered
    the F-16 pilot to pull away to a distance of 20 miles. 

    That order came after civilian air traffic controllers in New York had
    warned their military counterparts in Virginia that the fighter was too
    close. 

    The incident led to a suspension of military training maneuvers along
    the East Coast and changes in training to stress the problems of
    approaching too close to airliners. The Air Force said it expects to
    lift the training suspension later this week. 

    That incident and three others on the following Friday in which
    civilian and military planes had close encounters sparked concern about
    the dangers of the sky. 

    NTSB chairman Jim Hall said investigators have determined that such
    incidents are rare and the three cases Feb. 7 were of only minor
    concern, with the planes not coming very close to one another. The
    Nations Air case, however, will likely lead to NTSB recommendations on
    military training and communications. 

    Last year, there were more than 1,300 incidents in which airliners
    maneuvered to avoid aircraft, Peterson said. Of those, 7 percent
    involved military aircraft. 

    The Nations Air plane was being directed through a military area on the
    way to New York when two F-16s entered the region. Feith said the Air
    National Guard pilots had been advised that there was some traffic in
    the area but apparently had no details of it. 
7.739IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4622
    AP 18-Feb-1997 22:38 EST   REF5905

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Day-Care Parents Billed Billions

    HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -- Parents using state-run day care are used to
    seeing their bills rise as social services are trimmed. Still, some
    blanched at their January bill: $70 billion. 

    That's how much a day-care center in Espoo, about 10 miles west of
    Helsinki, billed each of about 600 households for the month. 

    "We'd have to win the lottery several times over to be able to pay it,"
    one parent told the newspaper Ilta-Sanomat. That was, in fact, an
    understatement -- each bill was about twice Finland's annual budget. 

    "It's obviously a mistake," a spokeswoman from Espoo City's Accounts
    Department said Tuesday. "The computer went haywire, and shot out this
    figure for some unknown reason." 

    Corrected bills of about $200 each were being sent out, she said. 
7.740IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4678
    AP 18-Feb-1997 21:28 EST   REF5867

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Audit Say French Art Missing

    By MARILYN AUGUST

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- Missing: one large marble statue weighing several tons.
    Last seen: French Ministry of Education. 

    The marble statue -- Alexandre Falguiere's 19th-century "Winner of the
    Race" -- is only one of 950 missing works, according to a scathing
    critique of the museum authority published Tuesday by the Audit Office.

    France has such a rich abundance of art that its national museum
    authority has lent more than 100,000 works to ministries, embassies and
    other public facilities. 

    But now, the government watchdog agency says that legacy is being
    pilfered, lost, destroyed or damaged due to mismanagement. 

    The news comes at a time of record-high attendance: 15 million people
    visited museums in 1994, up 67 percent from 1981. Yet a $6.8 million
    deficit remains. 

    Auditors inventoried 5,000 works. Many had been destroyed or stolen,
    some surfaced at public auction, others simply vanished without a
    trace. 

    In one case, auditors looked for a painting that turned out to have
    been destroyed in an embassy fire in Turkey decades ago. 

    Another painting, Theodule Ribot's "The Good Samaritan," loaned to the
    French embassy in Poland in 1931, turned up in the National Museum in
    Warsaw. The museum authority had no explanation, the report said. 

    And some Renaissance tapestries made by the famed Gobelins tapestry
    works, which also were loaned to an embassy, surfaced at an auction, it
    said. 

    Auditors say it is impossible to put a price tag on the missing or
    damaged works, partly because some have been missing for so long. 

    The report blamed poor coordination between the museum authority and
    its facilities, a lack of funds, and the lack of a framework to
    encourage private and corporate sponsorship. 

    "The report is overwhelming," the daily Figaro said. "It challenges the
    museum authority and its usefulness." 

    The authority oversees 33 museums in France, including the Louvre, the
    Orsay museum, Versailles and the Picasso museum. 

    Although the Audit Office has no power of enforcement, its
    recommendations carry weight. 

    For example, a confidential, unpublished section of the report, widely
    publicized last month, revealed the existence of nearly 2,000 works in
    French museums that were confiscated by pro-Nazi Vichy officials from
    Jews during World War II. As a result, a complete listing of the works
    has been published on the Internet. 

    The report cited examples of mismanagement on every level. Thefts are
    reported to police late, if at all; inventories are out of date. A
    Henri Matisse medallion, destined for a museum in Nice, was forgotten
    in the back of a moving truck. Dozens of pieces of Sevres china and
    oriental art from the Louvre were lost when the University of Lille
    moved to new quarters in Villeneuve-d'Ascq. 

    The report also found many works stored in perilous conditions. One
    auditor discovered two pastel drawings and an 18th-century painting in
    the dusty cellar of the Education Ministry. 

    "They have since found their way back to the Louvre," the report said.

7.741IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4734
    AP 18-Feb-1997 21:21 EST   REF5863

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    British Gun Bill Shot Down

    LONDON (AP) -- The House of Commons on Tuesday rejected amendments that
    would have compensated gun dealers and gun clubs for lost business as a
    result of new legislation banning most handguns in Britain. 

    The Commons also voted down an amendment that would have permitted gun
    owners to keep disassembled weapons at home. 

    The gun legislation, a response to the killing of 16 children and a
    teacher a year ago in Dunblane, Scotland, would ban all but .22-caliber
    handguns, and those could only be kept at gun clubs. 

    Although at least 80 members of the governing Conservative party sided
    with the House of Lords, which introduced the amendments, the
    government got strong backing from opposition parties in rejecting the
    amendments. 

    "We are punishing for the sins and the crimes of an individual a whole
    group of the most law-abiding, responsible people in this country,"
    said Sir Patrick Cormack, a Conservative lawmaker. 

    Home Secretary Michael Howard said gun dealers would be compensated for
    stock they could no longer sell, just as gun owners would be
    compensated for handguns they are forced to surrender, but not for
    extended business losses. 

    "We cannot accept liability for business losses which might result from
    the introduction of legislation aimed at improving public safety,"
    Howard said. 
7.742IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4759
    AP 18-Feb-1997 21:25 EST   REF5866

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Galileo Heading for Europa

    By JANE E. ALLEN

    AP Science Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The unmanned Galileo spacecraft is heading for its
    closest encounter yet with Jupiter's moon Europa, where scientists
    believe a frozen ocean could harbor life. 

    The spacecraft will pass within 360 miles Thursday night, although the
    signal won't be received on Earth until the next day, said William
    O'Neil, Galileo project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
    Pasadena. 

    The spacecraft is also expected to record information on two small
    Jovian moons, Amalthea, which is about 100 miles across, and Thebe,
    which is about 25 miles across. 

    Galileo's pass also will allow it to monitor the plumes of gas from the
    volcanic moon Io and examine Jupiter's rings and a white oval storm
    just above its surface. 

    At Europa, Galileo will look at a crater-type feature that appears as a
    dark spot with a bright halo and discriminate details as small as about
    250 yards across. And, when it looks at bright plains, it will be able
    to discriminate "things about 100 yards across," said Ken Klaasen, a
    Galileo imaging science team member. 

    Klaasen said playback of recorded images begins Saturday. The first
    images will emerge through the computers Monday. 

    Referring to Galileo's most recent encounters with Jupiter's largest
    moons, O'Neil said: "We had the perils of Pauline on two of the last
    three." 

    During Galileo's first pass by the moon Ganymede last September, the
    spacecraft computer shut itself off automatically due to a problem.
    During a Dec. 19 Europa encounter, from 430 miles out, scientists and
    engineers were on the edges of their chairs hoping the tape recorder
    would work. Aggressive work from the ground brought it back a little
    more than an hour before it was needed. 

    O'Neil said everything on the spacecraft is working fine now. 

    Europa, with an ocean that could be 60 miles deep, appears to have a
    fractured crust of icy slabs that may be sliding on a warmer layer of
    slush or water. 

    Researchers believe Europa may have two ingredients essential for life:
    water and a source of internal heat. 

    Galileo, launched in 1989 aboard a space shuttle, arrived at Jupiter in
    December 1995 and began a two-year tour of the giant planet and its
    major moons. 
7.743IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4735
    AP 18-Feb-1997 18:27 EST   REF5567

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Israel Experiment Reverses Aging

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- An Israeli scientist said Tuesday that he and his
    colleagues have reversed the age-related deterioration of human skin
    that has been transplanted onto mice. 

    Dr. Amos Gilhar said that when skin from an elderly volunteer was
    transplanted onto laboratory mice, "after a month ... we could no
    longer tell the difference between the old and young skin." 

    Gilhar, head of the Dermatology and Aging Laboratory at Haifa's
    Technion university, said that as people age the number of hormones and
    proteins secreted by the skin declines. 

    "In the wake of the transplant we saw increased quantities of these
    proteins," Gilhar told Israel TV. "The structure of the old skin had
    become the same as that of the young." 

    The reasons for the reversal were unclear. If they could be uncovered,
    it may be possible to produce a cream or other preparation which could
    be used to prevent or reverse aging, Gilhar said. 

    "But this is in the distant future," he said. "The message of this
    research project is that in the skin of the old there are many
    components which can be rejuvenated." 

    Lynn Drake, Professor of Dermatology at the University of Oklahoma's
    Health Sciences Center, said Gilhar's findings "sound interesting." 

    "I would be very interested in reading about Dr. Gilhar's findings in a
    scientific journal." 
7.744IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4885
    RTw  19-Feb-97 04:13    

    Australian sex offenders book sparks heated debate

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Michael Perry 

    SYDNEY, Feb 19 (Reuter) - The author of an Australian directory of
    convicted paedophiles and sex offenders on Wednesday defended her book
    against charges it would spark a "witchhunt" for sex offenders.

    "I don't encourage vigilantes, I don't condone that behaviour at all,"
    Deborah Coddington, author of "The Australian Paedophile and Sex
    Offender Index," said in a radio interview. 

    "I think it is a responsible book," said Coddington, a New Zealand
    journalist who launched a similar book in New Zealand in 1996 and plans
    one for Britain later this year. 

    "It is a survey of sexual offending right across Australia. It also
    shows people how these paedophiles operate, how they get access to
    children, how they win the trust of children." 

    The book lists 640 paedophile and sex offenders who either pleaded
    guilty or were convicted, giving brief descriptions of the offenders
    and their offences. 

    The book has sparked heated debate in Australia, with politicians,
    lawyers and the public deeply divided on its merits. 

    "To me this is a witchhunt wrapped up in disguise for concern for the
    victims," a talkback radio caller said on Wednesday. 

    "I think the kind of hysteria that this will generate will cause
    problems way out of proportion to the thing it is meant to solve," he
    said. 

    The chief prosecutor in Australia's most populous state, New South
    Wales (NSW), has also criticised the book and refused to co-operate
    with its compilation. 

    "Nothing should be done which encourages citizens to take the law into
    their own hands," said NSW Director of Public Prosecutions Nick
    Cowdrey. 

    Cowdrey warned that the book threatened the principle of a fair trial
    and may prevent the rehabilitation of sex offenders. 

    But Coddington said her book was based on publicly available
    information from Australian courts and rejected suggestions she was
    prejudicing anybody. 

    "I don't believe that when you have been convicted and served your
    sentence the slate has been wiped clean... Victims don't get given a
    fresh start, they often never recover." 

    Coddington called on the Australian government to issue an official sex
    offenders list. 

    "All I want the government to do is draw up a comprehensive list of sex
    offenders...so that we can check the people that want to be trusted
    with our children are worthy of that trust." 

    Western Australia state premier Richard Court has supported the
    publication of the controversial book. 

    "As far as I'm concerned, preying on innocent young children is as low
    as you can get," Court said. "If people have been convicted of that
    crime, and it's public information, I don't see why you can't continue
    to make it public." 

    Fred Nile, leader of the ultra-conservative Call to Australia Party in
    the New South Wales parliament, on Wednesday enthusiastically supported
    to book. 

    "When it comes to worrying about the hurt feelings of a paedophile or
    protecting our children from abuse, I favour the protection of our
    children," Nile said. 

    "Those who want to cover up these predators, so they can be
    rehabilitated, should realise that reliable evidence shows this is
    almost an impossibility." 

    REUTER
7.745IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4849
    RTw  18-Feb-97 23:44    

    Possible lair of Loch Ness monster found

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    INVERNESS, Scotland, Feb 18 (Reuter) - A Scottish auxiliary coastguard
    officer said on Tuesday that he believes he has found the secret lair
    of the legendary Loch Ness monster. 

    George Edwards, 45, spotted the 30-foot (nine-metre) wide cave in the
    bottom of the Scottish loch on a sonar scan as he cruised over the
    water. 

    "I came across the hole by accident one day as I was crossing Urquart
    Bay while on a coastguard exercise," he told a Scottish news agency.
    "My sonar reading suddenly fell an extra 30 feet, down to 826 feet (252
    metres). That is much deeper than this part of the loch is supposed to
    be." 

    Edwards believes the mysterious cave could be a major breakthrough in
    the search for the monster, nicknamed Nessie, which many people believe
    lives in the 23-mile (37-km) long loch. 

    "For the first time we have a clue to where Nessie might actually live
    so we can narrow down the search area and give ourselves a real chance
    of spotting her and her family," Edwards added. 

    He believes that the cave could be the entrance to a tunnel that
    connects Loch Ness to another loch or to the sea and is planning on
    releasing a non-toxic dye into the mouth of the opening to test his
    theory. 

    "This could be one of the most significant finds ever in Loch Ness,"
    said Gary Campbell, secretary of the Official Loch Ness Monster Fan
    Club. 

    "It looks like the best possible site for Nessie's lair. We need to
    send down a diver or a camera to see exactly how far it goes in and
    whether there is any evidence of something living inside," he added. 

    Sightings of the mysterious monster, which has often been described as
    having a long neck and a large body like a brontosaurus, have been
    reported since the 15th century. 

    Around two million tourists flock to the murky loch each year hoping to
    get a glimpse of the legendary beast. 

    REUTER
7.746IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4882
    RTos 18-Feb-97 23:38    

    China Plays Down Deng Health Scares

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BEIJING (Reuter) - China played down fears over the health of Deng
    Xiaoping Tuesday, saying there was "no big change" in the condition of
    the fragile 92-year-old paramount leader. 

    A tide of rumors spread Monday when Chinese sources disclosed that
    Communist Party chief Jiang Zemin and Premier Li Peng had both cut
    short out-of-town trips over the weekend to visit the ailing patriarch
    . 

    But Foreign Ministry spokesman Tang Guoqiang told a news briefing:
    "There has been no big change in Comrade Deng Xiaoping's health." 

    Tang declined to say if there had been a small change and or explain
    what would be considered a major change. 

    Officials of the State Council, or cabinet, who usually answer queries
    about Deng's health with the official line that he is as well as can be
    expected for a man of his age, could say only they were investigating
    the situation. 

    Officials declined to comment directly on the rumors washing around the
    Chinese capital concerning Deng's condition but diplomats said his
    health had likely deteriorated recently. 

    "It's been clear for a while that things have been...going downhill,"
    said one Western diplomat. 

    Japan's daily Nikkei Shimbun in its Wednesday edition quoted diplomatic
    sources as saying China's 92 year-old paramount leader is critically
    ill. 

    One indication of Deng's worsening state was that officials and family
    members had backed off from forecasts that Deng would travel to Hong
    Kong to witness Beijing's resumption of rule over the British colony at
    midnight June 30, the diplomat said. 

    "Clearly things are a bit on shaky ground," the diplomat said. 

    Taiwan's United Daily News quoted the island's top official on mainland
    affairs, Chang King-yuh, as saying Deng's condition was serious.
    Officials said they were closely monitoring reports of his health. 

    Diplomats have said one barometer of Deng's health in China's highly
    secretive political system is the travel of top leaders and close
    family members, with few considered willing to be caught out of town or
    abroad if Deng were close to death. 

    Chinese officials in the Philippines said visiting Defense Minister Chi
    Haotian would not change his travel plans there and Beijing's mission
    in Israel said Vice Premier Li Lanqing would not interrupt his current
    trip to Israel and Iran. 

    Deng, whose pragmatic policies transformed a backward Stalinist state
    into an economic powerhouse, lives in a tightly guarded central Beijing
    compound close to the Forbidden City, home for centuries to China's
    emperors. 

    A Hong Kong newspaper reported over the weekend that the architect of
    China's sweeping economic reforms was rushed to a hospital last
    Thursday after a massive stroke that followed an earlier, mild stroke. 

    Doctors said that if Deng's stroke had been a hemorrhage he could have
    died within hours. If it was the formation of a blood clot, he could
    last days or weeks, they said. 

    Rumors about Deng's health surface periodically and often have a direct
    impact on China-related stock exchanges, where Deng's demise is seen by
    some as a potentially destabilizing factor. 

    Worries over Deng's health helped to push shares on the Shanghai and
    Shenzhen stock exchanges sharply lower by their close Tuesday and also
    rocked share prices in Taiwan and Hong Kong. 

    Deng has not been seen in public since the 1994 Chinese Lunar New Year
    festival when he appeared frail and faltering. He is thought to be in
    fragile health and with fading lucidity. 
7.747IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4889
    RTw  18-Feb-97 21:07    

    EU Parliament warns Brussels over BSE

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Peter Blackburn 

    STRASBOURG, France, Feb 18 (Reuter) - The European Parliament attacked
    European Commission President Jacques Santer on Tuesday for what it
    called serious mistakes in the mad cow crisis, threatening sanctions
    unless he put matters right. 

    The assembly's main political groups, the Socialists and Christian
    Democrats, confirmed they would back on Wednesday a resolution which
    calls on the Commission to carry out reforms by November or face
    censure. 

    But their leaders rejected a separate censure motion, due for a vote on
    Thursday, by maverick Belgian socialist Jose Happart calling for the
    immediate dismissal of Santer and his 19 commissioners. 

    "If the reforms are not genuine, appropriate or fast enough...then my
    Group will join with others in tabling a motion of censure," said
    Pauline Green, socialist group leader. 

    The parliament was debating a scathing report from its special
    committee of inquiry that accused the Commission and Britain of making
    serious errors in the way they handled the outbreak of mad cow disease,
    bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and trying to minimise the
    public health risk. 

    The crisis erupted 11 months ago when the British government admitted
    that BSE can be transmitted to humans in a form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob
    Disease (CJD), like the bovine equivalent, fata. The disclosure, which
    alarmed consumers and undermined beef sales and market prices led the
    EU to impose a worldwide ban on British beef exports. 

    Green said Brussels needed time to change its "shambolic
    decision-making, lack of accountability and evasiveness." 

    "A successful motion of censure at this stage would simply lead to an
    institutional crisis which would last for months and not do one single
    thing to strengthen public health or consumer protection," she said. 

    Earlier, Santer tried to persuade parliament that the reforms the
    Commission planned to take would be sufficient. 

    He proposed that the the European Parliament be offered the right of
    veto over EU health policy, saying it should be given joint
    decision-making powers with EU ministers in that field. 

    "It is my belief that the time has come to put health to the fore in
    Europe," he said. 

    Santer said he would try to persuade an inter-governmental conference
    which is drawing up EU treaty reforms to endorse the new powers which
    would also cover farm policy. 

    But France's minister for European Affairs, Michel Barnier, was very
    sceptical. 

    "I have deep reservations (on co-decision in farm policy. It's the
    least I can say," he told a news conference after meeting European
    Parliament President Jose Maria Gil Robles. 

    But he added that he favoured more joint decision making on health
    policy. 

    Last week Santer announced a shake-up of the Commission's food safety
    services that would put the popular consumer affairs chief, Emma
    Bonino, in overall control. 

    Bonino was asked to make seven scientific, veterinary and food
    committees advising on BSE matters more efficient and also to run a new
    Irish-based veterinary inspection office. 

    "There are no miracle solutions. We can't produce miracles overnight,"
    Bonino warned the parliament, adding that more funds would be needed.
    "If we want a policy we have got to equip ourselves with the means." 

    EU Farm Commissioner Franz Fischler, who lost control of food safety in
    the reorganisation, said he was pursuing a new quality oriented and
    sustainable agricultural policy. 

    "The consumer has the right to have quality control from the field to
    the table," he said.

    REUTER
7.748IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:4970
    RTw  18-Feb-97 20:58    

    ``Evita'' gets cool reception at Argentine premiere

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Gary Regenstreif 

    BUENOS AIRES, Feb 18 (Reuter) - The movie musical "Evita" premiered in
    Argentina to huge fanfare on Monday night but was denounced by critics
    for being historically inaccurate and for sullying the image of the
    nation's most popular icon. 

    The hype surrounding the invitation-only premiere, and a government
    recommendation to boycott the film, appeared likely to further fuel the
    interest of Argentines to see Alan Parker's film version of the musical
    when it opens to the public on Thursday. 

    As the British director watched his film at a Buenos Aires cinema, the
    protests of older followers of Eva Peron outside were drowned out by
    cheers of young fans of Madonna, who portrays the former first lady. 

    "It has nothing to do with reality," said Enrique Oliva, a historian
    who briefed Madonna for three hours on the life of Evita. "I thought
    the film would be a homage to the merits of Eva Peron. It is a series
    of incredible insults and offences I was not expecting."

    The movie is based on the Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber stage
    musical that portrays the wife of former President Juan Domingo Peron
    as a woman who used her sex appeal to win power and manipulate the
    masses. Eva Peron, who died of cancer at the age of 33 in 1952, is
    revered by many Argentines who regard her as a saint for her defence of
    the "shirtless ones" and her charity. 

    "It is a mediocre film," said Osvaldo Quiroga, art critic for the
    business daily Cronista Comercial. "It is offensive to the figure of
    Eva Peron. It is badly acted. It is superficial. It is empty of
    content." 

    Critics were generally more generous about its artistic qualities than
    its historical veracity and predicted many Argentines, curious about
    the debate it had generated, would rush out and see it. Popular
    television and radio host Antonio Carrizo told reporters after the
    premiere that "as a historical film it is appalling, just appalling. As
    a movie it is not that bad." 

    Amateur critics also made their voices heard outside. 

    "Madonna is a pornographer," one incensed Evita fan shouted. "She is
    nowhere near the stature of our Evita, the idol of Argentina." 

    Debate over the film resurfaced on Monday when Vice President Carlos
    Ruckauf called on Argentines to boycott it. 

    The leading labour confederation, the Confederacion General del
    Trabajo, which holds to populist Peronist ideals, declared: "once again
    the standard bearer for the poor has been wronged." 

    But Parker in a news conference on Monday insisted his work, which won
    three Golden Globe awards, was unbiased. 

    "I honestly tried to make a balanced film but I understand it would be
    impossible to please everyone," he said, noting Eva was seen among
    Argentines as either a saint or a sinner. 

    "I think I was very respectful of her ... Here in Argentina some people
    think I've been too critical, while in other places they say I
    glorified the woman." 

    REUTER
7.749IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:5079
    RTw  18-Feb-97 20:45    

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    25% of China's bosses will access Internet in 5 years-survey 

    LONDON, Feb 18 (Reuter) - More than a quarter of China's business
    managers expect to be accessing the Internet from their homes within
    the next five years, compared to 77 percent in Japan and 76 percent in
    South Korea, according to a survey released on Tuesday. 

    The "Survey on Business Leaders in Japan, Korea and China," carried out
    by part of Dentsu Inc, the world's biggest advertising agency, said
    Asian business executives were increasingly buying household computers. 

    In Japan, 52 percent of middle managers said they already used
    computers at home, compared to 64 percent in South Korea, according to
    details of the survey received in London. 

    It showed 37 percent of China's middle managers expected to have
    computers at home within the next five years. 

    The Dentsu Institute of Human Studies, a Dentsu research division, said
    its study was aimed at "young middle management of leading enterprises"
    who would play an important economic role into the next century. 

    The survey covered middle managers under the age of 49 at Japanese
    publicly-traded companies, middle managers in South Korea and managers
    in China of state-run, private and joint venture companies. 

    Dentsu said the study showed "consumer consciousness" was becoming more
    and more borderless, with shoppers caring little about which country
    manufactured a particular product. 

    In Japan, a surprisingly large 92 percent of the executives surveyed
    said they would buy a product "if it is a good item...whatever country
    it is from." 

    Many South Korean executives said they were keen on
    environmentally-friendly products. 

    About 70 percent said "I will purchase an item that it good for the
    environment even if it is somewhat expensive." 

    The study found South Korean managers were more interested than Chinese
    counterparts in saving money rather than spending it, while Japanese
    executives were somewhere in the middle. 

    Japanese managers showed great tolerance for having to work overtime,
    while executives in South Korea wanted to stick to a more regular
    workday. 

    The survey showed most Japanese business people wanted to keep a
    tradition of lifetime employment with one company. 

    Most managers surveyed in the three countries said they wanted to be
    judged by their bosses on corporate ability and results rather than
    seniority, and wanted their countries to be internationally
    competitive. 

    "They (executives surveyed) show, however, skepticism toward the idea
    that the pursuit of individual benefits leads to benefits for society
    as a whole," Dentsu said. 

    Many managers in Japan, China and South Korea said they wanted a
    "society with a comprehensive welfare system." 

    Executives surveyed were asked about the soccer World Cup that will be
    co-hosted in 2002 by Japan and South Korea. 

    In South Korea, 86 percent of managers said they planned to attend
    soccer matches in Korea, compared to 52 percent in Japan who said they
    would go to home games. 

    Dentsu said 41 percent of Koreans surveyed also said they would travel
    to Japan for the World Cup, while 14 percent of Japanese executives
    said they would attend matches in South Korea. 

    REUTER
7.750IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:5052
    RTw  18-Feb-97 20:31    

    Maxwell's daughter says her father was murdered

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Feb 18 (Reuter) - Ghislaine Maxwell, the youngest child of
    former media tycoon Robert Maxwell, broke a five-year silence about her
    father's death on Tuesday, saying she believed he was murdered. 

    She told the celebrity magazine Hello there was no evidence of suicide
    or a heart attack. 

    "I think he was murdered," she said in an interview. "One thing I am
    sure about is that he did not commit suicide. That was just not
    consistent with his character. 

    Mystery has surrounded Robert Maxwell's death since he went over the
    side of his yacht on November 5, 1991 and was found floating dead in
    the sea off the Canary Islands. 

    Shortly after he died his media empire unravelled and 400 million
    pounds ($642.4 million) in company pension assets were found to be
    missing. 

    Although a pathology report said it was unlikely he commited suicide
    and the cause of death was probably drowing, doubts have persisted
    about his death. 

    "He did not commit suicide because he didn't drown. There is no
    evidence of suicide. It was not unhelpful to certain parties that the
    suicide theory was put about, because it meant his life insurance
    policy would be in dispute," Maxwell told the magazine. 

    "I can't see my father going to the side of a boat and slipping off the
    side. It is not easy to fall off the side of a boat." 

    The youngest of nine children, Maxwell, 35, lives in New York where she
    works as a business consultant. She said she still grieves for her
    father but she kept quiet for so long because there was already so much
    publicity about his death and because of the fraud trial of her two
    brothers, Kevin and Ian. 

    "I didn't want to give an interview until now because I felt that
    anything that I said would add to the already voluminous press
    coverage. Now there is no longer a trial, hopefully whatever I say will
    be taken at face value." 

    Kevin and Ian Maxwell were found not guilty of conspiracy to defraud
    the Maxwell group pension funds in January 1996 after a lengthy trial. 

    REUTER
7.751IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Feb 19 1997 10:5048
    RTw  18-Feb-97 20:27    

    Geologists say earth due for extraterrestrial bump

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 18 (Reuter) - Geological data shows the earth could be
    overdue for a major impact from a comet or meteorite, experts said on
    Tuesday. 

    "We can't say when, and we can't say how big, but it will definitely
    happen," Robert Hutchinson of the London Natural History Museum told
    Reuters. 

    He chaired a two-day conference at the Geological Society where
    scientists argued over whether or not the extinction of the dinosoars
    was caused by the huge meteorite they believe crashed into the Gulf of
    Mexico 65 million years ago. 

    But they agreed that research, which focuses on craters on the moon and
    on earth and examines remains of meteorites retrieved from Australia,
    the Antartic and New Mexico, showed we could be due for another big
    bump. 

    About 40 thousand tons of extraterrestrial material falls to earth
    every year in the form of micrometeorites, less than one millimetre
    across. 

    But the biggest threat comes from either large asteroids, which can
    range up to nine km (5.6 miles) in diameter, or comets. 

    A nine km asteroid would create a crater 150 metres (500 ft) in
    diameter, said Gene Shoemaker, co-discoverer of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9
    which hit Jupiter in July 1995. 

    But Hutchinson pointed out that asteroids can be predicted well in
    advance, and it might be possible to send a rocket out to an asteroid
    headed for earth to push it off course. 

    A comet heading for earth, on the other hand, could only be detected a
    few weeks before arrival, since they only glow brightly enough to be
    seen when they approach the sun, he said. 

    Shoemaker said regular peaks in the frequency of comets were caused by
    a number of factors, and he believed we were currently in the first
    such peak for 30 million years

    REUTER
7.752IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:52109
    AP 20-Feb-1997 1:06 EST   REF5501

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, Feb. 20, 1997
   
    CHINA-DENG 

    BEIJING (AP) -- Flags are being flown at half-staff and a mourning
    period has begun for Deng Xiaoping, the last of China's great Communist
    revolutionaries. Deng died Wednesday. China said he was 93. Deng had
    Parkinson's disease and died from respiratory failure, the Xinhua News
    Agency reported. President Clinton lauded the late Chinese leader for
    forging U.S. ties and said his death means the loss of "an
    extraordinary figure on the world stage." The president said Deng had
    tried to guide China towards prosperity and a wider role in world
    affairs. 
   
    RAPIST-ARREST 

    TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- A man who served eight years in a California prison
    for raping a teen-age hitchhiker and chopping off her forearms with an
    ax was arrested Wednesday night in the slaying of a woman in his home.
    Lawrence Singleton, 69, was arrested after police responding to a call
    about a domestic dispute made the grisly discovery. "They framed me the
    first time, but this time I did it," said Singleton, his hands cuffed
    behind his back, as he was leaving a police substation for the trip to
    jail. 
   
    SCHOOL SHOOTING 

    BETHEL, Alaska (AP) -- One of three classmates wounded in a shotgun
    rampage at a high school has reportedly died. Television state KTUU
    reports that Josh Palacios, a junior at Bethel Regional High School,
    died after surgery. Principal Ron Edwards died at a nearby hospital.
    Police say a 16-year-old junior carrying a shotgun and a paper bag full
    of shells chased fellow teens through high school hallways. Police say
    he also wounded two other students and exchanged shots with police
    before he surrendered. Witnesses said other students, hit by shotgun
    pellets in the arm and shoulder, were less seriously hurt. 
   
    CAMPAIGN-SUBPOENAS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Aides say the Senate panel investigating 1996
    campaign finance abuses subpoenaed President Clinton's legal defense
    fund for records of contributions and money returned to donors. The
    subpoena requests documents on $460,000 that Charles Yah Lin Trie, an
    Arkansas friend of Clinton, delivered to the Presidential Legal Expense
    Trust last March, said a Senate Governmental Affairs Committee aide.
    The legal defense fund was set up to pay for lawyers retained by the
    Clintons for the Whitewater probe and the defense of sexual harassment
    allegations in a lawsuit filed by Paula Jones. 
   
    FLORIDA-BUSH 

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -- Republican Jeb Bush, defeated in 1994 in the
    closest governor's race in Florida history, plans another shot at the
    governor's mansion next year. "I still have the passion for this," Bush
    said. "I'm still enthusiastic about having the opportunity to serve."
    Bush, 44, said he probably won't make a formal announcement before late
    fall. 
   
    COURT-ABORTION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court says anti-abortion demonstrators
    can confront clinic patients up close on public streets -- even if the
    patients ask to be left alone. The court struck down a federal judge's
    order that had kept most demonstrators at abortion clinics in the
    Buffalo and Rochester, N.Y., areas at least 15 feet away from patients
    or staff members. The court said it violated free-speech rights, but
    the panel still allowed a fixed buffer zone outside abortion clinics. 
   
    COURT-TRAFFIC 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Police can order all passengers -- not just the
    driver -- out of vehicles stopped for routine traffic offenses, the
    Supreme Court said. "Regrettably, traffic stops may be dangerous
    encounters" for police, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist wrote in a
    decision hailed by police groups. The 7-2 decision in a Maryland case
    said ordering passengers not suspected of wrongdoing out of a car is
    only a "minimal" intrusion on their rights. 
   
    D.C.-MAYOR 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A financial control board established by Congress to
    oversee the problem-plagued District of Columbia's municipal government
    will move next week to strip Mayor Marion Barry of some of his
    authority over the city's police force, the panel's chairman said
    Wednesday. Control board chairman Andrew Brimmer and Barry were briefed
    on a consulting firm's review of the 3,600-member police force. It
    found that the D.C. police department "hasn't been effective and is too
    political," according to sources. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was traded at 124.51 yen on the Tokyo foreign
    exchange market at 9 a.m. Thursday, up 0.87 yen. The Nikkei Stock
    Average rose 233.38 to 18,832.50. In New York, the Dow closed at
    7,020.13, down 47.33. The Nasdaq was at 1,365.58, down 0.21. 
   
    TENNIS-AGASSI 

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- Gustavo Kuerten added insult to Andre Agassi's
    injury Wednesday night by beating the world's 14th-ranked player 6-2,
    6-4 for his first victory ever over a top 20 player. Agassi, seeded
    second in the St. Jude Classic, reinjured his left ankle but finished
    the match. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.753IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:52121
    RTw  19-Feb-97 21:56    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BEIJING - China's paramount leader Deng Xiaoping died late on Wednesday
    of complications from Parkinson's disease and a lung infection, the
    Xinhua news agency said. The announcement of Deng's death was made in a
    letter to the Communist Party, the People's Liberation Army and the
    people of various ethnic groups throughout China, Xinhua said. Deng
    died at 21.08 p.m. (1308 GMT) at the age of 93, Xinhua said. 

    WASHINGTON - U.S. officials said the death of Deng Xiaoping would
    probably have little effect on the functioning of the country. There
    was no immediate formal reaction in Washington to Deng's death, but
    State Department spokesman Glyn Davies said he expected that Secretary
    of State Madeleine Albright would go ahead with an already planned trip
    to China next week. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to build
    a new Jewish neighbourhood in Arab East Jerusalem in a move quickly
    slammed by Palestinian President Yasser Arafat. 

    - - - - 

    RAMALLAH, West Bank - A Palestinian group opposed to PLO-Israel peace
    deals said it was ready to participate in talks with the Jewish state
    on final status of the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. But Tayseer
    Khaled, a politburo member of the Damascus-based Democratic Front for
    the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) demanded that the Palestinian
    Authority first consult all Palestinian factions on the talks through a
    national dialogue. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peruvian rescue workers have so far recovered 47 bodies from the
    site of a mudslide that buried two remote Andean villages, a local
    official said. Rescuers said at least 150 people more were feared
    buried after an Andean mountainside collapsed on the villages of Ccocha
    and Pumaranra in southeast Peru before dawn on Tuesday in a torrent of
    mud and rocks. 

    - - - - 

    ELBASAN, Albania - Albanian President Sali Berisha, under attack by
    thousands of investors who lost money in fraudulent pyramid investment
    schemes, stepped up a campaign to win back popular support. Amid heavy
    security, he travelled to this central town to explain his government's
    handling of the scandal which has engulfed Europe's poorest nation. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korea said talks were stalled on the fate of a senior
    North Korean defector in Seoul's Beijing embassy, and the head of the
    South's ruling party said Pyongyang was nearing a final crisis. A
    Foreign Ministry spokesman denied a Japanese newspaper report that
    China and South Korea had agreed that Hwang Jang-yop, ranked 24th in
    Pyongyang's hierarchy, could leave Beijing for asylum in South Korea as
    early as this week. 

    BEIJING - China  called for a solution to the crisis over Hwang,
    hinting for the first time in its domestic media that the senior
    ideologue had sought refuge of his own free will. 

    - - - - 

    BRUSSELS - The NATO allies agreed sweeping changes to a landmark arms
    control treaty limiting conventional forces in Europe in the latest
    attempt to soothe Russian concern over the alliance's plans to enlarge
    eastwards. 

    MOSCOW - Russian leaders kept silent on U.S. Secretary of State
    Madeleine Albright's proposal to create a joint Russian-NATO brigade,
    saying they needed more details before responding. But the idea, part
    of measures designed to reassure Moscow over NATO's plans to expand
    towards Russia's doorstep, was greeted with mistrust by communists and
    nationalists who accused Albright of trying "to cheat Orthodox
    Christians." 

    - - - - 

    KIEV - Ukraine's parliament failed to ratify a long-standing deal with
    Russia under which Moscow bears the burden of all former Soviet debt
    while Kiev renounces claims to Soviet gold, hard currency and other
    property. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - South Africa's Nelson Mandela said he would host a meeting
    between Zaire's government and rebels but there was no immediate
    confirmation in Kinshasa that the authorities there would take part.
    Zairean Foreign Minister Kamanda wa Kamanda told Reuters that it was
    too early to comment on the announcement by Mandela in Cape Town that
    he would host the meeting as early as Thursday in response to a request
    from the two sides. 

    - - - - 

    DUSHANBE - Gunmen have killed seven people, including a Russian
    serviceman and two Russians employed by the U.S. embassy, in a spate of
    attacks in the Tajik capital a day after the end of a two-week
    international hostage crisis. Unidentified assailants attacked various
    residential areas in the west of the city on Tuesday night. 

    - - - - 

    STRASBOURG, France - The European Parliament adopted a scathing report
    condemning European Commission President Jacques Santer and Britain for
    serious errors in the mad cow crisis, but stopped short of immediate
    sanctions. 

    - - - - 

    ANKARA - The Turkish parliament voted against sending Deputy Prime
    Minister Tansu Ciller to the Supreme Court for investigation into the
    sources of her considerable personal wealth.  

    REUTER 
7.754IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:53158
    AP 19-Feb-1997 23:35 EST   REF5253

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Deng Xiaoping Dies at 93

    By CHARLES HUTZLER

    Associated Press Writer

    BEIJING (AP) -- Deng Xiaoping, the last of China's great Communist
    revolutionaries, who abandoned Mao's radical policies and pushed the
    world's most populous nation into the global community with
    capitalist-style reforms, died Wednesday. 

    Xinhua, China's official news agency, said he was 93, although the
    birth date in most records would have made him 92 when he died. 

    Though Deng retired from his last official post in 1990 and had not
    been seen in public for three years, he spent much of the past decade
    orchestrating Chinese politics from behind the scenes with a loosely
    defined title: "paramount leader." 

    While he put an end to the iron rice bowl -- lifetime jobs for all --
    he ruled with an iron fist. The military suppression of the 1989
    Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests -- believed to have taken place
    on his final orders -- killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, and put a
    blot on the economic progress Deng had achieved. 

    He died at 9:08 p.m. (8:08 a.m. EST) of respiratory and circulatory
    failure brought on by lung infections and the Parkinson's disease that
    had stricken him long ago, the state-run Xinhua News Agency announced
    early Thursday. 

    The first test of Deng's legacy will be whether his handpicked
    successor, Communist Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin, and the other
    younger technocrats he installed in the 1990s will weather political
    maneuvering that is expected to intensify in the coming months. 

    A meeting of China's national legislature next month, the return of
    Hong Kong to Chinese rule on July 1 and a party congress to reshuffle
    top posts due in the fall will provide chances for the politically
    ambitious. 

    No one is expected to supplant Jiang, who received a boost in claiming
    Deng's mantle by being named chairman of Deng's 459-member funeral
    committee. 

    Yet the younger aspirants lack Deng's clout, especially with the
    all-important military and the few remaining powerful party elders.
    Successors will have to continue to manage by building consensus among
    influential constituencies. 

    The announcement of Deng's death came about 3 a.m., when most of
    Beijing was sleeping. It took about six hours before it was broadcast
    on state-run television or radio, relatively quickly for China: When
    Mao died in 1976, the announcement took two days. 

    Taiwan, the seat of the Nationalist government that lost the mainland
    to the Communists in 1949, immediately put its military on heightened
    alert Wednesday, state radio reported. 

    Many Chinese only became convinced of the news of Deng's death when
    China's five-star red flag was raised and then lowered to half-staff at
    dawn on Tiananmen Square. 

    "That today we are living well is entirely thanks to Deng Xiaoping.
    None of my family could believe it when the news said he was dead,"
    said a 64-year-old retired factory worker, Mrs. Cui. She cried and
    anxiously clutched her hands. "We were all very sad." 

    China's Central Committee proclaimed "with profound grief to the whole
    party, the whole army and the people of all ethnic groups throughout
    the country that our beloved Comrade Deng ... passed away," Xinhua
    said. 

    There were no signs that leaders had dispatched large numbers of troops
    or police around the city. About 10 uniformed guards in green padded
    coats, carrying AK-47s, stood watch outside the alley to Deng's home
    near the palace where China's emperors ruled for 500 years. 

    The extra security likely was aimed at protecting the top leaders and
    aging revolutionaries who are expected to visit Deng's family in coming
    days. 

    The funeral committee announced a mourning period, to begin immediately
    and end after a memorial meeting, Xinhua said. It gave no date for the
    ceremony, but the committee said no foreign dignitaries will be
    invited. 

    Plaudits from abroad, however, poured in immediately. 

    President Clinton called Deng "an extraordinary figure on the world
    stage" for the past two decades and credited him with being "the
    driving force" behind China's decision to normalize relations with the
    United States. 

    Confirmation of Deng's death came after days of rumors that his health
    had worsened -- not an unusual occurrence in recent years. 

    Deng succeeded Mao Tse-tung in the nearly two-year power struggle that
    followed the revolutionary leader's death in 1976. 

    China was riven by fear and poverty after the decade-long Cultural
    Revolution, an experiment in radical policies during which millions
    were persecuted or killed for political reasons. 

    Deng immediately put China on the road to a market economy, seeking
    foreign investment and encouraging the world's most populated country
    to set about making money. 

    "It doesn't matter if a cat is black or white, as long as it catches
    mice," was his most famous saying. 

    He abolished farming communes, allowed some private enterprises and
    established special economic zones to produce goods for export. 

    Under his reforms in the 1980s, peasants and workers could afford such
    luxuries as televisions, refrigerators and washing machines for the
    first time. Many city residents now own private cars and mobile phones. 

    Deng, who married three times and had five children, was born to a
    landowner in the southwest province of Sichuan on Aug. 22, 1904. At 16,
    he went to France on a work-study program and joined the Communist
    Party. 

    Back in China, he became a guerrilla leader and party officer. Purged
    briefly in the 1930s for backing Mao's unorthodox guerrilla tactics, he
    joined the 1934-35 "Long March" flight from Chiang Kai-shek's
    Nationalists. 

    Noted for his sharp intellect and superior organizational skills, Deng
    became a political commissar in the Communist army, fighting the
    Japanese from 1937-45 and the Nationalists in the 1945-49 civil war. 

    Three years after the 1949 founding of the People's Republic of China,
    Deng became vice premier. By 1956, he was on the Politburo Standing
    Committee -- the most powerful ruling body. 

    But Deng's economic pragmatism and his ties to Mao's rivals within the
    Communist leadership twice put him in political disfavor during the
    Cultural Revolution. Sent to work at a tractor factory, he returned to
    the leadership in 1973, only to be purged once again in 1976. 

    In 1977, he was rehabilitated and once again named vice premier, which
    gave him the power he needed to get his reform plans moving. 

    Former U.S. Secretary of State George P. Shultz, who worked with Deng
    and China during much of the 1980s, said Deng was tempered by his days
    as a Communist guerrilla and never lost sight of them. 

    "He could be tough. He could also be brutal," Shultz said. "And you
    could see the spark of creativity that allowed him to put China on a
    new and productive path. He has transformed China and thereby has had
    an immense impact on the shape of the future." 

    Xinhua ended its lengthy obituary urging future generations of Chinese
    to remember that: "Eternal glory to Comrade Deng Xiaoping." 
7.755IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5364
    AP 20-Feb-1997 0:27 EST   REF5470

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Teen Kills School Principal

    By JIM CLARKE

    Associated Press Writer

    BETHEL, Alaska (AP) -- A teen-ager carrying a shotgun and a paper bag
    full of shells Wednesday allegedly chased fellow teens through high
    school hallways and killed his principal and a student. 

    The 16-year-old junior also wounded two other students and exchanged
    shots with police before he surrendered, said Ken Waugh, a state police
    spokesman. He said the motive for the shooting was not known. 

    Principal Ron Edwards died at a nearby hospital. Josh Palacios, a
    junior at Bethel Regional High School, died after surgery at a hospital
    in Anchorage, about 400 miles to the east, television state KTUU
    reported. 

    The other students, hit by shotgun pellets in the arm and shoulder,
    were less seriously hurt, witnesses said. 

    Police would not release the arrested teen-ager's name because he's a
    juvenile, but numerous witnesses in the town of 4,700 identified him as
    Evan Ramsey, foster son of the school superintendant and son of a
    locally notorious ex-convict. 

    Fellow students described Ramsey as a sullen, lonely teen-ager. 

    Witnesses said Ramsey entered the lobby with the shotgun in his right
    hand and the shells in his left and shot Palacios from about 15 feet
    away, then fired a shot into the ceiling. 

    Ramsey then wandered the hallways, shooting sporadically as teachers
    tried to talk him into dropping the shotgun, said Erick Hodgins, a
    senior who was hiding behind a planter in the lobby. 

    "I really wanted to help him because he'd been shot, but the guy with
    the shotgun was still out there," Hodgins said of Palacios. 

    The school's 435 students were sent home and counselors were brought to
    the town's Yup'ik Museum and Cultural Center, where about 50 students
    discussed the shooting in hushed tones. A prayer service was scheduled. 

    Bethel, at the mouth of the Kuskokwim River, is the regional center for
    the dozens of river villages that dot the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in
    southwest Alaska. Many residents speak both Yup'ik, a native tongue,
    and English. 

    Hodgins and other students said Ramsey may have sought out Palacios and
    Edwards. Palacios was a gregarious, popular teen who sometimes teased
    Ramsey; Edwards was a stern but kind principal who frequently gave
    Ramsey detention, said Rayna Blakesley, 15, who also witnessed the
    shootings. 

    Ramsey's father, Donald Ramsey, was released Jan. 13 after serving a
    decade in prison for assaulting the publisher of the Anchorage Times in
    1986. Armed with a rifle and a revolver, he chained the newspaper's
    doors behind him, tossed smoke bombs and fired several shots into the
    ceiling before he was tackled by publisher Bob Atwood, then 79. 
7.756IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5390
    AP 20-Feb-1997 0:21 EST   REF5451

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rapist Arrested in Slaying

    By LISA HOLEWA

    Associated Press Writer

    TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- A man who served eight years in a California prison
    for raping a teen-age hitchhiker and chopping off her forearms with an
    ax was arrested Wednesday night in the slaying of a woman in his home. 

    Lawrence Singleton, 69, was arrested after police responding to a call
    about a domestic dispute made the grisly discovery. 

    "They framed me the first time, but this time I did it," said
    Singleton, his hands cuffed behind his back, as he was leaving a police
    substation for the trip to jail. 

    Danny Sales, a neighbor, said Singleton told the deputy he had been
    chopping vegetables and cut himself. The phone rang, and when Singleton
    went back in, the bloody body of the naked woman was visible on the
    floor. 

    "He came out, and he had blood all over himself and on the side of his
    face," Sales, who accompanied a deputy to Singleton's door in the
    Orient Park area of eastern Hillsborough County, told television
    station WTVT. 

    No cause of death was immediately released, and authorities were
    seeking a search warrant to enter the home. It was not clear how the
    woman was connected to Singleton, who lived alone. 

    Hillsborough sheriff's spokesman Lt. David Gee said there were obvious
    signs of a struggle and that the woman, a middle-aged white female, had
    been stabbed repeatedly in the upper body. 

    Someone who had gone to the house said he found Singleton naked,
    standing over a naked woman, and immediately left and called 911, Gee
    said. 

    Sales' father, David Sales, said he was unaware of Singleton's
    notoriety until three weeks ago when he and his son pulled Singleton
    out of his van in front of his home after he tried to asphyxiate
    himself. 

    "We never knew all that but when I found out the first thing I thought
    was should I have left that man in there," David Sales said. "If I had
    known, I probably would have at least given it a second thought." 

    In California, Singleton drew public ire when he was freed eight years,
    four months into a 14-year sentence for the 1978 mutilation-rape of a
    15-year-old hitchhiker, who was left to die along a road. She survived
    and testified against him. 

    After he was paroled in 1987, prison authorities shuttled him from city
    to city as residents staged angry demonstrations and even filed suit to
    keep him out of their communities. They wound up housing him in a
    mobile home on the grounds of San Quentin Prison until his parole ended
    in 1988. 

    Donald Stahl, the Stanislaus County, Calif., district attorney, had
    said after Singleton was finally set free that he was "very dangerous
    and unstable." 

    "I think he's operating under a delusion (of innocence)," Stahl said.
    "I don't know what will happen when the pressure gets to be too much or
    if he falls off the wagon." 

    News of the slaying in Florida came as little surprise Wednesday night
    to some of the people who helped drive Singleton out of California. 

    "He did a dastardly thing the first time to that young lady. If this is
    true, it was just like something waiting to happen," Nancy Fahden, a
    former Contra Costa County supervisor. "He was sick in the head. I
    don't think he should ever have been let out of jail." 

    "I hope they throw away the key. I'm hoping that this is his third
    strike and this is out," said Janet Callaghan, who was president of a
    Rodeo, Calif., citizens association in 1987 when a mob of 500 residents
    surrounded Singleton's apartment and forced him to leave town. 

    Singleton ultimately returned to his home state of Florida, where he
    has had several run-ins with police, Gee said. 

    In 1991, he was sentenced to two years in jail for shoplifting a $3 hat
    at a Plant City, Fla., Wal-Mart. In 1990, he served 45 days for swiping
    a $10 disposable camera from a drug store. 
7.757IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5357
    AP 19-Feb-1997 23:54 EST   REF5412

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Panel Seeks To Limit D.C. Mayor

    By JANELLE CARTER

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A financial control board established by Congress to
    oversee the problem-plagued District of Columbia's municipal government
    will move next week to strip Mayor Marion Barry of some of his
    authority over the city's police force, the panel's chairman said
    Wednesday. 

    A "redistribution of authority" will be included in action to be taken
    next week, control board chairman Andrew Brimmer said after he, Barry
    and other city officials were briefed on a consulting firm's review of
    the 3,600-member police force. 

    The review, by Booz-Allen and Hamilton, concluded that the police
    department "hasn't been effective and is too political," according to
    sources familiar with the findings who spoke on the condition of
    anonymity. 

    It recommended loosening Barry's political grip on the department and
    said more police resources should be devoted to stopping drug violence
    and closing down open-air drug markets. 

    The review was commissioned by local law enforcement officials after
    the district's homicide rate climbed 10 percent last year in contrast
    to declining numbers of murders in many cities across the country. 

    The consultants said Barry can overrule Police Chief Larry Soulsby on
    dozens of appointments down to the rank of captain, noting that such
    mayoral authority is rare among large municipal police departments. 

    "All of the recommendations are on the table," Barry said upon emerging
    from the three-hour briefing with the consultants. 

    The consultants' final report isn't due until March, but Brimmer
    indicated his board will not wait until then to take action. 

    "What we are saying is that the (police) chief should have as much
    authority as he feels he needs," he said of the actions he said are to
    be taken next week. 

    Barry, who was re-elected mayor in 1994 after serving a prison sentence
    for a cocaine violation, denied earlier that he has interfered with
    police operations. 

    "What am I not letting the chief do?" Barry said in response to
    published reports about consultants' review. "He picked his seven
    district commanders. I haven't disagreed on any promotions. They're all
    his people. He's leading the department. It's a tough department to
    lead." 
7.758IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5381
    AP 19-Feb-1997 23:48 EST   REF5392

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Principal Suspended in Test Flap

    By DENISE LAVOIE

    Associated Press Writer

    FAIRFIELD, Conn. (AP) -- The principal of a prestigious elementary
    school was suspended with pay Wednesday night after an eight-month
    probe found him responsible for tampering with test results to inflate
    student scores. 

    The school board's 8-1 vote to begin termination hearings against Roger
    Previs, who had earlier passed a lie detector test, was loudly booed by
    parents in the packed, 700-seat auditorium. 

    "What are we supposed to tell our children?" shouted one parent. 

    The scandal at Stratfield, an award-winning elementary school that
    consistently outscored other schools in the state on Connecticut skills
    exams, stunned parents, many of whom had moved to this 53,000-resident
    suburb of New York City to enroll their children at Stratfield. 

    The school board spent more than $100,000 investigating the allegations
    by the publisher of the Iowa Test of Basic Skills, which showed
    evidence of widespread tampering on tests taken by third- and
    fifth-graders at the school in January 1996. 

    The Riverside Publishing Co. said it found an erasure rate on
    Stratfield answer sheets that was three to five times higher than the
    rate at two other top-performing Fairfield elementary schools. Of the
    answers that were erased, 89 percent were changed from the wrong answer
    to the correct answer. 

    Two months after those allegations, a similar pattern of tampering was
    found on the school's Connecticut Mastery Test results. 

    A state Department of Education official Wednesday night also said she
    found tampering in the results of the 1993, 1994 and 1995 Connecticut
    Mastery Test. 

    The official, Betty Sternberg, stopped short of saying that Previs was
    responsible for tampering with that test's results, but said the
    department was unable to exclude him. 

    Previs attended the meeting but referred all questions to his attorney,
    Howard Klebanoff, who called the charges unfounded. He said Previs had
    cooperated fully and wants his termination hearings open to the public. 

    "We want a total openness in this process, because we feel the cloud of
    suspicion will rapidly be lifted," Klebanoff said. 

    "He will fight to prove that the charges are unfounded and defend his
    reputation and integrity," Klebanoff added, "and of the school and of
    the very children who are innocently involved in this whole situation." 

    The school board launched an investigation of the charges in June,
    prompted in part by parents who did not believe anyone had done any
    tampering. 

    After Wednesday's ruling, some parents still refused to believe
    tampering had occurred, saying the board relied too heavily on a
    statistical analysis and not enough on hard evidence. 

    Parents also strongly criticized the board for its harsh actions
    against Previs, Stratfield's principal for 12 years. 

    "I think that the school got to the pinnacle of its success ... due to
    the direction and efforts of that man. That cannot ever be taken away
    from this school," said Len Scinto, the father of a first-grade boy. 

    The investigation included an analysis by renowned forensic expert
    Henry Lee, who found irregularities on the answer sheets, but did not
    conclusively determine that tampering had occurred. 

    Stratfield has won numerous academic awards, including two blue ribbons
    from the U.S. Education Department. In 1993, Redbook magazine listed
    Stratfield as one of the best elementary schools in the nation. 
7.759IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5349
    AP 19-Feb-1997 23:15 EST   REF5087

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Three Convicted Of Bank Fraud

    By SAMUEL MAULL

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Three bankers from a Venezuelan family were convicted
    Wednesday of fraud and larceny in a bank scam that ultimately cost
    their government more than $8 billion in a bailout. 

    Orlando Castro Llanes, 71, his son Orlando Castro Castro, 46, both of
    Key Biscayne, Fla., and his grandson, Jorge Castro Barredo, 28, of
    Miami, were convicted of fraud. The younger two also were convicted of
    grand larceny. 

    The two younger Castros face up to 25 years in prison and Castro Llanes
    faces up to four years at his March 20 sentencing. Defense attorney
    Richard Sharpstein said they will appeal. 

    The Castros' part of the scam involved the theft of some $15 million
    from the Banco Progreso Internacional de Puerto Rico, which they
    controlled. 

    Assistant District Attorney Joseph Preiss said the Castros made illegal
    loans to themselves, propped up other institutions they controlled, and
    made risky, unauthorized investments using the bank's funds. 

    Castro Barredo used the money he stole to buy luxuries, including a
    boat and an airplane, and concealed the theft by manipulating the bank
    books, Preiss said. 

    Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau claimed jurisdiction on
    the grounds that some of those transactions involved checks that were
    payable through New York banks. 

    But Sharpstein told the jury, "This case does not belong here. Nothing
    happened in New York, at all. No depositor in New York lost a nickel." 

    Sharpstein said Venezuelan officials framed Castro Llanes by making it
    appear that the country's bank failures were his fault. The banks
    failed, he said, because of the government's incompetent management of
    the economy. 

    Venezuela's banking problems reportedly cost that government $8 billion
    paid to depositors, including depositors to the Puerto Rican bank. 
7.760IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5331
    AP 19-Feb-1997 23:17 EST   REF5100

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S. Korea To Give North Food Aid

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Responding to a U.N. appeal, South Korea
    will donate $6 million in emergency food aid to impoverished North
    Korea, the government said Thursday. 

    The South made the pledge despite mounting tension between the two
    Koreas over two recent incidents in particular: the defection of a
    high-ranking Pyongyang official, who is currently in Beijing, and the
    shooting of a second North Korean defector in Seoul last week. 

    The $6 million is twice the amount South Korea provided to the North in
    food aid last year through the U.N. World Food Program. 

    "The government plans to participate, from a humanitarian point of
    view," the Unification Ministry, which is in charge of North Korean
    affairs, said in a statement. How the money will be spent will be
    decided later with U.N. officials, it said. 

    The Rome-based World Food Program issued its appeal earlier this month
    -- the third in a year -- for 110,000 tons of grain worth $41 million
    to help alleviate an acute food shortage in North Korea. 

    The United States has agreed to provide $10 million. 

    U.N. officials working in North Korea warn that the communist country
    will face a famine this spring unless large-scale food aid is given. 
7.761IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5360
    AP 19-Feb-1997 22:00 EST   REF6078

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Spanish Truckers End Strike

    By CIARAN GILES

    Associated Press Writer

    MADRID, Spain (AP) -- Spanish truckers, whose two-week strike crippled
    production at some European car manufacturers, agreed Wednesday night
    to end their walkout, despite the government's refusal to give in to
    their demands. 

    Following a fifth meeting with government negotiators, strike leaders
    said they were convinced an agreement could be reached in the future on
    their principal demands. 

    The thousands of striking truckers, from a group that makes up about 30
    percent of Spain's estimated 200,000 truck drivers, demanded fuel
    subsidies, a freeze on truck-driving licenses, recognition of
    job-related illnesses and the lowering of the retirement age from 65 to
    60. 

    The National Transport Committee, which represents other Spanish
    truckers, supported the group's demands but abandoned the strike on
    Saturday. 

    The strike forced delays and stoppages at some European car
    manufacturers and provoked violence between picketing truckers and
    those who returned to work. 

    Opel, a General Motors subsidiary, told most of its 20,000 employees in
    Germany to stay home because car parts did not arrive from Spain.
    Volkswagen in Wolfsburg, Germany, told some 3,500 workers the same
    thing. 

    In Portugal, Renault's plant at Palmela, south of Lisbon, had been
    forced to stop production of the Clio. 

    One engine-parts manufacturer sidestepped the strikers by flying
    products by helicopter from its plant in Santander, Spain, to the
    airport in that northern city. There, they were loaded onto planes and
    flown to car-manufacturing factories in England, France and Italy. 

    On Wednesday, two trucks were attacked by gasoline bombs outside the
    northern city of Burgos, causing extensive damage. A driver also was
    injured when he was hit by a rock near the northeastern town of Lodosa.

    Some 300 trucks, many from France, Germany, the Netherlands and other
    European countries, were lined up on the outskirts of Santander.
    Picketers punctured tires and smashed windshields on many trucks. 

    Some strike-defying truckers managed to make deliveries as police tried
    to keep roads open and provide escorts. 

    The strike has not seriously affected other key factories or businesses
    in Spain, although there were some reports of shortages in fish and
    dairy products to markets in the north. 
7.762IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5338
    RTw  20-Feb-97 06:46    

    Web hackers may threaten bank accounts-magazine

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Feb 20 (Reuter) - German hackers have found a way to trick
    people into transferring money into the computer robbers' bank
    accounts, New Scientist magazine reported on Thursday. 

    Anyone using Intuit Inc's popular Quicken programme to do their
    banking, and then surfing the World Wide Web, could be at risk, it
    added. 

    It quoted the Chaos Computer Club as saying it could hide a malicious
    computer programme known as an "applet" in a web site. The applet would
    surreptitiously transfer itself into a person's computer when they
    dialled up that site. 

    Once inside, it would search for Quicken, a financial management
    programme that can be used to manage bank accounts via a modem. 

    The next time the unwitting victim dials up the bank to pay a bill or
    even check his or her balance, the applet slips in an order telling the
    bank to transfer money to the hacker's account. 

    The first thing the victim will know is when a surprising bank
    statement arrives. "It certainly is something that is a valid concern,"
    said Tony Macklin of Intuit's London office. He said Intuit was looking
    for ways to close the loophole. 

    New Scientist said the Computer Emergency Response Team at Pittsburgh's
    Carnegie Mellon University had issued a warning about ActiveX -- the
    computer language the applets are written in -- and a similar language
    Java. But they said they had not received any reports yet of someone
    falling victim to an applet.

    REUTER
7.763IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5345
    RTw  20-Feb-97 06:46    

    British body ponders screening for mental diseases

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, Feb 20 (Reuter) - A committee of doctors, scientists,
    philosophers and other experts said on Thursday it would conduct a
    public study on the ethics of genetically screening people for mental
    disorders. 

    The Nuffield Council on Bioethics, set up specifically to study such
    issues, said it would invite comment from anyone on the subject. 

    Pre-natal tests are now available for most diseases caused by a single
    gene, including muscular dystrophy and cystic fibrosis. Genes have also
    been found that show a risk of Huntington's disease, a neurological
    disorder, and mental disorders such as schizophrenia and even
    depression. 

    Healthcare workers routinely screen pregnant women for the genetic flaw
    that causes Down's syndrome, which brings mental retardation, and in
    many countries, including Britain, women can abort Down's syndrome
    foetuses if they wish. 

    "Developments in our understanding of mental disorders and genetics
    combine two important issues of our time," Fiona Caldicott, former
    president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists and chairwoman of the
    inquiry, said in a statement. 

    The committee said it would report in late 1997 and invited public
    comment, either via mail or on its world wide web site. 

    Questions it would consider included whether doctors could be held to
    blame for diagnosing or misdiagnosing a genetic tendency to a mental
    disorder, whether parents could be sued for having a child with mental
    problems and how people would cope with knowing they had a genetic
    tendency to mental illness. 

    On Tuesday the Association of British Insurers said its members would
    not require genetic testing for policyholders for at least two years
    but would require those who had taken genetic tests to disclose the
    fact.

    REUTER
7.764IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5376
    RTos 20-Feb-97 04:59    

    FCC Makes Available 311 for Non-Emergency Calls

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - To ease congestion on 911 emergency lines, the
    Federal Communications Commission made available to police departments
    nationwide Wednesday a 311 number that people can call in non-emergency
    situations. 

    It comes as calls about barking dogs, open fire hydrants and other
    non-life-threatening events have tied up 911 operators across the
    nation. That has diverted police resources and made it harder for those
    with an emergency to get through. 

    "We would get calls anywhere from a squirrel being in a home to a tree
    falling down. I can remember personally getting a call from a woman who
    lost a quarter at the Laundromat," said Agent Robert Weinhold, a
    spokesman for Baltimore's police department. It is operating a
    successful 311 pilot program. 

    President Clinton endorsed creation of the nationwide system last
    summer. Police departments around the country will have the option to
    use the 311 code, without having to seek prior approval from state
    regulators. Departments will not be required to use the new number. 

    The FCC also made available the number 711 on a nationwide basis to a
    special service that allows persons with hearing or speech disabilities
    to use the phone. 

    The volume of 911 calls has skyrocketed, averaging 268,000 a day
    nationwide, according to the Justice Department. Communitities have
    seen jumps of as much as 50 percent a year. 

    Estimates of non-emergency calls, for example, range from 70 percent of
    all 911 calls in Norfolk, Va., to 90 percent in Arapahoe County, Colo.
    In Los Angeles, 325,000 frusturated callers hung up on 911 in 1995
    after not getting help. 

    "...A lot of the 911 numbers were breaking down because 911 was being
    clogged up not only by genuine emergencies, but by other legitimate
    calls that weren't really emergencies," President Clinton told students
    Wednesday at the Boston campus of the University of Massachusetts. 

    Attorney General Janet Reno said the new system will make the 911
    system "more responsive." She said it also will "alleviate the present
    burden on 911 and at the same time better serve the American people." 

    The pilot 311 program started in Baltimore last October has drawn rave
    reviews from local law-enforcement officials. 

    The new system has cut the number of 911 calls to the department by a
    third. That allows police officers to devote more time to community
    policing efforts, such as going out on foot. 

    "They're not '911 secretaries' running from one call to the next," said
    Weinhold. Prior to the pilot program, the department's 911 operators
    handled 5,000 calls a day -- many not involving life or death
    situations. 

    The department has received enquiries about its pilot system from other
    police departments, mayors, governors, and even Britain's famed
    Scotland Yard. 

    Not everybody is happy about the new system. 

    The National Emergency Number Association, whose members include 911
    operators and law-enforcement agencies, fears the availability of two
    numbers will lead to more confusion -- especially among the elderly --
    about which number to call. 

    The group also said the new system will require more equipment,
    personnel and money. 

    REUTER
7.765IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5348
    RTw  20-Feb-97 01:31    

    Madonna devastated by ``Evita'' Oscar miss - Parker

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BUENOS AIRES, Feb 19 (Reuter) - Pop star Madonna is "devastated" over
    Hollywood's failure to nominate her for an Oscar for best actress in
    the title role of "Evita," director Alan Parker said in an interview
    published on Wednesday. 

    "Madonna is a great actress and she's devastated," Parker told the
    Argentine daily Clarin. "She had hoped that, after winning the Golden
    Globe award, she would be nominated (for an Oscar)." 

    Parker arrived in Buenos Aires last week for the Argentine premiere of
    his movie, a film adaptation of the Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber
    stage musical, which won three Golden Globe awards in January,
    including best actress for Madonna. The Golden Globes are awarded by
    the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. 

    In a news conference on Monday, Parker had admitted he was disappointed
    but said he was not overly concerned that "Evita" picked up only five
    minor Oscar nominations. He told Clarin Madonna would attend the
    Academy Awards ceremony on March 24 and he was thinking of joining her. 

    The British filmmaker said he enjoyed filming with Madonna and admired
    her for her strong personality and hard work. He also admitted he was
    tense during Monday's Buenos Aires premiere in a theatre cordoned off
    by police. 

    "I was pretty nervous. But I enjoyed the premiere and was happy it
    happened and was finally all over with," Parker said. 

    The invitation-only screening took place a day after Vice President
    Carlos Ruckauf called for a popular boycott of "Evita," which depicts
    Argentina's legendary first lady Eva Peron as a scheming woman who uses
    sex to gain power. 

    "I've spoken with many Argentines and nobody is taking (Ruckauf)
    seriously," Parker said. 

    The film was denounced by some politicians and others as historically
    inaccurate and even slanderous. But Parker insisted he had tried to be
    balanced and noted the suject was highly emotional in Argentina, where
    many still worship the wife of President Juan Peron as a saint. 

    REUTER
7.766IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Feb 20 1997 09:5393
    RTos 20-Feb-97 01:17    

    Albright Heads For Russia

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Secretary of State Madeleine Albright ended
    consultations with allies Wednesday ahead of talks in Moscow in which
    she will outline new sweeteners aimed at assuaging Russia's fierce
    objections to NATO enlargement. 

    "My purpose in going to Moscow is to lay out... a package that would
    make it clear to the Russians that enlargement of NATO is something
    positive (and) is based on creating a new sense of stability in central
    and eastern Europe," she said. 

    At a news conference with British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind,
    Albright said the package would be comprised of the conventional arms
    reduction proposal NATO approved Wednesday and a more detailed proposal
    for a Russia-NATO charter that includes the concept of forming a joint
    military unit. 

    She also said that in talks with Russian leaders she would "make it
    clear that they are repected members of the international community and
    they have global reponsibilities." 

    She leaves London Thursday for talks with Prime Minister Viktor
    Chernomyrdin and Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov in Moscow. She sees
    President Boris Yeltsin Friday. 

    Albright declined to say whether a Russian demand for full inclusion in
    the Group of Seven leading industrial nations would be met. A senior
    U.S. official told Reuters this is not something the allies have agreed
    on. 

    London was the fifth stop on Albright's first overseas trip as top U.S.
    diplomat, a nine-nation tour of Europe and Asia. 

    Her main goal in Europe was to solidify NATO support for NATO
    enlargement and the sweetners, something accomplished at an alliance
    foreign ministers meeting Tuesday. 

    Her last stop was to be Beijing on Feb 24. But officials said that
    visit was now uncertain because of the death of China's paramount
    leader Deng Xiaoping. 

    The alliance is due to formally decide which former Warsaw Pact states
    to invite to become the first new post-Cold War members at a July
    summit in Madrid. Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic are the top
    contenders. 

    Albright has made a point of making expansion appear inevitable,
    despite continued Russia opposition to the idea. 

    Even as she extends olive branches to Moscow with one hand, she had
    made clear in repeated statements that expansion will proceed whether
    or not Russia cooperates in negotiating a charter defining a special
    relationship. 

    Tuesday, Albright offered a new but still vague sweetener to Moscow in
    a proposal to create a joint NATO-Russia military unit for peacekeeping
    or other uses and a promise of close consultation at all levels of
    NATO's command structure. 

    Wednesday, the alliance approved a proposal for significant cuts in
    conventional arms in Europe below levels in the 1990 Conventional
    Forces in Europe treaty. Albright will cite this in Moscow as proof an
    expanded NATO would be non-threatening. 

    While specific numbers must be negotiated, a U.S. official said under
    the CFE proposal, NATO, which now has a three-to-one advantage over
    Russia, has vowed to slash further ground equipment like tanks,
    armoured personnel carriers and artillery. 

    CFE already has caused the United States, Russia and others of the
    pact's 30 signatories to eliminate more than 58,000 pieces of equipment
    from their forces in Europe. 

    The alliance has proposed to set national limits on arms, rather than
    the bloc-to-bloc limits now in the treaty. The proposal also inludes
    territorial limits, which would effectively cap foreign forces in a
    country, officials said. 

    The proposal establishes a "sensitive geographic region" in central
    Europe comprising Kaliningrad, Ukraine, Slovakia, Belarus, the Czech
    republic, Hungary and Poland and argues that ground equipment in that
    area cannot increase, officials said. 

    That means if Washington decided to deploy equipment in an expected new
    NATO member country like Poland, for instance, Poland's equipment
    levels must be decreased, they said.

    REUTER
7.767IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:58112
    AP 21-Feb-1997 1:00 EST   REF5653

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, Feb. 21, 1997
   
    PLANE-CRASH 

    COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) -- An army plane carrying about 50 soldiers
    crashed shortly after take-off Friday from a base near Colombo,
    military officials said. It was not immediately clear how many people
    were hurt or killed in the crash. The cause of the crash was not known.
    The plane was headed to northern Sri Lanka, where the army has been
    advancing against rebels in recent weeks. 
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Their restoration of the Hubble Space
    Telescope completed, Discovery's astronauts aimed for a rare,
    middle-of-the-night shuttle landing early Friday. Their scheduled
    arrival time: 3:32 a.m. They were supposed to land 1 1/2 hours earlier,
    but low clouds moved in at the last minute and kept the shuttle in
    orbit. Another option being considered, if the weather did not improve,
    was to send Discovery to the backup landing site at Edwards Air Force
    Base in California. Only eight of the 81 previous space shuttle flights
    have ended in darkness. 
   
    BOMBING-TRIAL 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's lawyer claims the Oklahoma City
    bombing trial will forever change Americans' perceptions of their
    country. "If you know what I know, and someday you will, you'll never
    think about the United States again in the same way," Stephen Jones
    told the Colorado Associated Press Editors and Reporters meeting. He
    didn't elaborate. McVeigh could face death if convicted in the bombing
    of the federal building. 
   
    PRISON EMERGENCY 

    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -- State prison officials prepared Thursday to move
    scores of inmates to Arizona after discovering an underground tunnel
    and plans for a riot at one penitentiary. The warden, Tim LeMaster,
    said in court papers that inmates planned a riot in which they planned
    to "stab as many people as possible and kill everyone." Officials
    ordered a lockdown at the facility Wednesday, and inmates remained in
    their cells with privileges suspended on Thursday. Authorities found
    the tunnel -- 30 to 35 feet long, 3 feet high and 3 feet wide -- in a
    prison basement. 
   
    CAMPAIGN MONEY 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A House counsel says ex-Clinton administration aide
    Webster Hubbell and Democratic fund-raiser John Huang have said they
    will refuse to turn over subpoenaed documents. They are key figures in
    the Democratic fund-raising controversy. Hubbell and Huang informed the
    House Government Reform and Oversight Committee by letter of their
    decision, the panel's chief investigative counsel said. Joseph
    diGenova, a former U.S. attorney, said their Fifth Amendment claim
    would not hold up in court and appeared to be made simply to delay the
    panel's investigation. 
   
    FEMALE PILOT 

    MINOT AIR FORCE BASE, N.D. (AP) -- The Air Force's first female bomber
    pilot qualified to fly in combat faces court-martial. Her base cites
    charges of adultery and other military infractions. First Lt. Kelly J.
    Flinn has flown B-52 bombers for the 23rd Bomb Squadron at Minot since
    October 1995. She remains on active duty. Flinn graduated from the Air
    Force Academy in 1993. The Air Force would not give her age or
    hometown. 
   
    737-RUDDERS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal safety investigators are stepping up the
    pressure to redesign the rudder controls on Boeing 737s, the world's
    most widely used airliner. Control problems are suspected in a pair of
    deadly crashes involving the jets. The National Transportation Safety
    Board has called for a speedup in the control redesign. It urged extra
    training for flight crews in dealing with sudden rolls caused by rudder
    movements. 
   
    ELIZABETH TAYLOR 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Surgeons removed a 2-inch brain tumor from behind
    the left ear of Elizabeth Taylor in a four-hour operation, and her
    doctor said he expects a full recovery. "The tumor appears to be
    benign," said Dr. Martin Cooper. 
   
    GRANDMA-QUADS 

    SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) -- With seven children and six
    grandchildren, life already was pretty busy for 50-year-old Cheryl
    Fillippini. It just got busier: She's given birth to quadruplets. Mrs.
    Fillippini bore three girls and one boy by caesarean section at Santa
    Barbara Cottage Hospital. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Stock prices rose Friday, but the dollar was lower
    against the yen. The Nikkei was at 19,093.33, up 41.62. In New York,
    the Dow closed at 6,927.38, down 92.75. The Nasdaq was at 1,347.40,
    down 18.18. 
   
    GIANTS-BONDS 

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- Barry Bonds has agreed to a $22.9 million,
    two-year contract extension with the San Francisco Giants, a deal that
    gives him baseball's highest average salary at $11.45 million. He will
    get $9.7 million in 1999 and $10.7 million in 2000. Bonds is due $8.25
    million this season and $8.5 million next year under his current deal. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARK KENNEDY 
7.768IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5948
    Updated at Thursday, February 20, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.

    Reuters World News Highlights 

    BEIJING - China peacefully mourned Deng Xiaoping, the leader who lifted
    the world's most populous nation out of rank poverty and chief
    architect of its capitalist-style reforms. His chosen heir, Jiang
    Zemin, 70, was named to head a funeral committee. 

    HONG KONG - World leaders paid tribute to patriarch Deng Xiaoping and
    praised him for freeing the socialist shackles that hobbled China's
    vast population. President Bill Clinton called Deng an ``extraordinary
    figure on the world stage over the past two decades''. 

    MOSCOW - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright began talks in
    Moscow intended to ease Russian opposition to NATO's eastward expansion
    but the Kremlin made clear she faced a tough task winning over her
    hosts. 

    CAPE TOWN - Zaire's warring parties inched towards their first talks in
    Cape Town. South Africa is trying to bring rebel leader Laurent Kabila
    and President Mobutu Sese Seko's security adviser to the negotiating
    table, 

    KINSHASA - Zaire's government said that it would launch fresh air
    strikes in the rebel-held east and advised civilians to leave the war
    zone. The defence ministry said the army was determined to recapture
    all enemy-held territory. 

    KERAPATA - The fear of further mudslides hampered the search for the
    bodies of 250 to 300 Peruvian peasants buried after an Andean
    mountainside collapsed and swept away two villages. 

    TOKYO - Lawyers for Japanese doomsday cult leader Shoko Asahara asked
    the Tokyo District Court to cancel his murder trials on health grounds,
    Japan's Kyodo news service said. 

    GENEVA - The World Trade Organisation (WTO) named three international
    experts to adjudicate in the EU-U.S. row over investment in Cuba but
    Brussels insisted it still wanted to find a solution in direct talks
    with Washington. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States challenged the World Trade
    Organisation's fitness to adjudicate a dispute over U.S. sanctions on
    Cuba and said it would not cooperate with a WTO investigative panel. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.769IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5964
    AP 21-Feb-1997 0:43 EST   REF5634

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Tobacco Aide: Papers Destroyed

    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- A Philip Morris USA scientist destroyed research
    in the late 1980s about cancerous agents in cigarette smoke, defying
    court orders but obeying the company's top management, a newspaper
    reported. 

    The Richmond Times-Dispatch, in a story for Friday's editions, said the
    allegation came from William Raymond Morgan, who was laid off at the
    tobacco company's research and development center in 1992. 

    Philip Morris denied Morgan's claim. 

    According to Morgan, his boss ordered him to destroy documents
    containing a test that found high levels of a cancer-causing chemical
    in smoke from a Virginia Slims cigarette. 

    "She came back to me and told me that I was to destroy all that data,"
    Morgan said in a sworn statement to attorneys for the state of Texas. 

    The 124-page statement will be turned over to the Justice Department,
    said Grant Kaiser, an attorney in the Texas attorney general's office. 

    Morgan was subpoenaed to testify in a $4 billion lawsuit filed by
    Texas, which is among several states seeking to recover health-related
    funds from the tobacco industry. 

    Michael York, a Washington attorney for Philip Morris, objected to the
    release of Morgan's testimony to the newspaper. 

    "The evidence at trial we think will show Dr. Morgan is mistaken. We
    think testimony will show he was given no such directive," York said. 

    But Ron Motley, the attorney who took Morgan's deposition, said the
    evidence was crucial. 

    "It's the first time an eyewitness has said he was ordered to destroy
    evidence," Motley said. Such destruction would have violated a number
    of court orders in effect at the time, he said. 

    The alleged destruction came around 1989 during the testing of Virginia
    Slims for possible carcinogens in secondhand smoke, according to
    Morgan's deposition. 

    Normally, researchers were instructed to use a generic test cigarette
    that lacked the flavorings and additives used in real Virginia Slims,
    Marlboros or other brands. 

    Motley called these "fake cigarettes" used to avoid legal problems of
    obtaining damaging test information about real cigarettes. 

    York said the practice is standard in the industry. 

    During the experiment, Morgan said, a fellow researcher couldn't find
    the right-sized substitute, so he pulled a Virginia Slim out of a pack
    in his laboratory. 

    The carcinogen's level in the Virginia Slim was "40 times greater" than
    the level found in the cigarettes researchers normally used, Morgan
    said. 
7.770IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5951
    AP 21-Feb-1997 0:10 EST   REF5620

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Riot Plans Found in N.M. Jail

    By BARRY MASSEY

    Associated Press Writer

    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -- State prison officials prepared Thursday to move
    scores of inmates to Arizona after discovering an underground tunnel
    and plans for a riot at one penitentiary. 

    The warden, Tim LeMaster, said in court papers that inmates planned a
    riot in which they planned to "stab as many people as possible and kill
    everyone." 

    In 1980, 33 inmates were killed in a riot at the penitentiary, south of
    Santa Fe. 

    Officials ordered a lockdown at the facility Wednesday, and inmates
    remained in their cells with privileges suspended on Thursday. 

    Gov. Gary Johnson suspended a federal decree governing the state's
    prison, a move that allows the state to move as many as 256 inmates
    from throughout the system to ease overcrowding. The prisoners would
    remain in Arizona for up to a year. 

    Authorities found the tunnel -- 30 to 35 feet long, 3 feet high and 3
    feet wide -- in a prison basement, John Shanks, director of adult
    prisons for the Corrections Department, told reporters Thursday. 

    The tunnel would have to extend at least another 100 feet to reach
    beyond the double fence that surrounds the penitentiary. 

    Authorities also found a makeshift kitchen nearby with some food, a
    gallon of gasoline and some paint. Shanks said the kitchen was evidence
    the "inmates were pretty much in control of that area, which greatly
    concerns us." 

    Prison officials don't know how long the tunnel was under construction
    or who built it. 

    The judge overseeing the decree has told state officials he may order
    some inmates released if overcrowding isn't relieved quickly. 

    The penitentiary's main prison unit, where the tunnel was found, holds
    420 inmates, but authorities considers 398 the maximum for safe
    operation. Officials said they didn't how many inmates would be removed
    from that unit. 
7.771IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5928
    AP 20-Feb-1997 23:57 EST   REF5559

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-House Postmaster Sentenced

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The one-time House postmaster was sentenced Thursday
    to four months in prison on his guilty plea to misdemeanor charges in
    paying congressmen for government-purchased stamps. 

    U.S. District Court Judge Norma Holloway Johnson also ordered Robert V.
    Rota to pay a $2,000 fine and repay Congress $5,000 for allowing former
    Reps. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., and Joseph P. Kolter, D-Pa., to trade
    stamps for cash. 

    Rota told authorities he gave Rostenkowski $20,000 in cash for
    government-purchased stamps, and Kolter $9,000 during the 15-year scam.
    Rostenkowski, former chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means
    Committee, was sentenced to 17 months in prison and Kolter to six
    months on their guilty pleas in the case. 

    "I know that those powerful men perhaps had such an influence on you
    that it was difficult to overcome," the judge told Rota. "I do concern
    myself ... with the fact that there was a time when you could have come
    clean." 

    Johnson did not exclude the possibility that Rota could serve his
    prison time in a halfway house. 
7.772IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5930
    AP 20-Feb-1997 23:31 EST   REF5297

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Former M.E. Faces Murder Charge

    PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -- A former medical examiner surrendered on
    Thursday to face a murder charge in the death of his wife, whose body
    was embalmed before he allowed an autopsy to be performed. 

    A grand jury indictment charging Dr. William Sybers with first-degree
    murder was unsealed Thursday as he returned to Florida from his home in
    British Columbia. He was jailed without bail pending a hearing on
    Friday. 

    State investigators say he allowed his wife's body to be embalmed,
    which may have erased evidence that could have shown that he killed her
    with a lethal injection on May 30, 1991. 

    An autopsy performed afterward failed to determine a cause of death,
    although needle marks on her arm raised suspicions. Sybers said he had
    botched an attempt to draw blood for analysis after she said she wasn't
    feeling well. 

    Sybers' lawyer, Harry Harper, welcomed the opportunity to present his
    client's side. "It will not take the jury a minute to acquit Mr.
    Sybers, if the case even gets to the jury," he said. 

    Sybers, now retired, was the state's district medical examiner here at
    the time of his wife's death. 
7.773IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5986
    AP 20-Feb-1997 23:28 EST   REF5296

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Diplomat Eyes Manslaughter Trial

    By ALICE ANN LOVE

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Georgian diplomat surrendered to police Thursday
    and was charged with involuntary manslaughter for the high-speed car
    crash last month that killed a 16-year-old girl. 

    Gueorgui Makharadze, second-ranking officer in the Republic of
    Georgia's embassy in Washington, was released pending trial. He
    appealed to Americans not to judge him "until all the facts are known."

    According to a police affidavit, Makharadze was drunk when he smashed a
    Ford Taurus into a line of cars waiting at a stoplight on a busy
    downtown street Jan. 3. 

    The government of the former Soviet republic notified the State
    Department last week that it was waiving diplomatic immunity in the
    case. But Georgian officials may ask that if convicted he be allowed to
    serve any jail sentence in his homeland. 

    As Makharadze left the courthouse, he told reporters he respected his
    government's decision. 

    "I realize some aspects of this case are far larger than me," said
    Makharadze. He also said he could not "adequately express my deepest
    sorrow" to the family of the teen-ager who was killed. 

    The diplomat had been drinking heavily at a restaurant that evening,
    and his car dodged in and out of traffic before careening at 80 to 85
    mph into the stopped vehicles on Connecticut Avenue, witnesses told
    police. 

    His attorneys later released a statement saying Makharadze had consumed
    only "a moderate amount of alcohol" during a three-hour business
    dinner, and suggesting the car's brakes had failed. They challenged the
    blood alcohol test done at a hospital and claimed the police account
    was "one-sided and omits many facts that favor Mr. Makharadze." 

    The police said city mechanics and independent experts who checked the
    Taurus concluded there was nothing wrong with its brakes or
    accelerator. The car had only 1,953 miles on the odometer. 

    Joviane Waltrick, who had recently moved to the Washington area from
    Brazil, was killed in the chain reaction. 

    The car Makharadze struck landed on the vehicle in which Waltrick was a
    front-seat passenger. The diplomat's car plowed into two more cars
    before landing on its roof. 

    Makharadze, 35, was accompanied by three attorneys when he was
    arraigned at police headquarters. 

    A Superior Court judge later released him to the custody of his embassy
    after ordering him to surrender his passport and forbidding him to
    leave the country. A hearing was set for March 4. 

    He was also charged with four counts of aggravated assault for injuries
    to others. 

    Police said Makharadze was not given a blood-alcohol test at the scene
    because of his diplomatic status. 

    But a test at Georgetown Hospital indicated Makharadze's blood alcohol
    level was 0.185, U.S. Attorney Eric Holder Jr. said. The legal limit
    for drivers in the district is 0.10. 

    The maximum penalty for involuntary manslaughter is 30 years
    imprisonment. Each of the four assault charges carries a penalty of up
    to 10 years. 

    The affidavit from Detective Michael A. Harvey said that last year the
    diplomat pleaded guilty to speeding in excess of 80 mph in Henrico
    County, Va., and was stopped in the district after driving the wrong
    way down a street and nearly ramming a police cruiser. 

    Viviane Wagner, mother of the teen-ager who was killed, said through an
    interpreter that the charges against Makharadze were a "victory for
    Joviane." She said the family would keep holding daily vigils at the
    accident site until Makharadze is convicted and sentenced. 
7.774IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5937
    AP 20-Feb-1997 23:24 EST   REF5214

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Grandmother Has Quadruplets

    SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) -- With seven children and six
    grandchildren, life already was pretty busy for 50-year-old Cheryl
    Fillippini. Things became a lot busier when she gave birth to
    quadruplets on Thursday. 

    Mrs. Fillippini bore three girls and one boy by caesarean section at
    Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital. 

    Her husband, Robert, 49, was by her side. He said the couple married
    three years ago, and decided to have another child to complete their
    union. The quadruplets were the result of an in vitro procedure. 

    "We felt we'd be lucky if we could have one baby," he said. "As it
    turned out, we got really lucky and we got four." 

    Mrs. Fillippini had seven children from a previous marriage, and her
    husband three; they now range in age from 10 to 33. 

    The babies, labeled A, B, C, and D for now, were born about 10 weeks
    early and ranged in weight from 2 pounds, 14 ounces to 3 pounds 4
    ounces. They should remain in the hospital for six weeks. Mrs.
    Fillippini is expected to be released in about a week. 

    Fillippini said he and his wife were up to the challenge of rearing
    four more youngsters. He's a welder for the Lompoc school district;
    she's a former neonatal and maternity nurse, and a recent graduate of
    the Santa Barbara College of Law. 

    "I'm sure there's going to be days I'll be so exhausted I won't know
    which way to go. But that's OK. That's all part of it," he said. "Being
    a father and parent is what I enjoy doing." 
7.775IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5978
    AP 21-Feb-1997 1:11 EST   REF5657

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Italy's PCs Can't Hack Dialects

    By FRANCES D'EMILIO

    Associated Press Writer

    ROME (AP) -- The elegant language that developed from Dante's "Divine
    Comedy" is spoken by millions of Italians -- sometimes. 

    The rest of the time, Italians still speak widely varying regional
    dialects, confounding their communication with one another -- and with
    computers. 

    Now, modern technology has risen to at least one of the challenges by
    developing a recording device capable of understanding everyone from
    Milan to Naples. 

    Dialects, it seems, were about to undo one of Italians' small triumphs
    over one of the annoying chores of everyday life in Italy: waiting in
    line to pay utility bills in post offices. 

    Great sighs of relief greeted the start a couple of years ago of
    automated telephone services, which consumers can call to give meter
    readings and identification numbers so bills can be paid from bank
    accounts. 

    But numbers expressed in dialect stumped the computers. 

    The recording of the Neapolitan gas company would switch off after a
    couple of requests by a computerized voice to "please repeat" a number,
    Rome's Il Messaggero newspaper reported Thursday. Similar defeats were
    being tallied in other places where dialect is commonly used. 

    The solution was simple -- add the dialect variations of the numbers
    into computers' memory -- but it was no easy task. 

    The newspaper ran a table of how to say one through 10 in different
    dialects. Some varieties: Ten in Milan is "des," but it's "dis" in
    Emiliano and "rieci" in Sicily. (It's "dieci" in standard Italian, a
    language which grew out of the Florentine tongue used by poet Dante in
    the 13th and 14th centuries.) 

    And some words in in the northern Emiliano dialect change if the
    speaker is a man or a woman. 

    Dialects don't just cause problems for computers, or just in mundane
    matters. 

    Last month, a jury in Calabria in far southern Italy acquitted two men
    of the murder of Nicholas Green, the 7-year-old California boy who was
    shot to death in 1994 during a highway robbery attempt. 

    A key piece of evidence for the prosecution was an intercepted
    telephone conversation. But linguistic experts, for both the defense
    and prosecution, couldn't agree if one of the suspects, speaking in a
    thick Calabrian dialect, was admitting to the killing or talking about
    something else. 

    A recent survey by the Italian statistical bureau ISTAT found that
    standard Italian is most likely to be used in Tuscany, the birthplace
    of Dante. At least 87 percent there spoke it at home and 92 percent
    with "outsiders." 

    Least likely to speak it were Sicilians, Calabrians and Neapolitans --
    less than 20 percent of residents were found to always speak in
    standard Italian. 

    The same study found that compared to a decade earlier, the percentage
    of standard usage was up most sharply among children and in tiny towns,
    where dialect had long been strong. 

    Some experts attributed the change in children's speech to the many
    hours spent watching TV, where standard Italian is used almost
    exclusively. 
7.776IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5996
    AP 21-Feb-1997 1:07 EST   REF5656

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Irish Couples Await Divorce

    By SHAWN POGATCHNIK

    Associated Press Writer

    DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -- For 14 years, Mags O'Brien has been married
    against her will, to a husband who has already divorced her and married
    again. Now her day is finally at hand. 

    "The first time I got married in Rome. This time it'll just be in a
    Dublin registry office. The difference is, this time I know what I'm
    doing -- I think," she said. 

    O'Brien, 45, led the grass-roots Divorce Action Group for a decade in a
    successful effort to amend the Irish constitution, which decreed
    marriage was for life. The payoff comes on Thursday, the effective date
    of a new law permitting divorce and remarriage after four years of
    separation. 

    An estimated 90,000 people stuck in failed marriages will have the
    chance to make a break, and perhaps marry again. 

    O'Brien hopes to be granted a divorce by June from Con Brogan. They
    married in 1976 and split in 1982. 

    "Things were fine in the first flush of love. They always are," she
    said with a slight smile. 

    "But he got involved in transcendental meditation. He'd meditate for 20
    minutes in the morning, and again in the evening. Then he got into an
    advanced course and it started to snowball. He became a vegetarian, and
    he quit smoking and drinking. He started going to bed at 7 o'clock
    every night as part of his regime." 

    Oddly enough, Brogan has already divorced her -- though not in the eyes
    of the Irish Republic. 

    He took up residence in England long enough to qualify for a divorce
    there, and 12 years ago he remarried under British law in Northern
    Ireland. Now he lives in Dublin again with his second wife and two
    children. 

    "Some people here say my marriage is kosher, and some don't. It's been
    good enough for me," said Brogan, 47. 

    "Now Mags is going to petition an Irish court for a divorce -- and
    obviously I will agree. She insisted that it was very important for her
    to marry in Ireland rather than abroad." 

    Voters in this predominantly Roman Catholic country of 3.5 million
    narrowly approved divorce in a 1995 referendum. Opponents went all the
    way to the Supreme Court before accepting that the battle was lost --
    that Catholic Ireland would be like any other European country. 

    So far, Dublin's lawyers have demonstrated more enthusiasm for divorce
    than their potential clients. 

    "People are reluctant to be the first to test the waters," said Brian
    Gallagher, senior counsel in the largest of 10 Dublin firms
    specializing in family law. 

    "But when the Bar Association organized a seminar last Wednesday night
    on the ins and outs of the divorce law, more than 300 lawyers came." 

    Even if more people decide to untie the knot, they may have a wait in
    store. Ireland has only three family law judges -- two in Dublin and
    one in Cork. 

    The courts are already backed up with separation cases, which typically
    take six months. Separations can be contentious, because that's when
    couples have to work out a property settlement. Couples must have lived
    apart for at least four years to qualify for a divorce.

    Among the hesitant is Jim Cullinan, who is separated and has just
    started to consider the possibility of marrying his partner of five
    years, Maria Mulraney. 

    Cullinan wed in 1985, but the marriage broke down within a year. "She
    wasn't a one-man woman, basically," he said, recalling the time he
    caught her in bed with a good friend of his. 

    Mulraney says a wedding is not her top priority. There are more
    pressing demands on their funds: medical bills for their 3-year-old
    boy, a fix-up job on the three-bedroom home they bought in 1994,
    insurance for their car, and college tuition for Mulraney, who is three
    months pregnant. 

    But Cullinan said cutting old ties makes sense. 

    "I would like to have a divorce, just to finally kill it off," he said.
    "It's dead, but I'd like to bury it." 
7.777IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5967
    AP 20-Feb-1997 22:01 EST   REF5988

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Iraq Accuses U.N. of Obstruction

    By SALAH NASARWI

    Associated Press Writer

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Iraq accused the United Nations on Thursday of
    blocking the flow of food and medicine allowed under the U.N. plan that
    permits Iraq to sell limited amounts of oil to buy humanitarian goods. 

    Mohammed Mehdi Saleh, Iraq's trade minister, said the United Nations
    still has not approved 140 contracts allowing Iraq to buy rice, wheat
    and other supplies. 

    "The U.N. committee dealing with this issue -- and especially the
    Americans -- are continuing to erect obstacles," Saleh told The
    Associated Press in an interview. "The only interpretation for this is
    that they want to block the flow of food and medicine. And by doing
    this, they increase the suffering of Iraqis." 

    International sanctions -- including a ban on oil sales -- were imposed
    on Iraq after it invaded Kuwait in 1990, leading to the Persian Gulf
    War. Only recently has Iraq been allowed to start selling some oil. 

    The U.N. Security Council has said the full sanctions, which also
    prohibit commercial air traffic, will not be lifted until Iraq fully
    complies with resolutions that call for the elimination of its weapons
    of mass destruction. 

    The chief U.N. weapons inspector arrived in Iraq on Thursday to
    investigate whether Baghdad had followed orders to destroy long-range
    missile parts. 

    Shortly before meeting with senior Iraqi officials, Rolf Ekeus said
    determining the extent of Iraq's chemical weaponry and long-range
    missile programs remained a "serious problem." 

    Under the oil-for-food plan, the United Nations said last month that
    Iraq should soon begin receiving supplies because the first revenues
    from oil exports had been deposited in a U.N.-controlled bank account. 

    However, Saleh said only 20 contracts have been approved by the United
    Nations since Iraq agreed to implement the deal, which allows it to
    sell $2 billion worth of oil for an initial six-month period to
    alleviate suffering in the country. 

    Other contracts, including purchase agreements for salt, tea, rice and
    wheat, had not yet been approved by the committee, he said. 

    Under the terms of the oil-for-food deal, the committee cannot approve
    the contracts until money from oil sales is deposited in a bank account
    the committee uses. 

    But Saleh, who is in Cairo to participate in an Arab trade meeting,
    said $324 million already was in the account from sales of oil, which
    Iraq began pumping Dec. 12, and more money should be deposited soon. 

    "This is more than enough to pay for the contacts that we have
    submitted to the committee," he said. 

    Iraq has complained about the slow pace of implementation of the
    program, which intentionally was designed to have a number of checks
    and approval stages to ensure Iraqi compliance. 
7.778IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5932
    AP 20-Feb-1997 21:42 EST   REF5913

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Vatican Seeks Libya Ties

    VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican on Thursday said it is negotiating to
    establish diplomatic relations with Libya, whose leader, Moammar
    Gadhafi, was quoted as saying ties were imminent. 

    A Vatican spokesman, Rev. Ciro Benedettini, said the talks were going
    "fruitfully." 

    He did not specify when an accord might be reached but said the
    announcement would be made simultaneously by Libya and the Holy See. 

    "Yes, it's true," Gadhafi said, when asked by the Italian newsweekly
    Panorama if his North African country was about to establish diplomatic
    ties with the Vatican. 

    The Vatican's relations with Libya have been strained in the past
    because of Libya's treatment of the small Roman Catholic community in
    the Muslim nation. 

    In 1986, the Gadhafi regime detained an Italian bishop who lives in
    Tripoli, Giovanni Martinelli, for 10 days, along with four priests and
    a nun. The detentions occurred during tensions between Libya and the
    West that followed the U.S. bombing of Tripoli earlier in the year. 

    Martinelli, still in Libya as Pope John Paul II's apostolic
    administrator, has been pushing for normalized relations, the Italian
    news agency AGI reported. 
7.779IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5932
    AP 20-Feb-1997 19:26 EST   REF5827

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Spacecraft Buzzes Jupiter Moon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The Galileo spacecraft made its closest pass by
    Jupiter's moon Europa on Thursday, seeking to capture detailed views of
    the icy slabs that scientists believe might hide an ocean of
    microscopic life. 

    The unmanned craft passed within 360 miles of the frozen moon and will
    begin transmitting pictures to Earth on Saturday. The spacecraft can
    capture details a few hundred yards across. 

    Scientists hope to get a better view of the criss-crossing lines,
    craters and other surface features on the moon first spied with a
    telescope by the Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei in 1610. 

    Researchers believe Europa may have two ingredients essential for life:
    water and a source of internal heat. 

    Europa, slightly smaller than the Earth's moon, is believed to have an
    ocean that could be 60 miles deep beneath a fractured crust of icy
    slabs. 

    The 2 1/2-ton Galileo spacecraft, launched in 1989 aboard a space
    shuttle, arrived at Jupiter in December 1995 and began a two-year tour
    of the giant planet and its major moons. 

    Among other things, it is examining Jupiter's rings and monitoring the
    plumes of gas from Jupiter's geologically active moon Io. 
7.780IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:59117
    AP 20-Feb-1997 17:38 EST   REF5324

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Panel: Pot May Have Medical Use

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    BETHESDA, Md. (AP) -- Sparse but promising evidence indicates smoking
    marijuana may ease the suffering of some seriously ill patients, but
    more study is needed before the drug's medical value is understood, a
    panel of experts said Thursday. 

    At a news conference interrupted repeatedly by pro-marijuana
    demonstrators, the experts assembled by the National Institutes of
    Health spoke of intriguing hints that marijuana smoking helps some
    patients with cancer, AIDS or glaucoma. But they cautioned there is
    little hard scientific evidence. 

    "For at least some indications (medical uses), it looks promising
    enough that there should be some new controlled studies," said Dr.
    William T. Beaver, a professor of pharmacology at Georgetown University
    School of Medicine and the panel's chairman. 

    Although a final committee report is not complete, "the general mood
    was that for some indications, there is a rationale for looking further
    into the therapeutic effects of marijuana," Beaver said. 

    The eight-member committee appeared at a news conference after two days
    of hearings during which members reviewed the scientific literature on
    medical use of smoked marijuana and heard from other experts. 

    Dr. Alan Leshner, head of the National Institute of Drug Abuse,
    organized the meeting after California and Arizona enacted state laws
    that allow medical uses of marijuana. 

    Those state laws also prompted White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey to
    issue a warning that doctors who prescribe marijuana could lose their
    federal authority to prescribe medicine. One California doctor already
    has been warned by the Department of Justice that he is under
    investigation. 

    Despite McCaffrey's tough stand, however, Leshner said the NIH would
    finance medical marijuana studies, if proposed research is approved by
    the agency's peer-review process. He said his institute is empowered to
    issue legal marijuana to researchers. 

    "Our policy is that if other institutes (at NIH) support a study, then
    we will provide the marijuana," he said. 

    Allowing doctors to prescribe marijuana is popular with Americans,
    favored by 62 percent to 33 percent in a CBS News poll released
    Thursday. But legalizing marijuana for personal use is opposed by 70
    percent to 26 percent in the poll of 1,276 adults taken Jan. 30-Feb. 1.
    Results have a 3-percentage-point margin of sampling error, CBS said. 

    Thursday's news conference was interrupted four times by ACT UP, the
    AIDS activist group, and members of the Marijuana Policy Project. In
    shouted accusations, the demonstrators accused Leshner of using a
    "stall tactic" to block marijuana research and of ignoring existing
    research. 

    "We don't trust you," screamed one demonstrator. "People with AIDS need
    marijuana to survive." 

    Security officers removed each demonstrator in turn, and the news
    conference continued. 

    Beaver said the scientists did not consider the politics or legal
    problems of doing marijuana research. 

    "You can argue the politics all you want, but if you don't have the
    data proving that marijuana is effective, then the political problem is
    irrelevant," he said. 

    Most of the scientifically valid research associated with marijuana,
    said Beaver, has been with the most active ingredient of the drug, a
    compound called delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC. A synthetic THC
    is now sold as the drug Marinol and is approved for the treatment of
    cancer-related nausea and vomiting and for wasting, the extreme weight
    loss associated with AIDS and some cancers. 

    But smoking marijuana presents serious technical problems in medical
    research, said Beaver. Most drug trials are blinded, with one group of
    patients taking the real drug and another taking a placebo. 

    Smoked marijuana, he said, is impossible to disguise. 

    Another problem is that smoking marijuana includes the same risk to the
    lungs as cigarette smoking, Beaver said. Both tobacco and marijuana
    smoke contain chemicals that can cause cancer and other diseases. 

    Despite these problems, he said, "there are promising areas" that
    should be researched. 

    THC has been found to help relieve nausea and vomiting of cancer
    patients on chemotherapy. The drug also has been effective in restoring
    the appetites of some AIDS patients and reversing wasting. 

    Dr. Paul Palmberg, an ophthalmologist at the University of Miami School
    of Medicine and a panel member, said one of his glaucoma patients has
    been smoking marijuana legally, under a federal compassionate use
    program, and "it has been very effective." 

    Legal marijuana also has helped at least two other patients and "merits
    looking at in glaucoma," said Palmberg. 

    Another panel member, Dr. Kenneth Johnson of the University of Maryland
    Hospital, said there is a suggestion that smoked marijuana helps to
    control some multiple sclerosis symptoms. But there have been no
    comprehensive studies, he said. 

    Studies, however, have indicated that marijuana was not effective in
    controlling Parkinson's disease, a chronic brain disease, Johnson
    said.
7.781IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 09:5985
    AP 20-Feb-1997 16:47 EST   REF5039

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Boeing Rudder Repair Expedited

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal safety investigators are stepping up the
    pressure to redesign the rudder controls on Boeing 737s, the world's
    most widely used airliner. Control problems are suspected in a pair of
    deadly crashes involving the jets. 

    The National Transportation Safety Board called Thursday for a speedup
    in the control redesign and also urged additional training for flight
    crews in dealing with sudden rolls caused by unexpected rudder movement
    on the airliners. 

    In particular, the board said, crews should be warned that under
    certain conditions the plane's rudder can reverse itself. The rudder is
    the large movable surface on the tail of an airplane that controls
    left-and-right movement. 

    Recent tests indicate that the jamming of a control valve leading to
    sudden reverse rudder "during normal pilot response can no longer be
    considered an extremely improbable or an extremely remote event," the
    safety board reported. 

    There "is no history of a rudder reversal in flight," responded Tom
    McSweeny, the Federal Aviation Administration's director of aircraft
    certification. 

    Boeing spokeswoman Susan Bradley said the company is "already working
    to an aggressive schedule and would do everything we could to
    cooperate" with authorities. 

    The recommendations from the board, which investigates accidents but
    has no enforcement authority, were made in a letter to the FAA, which
    is in charge of setting aviation safety standards. 

    The move may indicate that the safety board is getting closer to
    blaming the rudders in the crash of USAir Flight 427 on Sept. 8, 1994.
    The plane dived into a ravine on approach to Pittsburgh International
    Airport, killing all 132 people aboard. 

    That case has been subject to intense study by investigators concerned
    about sudden rudder movements on Boeing 737s. A similar problem is
    suspected in the 1991 crash of United Airlines Flight 585 at Colorado
    Springs, Colo., killing all 25 aboard. 

    Other cases of unexpected rudder movement on 737s are also being
    investigated, including an incident last June 9 when Eastwind Airlines
    Flight 517 experienced an unexpected roll on approach to Richmond, Va.,
    International Airport. The pilots were able to recover and there were
    no injuries. 

    On Jan. 16, Boeing and the FAA announced plans to redesign the rudder
    power control units for 737s to prevent jamming or reversal of the
    rudders. It has also directed rudder inspections every 2,500 hours of
    flight time. 

    The FAA said at that time it planned to issue an airworthiness
    directive requiring all 737s to be retrofitted within two years. 

    The safety board's new recommendation calls on the FAA to speed up that
    process. Recent tests, the board said, "indicate that the current
    Boeing B-737 rudder system does not provide the same level of safety as
    on similar transport category airplanes." 

    McSweeny replied: "We ... believe that the level of safety of the
    rudder system on this aircraft is commensurate with the level of safety
    on every other aircraft." 

    He called the two-year timetable for replacement of the rudder power
    control units "aggressive," considering that new equipment has to be
    designed and tested. 

    On Jan. 2 the FAA issued a directive calling on operators of the plane
    to give their crews increased training in dealing with the possibility
    of unexpected rudder movement aboard 737s. 

    The 737 is the most widely used civil airliner in the world with 2,705
    of the twinjets flying, including 1,115 in the United States. 
7.782IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 10:0046
    AP 20-Feb-1997 16:27 EST   REF5705

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Clinton: Docs Can't Be Muzzled

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Saying doctors should not be muzzled, President
    Clinton backed a bill Thursday ensuring physicians can discuss medical
    procedures that are not covered by a patient's insurance policy. 

    The bipartisan legislation before Congress would forbid "gag clauses"
    -- provisions in insurance plans that restrict what doctors can say
    about medical procedures that are not covered by the plans. 

    "This is unacceptable," the president said. "Patients in HMOs and other
    health plans should know that their doctor will give them the very best
    information ... when it comes to their treatment -- and there shouldn't
    be a shadow of doubt about this." 

    Standing at the president's side, Vice President Al Gore said, "For too
    many doctors, strict rules imposed by health plans have been turning
    the Hippocratic Oath into a vow of silence." 

    However, there is some question about how widespread the problem is.
    Alixe Glen, spokeswoman with BlueCross BlueShield Association, said
    none of the company's policies representing 70 million Americans
    contain a gag clause. And the American Association of Health plans, a
    health maintenance organization trade group, announced two months ago
    that it supported the ban on gag clauses. 

    Glen said the White House has exaggerated the problem. 

    "There's a shoot-from-the-hip tendency to create laws where problems
    don't exist and to act on anecdotes that are not representative of a
    trend and will only hurt an innovative market place," she said. 

    Still, the American Medical Association supports the legislation, and
    issued a statement Thursday praising Clinton for acting "to preserve
    one of the most important facets of quality health care -- free and
    open communication between patients and their physicians." 

    Clinton endorsed the bill in an Oval Office ceremony designed to
    highlight his decision to tell state Medicaid directors that gag
    clauses are prohibited in the program. The event was billed as a fresh
    initiative, even though Clinton was simply informing Medicaid directors
    about an existing law. 
7.783IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 10:0064
    RTos 21-Feb-97 04:41    

    Benign Tumor Removed from Liz Taylor's Brain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LOS ANGELES (Reuter) - Oscar-winning actress  Elizabeth Taylor
    underwent delicate surgery for nearly four hours Thursday as surgeons
    removed an apparently benign tumor from her brain. 

    "Miss Taylor is resting comfortably. The tumor appears to be benign and
    was totally removed," said Dr. Martin Cooper, head of neurosurgery at
    Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. 

    Cooper, speaking to reporters as the legendary screen star was
    recovering from the anesthetic in the intensive care unit, said Taylor
    might be fit enough to leave the famed Beverly Hills hospital in a
    week. 

    "The next 24 hours are important for her and we'll see how she's doing,
    but we expect full recovery," he said of the star who will be 65 on Feb
    27. 

    "The technical aspects of the surgery went very well," said Cooper,
    adding that the tumor was a meningoma, about 2 inches (5 cm) across,
    and such tumors are always benign. 

    However, asked by reporters about possible effects of the surgery,
    Cooper cautioned: "Anyone who has had a tumor removed stands a small
    chance of seizures." 

    The tumor, in the lining of her parietal lobe, just behind Taylor's
    left ear, was detected this month during a brain scan as part of a
    routine physical examination. 

    Earlier Cedars-Sinai spokesman Ron Wise said the British-born actress
    was in the operating theater from around 8 a.m. until about noon PST. 

    The operation, originally scheduled for Feb. 17, was postponed partly
    because Taylor had been suffering from the flu and also because of a
    scheduling conflict with her surgeons. Taylor also put off the surgery
    to attend a gala 65th birthday party in Hollywood Sunday to benefit
    AIDS research, her dearest charity. 

    Taylor's publicists said the actress had been visited in the hospital
    before surgery by her four children and nine grandchildren.

    The violet-eyed actress and AIDS activist is no stranger to hospitals.
    She has had two hip surgeries in the past and was treated in 1995 for
    high blood pressure and an irregular heart beat. 

    She nearly died of viral pneumonia in 1990 and had a relapse two years
    later that led to another hospital stay. 

    She also has a history of back ailments, as a result of falling from a
    horse making the movie "National Velvet", including a herniated disk,
    curvature of the spine and arthiritis in the neck. This partly
    triggered a dependency on pain-killers for which she spent some time in
    the Betty Ford clinic. 

    Taylor was awarded the Oscar for Best Actress in the 1966 film "Who's
    Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"

    REUTER
7.784IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 10:0088
    RTos 21-Feb-97 01:11    

    US Moves to Head Off Repeat of Cuba Shootdown

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - The United States moved Thursday to avoid a
    repeat of last year's shooting down of Cuban exiles by Cuban government
    jets, warning both sides to respect the law during a planned exile
    demonstration next week. 

    The State Department told Florida-based exiles planning to fly planes
    near the coast of Cuba Monday they would be in "serious danger" if they
    entered Cuban airspace or territorial waters without Havana's
    permission. 

    But the department said in a statement it had also urged Cuba to
    respect the safety of anyone who did enter its territory during
    ceremonies to mark the first anniversary of the shooting down of two
    exile-operated light planes. 

    At the Pentagon, Defense Department spokesman Ken Bacon told reporters
    that the U.S. military did not "plan any different procedures or
    heightened alerts on Feb. 24." 

    The U.S. statement was issued hours after the communist-ruled island
    warned that it would tolerate no violations of its airspace or
    territorial waters during the ceremonies. 

    Cuban Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Marianela Ferriol, asked if Cuba
    might be prepared to use force, said: "We will take all measures
    necessary to prevent a violation of our airspace or territorial
    waters." 

    Cuban-American groups in Florida said last week their plans to mark the
    anniversary included sending planes to international waters between
    Cuba and Florida to drop wreaths over the site of the plane downings. 

    Cuban MiG fighters shot down two small Cessna planes operated by an
    exile group called Brothers to the Rescue on Feb. 24, 1996, killing the
    four Cuban-American crew. 

    President Fidel Castro's government argued the planes were in Cuban
    airspace. But the incident sparked an international outcry, led by
    Washington, which said the planes were over international waters, and
    should not have been shot down wherever they were. 

    Thursday's statement by State Department spokesman Glyn Davies said it
    understood the ceremonies were planned at sites 21 and 22 nautical
    miles off Cuban shores, and that organizers had pledged to stay outside
    Cuban waters and airspace. 

    It said Washington sympathized with families of last year's victims,
    deplored the "brutal, unlawful actions" of the Cuban government and
    recognized the right of peaceful protest in international waters. 

    But, it added: "The Department of State cautions ... that participants
    who enter Cuban territory, territorial seas or airspace without
    authorization from the Cuban government place themselves and others in
    serious danger." 

    The department said it had also reminded Cuba of its obligation to use
    "the utmost discretion and restraint, and to assure the safety of lives
    at sea and aboard any aircraft should private vessels or aircraft enter
    Cuban territorial seas or airspace". 

    The statement also warned that the U.S. government would take "strong
    enforcement actions" against U.S.-registered vessels or aircraft making
    unauthorized entry into Cuban territory. 

    These included revocation of a pilot's certificate, seizure of any
    aircraft involved and maximum civil penalties. 

    Davies told a news briefing that U.S. Coast Guard cutters would be on
    hand to monitor the ceremonies, but he made no mention of any plans to
    give the exiles military protection. 

    Davies said he was aware of reports that one exile group had purchased
    two British-made Provost military aircraft and said the exiles should
    be all the more aware, aboard such faster planes, that they were only
    20 miles from Cuba. 

    Last year's shooting down had major international repercussions,
    leading President Clinton to sign into law the Helms-Burton Act
    toughening the longstanding U.S. economic embargo on Cuba, a measure he
    had previously opposed. 

    REUTER
7.785IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 10:0097
    RTw  21-Feb-97 00:51    

    Omens not promising for Major in by-election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Alan Wheatley 

    WIRRAL, Britain, Feb 21 (Reuter) - The omens for Prime Minister John
    Major's Conservative party are not promising, less than a week before a
    crucial parliamentary by-election in an affluent corner of northwest
    England. 

    The seat is traditional Conservative territory. Unemployment is below
    the national average, more than eight in 10 people own their own homes
    and nearly half work in professional or managerial jobs. 

    Yet, if the opinion polls are correct, Wirral South is about to return
    a member of parliament from the main opposition Labour party for the
    first time since the constituency was created in 1983. 

    In what is billed as a dress rehearsal for general elections that must
    be held within three months, voter surveys suggest Labour's Ben Chapman
    will easily overturn the 8,183 majority won by the late Conservative
    member at the 1992 election. 

    If they are accurate, the Conservatives would be thrust into a minority
    of one in parliament and Labour, out of power since 1979, would get a
    big psychological boost for the national election campaign. 

    "Labour has never won a safe Conservative seat so close to a general
    election in any circumstances. It would be a first," said Ian
    McCartney, a Labour member of parliament who is coordinating Chapman's
    campaign. 

    Conservative strategists privately accept the possibility of defeat but
    insist that their supporters, if they lodge a protest in the
    by-election on February 27, will flock back to their natural home in
    the general election. 

    But, if the comments of a dozen or so floating voters in the key swing
    ward of Bebington are anything to go by, the Conservatives have a hard
    task ahead. 

    "I just think it's about time we got rid of the Tories," said Derek
    Evans, 45, who works at Liverpool University on the other side of the
    River Mersey. 

    Whereas Liverpool is synonymous with industrial decline, Wirral South
    is a prosperous commuter belt. It has earned the tag "Surrey by the
    Mersey" after the well-off county south of London preferred by
    well-heeled stockbrokers. 

    Evans, who voted for the minority Liberal Democrats at the last
    election, appeared unwilling to give the Conservatives any credit for
    the lowest inflation and home-loan rates in a generation. "I just don't
    feel any better off," he said. 

    A former teacher said she might switch from the Conservatives in
    protest against local education cuts. Another, worried about crime,
    health and unemployment, said she would either stay at home or vote
    Labour. 

    Jean Christian, 66, voiced similar concerns and said she would desert
    the Conservatives for either Labour or the Liberal Democrats.

    "The situation in the country is not good," she said. "The whole of
    society has changed since I was younger, and especially in the past 20
    years." 

    But, giving a glimmer of hope to Major, Christian said she was worried
    that a Labour government, despite the iron grip of moderate leader Tony
    Blair, might herald a return to industrial strife and high taxes. 

    "We seem to have got over a bit of that, but I feel if the Labour party
    got in at the general election, a lot of those problems might emerge
    again," she said. 

    John McCormack, 63, said he would switch to Labour with some
    misgivings. "It's not that I support their policies but because I think
    the Conservative government needs a good kick up the arse," he said.
    "They've made all these promises for years but they've never carried
    them out." 

    Wirral South does not figure on Labour's list of the 60 key marginal
    seats it must capture at the general election if it is to regain power.
    It ranks about 140th. 

    But its voters, in an admittedly unscientific sample, seem to be saying
    that it is time for a change. 

    "I've been very disenchanted really, generally speaking," said one
    woman who plans to switch from Conservative to Labour. "And I don't
    think it's good for any country to be ruled for so long by any one
    party. 

    REUTER
7.786IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 10:0030
    RTw  20-Feb-97 19:02    

    American fraudster jailed for killing accomplice

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 20 (Reuter) - An American fraudster was jailed for life on
    Thursday for murdering his accomplice, a British accountant who had
    discovered he was being duped. 

    Michael Austin, 41, hired hitmen to shoot and kill David Wilson four
    years ago, when the pair fell out over a plot to sell non-existent
    cigarettes to commodity dealers around the world . 

    Wilson had hoped to clear at least 100,000 pounds ($160,000) from the
    deal but discovered Austin's plans to scuttle a ship carrying the
    cigarettes and boost his profits with a false insurance claim, a London
    court heard. 

    Police were led to Wilson by a tip-off and when Austin heard the
    accountant had talked to detectives, he hired two men to kill him. 

    New York-born Austin was originally convicted for the murder of Wilson
    two years ago, but he won an appeal for another trial after a key
    prosecution witness sold a tabloid newspaper a sex story about Austin. 

    The appeal court said publication of the story had tainted the
    witness's evidence. 

    REUTER
7.787IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 21 1997 10:0064
    RTw  20-Feb-97 18:51    

    Irish company announces mad cow test

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBLIN, Feb 20 (Reuter) - An Irish research company said on Thursday it
    had developed a diagnostic test that can be used to screen beef
    carcasses for mad cow disease. 

    Enfer Scientific Ltd, working under licence from Britain's Proteus
    International Plc, said its system could be used on up to 1,000 beef
    carcasses a day. 

    "The application of this technology can be expected to provide a new
    public confidence amongst beef consumers," it said in a statement.
    "Enfer scientific will install their detection system in any country or
    market requiring BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy or mad cow
    disease) detection." 

    Enfer's test uses brain tissue and a chemical luminescent agent to
    point up antibodies to the abnormal prion protein that is believed to
    cause BSE. 

    It said the test has been independently validated by the department of
    agriculture veterinary research laboratory in Abbotstown, Ireland. 

    Enfer, already contracted by the Irish government to inspect carcasses
    for the illegal growth promoting chemical clenbuterol, said it was
    negotiating to test Irish beef for BSE. 

    "There currently aren't any commercial tests on carcasses," David
    Gration, chairman of Proteus, told Reuters. He said Proteus would get
    "double-digit" royalties from Enfer on each test sold. 

    "The real significance of the test is that it can test large number of
    carcasses and get the results back before the meat enters the human
    food chain. This whole area of unknown carcasses is now over," Michael
    O'Connor, Enfer's technical director, said. 

    Arthur Rushton, medical director of Proteus, said current tests were
    based on actual examination of brain tissue under a microscope.

    "The basis of this test is radically different in that it will allow
    samples of brain tissue to be taken out of the animal at the abbatoir
    and taken through a high-input system," he said. 

    "Enfer have added their own technology to our proprietary technology
    and know-how and increased the sensitivity of a testing system of this
    nature." 

    Enfer is a privately owned Irish animal diagnostic service company.
    Proteus, based in Macclesfield, England, is a drug discovery company. 

    California Institute of Technology scientists said last September they
    had developed a test that could be used in live animals, also using
    antibodies. 

    British scientists admitted last March that a new form of
    Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, a deadly brain-wasting illness, was probably
    caused by eating infected beef. Since then, exports of British beef
    have been banned for fear of infection. 

    REUTER
7.788IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:16109
    AP 24-Feb-1997 1:03 EST   REF5385

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, Feb. 24, 1997
   
    EMPIRE-SHOOTINGS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A gunman who fired into a crowd of tourists on the
    observation deck of the Empire State Building has died. The man killed
    one person and wounded six others before fatally shooting himself in
    the head. Ali Abu Kamal, 69, from the West Bank town of Ramallah, died
    without regaining consciousness more than five hours after the
    shootings, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's press office said. The other dead
    man was a 27-year-old Danish musician visiting the building with a
    friend from Connecticut, who was also wounded, Giuliani said. 
   
    EMPIRE SHOOTINGS-SECURITY 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Empire State Building will review security
    procedures in light of Sunday's shootings, although a spokesman
    defended the building's lack of metal detectors or bag searches and
    called its security "superb." There were no metal detectors between the
    lobby of the landmark skyscraper and the 86th-floor deck where the
    public flocks to view the skyline, but security cameras did get a
    picture of the man who opened fire. 
   
    ALBRIGHT 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Secretary of State Madeleine Albright will be in Beijing
    Monday to assess China's new leaders during official mourning for Deng
    Xiaoping and hoping to smooth the complex U.S.-China relationship.
    Albright is carrying reassurance that the Clinton administration is
    committed to a One-China policy and that even private visits to the
    United States by officials of the Taiwan government will be limited.
    She comes also with a lecture on human rights, but with the caveat that
    U.S. policy is far broader than any single issue. 
   
    CHINA-DENG 

    BEIJING (AP) -- Thousands of Chinese lined the Avenue of Eternal Peace
    to bid farewell to Deng Xiaoping, who is to be cremated Monday at a
    cemetery for Communist heroes in western Beijing. Armed police in dress
    uniforms lined the roads at 10-foot intervals, keeping crowds waiting
    for the funeral procession on the south side of the avenue that runs
    through the heart of the city. A slow-moving motorcade of about 40
    luxury sedans along with two white minivans draped in yellow-and-black
    ribbons entered Babaoshan, where many of China's revolutionary veterans
    are interred. 
   
    INDIA-FIRE 

    NEW DELHI, India (AP) -- Fire swept through a cluster of thatched-roof
    buildings in eastern India where scores of worshipers had gathered to
    seek the blessing of a dead Hindu guru on Sunday, killing more than 150
    people, a government official said. The flames sent panicked
    worshipers, many of them impoverished villagers, running for exits,
    Press Trust of India reported, quoting witnesses. Many of the victims
    may have died in the stampede, the news agency said. 
   
    NIGHTCLUB-BOMBING 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Investigators have found some similarities in the bombs
    exploded at a nightclub Friday and an abortion clinic last month, a
    federal official said. Five people were injured when the nail-packed
    device exploded late Friday in a rear patio area of The Otherside
    Lounge. Police found a second bomb nearby and detonated it with a
    remote-controlled robot. Last month, two bombs exploded an hour apart
    outside an abortion clinic, injuring seven people. 
   
    U.S.-MEXICO 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Secretary of State Madeleine Albright says the U.S. may
    continue aid to Mexico's anti-drug program because of U.S. national
    security interests. She told ABC that she will "take a very careful
    look" at the situation and decide what appropriate steps should be
    taken. Albright will make recommendations to President Clinton this
    week on Mexican drug aid. Clinton has until March first to decide
    whether to re-certify that Mexico is cooperating in fighting drugs and
    eligible for anti-narcotics aid. 
   
    NATO-RUSSIA 

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- NATO and Russia said they made progress in
    outlining a charter to guide their relations after the military
    alliance expands eastward, but they acknowledged that differences
    remain. With four months remaining before NATO begins allowing new
    members, Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov met with NATO
    Secretary General Javier Solana for a second round of talks to
    negotiate concessions. The first round was in Moscow last month. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was mixed against the Japanese yen in early
    trading Monday, while stock prices gained moderately. The dollar was
    traded at 123.22 yen, up 0.34 yen from its late level in Tokyo Friday
    but below its late New York level of 123.28 yen on Friday. 
   
    SENATORS-AVALANCHE 

    DENVER (AP) -- Claude Lemieux, Scott Young and Sandis Ozolinsh scored
    in the final six minutes as the Colorado Avalanche came back from a
    two-goal third-period deficit to beat the Ottawa Senators 4-3 Sunday
    night. It was the third straight comeback win and sixth straight
    overall for the Avalanche. The Avalanche trailed 3-1 when Lemieux
    scored his sixth goal. Young tied it with his 17th at 15:42 and
    Ozolinsh scored the game-winner at 16:14 with his 20th. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.789IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1666
    RTw  24-Feb-97 03:16    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    BEIJING - A funeral cortege carrying the body of China's paramount
    leader Deng Xiaoping moved out slowly on Monday from the 301 military
    hospital toward a nearby cemetery where he will be cremated. Hundreds
    of armed police lined the streets along the 2.5-km (1.5-mile) route to
    the cemetery. The cortege moved at a pace slightly faster than walking
    to allow thousands of mourners lining the route a last glimpse of the
    man who ruled China for 18 years. 

    TOKYO - Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto told U.S. Secretary
    of State Madeleine Albright he expects no major change in China after
    the death of paramount leader Deng Xiaoping. He met Albright over
    breakfast before she left for Beijing, last stop of her whirlwind
    nine-nation tour. 

    - - - - 

    BARIPADA, India - A fire fanned by gusting winds tore through bamboo
    and straw shelters at a Hindu convention in eastern India, killing at
    least 120 devotees and injuring 165, police said. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin, declaring himself fighting fit after
    pneumonia and heart surgery, hopes that he and U.S. President Bill
    Clinton would strike a deal next month to end the row over NATO's
    expansion into eastern Europe. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albanian President Sali Berisha, a 52-year-old former heart
    surgeon who has faced weeks of protests over dubious investment
    schemes, appears certain to be re-selected by his right-wing Democratic
    Party this week to stand for a fresh five-year term as head of state. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - An Argentine human rights group seeking to mediate in Peru's
    68-day hostage crisis was rebuffed when it tried to visit 72 hostages
    held by Marxist rebels at the Japanese ambassador's home. 

    - - - - 

    WELLINGTON - A Fijian ship rescued 25 passengers who had drifted for 30
    hours in liferafts after their ship caught fire in the South Pacific,
    rescue officials said. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Ezer Weizman, a former fighter pilot turned combatant for
    Middle East peace, on Tuesday begins the first state visit by an
    Israeli president to Britain. 

    - - - - 

    BERLIN - Critics are tipping the film "The English Patient" by a
    relatively unknown British director, Anthony Minghella, to clinch the
    the "Golden Bear" prize for best film at the 47th Berlin film festival
    on Monday. 

    REUTER
7.790IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1663
    RTw  24-Feb-97 06:22    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    British scientists clone first adult animal 

    LONDON - British scientists said they had cloned an adult sheep, taking
    medical technology a step closer towards mass-producing herds of
    animals that can be farmed for human milk, blood and organs. 

    It is the first time an adult animal has been cloned, and the
    researchers said it opened the door to producing animals used to make
    health products more efficiently. 

    But other experts said the technique was potentially applicable to
    people and could confront mankind with major ethical questions. 

    Other teams have cloned frogs, cattle and mice but Dolly is the first
    animal to be grown from the cell of an adult animal. 

    - - - - 

    Russian workers not satisfied with sex-aid wages 

    MOSCOW - Bosses at what was once a high-tech Soviet defence plant have
    solved a severe cash shortage by paying workers with handouts of the
    firm's new post-Cold War products -- which include rubber sex aids. 

    Employees at the Akhtuba factory in Volgograd, who have had no wages
    for over a year, are far from satisfied with being paid in dildos and
    are now on the brink of revolt, the Moscow Times newspaper said at the
    weekend. 

    The Akhtuba plant had previously made high-precision marine navigation
    instruments for the Soviet navy. 

    - - - - 

    Two girls die in fire believed started by hair dryer 

    OKLAHOMA CITY - Two young sisters were killed when they accidentally
    started a fire by playing with dolls and a hairdryer at their Oklahoma
    City home, officials said. 

    Courtnie Shope, 5, and her 2-year-old sister Tessa were playing in
    their bedroom Saturday when the fire broke out. 

    Fire chief Mike Vernon said the exact cause of the blaze was not yet
    known but that the girls may have set the dolls' hair on fire by using
    the dryer on them or that it may have been dropped among some clothing
    on the floor and overheated. 

    The girls' mother escaped the fire with her infant daughter but was
    unable to rescue the other two girls, officials said. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER 
7.791IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:16110
    AP 24-Feb-1997 1:16 EST   REF5541

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Opens Fire at N.Y. Landmark

    By TIM WHITMIRE

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A gunman fired into a crowd of tourists on the
    observation deck of the Empire State Building Sunday, killing one
    person and wounding six others before fatally shooting himself in the
    head. 

    Ali Abu Kamal, 69, died without regaining consciousness five hours
    after the shootings, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's press office said. His
    passport said he was a Palestinian from Ramallah, on Israel's West
    Bank, who came to the United States on Christmas Eve, Giuliani said. 

    Witnesses said dozens of people -- many of them foreign tourists --
    fled in panic toward stairways and elevators as Abu Kamal sprayed
    bullets on the outdoor deck that surrounds a large, windowed room on
    the 86th floor. 

    "I've never seen so much blood in my life," said Belgian businessman
    Stef Nys, who said he saw the man shoot himself and fall, his dentures
    popping loose. "The most scary part was when people started to panic." 

    The man muttered something about Egypt seconds before he began shooting
    at about 5 p.m. on the observation deck of one of the world's
    best-known tourist sites, witnesses said. 

    Abu Kamal used a .380-caliber handgun which he apparently bought in
    Florida at the end of January, Giuliani said. 

    Police weren't sure of the significance of his remarks about Egypt. A
    city police terrorist task force and FBI agents were investigating,
    Giuliani said. Police Commissioner Howard Safir said the shooter
    apparently acted alone. 

    The other dead man was a 27-year-old Danish musician visiting the
    Empire State Building with an American friend from Connecticut, Matthew
    Gross, 27, who was also wounded, Giuliani said. 

    The others wounded included a French couple from Verdun, whose
    16-year-old daughter escaped injury; a 30-year-old Swiss man; an
    Argentinian man, 52; and a man from the Bronx. One of the wounded men
    was shot in the head, while others were less seriously hurt. 

    Two children were hurt when they were knocked from parents' arms and
    four women suffered minor injuries in the rush to the exit. 

    "I'd been out there about one minute when I heard what I thought to be
    firecrackers," said David Robinson, a tourist from England. "Then
    everyone started panicking." 

    A French family, Jean-Luec Will, 40, his wife, Catherine, and two sons,
    10 and 13, said they had just arrived at the Empire State Building on
    the second day of a trip to New York. 

    "I heard a loud popping noise," Will said. "I thought at first it was
    little child playing with fireworks. There was one shot, then two or
    three seconds passed then three shots, pop, pop, pop." 

    Gerard Guntner, 43, of Jersey City, N.J., said he tried to help a man
    with a bullet wound in the head on the deck by cradling his head in
    towels. 

    "He was bleeding profusely. He was coughing blood. I took the towels
    and wrapped them around his head. I just said, 'Hang in there."'
    Guntner said. "I've never seen anything like this in my life." 

    Empire State Building spokesman Howard Rubenstein said security cameras
    filmed the gunman riding an escalator to the elevator entrance after he
    bought a ticket in the ground floor lobby. 

    "He had a long coat and the gun was under his coat. You couldn't see
    it," Rubenstein said. The tape was turned over to police. 

    The Empire State Building is one of the most loved and admired tall
    buildings in the world. The 102-story skyscraper opened May 1, 1931 and
    reigned for decades as the world's tallest until 1972, when it was
    overtaken by the World Trade Center's twin towers. 

    The graceful tower in midtown Manhattan remains one of the best-known
    symbols of New York and is especially popular with the thousands of
    foreign tourists visiting the city each year. 

    Standing 1,250 feet -- 1,472 feet with its spire -- the building has
    been the site for hundreds of scenes in movies like "King Kong," "An
    Affair to Remember" and "Sleepless in Seattle." It also is noted for
    the lighting that bathes its granite sides in various colors to
    commemorate the seasons, holidays or special events. On Sunday, the
    lighting was all-white. 

    Visitors buy a ticket in the lobby and ride elevators to the 86th floor
    deck. They are not routinely subjected to metal detectors or searches
    of personal belongings. 

    Skies were clear, visibility from the deck was about 10 miles and
    temperatures were in the 40s on a Sunday afternoon that would normally
    attract hundreds of tourists. 

    Leona Helmsley, whose real estate company manages the Empire State
    Building, said the firm would pay for families of victims to be flown
    to New York. 

    "We will do everything possible to lighten their burden during this
    terrible time," Helmsley said through Rubenstein. 
7.792IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1722
    AP 23-Feb-1997 22:17 EST   REF5532

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Kids Find Pipe Bomb at Synagogue

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Children found a pipe bomb in the hallway of
    a synagogue during a luncheon after services. The building was
    evacuated and police disarmed the device. 

    The pipe bomb, which had some type of wrapping and a wire sticking out,
    was found Saturday behind a wooden case at the Jacksonville Jewish
    Center. Police have no suspects or motive, Lt. Steve Weintraub of the
    Duval County Sheriff's Office said Sunday. 

    "We have not had any kind of disturbance of any kind," Rabbi David
    Gaffney said. "We've always been on the best terms with the general
    community. It comes as a shock. It's disturbing." 

    The center had received a telephoned bomb threat Feb. 13 shortly before
    former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres spoke to 1,500 people, but
    Weintraub said investigators hadn't found evidence to link the events.
7.793IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1731
    AP 23-Feb-1997 21:38 EST   REF5513

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fumes Close National Airport

    ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) -- National Airport was closed for about two hours
    Sunday night after gas fumes were detected at the terminal. 

    Jonathan Gaffney of the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority said
    at least six flights were diverted to Dulles International Airport
    during the shutdown and that the Delta shuttle from New York was
    canceled for the night. 

    He said the could have been additional diversions and cancellations
    that did not come to his attention. 

    The terminal and control tower were evacuated at about 6:15 p.m., EST,
    and reopened shortly after 8. Air traffic controllers were able to get
    some flights off during the evacuation by using radios outside the
    control tower. 

    Washington Gas personnel turned off the gas at the airport when the
    fumes were noticed and hazardous materials specialists were called to
    the scene to try to find the source of the fumes. 

    A trash can emitting a gas order was sealed and taken off the premises
    for examination. 

    In August, the main terminal and the tower at National were evacuated
    for about four hours after a bus hit an exposed gas line. 
7.794IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1782
    AP 23-Feb-1997 20:16 EST   REF5478

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    2 Recent Atlanta Bombs Similar

    By CHELSEA J. CARTER

    Associated Press Writer

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Investigators have found some similarities in the bombs
    exploded at a nightclub Friday and an abortion clinic last month, a
    federal official said Sunday. 

    "We are certainly exploring the possibility that they were made by the
    same person or group but we are not ignoring the possibility that they
    were not," said Bobby Browning, a spokesman for the federal Bureau of
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. 

    Five people were injured when the nail-packed device exploded late
    Friday in a rear patio area of The Otherside Lounge. Police found a
    second bomb nearby and detonated it with a remote-controlled robot.
    Last month, two bombs exploded an hour apart outside an abortion
    clinic, injuring seven people. 

    ABC News reported Sunday that a number of components in the nightclub
    and abortion clinic bombs -- specifically the wiring, timing and
    dynamite -- were so similar that officials believe they were made by
    the same person or group. 

    Responding to the report, Browning said: "There are some similarities
    in the construction of the devices but there are some differences too." 

    Mayor Bill Campbell on Sunday called the bombing of the gay and lesbian
    nightclub a hate crime. But investigators said it was too early to
    determine a motive for the city's second bomb attack since the blast at
    the Centennial Olympic Park last summer that killed one person. 

    "Anyone who plants an explosive device that targets a particular group
    is expressing hatred," he said. "Gays and lesbians were targeted in the
    first bomb. Law enforcement officials were targeted with the second
    one." 

    A national ATF response team combed the area Sunday, searching for
    clues. More than 50 federal agents are on the case, including the same
    task force investigating the Jan. 16 abortion clinic bombing. 

    A second device -- apparently intended for police and rescue workers --
    exploded about an hour later outside the clinic in suburban Sandy
    Springs. 

    "The secondary devices are unusual. There hadn't been one used in the
    United States for more than 30 years until last month in Atlanta.
    Typically, they are aimed at first responders," said FBI spokesman Jay
    Spadafore. 

    "I think the agents know to keep a low profile after Sandy Springs."

    There have been no arrests in any of the bombings. 

    "This is a very troubling scenario. Nobody has been able to weave a
    thread that connects the three together in any way thus far," the mayor
    said. "It's clearly a person or persons ... seeking with this
    bait-and-ambush explosion tactic to do more damage than is seemingly
    apparent on the face of it." 

    The mayor met with gay and lesbian activists Sunday and ordered extra
    police protection for nightclubs frequented by homosexuals. Several
    rallies were held throughout the city in response to the nightclub
    blast. 

    Candace Gingrich, Newt Gingrich's half sister and supporter of gay
    rights, criticized the House Speaker during a rally for not denouncing
    the nightclub bombing -- as he did the abortion clinic blast. 

    "Considering this is the speaker's adoptive home state, its rather -- I
    think -- embarrassing that we have not heard a word from his office,"
    she said. 

    Sunday night, Gingrich's office issued a statement that said the
    bombings represent "inexcusable acts of terrorism that should outrage
    all Americans and cannot be tolerated." 
7.795IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1771
    AP 23-Feb-1997 19:53 EST   REF5458

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Dallas Woos Drivers to Trains

    By MELISSA WILLIAMS

    Associated Press Writer

    DALLAS (AP) -- Trench-coated commuters crowd the station platform,
    waiting for a southbound train and their daily ride to work in the
    city. 

    But this isn't New York City or Chicago. It's the wide-open spaces of
    Texas, where crowded commuter trains are still a novelty. 

    In order to wean people away from the independence of their cars --
    500,000 cars typically clog Dallas highways during rush hour -- the
    transit system has had to convince them that the light-rail trains are
    convenient, safe and reliable. 

    There is at least one transit officer on each two-car, squeaky-clean
    Dallas Area Rapid Transit train. Stations boast hand-set bricks and
    tiles, fancy metalwork, murals and poetry by neighborhood artists. 

    And the trains have been full. Ridership on its brand new north line
    has been beating projections by 22 percent since fare collections
    started on Jan. 20, following a 10-day free period. 

    Unlike two earlier lines connecting downtown to south Dallas and
    suburban Irving, the new north line reaches middle-class and affluent
    areas whose residents can afford downtown parking or have employers who
    pay for it. 

    "There were people who said no one would ever ride that train," said
    Andrea Parks, a spokeswoman for DART. "It's really a very pleasant
    surprise." 

    Supporters hope the light-rail system will bring significant business
    to downtown Dallas, whose 33 percent office vacancy rate ranks first
    among large U.S. cities. 

    The 20-mile system -- with 17 miles now open -- cost $860 million, or
    $43 million per mile. 

    Critics, including former city councilman Jerry Bartos, note the costs. 

    "In the long haul, it's not going to make a dent in the mobility needs
    of the region, and you're paying an awful lot of money for it," Bartos
    said. 

    Riders pay $1 for a ticket good for 90 minutes, less than a third the
    estimated $3.84 cost per rider. 

    Trains run every 10 minutes during peak times and every 20 minutes at
    other times. 

    Commuter Bill Sheehan, a 68-year-old judge, said he likes the DART
    train better than New York's subways or Washington's Metro. 

    "It's shorter, cleaner and they're on time," said Sheehan, who used to
    spend up to 45 minutes driving to work. "It's 22 minutes from my door
    to the courthouse door." 

    Scott Northcutt, a 33-year-old investment banker, said he prefers the
    train ride to congested roads. 

    "The only reason I agreed to transfer downtown was because the train
    was starting," he said. "Otherwise they never could have gotten me to
    do it." 
7.796IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1719
    AP 23-Feb-1997 17:15 EST   REF5078

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Lincoln Tomb Is Vandalized

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -- Police in Springfield, Illinois, are trying
    to find the culprits who vandalized Lincoln's Tomb. 

    Swastikas and obscenities were spray-painted on the site of the tomb at
    the Oak Ridge Cemetery this weekend. 

    Human excrement and a T-shirt were found on the observation deck. 

    Staff members at the historic site discovered the vandalism today. 

    Black plastic is being used to cover the spray-paint damage. And a
    high-powered spray-washing device and special cleaning solution will be
    used to clean the tomb's walls. 
7.797IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1762
    AP 24-Feb-1997 0:40 EST   REF5329

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fire Kills 150 in India

    By RANJAN ROY

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW DELHI, India (AP) -- Fire swept through a thatched-roof hall in
    eastern India where thousands had gathered Sunday for a Hindu religious
    festival, killing 177 worshipers, authorities said. 

    By Monday morning, rescue workers using shovels and pitchforks
    uncovered 154 charred bodies, while another 23 people had died in the
    hospital, said Gobinda Chandra, a district magistrate. 

    He said 123 people remained hospitalized, 30 of them in critical
    condition. 

    The fire tore through a temporary hall erected for followers of the
    late Swami Nigamananda, a Hindu spiritual leader, who had assembled for
    several days of worship on the outskirts of the town of Baripada, 1,250
    miles southeast of New Delhi. 

    The flames sent panicked worshipers running, Press Trust of India
    reported, quoting witnesses. Many of the victims may have died in the
    stampede, the news agency said. 

    The fire overwhelmed Baripada, which has only two fire trucks. The
    state government ordered doctors from larger towns to rush to the site.

    Some of the injured were lying on the road near a local hospital
    waiting to be treated, United News reported. The hospital put some
    patients on its verandah after its rooms filled up with victims. 

    The cause of the blaze was unclear, but witnesses told Press Trust an
    electrical short-circuit was to blame. United News said the fire might
    have been sparked by the explosion of a gas cylinder used for cooking. 

    An official investigation was ordered late Sunday. 

    More than 12,000 devotees of Swami Nigamananda had gathered at an area
    known as Madhuban grounds. The guru has been dead for many years, but
    his followers, mostly in eastern India, worship his memory and seek his
    blessing. 

    Organizers had built one huge hut and several other sheds with straw
    walls and thatched roofs to serve as meeting halls and temporary
    shelters. "So it all burned really fast," Hota said. 

    When the fire started at 3:30 p.m., many of the devotees were napping
    to escape the afternoon heat, Hota said. It was unclear if all the
    victims were in one building. 

    The state's chief minister said the state would award relatives of the
    deceased about $700 in compensation, and the injured about $300. The
    Indian government commonly compensates disaster victims. 

    The Nigamananda festival has been held in Baripada annually for 46
    years. 
7.798IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1727
    AP 23-Feb-1997 20:50 EST   REF5496

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    25 Saved After Ferry Burns

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- A freighter rescued 25 people who had
    been adrift in the Pacific Ocean in life rafts and a dinghy after
    fleeing their burning ferry off the Cook Islands. 

    The group had sent a Morse code message by flashlight to a Qantas jet
    flying overhead indicating they were safe, said Paul Harrison, squadron
    leader of the New Zealand Rescue Coordination Center. 

    An air force jet spotted the survivors on Sunday morning not far from
    the still-burning hulk of their vessel, and dropped a radio and medical
    supplies. A second plane directed a Fijian-registered cargo ship to the
    scene to retrieve the group. 

    A fire had broken out in the engine room of their ferry and trading
    ship, the 250-ton MV Avatapu, near Palmerston Atoll, 270 miles
    northwest of the Cook Islands capital of Rarotonga. 

    No one died in the fire and there were no apparent injuries, Harrison
    said. 

    The Cook Islands are about 2,000 miles northeast of New Zealand. 
7.799IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1762
    AP 23-Feb-1997 19:47 EST   REF5457

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    French Police Pressure Illegals

    PARIS (AP) -- French police at dawn Sunday forced about 400 illegal
    immigrants to leave a church they had been occupying to protest the
    conservative government's immigration policy. 

    The immigrants, mostly Chinese women and their young children, had
    demanded negotiations to legalize their status in France. 

    They had entered the Saint Jean Baptiste Church in eastern Paris on
    Saturday, after a march by tens of thousands of people protesting the
    government's proposed immigration law. 

    The bill, which parliament is to vote on Tuesday, is aimed at
    strengthening existing laws on illegal immigration. 

    Socialist Party leader Lionel Jospin said the march showed that
    "numerous men and women ... have set the limits for the government" on
    the immigration issue. 

    Speaking on French television Sunday night, Jospin said the government
    had "backed down" by removing the most controversial aspect of the
    bill. That section would have required people lodging foreign guests to
    tell their local governments when the guests left. 

    Currently, hosts are obliged to get permission to have certain foreign
    guests -- mainly from Africa and the Middle East -- but there is no
    need to inform authorities when they leave. 

    An amendment to the bill would put the onus of declaring departure on
    the foreigners, not the French hosts. 

    The bill is the latest in a series of measures over the last decade
    intended to crack down on illegal immigration, which the far-right
    blames for France's social ills, including a record 12.7 percent
    unemployment rate. 

    The far-right National Front party gained new momentum with its Feb. 9
    win in a mayoral election in the southern town of Vitrolles -- the
    party's fourth mayoral victory. 

    Early Sunday, police, backed by about 15 police vans, forced open the
    locked door to Saint Jean Baptiste Church and threatened to arrest
    those who refused to leave, a member of the occupiers' group said. 

    Paris City Hall had ordered an immediate evacuation of the church,
    saying the occupation hindered the church's normal functioning and
    posed hygiene problems. 

    One occupier, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Sunday that
    after negotiations with police the group decided to leave the church
    calmly. 

    The 400 protesters are illegal immigrants, but some apparently have
    legal status that prevents them from being immediately deported. At the
    same time, any effort by the government to arrest or export them would
    be politically risky given the current tension over immigration
    policies. 
7.800IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1731
    AP 23-Feb-1997 20:19 EST   REF5480

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Croatia President Seeks New Term

    ZAGREB Croatia (AP) -- President Franjo Tudjman, said by U.S. officials
    to be suffering from cancer, will seek re-election in voting this
    summer. 

    The authoritarian leader was nominated Sunday by his ruling Croatian
    Democratic Union party. 

    Tudjman, 75, has enjoyed broad unchallenged support as the country's
    leader since he rose to power in 1990. He led Croatia towards
    independence from the former Yugoslav federation in 1991 and in
    fighting to recapture lost territory from rebel minority Serbs. 

    He was one of the three leaders to sign the Dayton peace accord, which
    ended the Bosnian war. 

    Although his party's popularity has been steadily declining, Tudjman's
    own ratings remains high. With the backing of a pervasive state-run
    media, he is expected to win a landslide victory, despite the
    persistent rumors, confirmed last fall by U.S. sources, that he is
    suffering from stomach cancer. 

    Tudjman's office has denied that he has cancer. 

    Independent media have said the presidential elections will take place
    June 16. 
7.801IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1737
    AP 23-Feb-1997 19:28 EST   REF5446

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Titanic Survivor Tries Again

    LONDON (AP) -- One of the last remaining survivors of the Titanic will
    finally cross the Atlantic by boat -- 85 years after the liner struck
    an iceberg and sank. 

    Millvina Dean was just nine weeks old when the Titanic -- then the
    world's biggest liner -- went down on April 14-15, 1912, on its way
    from the southern English port of Southampton to New York. 

    Fifteen hundred people were killed, including Miss Dean's father. About
    700 crew members and passengers escaped on lifeboats as the vessel
    broke up and sank 560 miles off Newfoundland. 

    Miss Dean, who was traveling with her parents and brother to start a
    new life in the United States, survived after being put into a sack and
    handed to a sailor who got her on board lifeboat No. 13. 

    She plans to sail across the Atlantic on the QE2 luxury liner this
    year. 

    "I have never been on a big liner (as an adult). I love the sea," Miss
    Dean said Sunday, shortly after she visited a Titanic exhibition in the
    central English town of Dudley. 

    "I never had any emotions about the Titanic. I was too young, for one
    thing. I didn't know my father, and my mother never spoke about it." 

    Miss Dean, one of only seven living survivors, does not want the
    Titanic's wreck lifted from the sea bed. 

    "I don't want them to raise it. I think the other survivors would say
    exactly the same. That would be horrible," she said. 
7.802IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1728
    AP 23-Feb-1997 17:24 EST   REF5089

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Air Force Launches Titan Rocket

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- The Air Force launched its newest,
    strongest rocket Sunday, a Titan 4-B carrying a satellite for detecting
    enemy missiles. 

    The 20-story unmanned rocket blasted into a cloudy sky from Cape
    Canaveral Air Station in midafternoon. Air Force officials said
    everything went well during the early portion of the flight. 

    It was the maiden journey of the Titan 4-B, built by Lockheed Martin
    Corp. for the Air Force. The rocket was equipped with two improved
    solid-fuel rocket motors made of lighter material, each providing 1.7
    million pounds of thrust, as well as new guidance and self-destruct
    systems and simpler, standard electrical connections to the payload. 

    On board was the Pentagon's $200 million Defense Support Program
    satellite, destined for a 22,300-mile-high orbit. The entire mission
    cost about $500 million. 

    NASA observed the launch -- which was more than a month late -- with
    interest. The next Titan 4-B will be used to send the space agency's
    plutonium-powered Cassini probe to Saturn in October. Any major
    problems with Sunday's flight could have delayed Cassini. 
7.803IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1718
    RTw  24-Feb-97 06:16    

    Murdered Briton found on Thai seafront

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BANGKOK, Feb 24 (Reuter) - Thai police said on Monday they had found a
    murdered British man tied to a pole of a pier at a small town about 150
    kms (95 miles) southeast of Bangkok. 

    Police said villagers found the body of Geoffrey Chapman, 54, of
    Scarborough, Yorkshire, England, at the pier in Sriracha during low
    tide on Sunday. 

    A police officer said Chapman's murderers apparently had tied him to
    the pole to hide the body under water. 

    REUTER
7.804IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1751
    RTw  23-Feb-97 20:27    

    Westwood courts controversy at London Fashion Week

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 23 (Reuter) - British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood
    courted controversy on Sunday when she used girls as young as 13 years
    old to model her winter collection at the start of London Fashion week. 

    Westwood, creator of the punk image and known for her innovative ideas,
    was the first of 48 designers to show their collections in London. 

    The girls, aged from 13 to 18, had been chosen from London stage
    schools to model the ready-to-wear collection which was aimed at a
    younger buyers. 

    "We are using the girls because we think they would go with the aim of
    the collection," a spokeswoman for Westwood said. 

    In previous shows Westwood, a former British Designer of the year, had
    aimed to shock with her outrageous collections, staged for the past
    eight years in Milan and Paris, that featured topless models, fake fur
    G-strings and rubber skirts. 

    But her first show in London in a decade, was a much more staid affair
    featuring tweeds, woolens and knitwear. 

    The teenage models, who looked much older in the tailored suits and
    evening dresses, seemed unaware of the controversy as they strutted to
    music in front of a packed audience that included Rolling Stone Mick
    Jagger and his model wife Jerry Hall. 

    Even before the young, inexperienced models sashsayed down the runway,
    Westwood was criticised for her decision to use children to model
    adults' clothes. 

    A British member of parliament accused her of abusing teenagers by
    using them in a show when adult models were perfectly suitable. 

    "I think it is quite awful," said Lady Olga Maitland, a sponsor of the
    Conservative Family Campaign. 

    Westwood's marketing manager Victor Patino dismissed the criticism and
    said Westwood was back in London for good. 

    "Vivienne wanted to create something really fresh and vibrant, and that
    is what youth does. In the future, maybe there will be a baby line. Who
    knows?," he said after the show. 

    REUTER
7.805IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1769
    RTw  23-Feb-97 18:20    

    N.Ireland bomb attack foiled-security sources

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Martin Cowley 

    BELFAST, Feb 23 - British forces said on Sunday they had foiled a
    suspected IRA bomb attack probably intended to hit a security base in a
    rural Northern Ireland town near the border with the Irish Republic. 

    A device thought to be a mortar was found on cattle trailer abandoned
    at Middleton, County Armagh, after a police chase. The driver escaped
    on foot. 

    "This morning at first light a clearance operation was mounted and the
    trailer was found to contain an explosive device," a Royal Ulster
    Constabulary police spokesman said. 

    Security sources said it was still being examined but it appeared to be
    a mark 15 mortar, one of a range of home-made weapons often used by
    Irish Republican Army (IRA) guerrillas fighting to end British rule in
    Northern Ireland. 

    "Unquestionably major destruction of property and a threat to life has
    been averted," a senior police officer said. 

    The incident is the latest in a series which has heightened tension in
    the province since Christmas when the IRA stepped up hostilities after
    a wave of bomb attacks in mainland Britain and a blast last October at
    British army headquarters south of Belfast. 

    A police spokesman said a vehicle which was pulling the trailer was
    stolen from outside a village church on Saturday evening. 

    Later a routine police patrol spotted the vehicle and trailer and
    pursued it 15 miles (25 km) to Middletown, where the the driver ran
    off. 

    The town is in a frontier area dotted with army and police bases whose
    fortifications have been strengthened since October against the threat
    of IRA attack. 

    Earlier this month a British soldier was shot dead by a guerrilla
    sniper at a vehicle checkpoint in the village of Bessbrook, a busy army
    centre in County Armagh. 

    The IRA did not claim responsibility but was widely thought to be
    responsible. 

    On Saturday, Gerry Adams, leader of the IRA's political wing Sinn Fein,
    said he would press the guerrillas to call a ceasefire if Britain made
    concessions, guaranteeing speedy entry for his party into current
    multiparty peace negotiations. 

    Britain says a 17-month truce which the IRA broke a year ago was never
    meant to last and that the guerrillas used it to prepare for fresh
    hostilities. 

    Britain and the Irish Republic say Sinn Fein will get a seat at peace
    talks only after the IRA calls a "credible" ceasefire. Sinn Fein is
    seeking unconditional entry to the talks. 

    The British government says the timing of Sinn Fein's admission to
    talks will depend on intelligence assessments of whether any future
    cessation of violence is intended to be permanent. 

    REUTER
7.806IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1739
    RTw  23-Feb-97 18:00    

    BA would give up slots for AA merger -paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 23 (Reuter) - British Airways  is looking at giving away
    take-off and landing slots at Heathrow airport in order to ensure
    approval for its alliance with American Airlines, said the Observer
    newspaper on Sunday. 

    The airline has said it would give up slots only if it could sell them
    to other carriers, which could net it more than 300 million pounds
    ($486.4 million). 

    "We have always said we would be prepared to look at the issue of slots
    but we have always said we should get a fair market rate for the
    slots," said Alison Dewar, a BA spokesperson. 

    However the paper said "it (BA) now privately admits that it may have
    to cede control over the assets for no return in order to placate
    European competition authorities." 

    Dewar said: "It seems to be a lot more speculation. We are still very
    confident that the alliance will go ahead," she said. 

    Dewar added that although BA has some 20 percent of take off and
    landing slots at its home base Heathrow other carriers have a much
    larger share of slots at their national airport. 

    The UK government said last December it did not object to BA selling an
    agreed 168 slots to other airlines as a condition of the merger. 

    But Karl Van Miert, European competition commissioner, launched an
    investigation into the alliance last year and has since then he has
    stated his opposition to BA profiting from the handover of Heathrow
    facilities. 

    Approval for the merger in the United States is not expected until May
7.807IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1783
    RTw  23-Feb-97 17:38    

    Ex-premier stirs British Conservative feuding

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Gerrard Raven 

    LONDON, Feb 23 (Reuter) - Pre-election feuding broke out in the
    Conservative Party on Sunday after one of its most eminent elder
    statesmen dismissed its claims that the policies of its Labour
    opponents would imperil Britain's economy and unity. 

    Sir Edward Heath, prime minister between 1970 and 1974 and still a
    Conservative member of parliament, said there was "no danger" Britain
    would split apart, as his successor John Major has claimed, if Labour
    gave Scotland its own parliament. 

    And in a BBC television interview he disputed ministers' claims that
    half a million jobs could be lost if Labour introduced a statutory
    minimum wage, saying: "I'm not sure how strongly members of the
    government think that's right." 

    Conservative right-wingers, who distrust Heath as a friend of Brussels
    who led Britain into the European Union in the 1970s, were bitterly
    critical of his remarks. 

    "He is increasingly moving away from the Conservative Party traditions
    and has become a damaging source of disunity," said Conservative MP
    Bill Cash. 

    Another legislator, John Carlisle, accused Heath of being "an unashamed
    socialist," adding: "He is causing enormous damage to himself
    personally, and partly to his party." 

    The intervention by 80-year-old Heath was the second time in a week he
    has embarrassed Major in the run-up to a general election expected to
    be held on May 1. 

    On Thursday, he attacked the Prime Minister for lack of leadership on
    Europe and warned that the Conservatives could split apart over the
    issue after the election. 

    The Conservatives, some 18 points behind Labour in the opinion polls,
    have been campaigning to convince voters that they would be taking a
    risk by returning the first Labour government since 1979. 

    A massive poster campaign has been launched under the slogan "New
    Labour, New Danger," and on Thursday Major opened a parliamentary
    debate on Labour's plans for constitutional change, an issue he
    believes will be a key one at the election. 

    But Heath said if he had retained power at an election in 1974 which
    Labour narrowly won, he would have set up an assembly in Edinburgh to
    give Scotland more control over its own affairs. 

    Dismissing Major's warnings about "devolution" of power, Heath said
    Britain gave federal systems to Canada, Australia, South Africa, and
    its former colonies in central Africa, and, as one of the Allied
    victors in World War Two, to Germany. 

    "You cannot say that any of those have broken up. When you look at
    Germany, it is the most successful development since the Second World
    War," he said. 

    "It (devolution) has no danger to the unity of the United Kingdom, none
    whatever." 

    Heath said a minimum wage was a valuable tool in preventing
    exploitation of workers provided it was set at the right level. 

    "The purpose of the minimum wage is to avoid sweated labour, and quite
    rightly so," he said. "There are now elements (in Britain's labour
    force) that have got very low wages indeed." 

    Labour's deputy leader John Prescott said Heath had given the lie to
    Conservative propaganda against his party. 

    "The significance of what Edward Heath said should not be
    underestimated. He has told the truth about both Labour's plans and the
    lies being told by the Tory Party," he said.

    REUTER
7.808IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1869
    RTos 23-Feb-97 14:09    

    US Finds Spinal Cord in Meat

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - The U.S. Agriculture Department has released a
    study that found spinal cord and marrow in meat processed by high-tech
    equipment that strips meat from bone and said it would move quickly to
    squash a potential problem in food safety. 

    "The findings are very significant," said Thomas Billy, administrator
    of the department's Food and Safety Inspection Service. "We need to
    shift to a different approach..." 

    The government study was prompted by concerns raised by consumer groups
    and industry about the meat product churned out by high-tech deboning
    equipment, called advanced meat recovery systems.

    "The FSIS studies released today confirm our suspicions about AMR
    systems," Linda Golodner, president of the National Consumers League,
    said Friday. "Americans do not expect or want bone, marrow, or nerve
    tissue in the meat they buy for their families." 

    Consumer groups had been pressing the department to bar beef companies
    from processing spinal cord because of risk that so-called "mad cow"
    disease could get into the nation's food supply. 

    They argue that aside from the brain, the spinal cord is the most
    infectious part of an animal with BSE (bovine spongiform
    encephalopathy), the so-called "mad cow" disease that broke out in
    Britain and prompted a European boycott last year of British beef
    products.  Studies have linked BSE to Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD),
    a fatal ailment that attacks the human brain. 

    "As far as we know there is no BSE in the U.S., but since there are no
    guarantees we think it would be prudent to keep spinal cord out of the
    food supply," said Bob Hahn, Public Voice Director of Legal Affairs. 

    Department officials minimized health concerns. 

    "What we're talking about here is something that may not be meat," said
    Dr. Kaye Wachsmuth, acting deputy administrator for public health and
    science at the Agriculture Department. 

    Billy said the department would issue a directive in the next few weeks
    to clarify that spinal cord was not meat and would set new tasks for
    federal meat inspectors to ensure the thick cord of nerve tissue from
    the spinal column has been removed before carcasses are fed into the
    machines.  The meat safety chief also said the department would review
    existing regulations. 

    "We think there are some pretty clear steps that can be taken that will
    improve the performance of this equipment," Billy said. 

    The Agriculture Department study also found the mechanically-recovered
    product had, on average, lower protein values, and higher fat, calcium,
    bone residue and cholesterol than meat that had been deboned by hand. 

    In addition, it found in some cases bones did not emerge from the meat
    machines intact, as mandated by law, but instead were crushed or
    pulverized. 

    Advanced meat recovery systems produce 300 to 400 million pounds of
    ground meat products each year, which are mixed in with retail ground
    beef, sausages and hot dogs, according to consumer groups. Until two
    years ago, the product was not called meat.

    REUTER
7.809IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Feb 24 1997 10:1837
    RTw  23-Feb-97 12:50    

    Fergie, Prince may share home again, UK papers say
  
    LONDON, Feb 23 (Reuter) - The appearance of Prince Andrew, his divorced
    wife "Fergie" and their children on the Swiss ski slopes has prompted
    speculation in Britain that the couple may get back together, at least
    to the extent of sharing a home. 

    British newspapers on Sunday splashed pictures of the couple with
    daughters Beatrice, 6, and Eugenie, 8, in the luxury resort of Verbier
    over their pages. 

    They said it was possible that Fergie -- so nicknamed because her
    maiden name was Sarah Ferguson -- would move back to Andrew's
    Sunninghill Park home in southern England, saving herself the rent on a
    nearby six-bedroom house. 

    Andrew, second son of Queen Elizabeth, was divorced from his wife a
    year ago. But royal watchers believe the couple still get on well
    together and see the advantage for their daughters of living under the
    same roof. 

    The Sunday Mirror quoted a friend as saying: "They are both keen the
    girls are near them." 

    The Express on Sunday had another source saying: "They are the closest
    divorced couple I have ever met." 

    Moving into Sunninghill Park, conveniently close to the Queen's Windsor
    Castle residence, would have its financial attractions for Fergie. 

    The free-spending former Duchess of York has been struggling to pay off
    debts reputed to have amounted at one stage to four million pounds
    ($6.5 million). 

    REUTER
7.810IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:19104
    AP 25-Feb-1997 0:59 EST   REF5636

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, Feb. 24, 1997
   
    BOMB HUNT 

    HALTOM CITY, Texas (AP) -- A report that two men were spotted driving a
    U-Haul truck loaded with bomb components prompted an intense search
    Monday, but hours later it appeared the episode resulted from a
    misunderstanding. By Monday night, FBI agents had identified the two
    men driving the truck and determined that their cargo was legitimate,
    but the truck had not been located and agents wanted to interview the
    men to be sure, according to reports in several media outlets. The FBI
    refused to confirm the reports, sticking to an agency statement urging
    the men to call the FBI or local police "at once because of the
    possibility that the materials in the truck were meant only for
    innocent use." 
   
    CHINA-DENG 

    BEIJING (AP) -- With piercing sirens, China bade a final farewell
    Tuesday to Deng Xiaoping, as 10,000 of the nation's Communist elite
    gathered in Beijing's Great Hall of the People to mourn his passing.
    Tuesday's memorial was a solemn and constrained affair, in keeping with
    a family request to honor Deng's wish for a simple ceremony. Deng's
    ashes sat in a casket cloaked by China's red flag with five gold stars,
    amid white flowers and evergreens. A placid portrait of the late leader
    overlooked the gathering. 
   
    CLINTON-FUND-RAISING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton is pressing ahead to raise more
    political money -- even the kind he says should be banned. Clinton
    spoke to the Democratic Business Council in Washington this evening to
    raise funds for the party. The event brought in half a million dollars
    -- much of it in so-called "soft money." That's cash used for
    party-building efforts instead of specific candidates' campaigns. The
    president wants soft money banned. 
   
    BIRTH CONTROL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The government says women can safely prevent
    pregnancy by using high doses of ordinary birth control pills after
    sexual intercourse. The Food and Drug Administration has found six
    brands of birth control are effective "morning-after pills." The brand
    names include Ovral, Lo/Ovral, Nordette and Triphasil; also Levlen and
    Tri-Levlen. When taken within three days of unprotected sex, the FDA
    said, the doses are 75 percent effective at preventing pregnancy.
    However, side effects include nausea and vomiting. 
   
    EMPIRE-SHOOTINGS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Palestinian teacher who went on a shooting rampage
    atop the Empire State Building reportedly carried a note expressing
    anger at the United States. A high-ranking police source says the note
    found in Ali Hassan Abu Kamal's pocket blames Washington for using
    Israel as an "instrument" against Palestinians. The source says the
    note contains "rambling, angry stuff." Seven tourists were shot Sunday,
    one fatally, on the 86th-floor observation deck. The gunman then killed
    himself. 
   
    BOULDER SLAYING 

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- The parents of JonBenet Ramsey believe they top
    the police list of suspects in the brutal murder of their 6-year-old
    daughter, a family spokesman reiterated. "It's pretty obvious that from
    what the police and district attorney have said in recent weeks, they
    consider the Ramseys at the top of their potential suspect list," Pat
    Korten said Tuesday. It has been nearly two months since JonBenet's
    body was found strangled in the basement of her family's 15-room home
    here. 
   
    TRAIN-SAFETY 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Passenger railroads should have emergency response
    plans familiar to all crew members to improve the trains' safety
    record, the Federal Railroad Administration said. The FRA also proposed
    regulations to require that all commuter railroads conduct emergency
    situation simulations once every two years and that Amtrak hold such
    simulations six times a year. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading in Tokyo on Tuesday at 122.19 yen,
    down 0.19 yen. The Nikkei rose 85.04 points, or 0.45 percent, closing
    at 18,982.03 points. On Monday in New York, the Dow industrials
    shrugged off a 26-point deficit and rallied to close at 7,008.20, up
    76.58. 
   
    BOWE-MARINES 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Former heavyweight boxing champion Riddick Bowe
    didn't leave the Marines voluntarily, he was booted out of boot camp
    because he "refused to train," The Washington Post reported Tuesday.
    Marine Corps spokesman Maj. Rick Long in Parris Island, S.C., told the
    Post "there were a lot of occasions when he was told to do something
    and he just said, 'No, I'm not going to do it."' Long told the Post he
    wanted to clarify reports that he said gave the impression that Bowe
    was allowed to leave the Marines last week after realizing that he had
    made a mistake by joining. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARK KENNEDY 
7.811IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2044
    Updated at Monday, February 24, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.

    *Reuters World News Highlights* 

    BEIJING - China cremated paramount leader Deng Xiaoping after his
    successor President Jiang Zemin and the elite of the ruling Communist
    Party bowed before the body of the man who transformed the nation. 

    BEIJING - Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, after her first talks
    with Chinese leaders, reported no concrete progress on human rights or
    breakthroughs on other issues. 

    BARIPADA, India - Indian authorities began the mass cremation of
    unidentified victims of an inferno that killed at least 200 worshippers
    at a Hindu gathering. 

    PARIS - Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko flatly opposes talks with
    rebel forces who control a swath of eastern Zaire and have vowed to
    overthrow him, his son and spokesman said. 

    MIAMI - Seven Cuban exile planes left Miami to drop wreaths and flowers
    over the site in the Florida Strait where Cuban MiGs shot down two
    aircraft a year ago. 

    BRUSSELS - NATO and Russia have moved closer to a groundbreaking deal
    on a new post-Cold War relationship though major problems still cloud
    the alliance's eastward expansion, alliance sources said after NATO
    Secretary-General Javier Solana met Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny
    Primakov Sunday. 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin marked his return to the helm
    after an illness with a warning that some of his ministers may have to
    go to help quell rising social strife. 

    MOSCOW - Six cosmonauts, including an American and a German, were
    forced to don gas masks when fire broke out on the aging Russian space
    station Mir but officials said they were in no danger. 

    LIMA - Government negotiators and Marxist guerrillas held a fresh round
    of talks Monday seeking a bloodless solution to the crisis that has
    kept 72 weary diplomats, officials and businessmen captive for 69 days. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.812IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2078
    RTw  25-Feb-97 05:13    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    Singer Tammy Wynette battles tabloids in U.S. court 

    NASHVILLE, Tennessee -  Lawyers for supermarket tabloids the National
    Enquirer and the Star asked a federal court to throw out a suit against
    them by country music's Tammy Wynette, saying "almost anything in a
    celebrity's life is of public interest." 

    Judge John Nixon of U.S. District Court heard attorneys for the "first
    lady of country music" claim her privacy was violated after both
    publications ran stories on her in 1995 when she was in hospital in
    Pittsburgh. 

    Wynette was not in court but her husband, George Richey, heard the
    attorney for the National Enquirer tell the judge that Wynette had
    undergone 14 major surgeries during 31 stays in hospital over the past
    25 years. 

    - - - - 

    Alleged prostitute ringleader too fat for NY court 

    NEW YORK - A New York man charged with running a prostitution ring was
    arraigned in the outdoor courtyard of Manhattan Supreme Court because
    he was too fat to fit through the courtroom's doors. 

    Robert York, 48, wearing a white hospital gown dotted with tiny blue
    flowers, lay on an oversized hospital bed inside a city ambulance and
    pleaded not guilty to promoting prostitution through his escort
    service. 

    Police alleged York, who weighs 400 pounds (181 kg), ran the call-girl
    ring from a hospital bed in his Manhattan office. 

    - - - - 

    Horse in bedroom is poser for Scottish firemen 

    EDINBURGH - Scottish firemen have made a tricky rescue -- a hungry
    horse from the upstairs bedroom of an old house. 

    Max broke out of his converted stable on the ground floor and followed
    a trail of spilled feed up a narrow stair, squeezing through two sharp
    turns, to a bedroom where forage was kept. 

    The floor gave way, leaving the five-year-old gelding trapped astride a
    supporting beam with legs dangling through the ceiling of the room
    below. 

    Two fire engines and two rescue vehicles answered an emergency call to
    the farm in central Scotland. 

    - - - - 

    For sale -- France's only private glacier 

    PARIS - For sale, France's only privately-owned glacier. Pristine
    Alpine views, eagles and deer, no noisy human neighbours. Price: five
    million francs ($880,000). 

    Frustrated for 30 years, owners of the Gebroulaz glacier in the Alps
    are making a new push to sell their icy valley near the ski resorts of
    Meribel and Val Thorens despite a state ruling in 1990 outlawing any
    new building. 

    "We think the price is reasonable. For the price of a baguette, you
    could buy 13 square metres (yards) of the glacier," Marius Fernandez,
    who represents the family trying to sell, said on Monday.

    REUTER
7.813IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2041
    AP 25-Feb-1997 1:06 EST   REF5799

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: CIA Knew of Chemicals

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A Pentagon investigation has determined that in 1991
    the CIA warned the Army about the possible exposure of U.S. troops to
    chemical weapons during the Persian Gulf crisis, The New York Times
    reported Tuesday. 

    Negligence on the part of the Army, which did not confirm the CIA's
    findings, may have exposed more than 20,000 American troops to nerve
    gas and other chemicals when the soldiers were ordered to demolish a
    depot in March 1991, the newspaper said. 

    Two newly released declassified CIA reports undermine the Pentagon's
    repeated assertion that they were unaware of the possible exposure
    until last year. The CIA told the Army that investigators had found
    direct evidence that U.S. troops carried out the demolition, the
    newspaper said. 

    The documents show that the agency informed the Army in November 1991
    that United Nations investigators visited ruins of the Kamisiyah
    ammunition depot in southern Iraq and found damaged rockets filled with
    sarin, a nerve gas. 

    The U.N. uncovered an empty American issued crate with markings
    suggesting it had held American military demolition charges used to
    destroy the depot. One 1991 report warned of "the risk of chemical
    contamination" of American troops as a result of the demolition. 

    The Army, however, failed to conduct a thorough investigation and the
    information was put aside for more than four years, according to the
    report. 

    A Pentagon spokesman said last week that it was unclear why the
    documents had not been made public last year, in the midst of
    investigations by Congressional committees and a White House panel into
    complaints by soldiers who became ill after their return from the Iraqi
    conflict. 
7.814IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2077
    AP 25-Feb-1997 0:13 EST   REF5500

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FBI Launches Nationwide Bomb Hunt

    By STEFANI G. KOPENEC

    Associated Press Writer

    HALTOM CITY, Texas (AP) -- A report that two men were spotted driving a
    U-Haul truck loaded with bomb components prompted an intense search
    Monday, but hours later it appeared the episode resulted from a
    misunderstanding. 

    By Monday night, FBI agents had identified the two men driving the
    truck and determined that their cargo was legitimate, but the truck had
    not been located and agents wanted to interview the men to be sure,
    according to reports in The Dallas Morning News and several other media
    outlets. 

    "It looks as though they were going about legitimate business," a
    federal law enforcement official told the Morning News on condition of
    anonymity. "But we won't know for sure until we talk to the two men and
    examine the truck." 

    FBI spokeswoman Marjorie Poche refused to confirm the reports, sticking
    to an agency statement urging the men to call the FBI or local police
    "at once because of the possibility that the materials in the truck
    were meant only for innocent use." 

    "This is very soft, very speculative information," a federal law
    enforcement official in Washington had told the AP on condition of
    anonymity. "These guys may be farmers for all we know." 

    Federal authorities said a witness told police that the men were
    loading diesel fuel into containers in the back of the truck with
    out-of-state license plates at a Texaco station Saturday. Local police,
    however, said at a news conference that the witness saw three men at
    the station in Haltom City, a suburb north of Fort Worth. 

    Someone else at the station observed that the truck held three blue
    plastic containers that appeared to be filled with ammonium nitrate
    fertilizer, the FBI said. 

    The materials spotted in the truck could produce an explosion big
    enough to destroy a large building, the FBI noted in an advisory. 

    The FBI released a sketch of one of the men, of average build and in
    his mid-50s. He was described as having slicked-back, salt-and-pepper
    hair, being about 5-feet-10 and clean shaven. 

    The other man, in his mid-30s, was described as clean shaven with short
    brown hair, about 5-feet-9. 

    A spool of wire, a small box of what appeared to be red road flares and
    some type of generator also were spotted in the medium-sized truck, the
    FBI said. 

    About 50 agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
    Firearms were assisting in the search, said Dallas ATF agent Lester
    Martz. 

    The bomb that killed 168 people at the Oklahoma City federal building
    in April 1995 was made of about 4,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate
    fertilizer and fuel oil with a detonator cord to ignite it, government
    officials have said. 

    The FBI alert notes that Friday marks the anniversary of the initial
    ATF raid on the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, in which six Branch
    Davidians and four ATF agents were killed. 

    Leader David Koresh and about 80 followers died in the April 19, 1993,
    fire that ended the standoff. 

    The FBI asked anyone with information to call a toll-free number:
    1-888-324-9800.
7.815IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2036
    Court: Insurer Delayed Too Long

    AP 24-Feb-1997 23:53 EST   REF5449

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    By BOB EGELKO

    Associated Press Writer

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A life insurer waited too late to claim fraud and
    must pay benefits for a man who died of AIDS after sending an imposter
    to take his medical exam, the state Supreme Court ruled on Monday. 

    By law, an insurer must investigate fraud before it issues a policy or
    within two years afterward, the court said in a unanimous ruling. All
    paid-up policies are binding on the insurer two years after they take
    effect, even if the insurer was defrauded into issuing the policy, the
    court said. 

    Jose Morales submitted a written application to Amex Life Assurance Co.
    from Chicago in January 1991 in which he did not disclose that he had
    the AIDS virus, the court said. After moving to Los Angeles two months
    later, he sent another man to take the medical exam required by Amex. 

    The man was four inches taller and 30 pounds heavier than the man
    described in the application, and his handwriting was much different. 

    "Amex ignored this information and merely accepted the premiums,"
    Justice Ming Chin said. 

    Morales died of AIDS-related causes in June 1993, shortly after selling
    his policy to Slome Capital Corp., which buys insurance policies at a
    discount from terminally ill people. Amex refused to pay Slome the
    $180,000 proceeds, saying it had learned of the fraud after Morales'
    death. 
7.816IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2138
    AP 24-Feb-1997 23:52 EST   REF5436

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Park Cops Ban Alcohol in Capital

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The National Park Service has some sobering news for
    picnickers in the national's capital: Don't bring alcohol. 

    The National Park Service is banning people from bringing their own
    alcohol to federal parks in downtown Washington. Starting Saturday, a
    cold beer can only be consumed if it's purchased from a certified
    vendor. 

    Blame the dry rules on Fourth of July festivities, where hundreds of
    thousands of people celebrate on the national Mall, the long strip of
    park that lies between the Lincoln Memorial and the Capitol. 

    In addition to the packed lunches people brought to last summer's
    celebration, three beer trucks were parked on monument grounds. Those
    trucks will no longer be allowed. 

    "The lines were horrendous for the beer, and then customers go right
    over and get in line for the bathrooms," Arnold Goldstein,
    superintendent of downtown parks in the District of Columbia told The
    Washington Post. 

    "Sometimes they couldn't wait, and then we ended up with all sorts of
    problems in the bushes and trees," he added. 

    Goldstein said 5,000 to 10,000 people viewing the fireworks show at the
    Mall last summer were intoxicated. He said he saw underage kids getting
    sick from too much booze and witnessed people pelting passersby with
    beer bottles. 

    Goldstein conceded the new regulation won't be easy to enforce but said
    it gives park police the upper hand when cracking down on drunken and
    disruptive people. 
7.817IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:21131
    AP 24-Feb-1997 23:34 EST   REF5354

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Empire State Installs Detectors

    By TOM HAYS

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Palestinian teacher who went on a fatal shooting
    rampage atop the Empire State Building carried a note blaming the
    United States for using Israel as "an instrument" against his people. 

    The note found in Ali Hassan Abu Kamal's pocket contains "rambling,
    angry stuff," a high-ranking police source said Monday night. 

    Written in English and Arabic, it also expresses animosity against
    France and England and indicated that Abu Kamal planned to vent that
    anger at the Empire State Building, the source said. 

    The man's family claimed the shooting had nothing to do with politics. 

    The landmark building was fitted with an airport-style baggage scanner
    and two metal detectors Monday. The mayor blamed the shootings on laws
    that allowed the man to buy a gun just weeks after he came to America. 

    Seven tourists were shot Sunday, one fatally, on the 86th-floor
    observation deck of the famous landmark, long a symbol of romance and
    tourism. Kamal then killed himself. 

    That Abu Kamal -- a 69-year-old Palestinian in the country only two
    months -- could buy a Beretta semiautomatic handgun "is totally
    insane," Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said at a news conference. 

    Police Commissioner Howard Safir described Abu Kamal as "one deranged
    individual working on his own." 

    An anti-terrorist task force was still part of the investigation, Safir
    said, but so far it had found no evidence that Abu Kamal was aligned
    with any terrorist group. 

    In Abu Kamal's hometown of Gaza City, relatives said he had been
    distraught over losing his life savings of more than $300,000 and had
    no ties to Palestinian radical groups. Abu Kamal called home Sunday and
    said he could not send tuition money to one of his sons, who is
    studying civil engineering in Russia, a son-in-law said. 

    The letter in Abu Kamal's pocket discussed personal issues but did not
    mention the loss of his life savings, the police source said. 

    A senior law enforcement official told The New York Times, "The note
    shows he had a raft of grievances, but chiefly it shows that we are
    dealing with someone who was quite unstable. He wanders all over the
    lot. I can't even say there is real substance to the note." 

    The Times also reported in Tuesday editions that Abu Kamal visited the
    observation deck on Saturday, the day before the attack. 

    "He may have gone up there without his gun to see what the security
    was, whether there were metal detectors there," a federal law
    enforcement official told the paper. "Or he may have gone up there with
    his gun and he simply chickened out." 

    A security camera showed that Abu Kamal concealed his weapon under a
    long coat while entering the Empire State Building on Sunday. He took
    an elevator to an observation deck visited by 3 million tourists each
    year. 

    Some witnesses said he was asking people where they were from, then
    said he was from Egypt before opening fire on a group of tourists, many
    of them foreign. As panicked sightseers stampeded toward exits, Abu
    Kamal shot himself in the head, police said. 

    The Empire State Building was closed to tourists Monday and the bright
    lights that illuminate the building were turned off for the night at
    7:45 p.m. to mark the tragedy. Visitors Tuesday will be screened by the
    metal detectors at the second-floor elevator to the observation deck,
    and will have to check their bags through the scanner. 

    At City Hall, Giuliani attempted to shift the focus toward gun control.
    He was accompanied by Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., whose husband was
    killed and son wounded in the 1993 shootings on a Long Island Rail Road
    commuter train that killed six people and wounded 17. 

    In both that incident and Sunday's shooting, the gunmen circumvented
    New York's strict gun control laws by traveling out of state to buy the
    murder weapons, officials said. 

    "New York State, New York City have great gun control laws," McCarthy
    said. "But as the mayor said, we cannot control all the guns that are
    coming in from other parts of the country and that's what has to be
    stopped." 

    Officials said Abu Kamal established residence in Florida by using a
    motel address shortly after he arrived in the United States on Dec. 24
    from Cairo. He obtained a temporary resident identification card on
    Jan. 30 -- the same day he went into a gun shop to buy the
    semiautomatic, which costs about $500 and holds 14 bullets. 

    Police said he was required to wait three days and received the weapon
    on Feb. 4. The waiting period turned into five days because a weekend
    fell during the three-day waiting period. 

    "It makes no sense," Giuliani said. "He was living in a fleabag motel
    and you hand him a Beretta. It is totally insane." 

    Federal law requires aliens like Abu Kamal to be a resident for 90 days
    before getting a gun, although gun buying forms don't specifically say
    that. 

    Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles said Florida's gun laws are working. 

    "We've denied over 40,000 felons the right to be able to purchase a gun
    and also picked up a lot of people on warrants who were dumb enough to
    go in to purchase a gun," Chiles said. 

    Security experts agreed that no measure can stop a determined gunman. 

    "He could have done that in Times Square, or St. Patrick's Cathedral,
    or on the subway -- any stage he wanted for the final act of his life,"
    said John Horn, a senior official at Kroll Associates, a security
    consulting firm. 

    Of the six survivors, one remained in critical condition with a gunshot
    wound to the head. The rest were in serious but stable condition. 

    One victim, Patric Demange of Verdun, France, thanked police and
    doctors for treating him "wonderfully throughout this ordeal." 

    "I am a Catholic and it is important to forgive," he said. 
7.818IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2188
    AP 24-Feb-1997 23:17 EST   REF5304

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Immigrants Rush In Without Checks

    By CONNIE CASS

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The government failed to do full background checks
    on as many as 180,000 of the 1 million immigrants granted citizenship
    last year, and nearly 11,000 of those naturalized had felony arrest
    records, officials confirmed Monday. 

    Officials of the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the parent
    Justice Department said they have yet to determine how many, if any, of
    the immigrants not fully checked should have been denied citizenship.
    Their joint investigation won't be completed for several more months. 

    Congressional Republicans pointed to the preliminary findings as
    evidence of their contention that the Clinton administration's
    Citizenship USA program was rushing to produce new citizens who were
    expected to vote Democratic in the 1996 election. 

    INS officials, while acknowledging they made errors in screening the
    1.2 million people who applied for citizenship in the 1996 fiscal year,
    have said repeatedly that the ongoing program was not politically
    motivated. 

    They said Citizenship USA was created to end a backlog of cases that
    forced many applicants to wait two years before their cases were
    processed. 

    So far, by matching FBI records and an INS computer database, the
    internal investigation has found the names of about 66,000 new citizens
    who apparently were never subjected to an FBI criminal background
    check, as required by law. 

    "The Justice Department is assuming until shown otherwise that those
    people were not checked," said Justice spokeswoman Carole Florman. 

    INS spokesman Eric Andrus confirmed that the agency so far has been
    unable to verify that those names and fingerprints were vetted by the
    FBI, but he said more detailed study might lower the number
    substantially. 

    In addition, in another 113,000 cases, the applicants' names were
    checked but their fingerprint cards were rejected by the FBI --
    typically because the prints were smudged. 

    In some of those cases, Andrus said, a second set of fingerprints may
    have been sent to correct the problem, but INS has so far been unable
    to document that. 

    A congressional aide familiar with the issue estimated that from 8
    percent to 10 percent of citizenship applicants have some type of rap
    sheet -- record of a misdemeanor or felony arrest, but not necessarily
    a conviction. 

    But many were still eligible for citizenship, especially before a
    stricter law took effect this year. Only convictions count against an
    applicant, and only for certain specified crimes. 

    "Of the ones who were checked correctly and matched a record with the
    FBI, we have a fairly small number that fall into the category they may
    have been wrongly naturalized," Florman said. 

    About 71,000 new citizens who were subjected to full FBI checks showed
    some sort of record, and about half of those were only INS
    administrative records -- such as a deportation attempt -- that don't
    usually block citizenship. 

    Florman said 10,800 new citizens showed records of a felony arrest. 

    But she said the investigation has yet to determine how many, if any,
    of those were wrongly naturalized and how many were properly determined
    to be eligible for citizenship despite past brushes with the law. 

    Rep. R. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., chairman of the House subcommittee on
    national security, said the preliminary estimate of inadequate checks
    "confirms our worst fears." 

    "In its unprecedented push to rush through a million new citizens,
    potential voters all, the INS may have allowed dangerous criminals onto
    our streets, all the while denying it was doing exactly that," said
    Hastert, who accused the agency of failing to admit its flaws when they
    were first reported. 
7.819IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2156
    AP 24-Feb-1997 22:35 EST   REF5789

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    No Arrest Yet in Ramsey Slaying

    By STEVEN K. PAULSON

    Associated Press Writer

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- The parents of JonBenet Ramsey believe they top
    the police list of suspects in the brutal murder of their 6-year-old
    daughter, a family spokesman reiterated Monday. 

    "As I've said all along, it's pretty obvious that from what the police
    and district attorney have said in recent weeks, they consider the
    Ramseys at the top of their potential suspect list," Pat Korten said
    Monday. 

    Search warrants for the Ramseys' home and automobiles will remain
    sealed for 90 days or until an arrest is made in the case, a judge
    ruled Monday after prosecutors asked to keep the details secret. 

    It has been nearly two months since JonBenet's body was found strangled
    in the basement of her family's 15-room home here. John Ramsey found
    her body about eight hours after her mother discovered a ransom note
    seeking $118,000. 

    An autopsy revealed the former Little Miss Colorado may have been
    sexually assaulted. 

    Korten said the seals on the search warrants remain because the Ramseys
    haven't been eliminated as suspects in their daughter's murder.

    In addition, the parents have yet to sit down for a formal interview
    with police, although the two sides remain in contact. "All dealings
    are through the attorneys," Korten said. 

    Also Monday, a newspaper reported that Boulder police returned to
    Atlanta with questions about the alibi for JonBenet's half-brother,
    John Andrew Ramsey, who was a student at the University of Colorado
    until the slaying and lived with his parents on the same block as his
    fraternity house. 

    The Jefferson Sentinel ONLINE, in a copyright story, quoted an
    unidentified source as saying police had doubts about the family's
    claims that John Andrew was in Georgia when the girl was killed. The
    Jefferson Sentinel ONLINE is the daily electronic edition of the
    Jefferson Sentinel weekly. 

    A team of investigators left Boulder on Feb. 13 to make a second trip
    to the Atlanta area to conduct interviews. They then continued on to an
    undisclosed location. 

    John Andrew and his sister, Melinda, 25, are the children of Lucinda
    and John Ramsey, who were divorced in 1978. 
7.820IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:21131
    AP 25-Feb-1997 0:43 EST   REF5616

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    China Bids Farewell to Deng

    By CHARLES HUTZLER

    Associated Press Writer

    BEIJING (AP) -- With piercing sirens, China bade a final farewell
    Tuesday to Deng Xiaoping, as 10,000 of the nation's Communist elite
    gathered in Beijing's Great Hall of the People to mourn his passing. 

    The memorial was a solemn and constrained affair, in keeping with a
    family request to honor Deng's wish for a simple ceremony. 

    "Today, we are at the Great Hall of the People ... to hold a memorial
    meeting and mourn for our beloved Comrade Deng Xiaoping with profound
    grief," said Deng's handpicked political heir, President Jiang Zemin,
    in a voice laden with emotion, wiping his eyes as he gave a somber
    tribute. 

    Deng's ashes sat in a casket cloaked by the red Communist Party flag
    with its gold hammer and sickle, amid white flowers and evergreens. A
    placid portrait of the late leader overlooked the gathering. 

    The national anthem played. Jiang stood before the gathering and
    delivered his eulogy. 

    "The Chinese people love Comrade Deng Xiaoping, thank Comrade Deng
    Xiaoping, mourn for Comrade Deng Xiaoping, and cherish the memory of
    Comrade Deng Xiaoping because he devoted his life-long energies to the
    Chinese people, performed immortal feats for the independence and
    liberation of the Chinese nation," Jiang said. 

    After Jiang's almost 50-minute speech summing up Deng's career, Premier
    Li Peng led the gathering in bowing three times, defying Deng's wishes
    that there be no such traditional shows of reverence. 

    After the memorial, Deng's ashes were to be scattered at sea, at his
    family's request. 

    The 10,000 mourners in dark suits and military uniforms with white
    flowers pinned to their lapels stood with heads bowed, packing to its
    highest tiers the massive legislative building next to Tiananmen
    Square, where troops acting on Deng's orders crushed 1989 pro-democracy
    demonstrations. 

    At the ceremony's conclusion, a band played a quick tribute and then
    switched to a funeral dirge as Jiang and other leaders filed out of the
    hall, shaking hands with Deng's family as they left. 

    Police sealed off the square at the heart of Beijing early Tuesday as
    thousands of mourners' vehicles were parked in its vast expanse and
    soldiers practiced marching. 

    Outside, crowds were kept back and police quickly quashed any attempts
    at spontaneous mourning, alert for any sign of emotion that could
    trigger unrest. The 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations began with
    unplanned outbursts after the death of ousted Communist Party head Hu
    Yaobang. 

    Early Tuesday, an elderly couple who crossed Tiananmen saying that Deng
    had been a great man were bundled into a police van after they
    attracted the attention of a number of journalists. 

    Near the square, people gathered in front of store televisions to watch
    the nationally broadcast memorial. 

    But life bustled by on most busy Beijing streets, so noisy that the
    sirens blasted by trains, ships and factories could not be heard
    throughout the city. 

    Construction workers building a shopping mall in central Beijing
    emerged from the site into the street a few minutes before the ceremony
    started. 

    "We came out to hear the sirens ... Comrade Xiaoping in the people's
    hearts is really OK," said a 40-ish construction worker surnamed Gao. 

    Disappointed they could not hear the sound, the workers returned to the
    construction site. Gao said, "It's just like it is every day." 

    The activity and affluence found throughout China are generally
    attributed to reforms launched by Deng. His market-oriented economic
    policies brought unprecedented progress to a country once mired in
    poverty and political turmoil, although they were not accompanied by a
    loosening of the Communist Party's repression of dissent. 

    Some 500 people stood in silence watching the memorial on a giant TV
    screen in the main Beijing train station, where the high-pitched siren
    could be heard. Everyone stood in silence. 

    "Only with Deng Xiaoping did China start to develop. The (current)
    leaders surely will have to keep to his road," said Ying Heng, 39. Ying
    said he had been able to start his own electronics business in
    Shanghai, thanks to Deng's reforms. 

    Determined to show all China that they have inherited the mantle of
    leadership from the party patriarch, Deng's successors also had bowed
    low before his body at the cremation Monday. 

    "Daddy, you haven't died," wailed Deng Rong, youngest of his three
    daughters. Middle daughter Deng Nan smoothed and kissed his forehead. 

    Outside, many of those gathered along the road wore white paper flowers
    or black arm bands of mourning. Some said they had been sent by their
    state-run industries and were positioned to fill any gaps in the
    procession. 

    Liu Guilan, a 50-year-old retired worker, said the crowds did not
    compare with those who mourned the death of Premier Zhou Enlai in 1976.

    A retired official from the mining bureau cried quietly when the
    motorcade entered the cemetery. 

    "He really had an impact on the building of our country. We're eating,
    dressing better. That would have been extremely difficult before," said
    the man, surnamed Tang. 

    Deng was cremated hours before Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
    arrived in Beijing on the last stop of a nine-country, 11-day tour. 

    After meeting with Jiang, Premier Li Peng and Foreign Minister Qian
    Qichen, she told reporters the leaders "were all in deep mourning." 

    Albright left early Tuesday, cutting short her original plans so she
    could get out of Beijing before the memorial. Foreigners were not
    invited because at the time of his death, Deng, who had given up all
    his official posts, was officially an ordinary Chinese citizen. 
7.821IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2173
    AP 24-Feb-1997 22:04 EST   REF5769

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S Korean Leader To Apologize

    BY PAUL SHIN

    Associated Press Writer

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- President Kim Young-Sam publicly apologized
    for a major bribery scandal on Tuesday and declared he will banish one
    of his sons, allegedly involved in it, from social activities. 

    In a nationally televised speech marking the fourth anniversary of his
    inauguration, Kim said the involvement of some of his close aides in
    the scandal makes him feel "extremely sad, grim and sorry." 

    "What troubles me more is that the name of one of my sons is talked
    about in connection with this case," Kim said. "As other fathers in
    this world, I consider my son's fault to be my own." 

    Hanbo Steel Industry Co., a flagship of the Hanbo group, the nation's
    14th largest conglomerate, went bankrupt Jan. 23 after racking up $6
    billion in debt -- 22 times the value of its collateral. The debt was
    incurred mostly in government-controlled bank loans. 

    Ten people, including a Cabinet minister, three legislators, two
    bankers, the head of the steel company and three of his executives,
    were indicted last week on charges of taking or giving millions of
    dollars in bribes to arrange the loans. 

    Among them was Hong In-kil, a lifetime personal aide to the president
    until he resigned in December to become a government legislator. He was
    charged with taking $940,000 in bribes. 

    An opposition legislator alleged in a speech in Parliament on Monday
    that Kim's son, 38-year-old Kim Hyun-chul, took $235 million in
    kickbacks for helping Hanbo buy foreign steel-making equipment and
    technology with government loans. 

    Prosecutors questioned Kim Hyun-chul last week in connection with Hanbo
    and cleared him of suspicion. The opposition labeled the probe a
    whitewash and called for an independent prosecutor to reinvestigate. 

    The president's son currently heads a socially active fraternity group.
    He holds no government position but has often been criticized by the
    opposition for alleged influence-peddling. 

    The president said that although his son was legally cleared of
    suspicion in the scandal, he felt "moral responsibility" and will order
    him to suspend all "social activity." 

    The president did not elaborate, but the national Yonhap news agency
    said Kim Hyun-chul will be sent abroad for study. He received a
    doctorate in business administration from Seoul's Korea University on
    Tuesday. 

    Kim, a former dissident, is South Korea's first civilian leader in 32
    years. Since taking office in 1993, he has made anti-corruption the
    cornerstone of his policy. But even before the Hanbo scandal, some of
    his aides had been found guilty of taking bribes. 

    Opposition parties allege that President Kim received huge donations
    from the steel company for his 1992 election campaign, which later laid
    the foundation for the illegal bank loans. 

    The president also indicated that as a follow-up on Hanbo, he soon will
    reorganize his Cabinet and ruling party. 

    Local newspapers, quoting various political and government sources,
    said the reorganization would affect the premiership and the
    chairmanship of the governing party. 
7.822IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2130
    AP 24-Feb-1997 20:31 EST   REF5727

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Banister Slider Stays Fired

    LONDON (AP) -- An employee who capped a business deal celebration with
    a dangerous slide down a banister cannot protest the career slide that
    followed, a British industrial tribunal ruled Monday. 

    Diane Williams, 34, was fired by the Royal Institution of Chartered
    Surveyors after her stunt last July. She argued the dismissal was
    unfair. 

    Williams, who had been drinking with colleagues, attempted to slide
    down a banister at the office but slipped and fell 12 feet, knocked out
    a tooth and knocked herself unconscious. 

    Her former manager, George Davies, said her actions "were both reckless
    and extraordinary," and that anyone who would climb onto the banister
    "would have to be extremely drunk or crazy. It is a frightening drop." 

    Personnel manager Janet Nicolas told the tribunal that Williams had
    undermined her bosses' trust. In a professional body, members are
    expected to display "a certain decorum," she said. 

    Williams, who since has found another job, admits she made a mistake
    but faulted her former employers for their lack of humor. 

    "They don't know how to enjoy themselves," she said. 
7.823IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2240
    AP 24-Feb-1997 20:30 EST   REF5725

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Lawmaker Notes 'Jew' Reference

    LONDON (AP) -- A British lawmaker said Monday that a German newspaper
    editor expressed regret over an article that referred to British
    Foreign Minister Malcolm Rifkind as "the Jew Rifkind." 

    Greville Janner, former president of the Board of Deputies of British
    Jews and an opposition Labor party lawmaker, said he had spoken Monday
    to editor Guenther Nonnenmacher of The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. 

    He said Nonnenmacher assured him there had been no anti-Semitic intent
    in the reference to Rifkind and promised not to use the phrase again. 

    Nonnenmacher was not available for comment Monday. A woman answering
    the phone at the newspaper said she was unaware of any statement by
    Nonnenmacher and that the newspaper did not plan to print anything
    about the controversy in its Tuesday editions. 

    The issue arose from coverage of Rifkind's speech in Bonn on Wednesday,
    in which he said a series of German proposals suggested a desire for a
    European superstate. 

    The article by reporter Michaela Wiegel alluded to Rifkind's use of a
    quotation from Martin Luther. 

    "As if his speech had not quite stressed it, the Jew Rifkind closed --
    ironically apologetically -- with the words spoken by the German
    Luther: 'Here I stand. I can do no other,"' she wrote. 

    Janner said both the journalist and the newspaper "deeply regret the
    offense that was caused and guaranteed not to use the phrase in
    future." 

    "This episode shows that as we debate the future of Europe, we should
    be extremely sensitive to the past, including the impact of language
    and of epithets," Janner said. 
7.824IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2233
    AP 24-Feb-1997 19:04 EST   REF5676

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Princess Di Sues Paper for Libel

    LONDON (AP) -- Princess Diana sued a British newspaper for libel
    Monday, claiming it falsely reported that she would personally profit
    from an auction of her dresses. 

    The lawsuit, disclosed by Diana's attorney Anthony Julius, was filed a
    day after the article appeared in the Express on Sunday newspaper. He
    did not say how much compensation Diana was seeking. 

    The newspaper's parent company, United News and Media, had no comment. 

    Details of the auction at Christie's were to be announced later in the
    week. Diana's senior financial manager, Michael Gibbins, said all
    profits would go to charity. 

    "The entire proceeds will be divided equally between the AIDS Crisis
    Trust and the Royal Marsden Cancer Research Fund," Gibbins said. "The
    princess herself will not benefit financially in any way from the
    sale." 

    It was the first time Diana has sued for libel. In 1993, she sued
    Mirror Group Newspapers and gym owner Bryce Taylor for invasion of
    privacy and breach of contract after the group's newspapers published
    pictures Taylor had taken of her workouts. The action was settled out
    of court in 1995. 

    Last summer, she obtained an injunction against photographer Martin
    Stenning that banned him from going within 300 yards of her. 
7.825IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2376
    AP 24-Feb-1997 19:02 EST   REF5672

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Yugo Opposition Takes Over Media

    By DUSAN STOJANOVIC

    Associated Press Writer

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Belgrade's new leaders, the first
    non-communists to rule the city since 1945, appointed a pair of
    well-known independent journalists Monday to an influential television
    station. 

    Lila Radonjic, the new chief editor at Studio B, appeared on the
    evening news, saying an independent course would begin immediately --
    and that appeared to be the case. 

    Reports followed on all political parties in Serbia, and the reporting
    did not favor either the opposition coalition Zajedno, or President
    Slobodan Milosevic's Socialists, the former Communists. 

    Radonjic and Zoran Ostjoic, the new director, worked at the station
    before Milosevic took it over in 1994. Control of the media has been a
    powerful tool and, although Milosevic agreed to give up control of the
    city councils, he is reluctant to lose the state-run media. 

    The opposition took control in Belgrade and 13 other major Serbian
    towns on Friday, following three months of street protests against
    Milosevic's annulment of opposition victories in November municipal
    elections. 

    Between 1991 and 1994, Studio B was one of the toughest critics of
    Milosevic's autocratic rule. The station broadcasts to the capital and
    its suburbs, about 2 million people. State-run Serbian Television,
    firmly controlled by Milosevic, reaches about 9 million people
    throughout the republic. Most Serbians get their news through
    television, not newspapers. 

    "We accepted the job under one condition: to remain independent,"
    Radonjic said. "I know it's going to be difficult. But we don't want to
    serve anyone, and we want to do an honest job." 

    Also Monday, a top Milosevic aide said opposition parties would have
    free media access in the campaigns leading up to presidential and
    parliamentary elections later this year. 

    Radmila Milentijevic, Serbia's new information minister, also
    acknowledged that criticism of Serbia's biased government media was
    "partly justified." 

    "Up to now, the (state television) in its newscasts and its political
    programs did not adequately reflect -- far from it -- the realities of
    political life," said Milentijevic, who took her post Feb. 11. "We have
    to move in the direction of liberalizing the media." 

    Meanwhile, protests continued against Milosevic, with university
    students pressing for democratic reforms, and elementary and high
    school teachers demanding higher salaries. 

    About 10,000 students marched through Belgrade demanding the
    resignation of their dean, a Milosevic ally. Some 5,000 teachers
    rallied to support the students. 

    But the opposition was in trouble, plagued by its perennial problem:
    division. 

    Vojislav Kostunica, head of The Democratic Party of Serbia, told the
    Belgrade daily Telegraf that his party would "never again be together"
    with Zajedno, the opposition coalition led by three people, including
    Belgrade's new mayor, Zoran Djindjic. 

    Kostunica accused Djindjic of shutting out his smaller party. Djindjic
    helped direct the protests to regain opposition electoral victories
    voided by Milosevic-controlled courts. 
7.826IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2327
    AP 24-Feb-1997 18:29 EST   REF5653

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Funeral Pyramids Found in Siberia

    BARNAUL, Russia (AP) -- Pyramids -- in Russia? 

    A Russian news agency reported Monday that archeologists claim to have
    discovered funeral pyramids in the remote Altai territory of Siberia. 

    The step pyramids, similar to ones in Latin America, were found last
    summer in the Sentelek Valley of the Charysh district, Interfax said. 

    Subsequent research has found that the structures date to the fourth
    century B.C., Pyotr Shulga, head of the Inheritance scientific research
    center, was quoted as saying. 

    The Siberian pyramids were constructed of ceramic plates covered with
    turf and stone, and are hollow inside in order to allow priests to
    visit the dead, he said. The report gave no other details about the
    structures. 

    Two 2,500-year-old mummies have been found in the same region of
    Siberia, near Russia's border with Mongolia. Scientists believe they
    belonged to the Scythian tribes that roamed the steppes from the Black
    Sea to Mongolia. 
7.827IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2325
    AP 24-Feb-1997 17:44 EST   REF5605

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Liechtenstein Ruler May OK Drugs

    ST. GALLEN, Switzerland (AP) -- Drugs should be legalized for adults
    because current policies have done nothing but create cartels and make
    huge profits for them, the ruler of Liechtenstein says. 

    Prince Hans-Adam II outlined his proposal in an interview published
    Monday in the St. Galler Tagblatt, a Swiss newspaper. 

    "Young people should be protected from the drug market," he said. "But
    from 18 or 20, a person should be free to decide to consume drugs." 

    People could buy and consume drugs only in special areas under the
    control of the state, he suggested, saying heroin, cocaine or ecstasy
    could be sold for well below black market prices. The state would buy
    the drugs directly from the producers, eliminating the need for cartel
    middlemen. 

    Hans Adam, 51, has ruled this 62-square mile mountain principality for
    seven years since the death of his father, Franz Josef II, who kept
    Liechtenstein out of World War II and steered it to riches. 
7.828IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2385
    AP 24-Feb-1997 16:54 EST   REF5052

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Asthma Guidelines Released

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Asthma patients are urged to take more control of
    the treatment of their lung disease in new guidelines issued Monday by
    a panel of experts representing 35 professional health care
    organizations. 

    Among the recommendations: no cats or dogs in the house and no
    over-the-counter drugs. 

    "Medicine is a partnership now," said Dr. Shirley Murphy, a professor
    at the University of New Mexico school of medicine and chairman of the
    experts panel. "Patients need to take a greater responsibility for
    managing their chronic disease." 

    Asthma is a chronic inflammatory lung disease that can severely affect
    the ability to breath. The incidence of the disease among Americans has
    increased from fewer than 7 million cases in 1980 to more than 14
    million in 1994. The disease causes thousands of hospitalizations
    annually, often on an emergency basis, and many deaths. 

    "Asthma is still the most underdiagnosed and undertreated chronic
    disease in the country," said Murphy. 

    The new guidelines, which are so extensive and detailed that they will
    be released on a computer disk, calls for asthma patients to work with
    their doctors to develop specific personal plans for controlling the
    disorder. 

    Murphy said the personal plans would include the daily medicines and
    what to do if there is an asthma crisis. 

    The plans for some patients will include daily lung-capacity tests and
    specific directions on what medications to use to "rescue" themselves
    in a breathing crisis, she said. 

    Also included are methods to diagnose and start treatment of asthma at
    a very early age. Murphy said experts now know that early control of
    inflammation helps to preserve lung function later in life. 

    The new guidelines are an update of ones first issued in 1991 by the
    National Asthma Education and Prevention Program. The new guidelines
    are needed, said Murphy, because in the last six years new medicines
    have been developed and there is an improved scientific understanding
    of how to treat asthma. 

    Highlights of the new guidelines include: 

    --A reclassification of asthma status into four stages: mild
    intermittent, mild persistent, moderate persistent and severe
    persistent. The mildest form involves symptoms appearing less than
    twice a week and only brief exacerbations, or breathing crises. The
    severest form includes continual symptoms, prolonged crisis, limited
    physical activity and a lung function of less than 60 percent normal. 

    --The precise use and dosage of medication for each step of the
    disease. Murphy said the plan emphasizes the use of inhaled
    corticosteroids in various doses to control inflammation, and the use
    of inhaled beta-2-agonist for crisis symptoms. Daily use of the beta-2
    drugs is not recommended, while the use of new drugs for long-term
    control are discussed. 

    Murphy said patients also are urged to stop using over-the-counter
    products and to get prescription inhalants, which are more effective. 

    --Skin tests to identify allergy-causing substances in the home which
    then must be removed or controlled. As a general rule, said Murphy,
    these efforts include avoiding smoke, controlling dust mites, forgoing
    some foods and forbidding furry or feathered pets. 

    "If there is a family history of asthma, new parents should make sure
    there no smoke in the house, or warmblooded pets, and that the humidity
    is kept low," said Murphy. 

    --Doctors are urged to establish formal and written personal treatment
    plans for each patient. This includes written instructions for what
    drugs to use and actions to take in the event of a breathing crisis. 
7.829IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2460
    AP 24-Feb-1997 13:55 EST   REF5402

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Space Station May Be Delayed

    By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Construction of the international space station,
    scheduled to begin with a Russian flight in November, could be delayed
    once again because the Russian space program is broke. 

    The Russians had said previously they were eight months behind on a
    service module that was scheduled to be launched in April 1998 and the
    United States was making plans for a temporary stand-in. 

    But statements made in Moscow Monday by Yuri Koptev, head of the
    Russian Space Agency, indicated the Russians may not be able to meet
    their November 1997 date for launch of a guidance, navigation and
    control module -- the first element of the station to be put into
    orbit. 

    The United States has paid $215 million for the module and is paying
    $472 million for space station cooperation, including use of the Mir
    station, according to Marcia Smith, a Congressional Research Service
    specialist in aerospace matters. 

    NASA learned of the possible delay from news accounts. 

    "NASA has not made any decisions about possible changes in the
    first-element launch," said Daniel S. Goldin, administrator of the
    space agency. "We are aggressively reviewing our options in terms of
    flight hardware and assembly schedule." 

    Goldin also said that if news reports about Koptev's statement are
    accurate, "I'm sure Mr. Koptev will convey his views on the assembly
    schedule to NASA." 

    The United States is committed to spend $17.4 billion on the space
    station for construction, which had been scheduled for 2002. This is in
    addition to $10.2 billion spent over a decade for designs that went
    nowhere. 

    Koptev said without elaboration that the United States, Japan, Canada
    and the 10-member European Space Agency were inclined to accept the
    delay in the schedule. 

    "We are in regular consultation with the Russian space agency and we
    will certainly consider closely any recommendation he has on this
    subject," Goldin said. 

    Less than two weeks ago, Goldin told a House hearing that Russia has
    until Feb. 28 to keep its commitment for the service module. Although
    he praised the benefits of Russia's partnership, Goldin said Russia has
    repeatedly failed to keep its promise on the module. 

    The first-element module, called by its Russian initials, FGB, has been
    considered a safe bet for the November launch -- until now. 
7.830IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2461
    AP 24-Feb-1997 13:23 EST   REF5383

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Three Mile Island Tied to Cancer

    By ANICK JESDANUN

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A new review of data from the 1979 nuclear accident
    at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania raises the possibility of stronger
    links between cancer and radiation exposure there, a study said today. 

    Applying new analytical techniques to the old data, the team at
    University of North Carolina said lung cancer and leukemia rates were
    at least twice as high for residents living downwind from the reactor
    than upwind. 

    But Steven Wing, an epidemiology professor who is the study's lead
    author, said the analysis is inconclusive and called for further study.

    The new study was published in Environmental Health Perspectives. It
    questioned an assumption made by researchers in 1990 who studied cancer
    cases within 10 miles of Three Mile Island, site of the nation's worst
    commercial nuclear accident. 

    Maureen Hatch, who was at the Columbia School of Public Health in New
    York in 1990, assumed that exposure to radiation was relatively low
    following the accident. She said radiation measurements and her
    mathematical analyses supported that assumption. 

    The 1990 study found a slight increase in cancer risk after the
    accident. But the study said that "does not provide convincing evidence
    that radiation releases ... influenced cancer risk" during the six-year
    period after the accident. 

    Wing's research, essentially using the data from the earlier study,
    also demonstrated an increase in cancer risk. 

    But while the results of the two studies were similar, Wing said there
    may have been problems measuring the actual radiation release. Thus, he
    left open a greater possibility of a link between cancer and the
    accident. 

    "This cancer increase would not be expected to occur over a short time
    in the general population unless doses were far higher than estimated
    by industry and government authorities," Wing said. 

    A federal judge in Harrisburg, Pa., last year dismissed 2,000 damage
    claims against the plant, saying area residents failed to provide
    enough evidence the accident may have made them ill. 

    Wing estimated the increase in some cancer rates were two to 10 times
    higher downwind of the plant. His estimate was based on a complex
    formula that took into account age, sex, geography and, in some cases,
    socioeconomic factors like education, income and population density. He
    also focused on different cancer types than studied by Ms. Hatch. 

    Ms. Hatch said, "I think a great deal of his conclusion deals with the
    differences in the starting assumption about the level of release."
7.831IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2480
    AP 24-Feb-1997 12:20 EST   REF5317

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Morning After' Prevention OK'd

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The government today declared high doses of ordinary
    birth control pills taken soon after unprotected sex a good way to
    prevent pregnancy, marking the nation's first formal acknowledgement of
    emergency contraception. 

    European women who are raped, whose birth control fails or who just
    forget in the heat of the moment have for years been prescribed a
    handful of regular contraception pills as "morning-after" pills. The
    pills are even sold specially packaged to have on hand in case of an
    emergency. 

    But those same contraceptive manufacturers refuse to sell birth control
    pills for "morning-after" use here, citing litigation and political
    fears. So while it is legal for doctors to prescribe the pill for
    emergency use, few physicians know what doses to prescribe and few
    women even know to seek the treatment. 

    The Food and Drug Administration, acting on the request of advocacy
    groups, independently investigated the pill -- and today published what
    it has determined are the proper "morning-after" doses for six brands
    now on the market. 

    "The best-kept contraceptive secret is no longer a secret," said FDA
    Commissioner David Kessler. "Women should have the information that
    this regimen is available. That's what we care about." 

    The pills prevent pregnancy by blocking a fertilized egg from
    implanting into the uterus so it can grow into an embryo. If a woman
    already is pregnant, they will have no effect. 

    The FDA said that to work, two to four birth control pills are taken
    anytime up to 72 hours after sex -- not just the "morning after" -- and
    then the same dose is taken again exactly 12 hours later. 

    The regimen is effective at preventing pregnancy 75 percent of the
    time, the FDA said. If doctors and women adopt it, emergency
    contraception could prevent up to 2.3 million unintended pregnancies
    every year, 1 million of which now end in abortion, the agency said. 

    The six brands that work are: two tablets of Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories'
    Ovral taken after sex and again in 12 hours, or four tablets of Wyeth's
    Nordette, Lo/Ovral, Triphasil or Berlex Laboratories' Levlen or
    Tri-Levlen. 

    For Ovral and Lo/Ovral, take only the white tablets that are inside the
    pill container; use only the light orange versions of Nordette and
    Levlen and only the yellow versions of Triphasil and Tri-Levlen. The
    colors are important because different colored birth control pills
    contain different doses of hormones. 

    Nausea and vomiting, sometimes severe enough to prevent the emergency
    contraceptive from working, are the main side effects. 

    The FDA action legally is a request for contraceptive manufacturers to
    seek permission to advertise morning-after contraception -- essentially
    a pre-approval pending the filing of the proper paperwork. 

    But the FDA decided not to force contraceptive makers to relabel their
    pills, something women's groups had requested, so the decision, to be
    published Tuesday in the Federal Register, primarily will act as a
    prescription guide for physicians. 

    The agency also hopes that women's groups will use it to spread the
    word about emergency contraception. 

    Already, a small group of doctors and family-planning workers had
    started a campaign to publicize morning-after pills. The Reproductive
    Health Technologies Project has a hot line to inform women about the
    method and refer them to doctors in their area to prescribe the pills,
    and similar information is posted on the Internet. 
7.832IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2432
    RTw  25-Feb-97 06:45    

    Vast majority of Americans oppose human cloning

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    WASHINGTON, Feb 25 (Reuter) - In the wake of news that scientists have
    cloned a sheep, 87 percent of Americans say the cloning of humans
    should be banned, according to a new poll released on Tuesday by ABC
    News "Nightline" programme. 

    Eighty-two percent said cloning human beings would be morally wrong,
    and 93 percent said they personally would not choose to be cloned. 

    But six percent of the 519 adults polled on Feb. 24 said they would
    like to be cloned. 

    Americans are split on the scientific breakthrough, the pollsters said,
    noting that 50 percent disapproved of the research, but 53 percent said
    cloning animals should be allowed in the name of medical research. 

    If such research could lead to lifesaving drugs or medical techniques,
    a higher number of 71 percent said it should be allowed, ABC said. 

    The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points. 

    Last weekend, Ian Wilmut of the Roslin Institute near Edinburgh in
    Scotland reported that he had used the cell of an adult sheep to create
    a baby clone. Wilmut has stressed he intends to use the technique on
    animals, not people. 

    REUTER
7.833IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2459
    RTw  25-Feb-97 03:45    

    Americans urged to be careful in Saudi Arabia

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON, Feb 24 (Reuter) - The U.S. State Department on Monday
    warned Americans living in Saudi Arabia to heighten their vigilance to
    security risks, citing concerns about possible extremist attacks. 

    The warning, issued by the U.S. embassy in Riyadh and U.S. consulates
    in Dhahran and Jeddah, was released in Washington hours after the
    arrival of a Saudi Arabian delegation seeking to allay Washington's
    concerns over the probe into last year's bombing against Americans in
    the kingdom. 

    The embassy noted "with deep concern" that in a Feb. 20 interview aired
    on British television, "well-known terrorist Usama Bin Ladin ... not
    only threatened again the U.S. military in Saudi Arabia but also called
    for the expulsion of American civilians." 

    The embassy said it also continued "to receive reports indicating
    possible surveillance or probes of U.S. military and government
    facilities suggesting that planning for terrorist action against U.S.
    interests in Saudi Arabia continues unabated." 

    This period after the Islamic festival of Eid-ul-Fitr was considered
    particularly dangerous in light of a public threat that attacks would
    occur if certain detained invididuals were not released before the end
    of the month of Ramadan. 

    The upcoming month of pilgrimage raised further concerns because the
    large inflow of pilgrims placed a heavy burden on the entire Saudi
    government, but most particularly the security forces, the embassy said
    in its statement. 

    "These statements and reports reinforce the embassy's view of the need
    for the private American community in Saudi Arabia to heighten its
    vigilance and alertness," it said. 

    It strongly encouraged all Americans to take appropriate steps to
    increase their awareness of security risks and lessen their
    vulnerability to attack, saying U.S. government and military
    installations had already reviewed and improved their security
    arrangements. 

    Americans living in Saudi Arabia should continue to exercise extreme
    caution, maintain a low profile, reduce travel within the Kingdom, vary
    travel routes and treat any mail from unfamiliar sources with
    suspicion. 

    Any suspicious activity should be reported to the embassy. 

    The close U.S.-Saudi relationship has been dogged in recent months by
    U.S. complaints that Riyadh was not sharing enough information on its
    investigation into last June's truck bombing that killed 19 American
    servicemen in Dhahran. 

    REUTER
7.834IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2554
    RTw  25-Feb-97 02:27    

    London tube sale to raise reinvest 2 bln stg-Times

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 25 (Reuter) - Britain's transport minister is set to
    announce plans for the sale of London's Underground rail network for
    two billion pounds which would be reinvested in the system, according
    to a report in The Times. 

    The report said the plan to be unveiled by Transport Minister Sir
    George Young on Tuesday and implemented if the Conservative are
    re-elected in this year's general election, would require the proceeds
    to be ploughed back into rejuventating the commuter network. 

    Sale of 'The Tube' is being billed by the government as a possible vote
    winner among London's commuter masses in the election which must be
    held by May 22. 

    The two billion price tag mooted by the Times is higher than previous
    estimates by government insiders. Most recently, Stephen Norris, the
    former transport minister who is working on the government's election
    manifesto, told Reuters up to 1.5 billion pounds could be raised from
    the sale. 

    Recent press reports said the sale had been delayed by ministers amid
    public concern that privatisation would not include safeguards on
    prices and service standards. 

    Addressing this issue is now seen as key to winning public support by
    government ministers led by Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke,
    said The Times. 

    Young is interested in selling the network off under a 10 to 20 year
    franchise, said the report, with the government retaining ultimate
    strategic control. 

    The move will follow the completion of the controversial privatisation
    of Britain's rail network which included the sale of the rail passenger
    services under a franchising system -- seen as a possible model for the
    underground sale. 

    Privatisation of the underground is expected to be one of the key
    issues in the ruling Conservative Party's election manifesto. The Times
    said the manifesto will also include proposals to give the still
    publicly owned Post Office greater commercial freedom. 

    But plans to privatise the Post Office and the Channel Four television
    station have been ditched. Even so the government is still looking to
    raise 6.5 billion stg in sell-offs over the next four years, if it wins
    the election, said the report. 

    REUTER
7.835IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 10:2527
    RTw  25-Feb-97 00:00    

    Six dead in car accidents as gales lash Britain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 24 (Reuter) - Six people died in two road accidents on
    Monday as rain and gale-force winds lashed the southern half of
    Britain. 

    Three people died in an accident involving four vehicles on the M5
    motorway near Bristol, southwest England. The motorway was later closed
    in both directions. 

    Another three people died in a crash on a main road in King's Lynn, in
    eastern England. 

    "It is still too early to say what caused the accident but the driving
    conditions were certainly atrocious," a police spokesman said. 

    The Meteorological Office warned that winds of up to 80 miles per hour
    were expected overnight and that England and Wales could see the most
    sustained period of gales since early 1990, when insurers had to pay
    out two billion pounds ($3.3 billion) in weather-related insurance
    claims. 

    REUTER 
7.836IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:2887
7.837IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:2951
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue
    641

    Mafia teenage killers turn supergrasses
    
    By Bruce Johnston in Rome 

    TWO Sicilian teenagers have admitted killing 33 people between them in
    a Mafia career lasting five years.

    Orazio and Simon, 16 and 17 respectively, began to kill at an age when
    most children still ask to leave the table. Each time they murdered,
    they carved notches on the butts of their guns. However, their killing
    days are over as they have become pentiti - supergrasses.

    Orazio and Simon come from the town of Gela, the island's most
    productive hothouse for trigger-happy junior Mafia recruits, known as
    the killer bambini. According to Concetta Sole, president of the
    Juvenile Court in nearby Caltanisetta, they are only two of 687
    youngsters being tried for serious crimes in Gela, an urban jungle of
    squalor, joblessness and crime where many people live in illegal
    housing lacking basic services.

    So serious has youth crime become that the court has started to
    resemble an ordinary High Court, in terms of the seriousness of
    offences.

    When the time comes for them to give evidence, Orazio and Simon do not
    have to appear in court in person. For their own protection, minors -
    just like the more senior Mafia supergrasses - give their testimony via
    a video screen. Yet the need for such precautions merely reflects the
    fact that Gela's young criminals seem prepared to stop at nothing.

    Take Orazio, who, when he first fired a gun in public, killed three
    men. He and two other youths burst into a crowded bar in Palma di
    Montechiaro, near Gela, at 2am on New Year's Day 1992.

    Orazio was clutching a .38 pistol in one hand and a sawn-off shotgun in
    the other. When they had finished, nine people were lying in a pool of
    blood. Orazio eventually confessed and, while collaborating with
    justice, owned up to 10 other killings.

    Simon's career of killing was far more illustrious. He is the son of a
    member of the Stidde - a dialect word for the star-shaped tattoo
    between the fingers of those initiated into small, maverick Mafias.

    Five years ago, the Stidde began waging war against the more
    centralised Cosa Nostra. Its method, which became Simon's method, was
    to shoot all of the enemy dead. He killed his first rival at 13, then
    went on to kill another 19 before "repenting". In court, he admitted
    regularly "going out at night looking for someone to kill".*
7.838IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:3141
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Howard's wife tries to block documentary
    
    By Alice Thomson 

    SANDRA Howard, the wife of the Home Secretary, yesterday attempted to
    stop a television documentary being broadcast which includes claims
    that she urged her husband to cut the quality of prison food.

    Mrs Howard instructed her solicitor to write to Granada TV - the
    producers of last night's World In Action - two newspapers, the
    publishers Penguin and Derek Lewis, the former Prison Service chief,
    insisting that she never made such suggestions.

    In an interview with The Telegraph yesterday, Mrs Howard said she could
    not understand why Mr Lewis, who made the allegations in the programme,
    had attacked her. She said she had only ever met Mr Lewis once, and
    added: "I feel bewildered as to why he felt it necessary to pass such a
    slur."

    Mrs Howard added: "I am terribly keen on people having nutritious food
    at all times. In fact, the only criticism I would make is that it would
    be rather nice if prisoners' meals didn't have to be served so early."

    Mr Lewis, who was sacked by Mr Howard in 1995, has told World In Action
    that he was taken aside by Mr Howard's political adviser, David
    Cameron, in 1994 and told that Mrs Howard believed that "the prison
    code's requirements to provide a balanced and nutritious diet was
    somehow too generous for prisoners".

    Mrs Howard's lawyer, John Turnbull, said yesterday: "She never said or
    suggested that any actual or proposed nutritional standards at Her
    Majesty's Prisons were too generous. She has never had any discussion
    with her husband or any of his advisers about the nutritional standards
    in the code."

    Granada made late changes to the World In Action programme in order to
    reflect Mrs Howard's views though it did not cut the interview with Mr
    Lewis. A spokesman said that the interview was transmitted "as
    originally planned".*
7.839IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:3254
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Billie-Jo's father questioned in murder inquiry
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 

    THE foster father of Billie-Jo Jenkins, the 13-year-old beaten to death
    in Hastings, was questioned yesterday by police investigating her
    murder.

    Sion Jenkins, 39, is understood to have been interviewed at Hastings
    police station in East Sussex since yesterday morning. Sussex police
    said a man had been arrested and was helping with their inquiries. They
    refused to confirm that the man in custody was Mr Jenkins, saying only
    that he was a local man in his 30s. They declined to give a precise age
    or to say exactly where he was arrested.

    Sources indicated that no charges were likely last night and he was
    expected to be held overnight. The man is the third to be arrested by
    detectives since the murder on Saturday Feb 15 at Billie-Jo's home in
    Lower Park Road, Hastings. The two other men have been released.
    Billie-Jo died after being beaten on the back of the head with an 18in
    metal tent spike as she painted patio doors at the back of her house.

    Mr Jenkins told a news conference last week that her body was found by
    the second eldest of his four natural daughters - Lottie, aged 10 -
    after he brought her and her 12-year-old sister Annie back home from a
    music lesson. Police said last week that the dead girl had been alone
    at the house for only about 40 minutes.

    It is understood that Mr Jenkins, the deputy headmaster and head
    designate of the William Parker boys comprehensive school in Hastings,
    has been given a further week off from school on compassionate grounds.
    Neighbours said they did not believe the family had returned to stay in
    their home since the murder. Police have carried out extensive tests at
    the house and an empty house next door.

    Mr Jenkins spoke last week with his wife Lois, 35, of a loving, caring
    and lively young girl who joined the family as a foster daughter
    four-and-a-half years ago after a "troubled background" in east London.
    Before Christmas Mr and Mrs Jenkins - who coincidentally have the same
    surname as Billie-Jo's natural father, Bill Jenkins - became the legal
    guardians to Billie-Jo. The couple told a news conference that they had
    been concerned about the family's safety.

    Mrs Jenkins said that she and neighbours had reported concerns to
    police about movements in the empty house next door. A neighbour had
    also reported to police a prowler looking into the Jenkins's house. Mr
    Jenkins said he had glimpsed a prowler in the back garden and had seen
    a man apparently looking at the house from the park opposite, though
    these incidents were not reported. A letter from Lottie Jenkins to
    Billie-Jo is attached to one of hundreds of bouquets outside 48 Lower
    Park Road. It reads: "Dear Billie-Jo, I think about you every day and
    every minute of every day. I will never forget you."*
7.840IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:3383
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Children terrified by gunman as minister is seized in church stunt
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 

    A CHURCH of Scotland minister was condemned yesterday for setting up a
    stunt in which a gunman in combat fatigues burst into a church filled
    with children.

    The intruder, whose face was painted, held a handgun to the minister's
    head and told 250 Cubs, Scouts and Guides, their parents and leaders,
    that religion had caused a lot of trouble in the world. Most of the
    adults realised that the incident had been staged when the man talked
    about missionaries being persecuted for their beliefs. But some of the
    younger children started to cry as the Rev Earlsley White was tied up
    and led out of church. The congregation then heard two shots being
    fired.

    The Park Parish Church in Uddingston is less than 25 miles from
    Dunblane and the incident was staged just over two weeks before the
    first anniversary of the school massacre by Thomas Hamilton, on March
    13. After the stunt the minister returned, offered no explanation, and
    resumed his sermon on the dangers faced by missionaries and nuns
    preaching the gospel abroad.

    The Sunday afternoon service, to commemorate the founders of the
    Scouting movement, was stopped by the police a short time later after a
    member of the public reported seeing a gunman enter the church. Armed
    police sealed off the street outside the building and a police
    helicopter hovered overhead as the 69-year-old minister was
    interviewed.

    Mr White told officers from Strathclyde Police that he was trying to
    illustrate the theme of his sermon. He was later charged with
    obstructing the police, and the 40-year-old "gunman", a friend of the
    minister, was charged with firearms offences and a number of weapons
    and a quantity of ammunition were later taken from his home. One local
    man described the stunt as "the sickest joke ever".

    According to adults in the congregation, some of the"children were so
    terrified they had to be coaxed out of the church. One witness said:
    "Children as young as six were obviously shaken by what happened. Some
    said they were scared to come out in case the 'bad man' got them."

    Mr White was described by acquaintances as a highly respected and
    inspirational minister, but his stunt was condemned by parents, the
    Church of Scotland, politicians and anti-gun campaigners. Last night
    the Rev James Wilson, the clerk to the presbytery, apologised for the
    offence and distress caused in the community by the minister's "serious
    misjudgment".

    Alastair Masterton, 32, a butcher in the town, who was sitting in the
    public gallery while his eight-year-old son Mark was in the church,
    said the minister should be "thrown out" of the ministry. He added: "I
    was absolutely terrified. My first thought was, 'Oh my God, Mark is
    down there'. I was totally convinced it was real, right until when the
    minister came back in."

    A local woman, who did not want to be named, was outside the church
    waiting for her 10-year-old son when she saw the "gunman" emerge. "He
    had some kind of gun and fired two shots into the ground. It might have
    been blanks, or whatever, but the shots left two scorch marks on the
    grass," she said. "I didn't know what to think at first. I know I was
    raging and there was a lot of anger among the other parents. It was
    very realistic."

    George Robertson, the shadow Scottish Secretary, said it was
    "dangerously irresponsible" to become involved in gimmicks with
    firearms, and Ann Pearston, of the anti-handgun Snowdrop Campaign,
    called the affair "totally shocking". David Shelmerdine, chief
    executive of the Scottish Council for the Scout Association, said he
    had been told that most of the older children understood the sermon. He
    added: "The reaction in the church when the gunman burst in was one of
    total disbelief, but I understand there was no panic. The minister has
    spoken to local Scout representatives and has accepted that the content
    had gone badly wrong."

    Mr White refused to comment on the incident. However his wife said it
    had been "a bit of fun" and had been "blown out of proportion". It
    emerged yesterday that the minister, who has been at the church for 10
    years, had been criticised recently for talking about firearms and
    other weapons during sermons.*
7.841IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:3536
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Interviews with suspects to be filmed by police
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 

    POLICE interviews with suspected criminals will be filmed and could be
    shown to juries as evidence, the Government said yesterday.

    David Maclean, the Home Office Minister, said cameras would be
    installed in police stations in eight areas in order to assess the
    practicality of the scheme. The video tape could be produced in court
    to allow juries to assess the body language as well as the words of a
    defendant, he said. Filming interviews would also prevent police
    officers bullying suspects into confessing.

    The announcement follows the release of the Bridgewater Three last week
    after 18 years in jail for murder. The Appeal Court judges were told
    that two policemen had probably fabricated a vital statement. Police
    interviews have been recorded on audio tape since 1984 and the tape, or
    transcript, can be used as evidence in court. But some suspects have
    claimed that detectives were making threatening gestures while
    interrogating them.

    Michael Howard, the Home Secretary, has decided to extend the recording
    to video tape, which could be shown if the suspect refuses to give
    evidence in court. Police forces in Scotland already film interviews
    and the eventual aim is to make this compulsory across Britain.

    Cameras will probably be installed showing the suspect's face and the
    back of the police officer. This would let the jury see the defendant's
    expression while answering questions, but would also make any
    aggressive behaviour by the questioner clearly visible. Mr Maclean said
    the film would be "an extra safeguard for suspects" and "an extra
    safeguard for police officers" who could be wrongly accused of
    bullying.
7.842IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:3732
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    MPs back call to release jailed soldiers
    
    By Colin Randall, Chief Reporter 

    A CAMPAIGN to free two Scottish Guardsmen jailed for life for the
    murder of a Belfast teenager is attracting cross-party support from a
    growing number of MPs.

    Forty members have now signed an Early Day Motion seeking the release
    of Jim Fisher, 27, and Mark Wright, 23, who have each been detained for
    four-and-a-half years.

    MPs and senior military figures sympathetic to the men have drawn
    encouragement from a judge's decision last December that the Northern
    Ireland Office should reconsider the case. Previously, the Life
    Sentence Review Board was not due to examine the men's sentences until
    late next year.

    Fisher, from Ayr, and Wright, from Arbroath, have been in custody since
    Sept 1992, when they were involved in the shooting of 18-year-old Peter
    McBride while on patrol in a republican area of Belfast.

    Maj-Gen Murray Naylor, a former Scots Guards officer, said yesterday
    that the two men appeared to have made a "tragic misjudgment". He said
    the demand for the soldiers' release was based not on challenging the
    correctness of their convictions, but on precedent and natural justice.

    Philip Gallie, the Tory MP for Ayr, who tabled the Commons motion
    seeking the men's release, said it was the right time to raise the
    campaign's profile.
7.843IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:3983
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Mother who could not cope threw baby from bridge
    
    By Wendy Holden 

    A MENTALLY-ill mother threw her baby son from a 150ft-high bridge after
    social services decided that she should be allowed to look after him
    herself, a court was told yesterday.

    Lisa Whayman felt "pressured" by the decision and the day before she
    was due to resume caring for 16-week-old Daniel last August she hurled
    him to his death from the Orwell Bridge, near Ipswich. She had called
    social services hours before the boy's death, saying that she would be
    unable to cope with caring for him.

    Whayman, 33, of Worlingworth, near Saxmundham, Suffolk, wept throughout
    yesterday's 45-minute hearing at Norwich Crown Court. She denied
    murdering her son but admitted manslaughter. Her plea was accepted by
    the prosecution. Mr Justice Wright ordered her to be detained
    indefinitely in a mental hospital. The court was told that Whayman, who
    had suffered from psychiatric problems since she was 14, also had a
    10-year-old daughter who is in the custody of a previous partner.

    Caroline Ludlow, prosecuting, said that Whayman gave birth to Daniel in
    May last year and he was immediately placed on an "at risk" register by
    social services. Later the baby went to live with his maternal
    grandparents, Ken and Marie Eley, after his mother and her husband
    started having marital problems. Social workers decided that the child
    should be returned to Whayman and his father and fixed the date for Aug
    30.

    Mrs Ludlow told the court that Whayman felt "pressured" by the thought
    of having to care for Daniel and the night before she killed her son,
    she had stayed awake into the early hours. The following day, Aug 29,
    she visited Daniel at his grandmother's home, and was left alone with
    the child. Whayman called a taxi and asked the driver to take her to a
    building society and then on to the Orwell Bridge, a notorious suicide
    spot over the River Orwell, outside Ipswich. She told the driver that
    she was meeting someone at the bridge, although he was reluctant to
    leave her there because it was raining heavily and she appeared to be
    distressed, the court was told.

    Minutes later she threw Daniel off the bridge. The baby landed on the
    riverbank and was pronounced dead in hospital about an hour later. The
    court was told that a number of motorists had seen Whayman throw the
    child off the bridge - although some thought that she had been carrying
    a bundle of clothes. She told a jogger who approached her: "I have just
    killed my baby. I threw him off the bridge." She later told police the
    same.

    Dr Hadrian Ball, a psychiatrist, told the court that Whayman had
    probably been suffering from schizophrenia since her mid-teens, but the
    diagnosis was confirmed only after Daniel's death. Psychiatrists who
    examined her previously had concluded only that she was suffering from
    a personality disorder.

    Gareth Hawksworth, defending, told the court: "It would appear that the
    real tragedy of this case is that this lady's condition went
    undiagnosed for so many years." He said there were indications that his
    client may also have intended to take her own life when she killed her
    son.

    Mr Justice Wright said Whayman had been a source of anxiety to the
    health service for about 15 years. He added that there was no doubt
    that she needed help and treatment. "This was a terrible and tragic
    event," he said. "No one of course can be in any doubt that a mother
    who commits an act of unlawfully killing her own child must be in
    serious need of help." He said Whayman's mental condition substantially
    diminished her responsibility for the crime.

    A spokesman for Suffolk social services said care workers had done all
    they could for Whayman and her child since she was referred to them by
    her family doctor three months before Daniel was born. He said: "Her GP
    had expressed concern about her fitness to cope with a new-born baby,
    but with daily visits to the family home and a tremendous amount of
    support, Daniel was a healthy, happy, well-cared-for baby."

    Four separate psychiatric reports had failed to diagnose schizophrenia,
    the spokesman said, and although there had been plans to reunite the
    child with his mother, those plans had been halted when Whayman
    telephoned social services on the day she killed her son and claimed
    that she could not cope.
7.844IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:4850
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    IRA sniper's victim cremated
    
    By Will Bennett 

    THE murder of Lance Bombardier Stephen Restorick by the IRA should be
    used as an opportunity to restart the Ulster peace process, mourners at
    his funeral were told yesterday.

    "We have to hope that his death will be a catalyst to restart the peace
    process and bring both sides together to talk," said John Pearce, of
    the British Humanist Association, who officiated at the non-religious
    service at Peterborough Crematorium, Cambridgeshire.

    It took place on the day that L/Bdr Restorick of the 3rd Regiment Royal
    Horse Artillery, a bachelor from Peterborough, would have been 24. He
    was shot as he talked to a couple in a car at a checkpoint in
    Bessbrook, Co Armagh, on Feb 12. He was the second soldier killed by
    the IRA since it ended its ceasefire.

    The driver,Lorraine McElroy, 35, who was grazed by the bullet which
    killed him, had hoped to attend yesterday's funeral but is believed to
    be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

    The coffin, carrying a single wreath from L/Bdr Restorick's regiment,
    was carried by uniformed colleagues as Samuel Barber's Adagio for
    Strings played over the loudspeakers.

    Mr Pearce said L/Bdr Restorick's family wanted to celebrate his life
    rather than mourn his death and praised their response and their
    rejection of vengeance. Last week his parents, John and Rita Restorick,
    issued an open letter in which they pleaded: "Please help to make
    something good come out of this evil deed." Mr Pearce said: "He would
    have wished us to strike an upbeat note. Keep that in your minds and
    heart. Do not let it go." 

    The hour-long service heard many tributes to the good-humoured young
    man who had followed his father and grandfather into the services at
    the age of 19. Major Mark Milligan, his commanding officer, said he had
    been quickly identified as a promising young soldier with leadership
    qualities, adding: "He always worked hard and was noted for raising
    morale."

    Among those at the service were Dr Brian Mawhinney, the Conservative
    Party chairman who is MP for Peterborough, and Edward Barrington, the
    Irish Republic's ambassador to London. Dr Mawhinney, an Ulsterman, said
    afterwards that the people of Northern Ireland wanted a lasting peace.
    "We want to see the variety of people and ideas and cultures blossom
    side by side," he said.
7.845IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:4937
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    BBC to favour the Referendum Party
    
    By Robert Shrimsley 

    THE BBC is to give favoured treatment to Sir James Goldsmith's
    Referendum Party during the election campaign, compared to other "minor
    parties". 

    But even the billionaire financier is to be kept off the BBC's main
    political programmes during the campaign, including Question Time,
    Election Call and Any Questions. The decision is revealed in a leaked
    memo from Anne Sloman, the BBC's chief political adviser, which has
    been passed to The Telegraph.

    Mrs Sloman's memo, on the coverage to be offered to parties that have
    no MPs, stated: "The Referendum Party has a distinctive position on one
    of the major issues of the campaign.

    "It is also a story because of the way it has been created. There will
    be occasions when this is reflected in news packages." The memo
    stressed that steps must be taken to ensure coverage of Sir James's
    party "doesn't get out of proportion" and that other parties which have
    a "distinctive position" on the European question are also interviewed.

    All minor parties fielding more than 50 candidates will have the launch
    of their manifestos covered. After that they can expect just one
    package on the Six O' Clock news on BBC1, Newsnight on BBC2, Today on
    Radio Four, and a sequence on Radio Five live. Mrs Sloman said:
    "Requests by such parties to be treated on a par with other parties who
    have MPs in Westminster on programmes such as Question Time, Election
    Call and Any Questions are not likely to be met".

    A Referendum Party spokesman said: "It would be undemocratic of the BBC
    to deny a voice on these programmes to a party fielding 550
    candidates." 
7.846IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 13:5494
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    QC's wife used a 'sixth sense' to help the sick
    
    By Caroline Davies 

    A BARRISTER'S wife who claims to have healing hands and psychic powers
    denied yesterday that she had encouraged a solicitor to leave his wife.

    Jenny Wilmot-Smith, 48, a mother of three children, told a jury she had
    hoped to help Stephen Kirby, 40, when he came to her suffering from
    headaches. But she was "stunned", she said, when she learned that Mr
    Kirby's wife Clare, 40, also a solicitor, was blaming her for the
    breakdown of their marriage.

    Mrs Wilmot-Smith and her husband Richard Wilmot-Smith, QC, 44, are
    suing The Daily Telegraph and Clare Kirby over an article they allege
    claims they "brainwashed" Mr Kirby into parting from his wife. Mr Kirby
    is suing The Daily Telegraph over the same article. The defendants all
    deny libel and claim justification.

    Being questioned by her husband, who is representing them both, she
    told the High Court that when Mr Kirby came to see her she thought she
    could "alleviate some of the pain, short-term, by laying on of hands".

    She had a "sixth sense" she said, which she had known of throughout her
    "conscious life". She could sit on a train, she said, "and know where
    the person sitting next to me was hurting and how unhappy they were. I
    found it intolerable". She said she began "healing" sessions with Mr
    Kirby but, as he gave details of his extra-marital affairs, she
    realised she could do no more for him while his family problems
    continued. She then took on the role of a "befriender".

    She visited him during the time he decided to separate from his wife,
    but later learned that Mrs Kirby blamed her for his request for a
    separation. "I had not forbidden Mr Kirby to see his wife. I was trying
    to get Mr Kirby to come to talk to his wife and not hide behind me,"
    she said.

    Her husband asked her: "Do you ever wish to break up a happy marriage?"
    She replied: "No." He continued: "What is your attitude towards
    marriage?" She replied: "It is very hard work, but it's worth it." Her
    own 19-year marriage, she told the court "was one of the best things
    that had ever happened to me".

    Mrs Wilmot-Smith said she had seen "hundreds" of people as a psychic
    and a medium. She told the court she had no medical qualifications, was
    not a "prophet" in the "biblical sense" and she did not like looking in
    the future for people. Instead, she called herself a "healer". She
    added: "I believe I have a gift, some people call it psychic. In my own
    religion it is called a gift of the spirit."

    George Carman, QC, for the defendants, asked her how often she received
    "psychic messages" and where. "In the bed, out shopping, having a
    bath?" he asked. She said she had no idea how to describe her
    experiences. "It's a sixth sense."

    She said she would act as a medium only if someone asked for "a
    demonstration of survival" to show them that someone important that
    they loved survived. "It is very difficult to describe. How do you know
    what you are going to give the children for dinner?" she replied.

    "Well," replied Mr Carman, "the answer to that might be to look in the
    fridge." She replied that it was different, "because I have been aware
    of this gift all my conscious life. How do I know that I see his
    Lordship there?" she asked, referring to the judge, Mr Justice Rougier.

    Mr Justice Rougier intervened: "We are getting very metaphysical here,
    aren't we?" She said her "healing gift" had been affected by the court
    case. "I can't use my healing gift if I am too tired or too upset and
    have too much on my mind," she said.

    "Since the article in The Daily Telegraph it has seemed to me wrong
    that anybody should come to see me as a healer or a medium without my
    having cleared my name, and because I don't want them to be
    investigated by reporters and their confidentiality exposed as Mr
    Kirby's has been."

    She said she and her husband had not been given enough time to respond
    to inquiries by The Daily Telegraph before the article, containing
    allegations made by Clare Kirby, was published.

    After it was printed she felt "like some piece of a football that Fleet
    Street could kick around to suit their own story". People rang her up,
    she said, saying they had read about her in the newspaper, including
    her mother. "I was particularly distressed about my mother because she
    said, 'Is this true?' I said, Mum how can you ask me if it's true?
    'Well', she said, 'It's in The Daily Telegraph'."

    The libel action, she said "had taken the sun out of the sky" for her,
    and The Daily Telegraph had covered the trial daily, she added,
    "reporting the bits they want".

    The case continues.
7.847IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 14:0154
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Child sex leaflet condemned by holiday resort
    
    By Sean O'Neill 

    A CHARITY'S campaign to highlight the problem of child prostitution has
    been condemned for appearing to portray a South Coast resort as a
    centre of sex tourism.

    Thousands of leaflets being distributed by the Children's Society carry
    an image of a tropical sunset with the words: "Why travel 6,000 miles
    to have sex with children when you can do the same thing in
    Bournemouth?" Similar pamphlets, devised by the charity in consultation
    with an advertising agency, will be handed out in Manchester, Leeds,
    and Birmingham. The four places named in the campaign were selected not
    because they have exceptional child prostitution problems but because
    the Children's Society operates refuges for abused young people in
    each.

    The choice of Bournemouth, which has a reputation as a family resort,
    prompted an angry reaction yesterday from politicians, police and
    tourism officials. Dorset police said the campaign was "an ill-advised
    publicity stunt" and a spokesman said the force took "a very dim view"
    of the leaflet. "We have had a problem with paedophiles taking indecent
    pictures of children playing on the beach," the spokesman said. "But
    this can only make the problem worse and actually attract this sort of
    person to the town. There is no evidence to suggest that there is any
    child prostitution in Bournemouth or the area as a whole."

    John Butterfill, the Conservative MP for Bournemouth West, said the
    charity had behaved appallingly and described its leaflet as "very
    irresponsible". He said: "I would support any measure to combat child
    prostitution but I think that this emotive and unsubstantiated sort of
    publicity is very bad. It could actually attract paedophiles to a
    particular area."

    Ken Male, the resort's director of tourism, said the leaflets were
    misleading and potentially damaging to the tourist trade. The campaign
    was also condemned by Julian Hulse, the chief executive of Manchester's
    chamber of commerce, who said he would want any reference to his city
    withdrawn. "This is a quite appalling piece of bad taste," he said.
    "Whoever is responsible for writing that slogan needs to take a long,
    hard look at themselves and what they are doing."

    But the Children's Society remained unapologetic about its campaign,
    which it admitted amounted to shock tactics. "It is shocking because
    the reality is shocking," a spokesman said. "There are children who
    fall through all the safety nets and are preyed on by pimps. Those
    children are in great danger. It is easy to turn a blind eye and
    pretend that child prostitution happens only abroad. But it does happen
    here and people should be aware of it. Bournemouth is a tourist town
    and we can see why people there would be upset. But we have a different
    agenda, we are about protecting children and that is our bottom line."
7.848IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 14:0364
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Baxter airs a grievance in helipad noise row 
    
    By Michael Fleet 

    RAYMOND Baxter, the broadcaster whose name is synonymous with
    ear-splitting decibels on the airfield, will today join neighbours in a
    battle over the noise generated by a Swiss businessman and his jet
    helicopter.

    Urs Schwarzenbach has been involved in run-ins with his neighbours on a
    tranquil stretch of the Thames near Henley, Oxon, for the past seven
    years. First he built a polo ground without planning permission,
    including 49 stables, a full-size pitch and an all-weather exercise
    strip. Then summer parties were held at the ground, with police
    receiving up to 20 calls a night about the noise.

    Today Mr Shwarzenbach is going to a planning inquiry to try to get
    permission for a helipad, with lights for use in poor conditions, and
    to be given rights to land his twin-engine Squirrel helicopter at least
    400 times a year. Against him will be residents of the riverside houses
    who make up his neighbours and whose pleasures include riverside walks
    or using their boats.

    Mr Baxter joined the RAF in 1940 and flew Spitfires. He presented
    Tomorrow's World and covered the Farnborough Air Show for 34 years. He
    said that the noise of the helicopter was driving people to
    distraction. "It is a cacophony of sound which is obtrusive and totally
    foreign to this area which myself and my neighbours moved to because we
    enjoyed the peace and tranquillity."

    Mr Baxter is a qualified pilot who enjoys flying when he can and admits
    that "to some ears, including mine, jet engines are a harmony". But the
    Squirrel is not a pleasant sound, even to him.

    "On its last stage of approach it is louder than almost any other
    helicopter, including the Sea King." Mr Schwarzenbach was given
    retrospective permission for his polo ground, from where he runs his
    own team, but has been refused permission for the helipad.

    He can, however, land the helicopter for 28 days a year. He is seeking
    to lift the restriction so that, if he does not get the helipad, he can
    land more often. Vivien Rubenstein, chairman of Harpsden parish
    council, where Mr Schwarzenbach's Lower Bolney Farm complex is based,
    is among objectors. "There is no issue in the village which generates
    more telephone calls to me. People are very upset," she said.

    She told of one widow who has given up swimming in the Thames because
    of the helicopter. "She is well into her 80s but used to swim
    regularly. One day she rang me incandescent with rage to say that as
    she was getting out of the river the helicopter was right overhead and
    whipped up the water. She was very frightened."

    Anthony Mayes, a public relations consultant who lives opposite Mr
    Schwarzenbach, said the noise destroyed the riverside ambience he
    loved. "This was once a peaceful area of great beauty. The noise of the
    helicopter has to be heard to be believed."

    Eyre Maunsell, estate manager for Mr Schwarzenbach, said: "There are
    quite a lot of extraneous noises in this valley, from the railway and
    overflying aircraft, and we do not believe the helicopter is an
    intrusive disturbance." He said that Mr Schwarzenbach was "unlikely" to
    use the helicopter as many as 400 times in a calendar year.
7.849IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 14:0550
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 25 February 1997 Issue 641

    Elderly 'so unfit they struggle to wash hair'
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 

    MIDDLE-aged and elderly men and women are so sedentary and unfit that a
    substantial number cannot move their shoulders enough to wash their
    hair in comfort.

    A Health Education Authority survey published today reveals widespread
    inactivity, with 7 per cent of men and 28 per cent of women unable to
    climb the stairs with ease. A fifth of women and one in 14 men had a
    shoulder movement measurement of less than 120 degrees which would make
    hair washing and reaching difficult.

    The survey shows that nearly half of men and women over 50 spent most
    of the day sitting down, with women watching an average of 21 hours of
    television a week and men 19 hours. "Once they had switched off the
    television, a quarter of older women (aged 70-74) did not have enough
    strength in their legs to get out of a chair without using their arms,"
    the survey says.

    Once they got up, over a third of the women and nearly one in 10 men,
    aged 50 to 74, were unable to walk at a 3mph pace, and their ability to
    stroll at that speed deteriorated dramatically with age. A quarter of
    men and a third of women over 70 could not walk for a quarter of a mile
    on their own.

    More than seven out of 10 men and eight out of 10 women, aged 50 and
    over, did less than 30 minutes of moderate physical activity five times
    a week, according to the HEA survey of 4,300 50 to 74-year-olds in
    England.

    The HEA is now targeting the next phase of its Active For Life campaign
    at older people. New advertisments will be launched this week.

    Nick Cavill, physical activity manager for the HEA, said yesterday:
    "These figures are worrying. We are encouraging men and women over 50
    to take part in some sort of daily activity. This can include anything
    which makes you feel warm and breathe more heavily than usual - such as
    a brisk walk to the shops, digging the garden, cycling or dancing."

    Senior doctors will launch a set of standards today designed to rescue
    old people from "squalor, indignity and suffering" in the National
    Health Service.

    The British Geriatrics Society and all the royal colleges have agreed
    on national guidelines covering hospital care and discharge from
    hospital.
7.850IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 14:0737
7.851IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Feb 25 1997 14:0850
7.852IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:29110
    AP 28-Feb-1997 1:01 EST   REF5552

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, Feb. 28, 1997
   
    TOBACCO-CRACKDOWN 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Starting Friday, people under age 27 who want to buy
    cigarettes or chewing tobacco must produce a photo ID proving they are
    at least 18 years old. The move is the first wave of the government's
    crackdown on smoking by youths. But how the regulations will be
    enforced remains unclear. The Food and Drug Administration still hasn't
    hired state inspectors to audit cigarette retailers' compliance. That
    means, at least until summer, anti-tobacco volunteers will have to blow
    the whistle on offenders. 
   
    CAMPAIGN-FUND-RAISING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A third former Clinton administration official has
    refused to give Congress documents subpoenaed for investigations of
    Democratic fund-raising -- claiming a Fifth Amendment privilege against
    self-incrimination. The refusal by former White House aide Mark
    Middleton to turn over documents came as the head of the Senate probe
    -- Tennessee's Fred Thompson -- warned that a stalemate over his budget
    must be resolved quickly or there will be no money for the
    investigation. 
   
    CLINTON 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton is drawing high marks for his job
    performance despite swirling questions over campaign financing,
    Whitewater and his personal life, a new poll says. The Pew Research
    Center survey found 60 percent approved of the way Clinton is handling
    his job, a record in Pew polls. In a USA Today-CNN-Gallup poll, 42
    percent said Clinton was wrong to invite large contributors to stay in
    the White House. Even so, 53 percent said the issue was irrelevant to
    his character and job. 
   
    AIRLINE-TAX 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate agreed to revive a $2.7 billion package
    of airline taxes, including a 10 percent ticket tax, sending the
    measure to the White House for the president's approval. The bill
    quickly moved through Congress -- the House approved it by a wide
    margin -- because the taxes are a crucial source of funds for aviation
    safety projects nationwide. 
   
    AIDS-DEATHS 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- For the first time since the epidemic began in 1981,
    deaths from AIDS have dropped significantly nationwide. Federal health
    officials credit better treatment and prevention programs for the 13
    percent drop in the first six months of last year. President Clinton
    says the nation must not relax its fight. 
   
    MOTHER TERESA 

    CALCUTTA, India (AP) -- Mother Teresa's health has improved since her
    heart attack last year, but sources say she is still unlikely to be
    re-elected head of her worldwide charity. A friend of the Missionaries
    of Charity leader said she is "too old and not in good health." Mother
    Teresa has told fellow nuns she no longer wanted to head the
    organization. A successor is expected to be named in the next few
    weeks. The 86-year-old nun has been confined to a wheelchair because of
    back pain linked to arthritis and osteoporosis. 
   
    IRS-STOCK 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The IRS is moving to close a major tax loophole that
    could affect some $20 billion in complex financial deals either
    completed or under way. At issue are so-called "fast pay" or "step
    down" preferred stock offerings that enable companies to borrow at
    lower costs by using the tax-exempt status afforded to these types of
    deals. Essentially, the transactions let companies sell preferred stock
    through Real Estate Investment Trusts, enabling them to take advantage
    of tax deductions on the dividends they pay out on those investment
    vehicles. 
   
    PAKISTAN EARTHQUAKE 

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -- A powerful earthquake with a magnitude of
    7.3 shook western Pakistan early Friday, killing at least eight people
    and injuring more than two dozen, hospital officials said. According to
    the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo., the quake was centered 70
    miles east-southeast of Quetta, the capital of Pakistan's least
    populated province, Baluchistan. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading at 120.57 yen on Friday, down 0.35
    yen. The Nikkei is down 260.03 points to 18,761.53. In New York, the
    Dow industrials closed at 6,925.07, down 58.11. 
   
    BULLS-CAVALIERS 

    CLEVELAND (AP) -- Michael Jordan's 3-point try rimmed out with one
    second left, and the Cleveland Cavaliers held Chicago to season lows in
    points and field goal shooting to beat the Bulls for the first time in
    two years, 73-70 Thursday night. The Bulls, who had 50 wins in 56 games
    last season, fell to 49-7. 
   
    HORNETS-ROCKETS 

    HOUSTON (AP) -- Glen Rice scored 12 of his 24 points in the third
    quarter as the Charlotte Hornets beat the Houston Rockets 106-95 on
    Thursday night for their first win ever at The Summit. Charlotte had
    lost their previous nine games in Houston. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.853IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:29117
    RTw  28-Feb-97 03:24    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    JERUSALEM - Defying international and Palestinian protests, a buoyant
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared a victory in the
    battle for Jerusalem. 

    JERUSALEM - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat attacked Israel's
    decision to build a hilltop settlement in Arab East Jerusalem as a
    serious breach of the Palestinian-Israeli peace agreement. 

    - - - - 

    WIRRAL, England - Britain's opposition Labour party won a key
    by-election in north west England, pushing Prime Minister John Major's
    Conservative government into a parliamentary minority, officials
    announced. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin makes an address to the nation on
    Friday in which he is expected to speak of the problems facing Russia's
    armed forces amid mounting speculation he will sack his defence
    minister. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Top U.S. officials voiced support for Mexican President
    Ernesto Zedillo, suggesting the Clinton administration was leaning
    toward certifying Mexico once again as an ally in the war on drugs. 

    - - - - 

    PRETORIA - Zairean rebels have said they are ready to begin talks on
    ending the country's civil war but a Kinshasa government official said
    his side is not authorised to start negotiations. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Gulf War commander Norman Schwarzkopf said he doubted U.S.
    troops were exposed to Iraqi war gas because a milligram of it is fatal
    and he got no report throughout the war that anyone was even sickened
    by gas. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - North Korea's vice-defence minister Kim Kwang-jin died less
    than a week after the death of the defence minister, monitoring
    agencies reported. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton's budget would result in a $13
    billion tax increase after key tax cuts expire at the end of 2000, a
    congressional report said. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean president Kim Young-sam replaced his top aides,
    kicking off a sweeping administration reshuffle designed to restore his
    credibility following a loans scandal. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Opponents of a controversial French bill to clamp down on
    illegal immigrants have urged new street protests after the National
    Assembly approved the measure and sent it to the Senate for a final
    reading. 

    - - - - 

    QUETTA, Pakistan - A violent earthquake jolted Pakistan's southwestern
    province of Baluchistan, killing at least eight people and injuring
    many others, residents and officials said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - A key senator questioned the Clinton administration's
    proposal to sharply increase aid to Russia while holding down
    assistance to most other former Soviet states. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Marxist guerrillas holding 72 VIP hostages at the Japanese
    ambassador's residence said they were not giving up their main demand
    for the release of some 400 comrades in Peruvian jails. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Donations to the legal defence fund for President Bill
    Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton have dwindled, with more than $2.25
    million in lawyer bills unpaid at the end of 1996, a fund trustee said. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania's parliament announced it would hold a vote to elect
    the country's president on Monday and the ruling Democratic Party chose
    President Sali Berisha as its candidate. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Saudi Arabia renewed pledges of cooperation with the
    United States in the investigation of a truck bombing that killed 19
    U.S. troops and Washington said it hoped they would be carried out. 

    - - - - 

    SYDNEY - Twelve people were taken to hospital and 500 evacuated from a
    Sydney shopping centre after an unexploded chlorine bomb seeped out
    toxic fumes, firefighters said. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER 
7.855IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2945
    AP 28-Feb-1997 0:27 EST   REF5470

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    IRS Closing Major Tax Loophole

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The IRS moved Thursday to close a major tax loophole
    Thursday that could affect some $20 billion in complex financial deals
    either completed or under way. 

    "We've recently seen these things occurring and it's a misuse of the
    tax code," said a Treasury Department spokesman, who declined to be
    identified further. 

    At issue are so-called "fast pay" or "step down" preferred stock
    offerings that enable companies to borrow at lower costs by using the
    tax-exempt status afforded to these types of deals. 

    Essentially, the transactions let companies sell preferred stock
    through Real Estate Investment Trusts, enabling them to take advantage
    of tax deductions on the dividends they pay out on those investment
    vehicles. 

    A Real Estate Investment Trust, or REIT, is a special corporation
    exempt from federal corporate taxes so long as it distributes 90
    percent of its income to investors. REITs usually hold mortgages on
    office buildings or other properties. 

    In a typical preferred stock offering, companies don't receive tax
    deductions for dividends paid on preferred stock, nor can the investors
    get a tax break on the dividends received on the stock. 

    The "step down" preferred deals typically pay out high dividends,
    exceeding 10 percent. Through a complex financing arrangement, the high
    dividends enable the trust to rapidly pay off a debt, such as a first
    mortgage on an office building. 

    The Treasury official said that the government stood to loose
    significant tax revenues -- about one-third of the estimated $20
    billion that big Wall Street firms sought to raise through such
    offerings in recent weeks. 

    According to reports, the exact language of the new regulations was
    still being drafted but their effectiveness would be made retroactive
    to Thursday. 
7.856IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2932
    AP 27-Feb-1997 23:38 EST   REF5176

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Bomber's' Letter Questioned

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Investigators Thursday questioned the authenticity of a
    letter claiming responsibility for two Atlanta bombings, since the
    writer left out details known only to the bomber. 

    "There are unique features about the bombs that were not disclosed,"
    FBI spokesman Jay Spadafore said. "This makes the point why we can't
    say the letter writer is the bomber." 

    The letter, sent to several news organizations, claimed a group called
    the Army of God was responsible for bombing an abortion clinic in
    suburban Atlanta on Jan. 16 and last week's bombing at a gay and
    lesbian nightclub. 

    Bobby Browning, a spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
    Firearms, also said the letter's description of the bomb differed from
    the actual bombs. 

    "There are some other aspects that make me skeptical," Browning said,
    refusing to elaborate. 

    The FBI's crime lab is testing the letter for fingerprints, paper type
    and ink. The wording of the letter also will be examined for clues,
    Browning said. 

    Mayor Bill Campbell and some gay and lesbian businesses have put up a
    $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest. 
7.857IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2949
    AP 27-Feb-1997 23:29 EST   REF5168

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Synagogue Sniper Sentenced

    By JIM SALTER

    Associated Press Writer

    CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) -- A five-time convicted killer and avowed racist who
    claims he shot civil rights leader Vernon Jordan in 1980 got his wish
    on Thursday: the death sentence for a 20-year old murder at a
    synagogue. 

    Joseph Paul Franklin warned a jury last month that he would kill again
    if he was not executed. The judge followed the jury's recommendation
    and sentenced Franklin to death for the 1977 sniper attack on Gerald
    Gordon, who was leaving a bar mitzvah when he was gunned down. 

    "I'd just like to thank the court for a fair trial," Franklin said
    softly, nodding approvingly as Circuit Judge Robert L. Campbell read
    the sentence. 

    According to testimony and taped confessions from Franklin, he wanted
    to kill as many Jews as possible. 

    Already serving six life sentences for four other killings, Franklin
    signed a waiver of appeal moments after the sentencing. He claims to be
    anxious to die out of weariness of prison life. 

    But defense lawyer Karen Kraft, appointed to assist Franklin, plans to
    appeal, saying Franklin is a paranoid schizophrenic and should not have
    been allowed to represent himself at trial. 

    Franklin was serving six life sentences when he admitted to killing
    Gordon. He was sent to prison for killing an interracial couple in
    Madison, Wis., in 1977 and for killing two black men in Salt Lake City
    in 1980. 

    In 1982, Franklin was acquitted of wounding Jordan, when Jordan was
    president of the Urban League in Fort Wayne, Ind. Franklin admitted to
    the crime a decade later, but couldn't be tried again because of the
    Constitution's protection against double jeopardy. 

    Franklin also was indicted but not tried for allegedly shooting Hustler
    magazine publisher Larry Flynt in 1978. The prosecutor said the assault
    charge wasn't worth pursuing, given the murder charges against
    Franklin. 
7.858IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2924
    AP 27-Feb-1997 23:28 EST   REF5167

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Apparent Bullet Hole Found in Jet

    DANIA, Fla. (AP) -- A maintenance worker inspecting a TWA jet just
    after it landed Thursday found what appeared to be a bullet hole in the
    tail. 

    TWA Flight 680, carrying 126 passengers and crew from St. Louis to the
    Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, landed at around 1:30
    p.m. with no problems, the Federal Aviation Administration said. 

    Shortly afterward, a maintenance worker doing a routine inspection
    discovered the hole in the tail section, FAA spokeswoman Kathleen
    Bergen. She said police made the preliminary determination that it was
    a bullet hole. 

    There was no indication how the hole got there, Bergen said. 

    John McDonald, spokesman for Trans World Airlines, said Thursday night
    that the hole wasn't there when a crew inspected the Boeing 727 before
    it left Lambert Airport in St. Louis. 
7.859IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2970
    AP 27-Feb-1997 21:52 EST   REF5999

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Nurse's Aide Convicted of Rape

    By BEN DOBBIN

    Associated Press Writer

    ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- A fired nurse's aide was convicted Thursday of
    raping a comatose woman in a nursing home. It was the only known case
    of a woman being impregnated and giving birth while in a coma-like
    state. 

    John Horace, 53, was found guilty of rape and sexual assault for the
    attack on the 29-year-old woman in 1995. 

    Horace displayed no emotion as the verdict was read, but relatives of
    the victim gasped and sobbed. He could get up to 25 years in prison at
    sentencing on March 27. 

    The woman, who delivered a healthy boy two months prematurely last
    March, was severely injured in a car wreck in 1985 that left her in a
    chronic vegetative state. 

    "He chose the most vulnerable among us, a woman struck down in her
    prime, a patient entrusted to his care," prosecutor Jerry Solomon said
    in closing arguments. 

    Doctors said it's unlikely she had any awareness of the rape, pregnancy
    or birth. 

    The woman's mother, referred to only as Grandma Doe to protect her
    daughter's identity, testified that "She hasn't spoken since the
    accident" and is unable to communicate or voluntarily move her body. 

    "We've never been able to get through to her at all," she added. 

    Horace had worked for just five weeks at Westfall Health Care Center, a
    nursing home for the severely disabled in Brighton, a Rochester suburb,
    when he was fired for fondling a 49-year-old patient with multiple
    sclerosis. 

    It was the fourth time Horace had been fired for alleged sexual
    misconduct. Because no one pressed charges in any of the cases, his
    history of abuse did not show up in his employment record when he was
    hired by Westfall. 

    Four months after he left Westfall, staff there discovered the woman
    was pregnant. Her Roman Catholic family ruled out an abortion and her
    mother opted to raise the boy rather than give him up for adoption. 

    DNA tests of Horace's blood established a minimum of 680 million-to-1
    probability that he was the father. 

    There were no eyewitnesses, and the defense argued that the woman could
    have become pregnant before or after Horace worked at Westfall, and by
    artificial insemination instead of sexual intercourse. 

    Horace, a tall, elegant, fastidiously groomed man, had begun posing as
    a sex therapist for at least six months before joining Westfall,
    offering in ads to perform gynecological exams at his home. 

    He pleaded guilty last spring to impersonating a doctor and offering
    examinations without a license and drew six months in prison. 

    For law-enforcement and health-care authorities, the case highlighted a
    largely unrecognized problem: the vulnerability of nursing-home
    patients to abuse. 
7.860IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2930
    AP 27-Feb-1997 21:47 EST   REF5998

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Little League Sued by Hurt Man

    PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -- Robert L. Whitt was standing in his yard
    complaining to a police officer about Little Leaguers hitting baseballs
    onto his property when one sailed over the fence, bounced and hit him
    in the jaw. 

    Now Whitt is suing, saying the ball severely injured his eye. 

    Officer Darryl Williams is the witness. He went to the house after
    Whitt had complained earlier in day about the errant baseballs. 

    "Mr. Whitt stated he has pleaded with everyone at City Hall, but no one
    will help him," Williams wrote in his report of the Feb. 22, 1996,
    accident. 

    Mayor Gerry Clemons said Tuesday that he was unaware of Whitt's suit
    against this Florida Panhandle city and Central Little Major League
    Inc., but was familiar with Whitt's complaints. 

    "There were balls that did go in his yard, and he compounded the
    problem because he kept them and wouldn't give the baseballs back,"
    Clemons said. "He didn't like the Little Leaguers, and I would gather
    they weren't crazy about him, either." 

    Whitt has since moved. 
7.861IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2957
    AP 27-Feb-1997 21:12 EST   REF5986

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Married Priest Leaving Church

    By LISA HOLEWA

    Associated Press Writer

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- A Roman Catholic priest who scandalized
    the diocese when it came out that he had been secretly married for 15
    years has apparently decided to leave the church and stay with his
    wife. 

    Patrick J. Clarke started working for a real estate agency last month
    and lists his wife's address on his real estate license, state records
    show. 

    Although he's sent letters to former parishioners informing them of his
    new position, he is still on leave from his job as pastor of Espiritu
    Santo Catholic Church and has not notified the church of his decision. 

    "I know nothing," said Mary Jo Murphy, spokeswoman for the Catholic
    Diocese of St. Petersburg. "All I know is officially he is still on a
    leave of absence." 

    After a copy of Clarke's marriage license was anonymously sent to
    church officials, Bishop Robert Lynch announced in October that Clarke
    was married. He asked Clarke, 52, to take a leave of absence and choose
    between his wife and a job that requires he be single and celibate. 

    "You can be assured of my concern for your welfare in the important and
    personal decisions of purchasing or selling property," Clarke said in
    the letter sent this week to former parishoners, which did not mention
    his ministry. 

    He apparently made up his mind late last year. 

    He sent a letter with his Christmas cards that said he decided to
    devote himself to his marriage and planned to go into real estate, said
    former parishioner Andrew Rodnite, Jr. 

    "This has had big effect on me. It's like losing a friend," said
    Rodnite, whose children were baptized by Clarke. 

    Clarke did not return messages left Thursday at his home and office. He
    has not spoken publicly since Lynch's announcement. 

    His wife, Barbara Rominger, has said she will support her husband no
    matter what he decides. 

    Kathy Erickson hired Clarke to work in her real estate agency starting
    in mid-January. 

    "I felt he was a good person and he would fit in well here. I feel very
    strongly that he's a wonderful asset," she said. 
7.862IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:2953
    AP 27-Feb-1997 20:55 EST   REF5980

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Firemen Sue over Internet Knock

    PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Firefighters upset by a message on the Internet have
    sued a paramedic who accused them of laziness and incompetence. 

    But an attorney for Derek Shields, the Pittsburgh medic who posted the
    message, said it was merely an opinion that targeted no one by name. 

    "This is a shame. It is an example of a big union trying to intimidate
    a little guy," lawyer Dominic Salvatori said. He asked Allegheny County
    Judge Robert Horgos to dismiss the lawsuit. 

    Shields was accused of libel and defamation. Attorney Stanford Segal,
    who represents Pittsburgh Fire Fighters Local No. 1, said Shields
    stated his opinions as fact. 

    "The statements made ... are clearly defamatory," Segal said. 

    About 900 firefighters belong to the local. 

    Horgos needed time to study a transcript of lawyers' arguments before
    deciding whether to allow the lawsuit, his secretary, Charlene Baker,
    said Thursday. 

    In his critique on the "pgh.opinion" discussion group on the Internet
    last July, Shields, 24, said firefighters spent four to six hours a
    year actually fighting house fires and devoted most of their time to
    sleeping. 

    Shields also accused firefighters of bungling medical procedures when
    they arrived first at the scene of a blaze. 

    Segal disputed Shields' claim that people have died as a result of
    medical procedures firefighters did or didn't take. 

    Shields, who has two years of experience as a paramedic, alleged that
    at other times firefighters were too quick to use shock treatment.

    "Couldn't they tell these people had pulses? Specifically if they were
    talking?" he wrote. 

    Firefighters were trying at the time to persuade the city to train them
    also as paramedics and disband Emergency Medical Services, the
    paramedic service. Such training would have made firefighters more
    valuable and harder to lay off. 

    "You don't send medics to a house fire to extinguish it with a garden
    hose, (and) you shouldn't send firefighters to critical calls with
    Band-Aids," Shields wrote. 
7.863IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3136
    AP 27-Feb-1997 20:02 EST   REF5957

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Groups Back Encryption Bill

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Computer groups rallied Thursday behind a Senate
    bill they say would let companies export more powerful devices than
    allowed by the Clinton administration to maintain the privacy of
    computer messages. 

    The Business Software Alliance and the Computer and Communications
    Industry Association, two major industry groups, backed legislation
    offered Thursday by Sens. Conrad Burns, R-Mont. and Pat Leahy, D-Vt. 

    The bill would liberalize the administration's export restrictions on
    software with strong encryption. The industry groups complain that the
    administration's loosened export rules, which took effect in December,
    didn't go far enough. 

    Unlike the administration's policy, the Burns-Leahy bill would not
    require exporters to assure the U.S. government that police agencies --
    upon court order -- would be able to crack their products' encryption
    codes and intercept communications. 

    Computer groups oppose the concept of providing government with a
    back-door key to scrambled communications. 

    At issue is sophisticated software that allows users to scramble
    telephone and computer messages that move across computer networks and
    the Internet. 

    Users, particularly businesses, want to keep their data private with
    few or no restrictions. Law enforcement officials contend they need the
    power to unscramble messages in investigating people suspected of
    terrorism or other criminal activities. 
7.864IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3167
    AP 27-Feb-1997 19:52 EST   REF5947

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Philadelphia Surgeon Convicted

    By JENNIFER BROWN

    Associated Press Writer

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- A plastic surgeon known for his work with the poor
    and the elderly was convicted Thursday of changing the appearance of
    Philadelphia's most notorious drug lord. 

    A federal jury convicted Dr. Jose Castillo of conspiracy to harbor a
    fugitive and obstruction of justice. He remains free on bail for now,
    but faces up to 10 years in jail and could lose his medical license.
    His lawyer promised an appeal. 

    Castillo, 68, was accused of operating on Richard Ramos in 1990 to blur
    his fingerprints, alter his face, suck fat from his waist and reduce
    identifying facial scars. Prosecutors said the change helped Ramos
    elude police for 18 months. 

    Castillo, who also has a general medicine practice, is known throughout
    Philadelphia's Hispanic community for providing free or reduced-cost
    care to the poor and elderly. The native of Mexico hosts a popular
    Spanish-language medical advice program on cable TV, and has been
    praised by the Clinton White House and the Consul General of Mexico. 

    Ramos, 27, led one of Philadelphia's most notorious drug operations,
    selling more than $20 million worth of cocaine and crack from 1987 to
    1990. 

    But Castillo said he didn't know Ramos was a drug dealer or in trouble,
    even though he had been the Ramos' family doctor for years. He said his
    involvement was limited to a one-day operation to relieve infected
    burns caused by an out-of-control, backyard barbecue. The damage
    required removal of burned skin from Ramos' stomach, fingertips and
    face, Castillo said. 

    The defense also presented medical records showing the surgery was May
    14, 1990, before Ramos was indicted on drug charges Sept. 18, 1990.

    And Ramos, who has served two years of a 30-year sentence, testified
    that while Castillo operated on him, he never told the doctor he had
    been indicted and was on the run. 

    But prosecutors said Ramos visited Castillo's office for five or six
    after-hours operations aimed at changing the fugitive's appearance.
    Ramos, too, testified that he had his features changed in several
    operations while he was a fugitive. 

    And although prosecutors don't know exactly when the operations took
    place, they said it couldn't have been that May 14, because Ramos
    showed no signs of recent surgery when he met with police and federal
    investigators six days later. 

    Prosecutors said Castillo's conviction was the last piece of business
    in the Ramos drug-ring case, which has landed 39 people in jail. 

    Carmen Lomboy, who volunteered with Castillo for the Amerian Cancer
    Society for the past five years, said she believes he is innocent. 

    "I knew him as a person who never said 'no' to anybody," she said. "We
    had this hope that the judge would see the type of person that he is."

7.865IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3294
    AP 27-Feb-1997 19:43 EST   REF5939

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Assisted Suicide Law Upheld

    By BOB EGELKO

    Associated Press Writer

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A federal appeals court on Thursday rejected a
    challenge to Oregon's first-in-the-nation assisted suicide law for the
    terminally ill, saying the specter of involuntary suicides was merely
    "speculative." 

    The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, without deciding whether the
    voter-approved law adequately protects patients, said enforcement of
    the law posed no immediate threat to the rights of the woman who sued
    to block the law, or to doctors who have objected to the measure. 

    Opponents vowed to keep the law on hold while appealing the 3-0 ruling
    to the full 9th Circuit and the Supreme Court, if necessary. 

    "We will avail ourselves of every litigation option available to us to
    prevent a very unwise and dangerous public policy from being used to
    accomplish the deliberate deaths of Oregonians," said Bob Castegna of
    the Oregon Catholic Conference. 

    But Geoffrey Fieger, an attorney for Michigan assisted-suicide advocate
    Dr. Jack Kevorkian, predicted that any Supreme Court ruling will affirm
    the law, and that more states will follow Oregon's lead, he said. 

    "It's all over," Fieger said. "Regardless of what they rule, there will
    be a state that permits it. And in the future there will be more."

    The issues in the Oregon case differ from those before the Supreme
    Court, which is to decide by early July whether terminally ill patients
    have a constitutional right to physician assistance in suicide. 

    That ruling will apply to laws in most other states, which make it a
    crime to aid in a suicide. Only Oregon, by the narrowly approved 1994
    initiative, expressly allows doctor-assisted suicide and prescribes how
    it can be done. 

    Measure 16 allows Oregon residents to ask for suicide medication if
    their doctors determine they have less than six months to live. 

    "Tell the world that I'm very happy," said AIDS patient Tim Shuck, who
    had intervened in the case on behalf of the state of Oregon. 

    "All along I've always wanted the right to have that choice," said
    Shuck, 48, who said he's never been ill enough that he was ready to
    take his own life. "What can I say but wonderful?" 

    Eli Stutsman, a lawyer for the campaign that put the measure on the
    ballot, said two terminally ill people who supported the law and were
    involved in the case died as the lawsuit made its way through the
    courts. 

    "They died a very difficult death," he said. "They would have liked to
    have exercised the choice that was made available to them under Measure
    16." 

    Before Measure 16 took effect, it was challenged by two terminally ill
    patients, who said they feared being induced to take their own lives
    against their wills, and by doctors and hospitals who objected to
    taking part in assisted suicide. 

    U.S. District Judge Michael Hogan of Eugene, Ore., blocked enforcement
    of the law and later ruled it unconstitutional, saying it lacks
    adequate safeguards for terminally ill people who are mentally
    incompetent. 

    In Thursday's ruling, the higher court said there was no immediate
    prospect that the one surviving patient in the case, Janice Elsner,
    might end her life against her true intent because of some legislative
    inadequacy. 

    Elsner suffers from a progressive form of muscular dystrophy and has
    already lived longer than doctors expected, the court said. 

    For her rights to be affected by the law, the court said, a "chain of
    speculative contingencies" would have to occur: 

    She would have to make a decision under the influence of a future
    mental illness or someone else's persuasion; doctors and witnesses
    would have to fail to recognize that influence, and she would have to
    renew her request several times. 

    "There's no reason why Oregon cannot be a model for the rest of the
    country to see how this law works," said Faye Girsh, director of the
    Hemlock Society USA. "We will not see any catastrophic results. All we
    will see is people who are suffering agonizing and prolonged death
    being able to make a choice to die in dignity." 
7.866IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3242
    AP 27-Feb-1997 23:04 EST   REF5065

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Korea Defense Official Dies

    By SANG-HUN CHOE

    Associated Press Writer

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Kim Kwang Jin, North Korea's top-ranking
    defense official, has died at age 69, official North Korean radio said
    Friday. The death comes less than a week after the country's defense
    minister suffered a fatal heart attack. 

    Radio Pyongyang, monitored in Tokyo by Radio Press, said Kim died
    Thursday, but it did not give the cause of death, saying only that the
    vice defense minister died of an "incurable illness." 

    A replacement for Choe Kwang, the defense minister who died on Feb. 21
    at age 78, has yet to be named. He was North Korea's second-most
    influential military figure after the country's leader, Kim Jong Il. 

    Analysts in South Korea had predicted that Kim would replace Choe as
    the North's defense chief. An artillery expert, Kim rose steadily
    through the North's military ranks, becoming vice defense minister in
    October 1995, according to Naewoe Press, South Korea's official
    observer of the North. 

    South Korean analysts have said that Choe's death provides Kim Jong Il
    the opportunity to shore up his power base by naming replacements loyal
    to him. Choe was one of the last members of the aging elite who came to
    power under Kim's late father, longtime President Kim Il Sung. 

    In fact, the funeral arrangements for Choe -- the decision to include
    some officials on the planning committee and not others -- suggested
    that just such a shake-up is in progress in the Stalinist state. 

    The passing of Kim and Choe within a week is only the latest trial for
    the country, which is grappling with severe food shortages and the
    defection of Hwang Jang Yop, the highest communist official yet to seek
    refuge in the South. 
7.867IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3263
    AP 27-Feb-1997 23:01 EST   REF5004

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Arrests Made in China Bombings

    BEIJING (AP) -- Police have arrested suspects in the bombing of three
    buses in restive northwestern China, an official said Thursday, as the
    death toll rose to three and Beijing ordered a nationwide clampdown on
    explosives. 

    The bombs struck buses traveling in different parts of Urumqi, the
    capital of the Xinjiang region, almost simultaneously on Tuesday, in an
    indication that separatist groups were becoming better organized. 

    A Communist Party official in Xinjiang, who refused to be identified,
    said at least three people were killed, including a child. He said
    several other people were seriously injured. 

    Hospital officials had previously said that two people died and 27
    others were injured. But residents in Urumqi reached by telephone and
    tourists arriving in Beijing said rumors were circulating that the
    death toll was several times higher. 

    A reporter at a state-run newspaper, which has investigated the
    bombings, said there were more than three dead, although he refused to
    give a precise figure. 

    The reporter said two bombs exploded inside buses and a third was
    found, tossed out a bus window and detonated. A fourth bomb also was
    discovered and defused, he added. He did not give his name. 

    Police set dozens of roadblocks throughout the city, checked identity
    papers and searched vehicles for bombs. Armed police with automatic
    rifles were stationed at bus stops throughout the city. 

    Police cars were stationed around Urumqi's airport and officers in
    steel helmets checked identity papers. 

    Some arrests have been made, said an official with the Urumqi police
    department who refused to be identified. 

    Government offices refused to release information on the attacks, and
    higher-level officials were in meetings Thursday to discuss the
    bombings. 

    Relations between Chinese and the Turkic-speaking Muslim Uighurs have
    long been tense. Uighurs (pronounced WEE'ghurs) are the dominant ethnic
    group in Xinjiang. But Chinese dominate Urumqi, and Uighurs and other
    Muslim ethnic groups increasingly see Chinese migration into Xinjiang
    as a threat to their hopes for prosperity. 

    Beijing ordered a crackdown on separatist and unlawful Islamic groups
    in May, after several bombings were reported around Xinjiang and one
    group tried to assassinate government figures. 

    China's national police, the Ministry of Public Security, has issued an
    order calling for tighter controls on explosives, state-run media
    reported Thursday. 

    The order noted that management of explosives has been poor, especially
    at small rural mines, and that some places were even manufacturing and
    selling explosives illegally. 
7.868IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3250
    AP 27-Feb-1997 22:31 EST   REF6019

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Belgian Leader Quits in Scandal

    By RAF CASERT

    Associated Press Writer

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- One of Belgium's most influential politicians
    resigned from key posts Thursday over the latest bribery allegations to
    hit the governing Socialist Party. 

    Guy Spitaels said he was stepping down as president of the regional
    parliament in southern Wallonia and from the board from a leading bank,
    the Credit Communal. 

    The former leader of the Socialist Party and one-time deputy prime
    minister was once so powerful in Belgium's French-speaking southern
    half that he gained the nickname "God." But his position has been
    steadily eroded in recent years by a spate of corruption allegations. 

    In a statement, Spitaels also said he was temporarily stepping down
    from all his party functions during a "period of clarification." 

    His resignation came after he admitted knowing about an illegal
    Socialist bank account in the tax haven of Luxembourg. The account is
    believed linked to allegations that the party took bribes from the
    French plane maker Dassault Aviation in return for government defense
    contracts. 

    Spitaels denied any knowledge of Dassault irregularities. "With all my
    energy, I tell you I knew nothing about the negotiations with
    Dassault," his statement said. 

    Spitaels' parliamentary immunity from prosecution was lifted this
    month. 

    In 1994, he resigned as leader of Wallonia's regional government when
    he was named in another bribes-for-defense contract scandal involving
    the Italian helicopter maker Agusta SpA. 

    The Socialist Party is the second-largest member of the four-party
    national coalition of Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene. 

    The Dassault affair broke last month when two high-level party members
    were arrested and accused of taking bribes in return for a $190 million
    1989 contract to renovate F-16 jet fighters. The fraud allegations have
    not directly hit party representatives in the national government. 
7.869IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3257
    AP 27-Feb-1997 21:09 EST   REF5985

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Virus Found in Donor Blood

    LONDON (AP) -- Researchers in California have found a virus believed to
    cause an AIDS-related cancer in blood donated by a healthy man, but
    they say the implications of the discovery are unclear. 

    The virus, called human herpes type 8, is thought to cause Kaposi's
    sarcoma, a rare form of skin cancer that frequently occurs among
    homosexual men with AIDS. 

    Scientists do not know whether the virus can be transmitted through
    blood transfusions or whether it poses any health risk to people with
    normal immune systems. 

    However, the unidentified man was barred from making further blood
    donations at least until federal guidelines are issued on blood
    containing the virus. 

    "As to the public health significance, it is yet to be seen," said Dr.
    Patrick Moore of the Columbia University School of Public Health. 

    "I certainly don't want to leave the impression that this is a known
    threat to the blood supply," he said. "It is something we need to be
    concerned about. Definitely more studies are needed." 

    In 1994, Moore and his wife, Dr. Yuan Chang of the Columbia University
    College of Physicians and Surgeons, published the first evidence that
    Kaposi's sarcoma may be caused by a virus. 

    Although it is still not definitely proven, dozens of studies in the
    past two years have suggested the association. 

    The discovery of the virus in donated blood was reported in the latest
    issue of the journal Lancet by a team led by Prof. Jay A. Levy of the
    Cancer Research Institute at the University of California. The
    researchers said their finding was significant because the virus proved
    to be infectious, and this suggested it could be transmitted through
    transfusions. 

    Moore noted that the study dealt with blood that had not undergone
    normal purification, which could have eliminated the virus. 

    Studies suggest that the prevalence if the virus in the general
    population is between 1 percent and 8 percent. 

    "Present knowledge suggests that the risk of such tumors developing in
    immunocompetent individuals is extremely small," Jean-Pierre Allain of
    the Division of Transfusion Medicine at the University of Cambridge
    wrote in a separate commentary published in The Lancet. 

    One question to be answered, Allain said, is whether the presence of
    the virus in transfused blood posed a risk to transplant patients who
    are given drugs to suppress the immune system. 
7.870IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3246
    AP 27-Feb-1997 20:33 EST   REF5971

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Widow Wins Sperm Case

    LONDON (AP) -- A widow won the right Thursday to have a child using her
    dead husband's frozen sperm, capping a two-year legal battle.  The
    Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority said Diane Blood can take
    the sperm to a Belgian clinic for the insemination. The sperm was
    removed from her husband when he was dying of meningitis in March 1995. 

    Blood, 30, now must get approval from a hospital ethics board in
    Belgium. 

    The Court of Appeal ruled Feb. 6 that Blood could not be artificially
    inseminated in Britain because her husband had not given his written
    consent. But the court decided to let the fertilization authority, the
    government regulatory agency, make the final decision. 

    "I am sure she understands there were very important principles we had
    to uphold," Ruth Deech, chairwoman of the authority, said after the
    announcement. 

    A jubilant Blood, whose fight for the sperm brought her much sympathy
    around the country, popped open a bottle of champagne outside the
    London hotel where she had nervously awaited the decision. 

    "This is obviously wonderful, wonderful news. I am very, very
    relieved," she said. "I am sure that Stephen would be very happy." 

    She also telephoned her husband's parents with the news. 

    "I never imagined that it would be so hard. I couldn't see why it was
    not something simple, just to do with me and my husband's family,"
    Blood said. 

    Belgium does not have a ban on using sperm without written consent, but
    a 10-member ethics committee at the Center for Reproductive Medicine in
    the Free University Hospital near Brussels must approve the
    insemination. 

    Professor Paul Devroey, who heads the team that will treat Blood at the
    hospital, said she will undergo a battery of tests, including a
    psychological profile, before the committee decides on her suitability
    for artificial insemination. 
7.871IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3253
    AP 27-Feb-1997 20:17 EST   REF5966

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rumors Abound of Russia Shakeup

    By LYNN BERRY

    Associated Press Writer

    MOSCOW (AP) -- A day after criticizing his defense minister, President
    Boris Yeltsin met Thursday with a military commander rumored to be in
    line to replace the Cabinet minister. 

    Col. Gen. Viktor Chechevatov, commander of the Far East military
    district, said they did not discuss his possible appointment to any
    ministry post. 

    But Defense Minister Igor Rodionov, aware his job may be in jeopardy,
    made it a point Thursday to say he agrees with Yeltsin that it's time
    to stop complaining and implement military reform. 

    After reportedly securing a promise of funding for the military from
    top Russian bankers, he said the army must learn to work "with minimum
    spending." 

    Chechevatov said he told Yeltsin he supports radical steps to reform
    the struggling Russian military, and the president listened to the
    commander's proposals "with interest," according to the presidential
    press service. 

    The president's announcement this week that he was preparing a Cabinet
    shakeup has led to widespread speculation in the Russian media, with
    Rodionov often listed among those likely to go. 

    Appointed after Yeltsin won a second term in July, Rodionov was
    entrusted with carrying out military reform, but little has been done.
    He has feuded openly with the chief of Yeltsin's Defense Council, Yuri
    Baturin, who favors aggressive reform and deep spending cuts. 

    Speculation was heightened Wednesday when Yeltsin chided Rodionov for
    saying recently that steep cuts in defense spending have left the armed
    forces unable to defend the country. Rodionov also had said Yeltsin had
    been misinformed about the state of the army. 

    The ITAR-Tass news agency, citing an unnamed Kremlin source, reported
    Thursday that Yeltsin will decide whether to appoint a new defense
    minister after a Defense Council meeting in March. 

    Among the other officials whose names are mentioned as possible victims
    of a shakeup are Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, Labor Minister
    Gennady Melikyan and Viktor Ilyushin, first deputy prime minister in
    charge of social issues. 
7.872IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3279
    AP 27-Feb-1997 23:04 EST   REF5048

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Playing 'Hunches' Normal

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Playing a hunch is part of the normal decision
    process and the lack of this intuition may help explain why people with
    damaged brains often make poor choices, researchers say. 

    A team of behavioral scientists at the University of Iowa devised a
    card game to test the intuitive powers of people and found that those
    with normal brains can make accurate decisions based on hunch alone. 

    However, patients with certain types of brain damage seemed to lack
    this ability and in the experiment repeatedly made bad decisions,
    according to a study to be published Friday in the journal Science. 

    The researchers, led by Antonio R. Damasio, used a card game in which
    the test subjects were rewarded with play money for making good choices
    and penalized for making poor ones. 

    The game consisted of four decks of cards face down on a table. Each
    card in the decks either gave an award or a penalty. Unknown to the
    players, the awards were large in decks A and B, but so were the
    penalties. In decks C and D, the awards were half as big, but the
    penalties were small. Playing decks C and D leads to an overall gain,
    while playing A and B produced overall losses. There was no way the
    subjects could predict this without playing. 

    Players in the experiment were 10 people with normal brains and six who
    have damage to the prefrontal cortex of the brain, a condition that
    affects the decision processes, but not basic intelligence or memory. 

    Researchers also measured the skin conductance response, or SCR, of
    each player. The SCR is a skin microsweating that is involuntary and
    prompted by emotion. 

    The game starts with the top cards in each deck producing a reward and
    all the players tended to pick evenly from each deck. However, by the
    10th card, the heavy penalties in decks A and B started and the normal
    players registered anticipatory SCRs, suggesting an intuitive
    apprehension about those decks. 

    At card 20, none of the players claimed to know the differences in the
    decks, but the normals continued to have SCRs. By card number 50,
    however, the normal players said they had a "hunch" that decks A and B
    were bad choices. They registered SCRs whenever they contemplated those
    decks. 

    By card 80, seven of the normals had concluded that decks A and B were
    "bad" and would produce eventual losses, while decks C and D were
    "good." But even the three normals who could not explain the
    differences in the decks still favored the "good" decks. 

    None of the brain-damaged patients ever developed anticipatory SCRs,
    indicating they never had the hunch that decks A and B were poor
    choices. 

    Instead, the brain-damaged patients throughout the game selected from
    the bad decks. This continued even though three of the patients were
    able to explain that decks A and B were high-risk choices. 

    Damasio said those three "thought it was more exciting to play from the
    risky decks" or thought that the rules would change unexpectedly. 

    The study, said the researchers, suggests that unconscious emotional
    signals can help lead normal people to make good decisions and that
    this ability is lacking in people with some types of brain damage. 

    Dr. Stephen Kosslyn of Harvard University said in Science that the Iowa
    study results are "really exciting." 

    "Emotion apparently is not something that necessarily clouds reasoning,
    but rather seems to provide an essential foundation for at least some
    kinds of reasoning," said Kosslyn. 

    Science is the weekly journal of the American Association for the
    Advancement of Science. 
7.873IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3287
    AP 27-Feb-1997 17:48 EST   REF5796

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    AIDS Deaths Drop Nationwide

    By TARA MEYER

    Associated Press Writer

    ATLANTA (AP) -- The number of AIDS deaths has dropped significantly for
    the first time since the epidemic began in 1981 -- a decline officials
    credited to better treatment and programs. 

    AIDS deaths fell 13 percent in the first six months of 1996, to 22,000
    people, down from 24,900 deaths in the same period a year earlier, the
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Thursday. 

    The CDC saw a slight drop in AIDS deaths in the second quarter of 1995,
    but researchers did not see it as significant. 

    "This is one of the first bright spots we have seen in this epidemic,"
    said Christopher Portelli, executive director of the National Lesbian
    and Gay Health Association in Washington. "But we hope it is seen as a
    call to arms rather than a chance to relax and breathe a sigh of
    relief." 

    There was more good news Thursday: While the number of people diagnosed
    with AIDS continues to grow, the growth rate is slowing. In 1995, about
    62,200 people were diagnosed, an increase of less than 2 percent over
    the 61,200 new cases in 1994. The growth rate from 1993 to 1994 was 5
    percent. 

    "We must not relax our efforts," President Clinton said. "In the months
    and years ahead, we must continue to work together as a nation to
    further our progress against this deadly epidemic." 

    The first signs of the drop in AIDS deaths came in January, when New
    York City reported a 30 percent drop in AIDS deaths in 1996. 

    "I think this speaks to the success of the dual approach of counseling,
    testing and treating people with HIV," said Patricia Fleming, the CDC's
    chief of HIV/AIDS reporting and analysis. 

    The CDC credits better treatment for AIDS patients, including new
    drugs, and better access to treatment through state and federal
    programs. 

    What's still unclear is the impact of a new class of drugs called
    protease inhibitors. The AIDS death rate leveled off in 1995, before
    those medicines became widely available. 

    Not all doctors are sure that AIDS is making an about-face, however.

    "In my view, this decline is unfortunately only a lull," said Dr. Irvin
    S.Y. Chen, director of the AIDS Institute at UCLA. "Not all patients
    are responding as effectively as the majority of patients. There are
    some patients for whom the drugs are not effective." 

    And some advocates point out that AIDS patients, as they live longer,
    will need more help, not less. 

    "It's still difficult for a person to walk into a doctor's office and
    be treated for AIDS," Portelli said. "We are concerned that people will
    misinterpret this news. We would hope to see more money and support for
    better access to medical services. New drugs are not all we need." 

    "Access to health care is a life-and-death matter," said Christine
    Lubinski, deputy executive director of the AIDS Action Council in
    Washington. "We are going to continue to urge an increased investment
    ... because we're finally beginning to see a payoff." 

    A growing number of people are living with AIDS each year, the CDC
    said. In June 1996, 223,000 Americans age 13 and older had the disease
    -- a 10 percent jump from mid-1995 and a 65 percent increase over 1993.

    As of December 1996, 581,429 Americans had been diagnosed with AIDS
    since 1981: 488,300 men, 85,500 women and 7,629 children. 

    And some new trends are worrying health officials. Blacks accounted for
    more cases of AIDS than whites for the first time in 1996 -- 41 percent
    compared to 38 percent. Hispanics accounted for 19 percent, and other
    races 2 percent. 

    Also, the proportion of women with AIDS is still increasing. In 1996,
    women made up 20 percent of new cases. AIDS deaths have not declined
    among women or heterosexuals. 
7.874IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3279
    AP 27-Feb-1997 17:00 EST   REF5010

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pig Organ Transplant Questioned

    By MALCOLM RITTER

    AP Science Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A virus apparently found in healthy pigs can infect
    human tissue, says a study that supports concerns about transplanting
    pig organs to people. 

    Scientists are studying using pig hearts, livers and kidneys because
    there aren't enough human organs available for people who need them. 

    But some have raised concerns that transplants from animals could
    introduce new viruses to the human population. 

    One potential source is a class of viruses that infected pig ancestors
    thousands of years ago. The viruses planted their DNA permanently in
    the pig genetic heritage, so that the DNA is now inherited by healthy
    pigs. 

    Nobody knows how many of these viruses exist. Their genes are usually
    inactive in pigs, and if they do produce new viruses, the germs appear
    harmless to animals. But after an organ transplant, such viruses might
    infect people and make them dangerously sick, some scientists say. 

    The new work shows that such infection is "more plausible than a
    fanciful scare story," British researchers say in the March issue of
    the journal Nature Medicine. 

    "I don't want to be alarmist but I do think the transplant surgeons
    ought to know about our work," said Robin Weiss, one of the scientists
    reporting the work from the Institute of Cancer Research in London. 

    It's not known whether the virus he studied would make people sick,
    although it's related to viruses that cause leukemia in mice and cats,
    Weiss said. 

    The U.S. government is developing guidelines for animal-to-human
    transplants. The new findings weren't a surprise, but they show where
    research is needed, said Dr. Amy Patterson, acting deputy director for
    the division of cellular and gene therapy at the Food and Drug
    Administration. 

    Jon Allan, a virus expert at the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical
    Research in San Antonio, who has been outspoken about risks of
    infection from animal tissue, said he thought animal-to-human
    transplants should be banned until they're proven safe. 

    The risk of launching an infectious disease in people through pig
    transplants is very small, but "large enough to make you worry," he
    said. 

    Weiss and colleagues said breeding or genetic engineering should be
    tried to eliminate potentially hazardous DNA from viruses in pigs. 

    But Weiss cautioned that would be hard. His team found evidence that
    DNA from the virus they worked with is duplicated 30 to 50 times in pig
    genes. 

    He and colleagues studied pig kidney cells that had adapted to growing
    in laboratory dishes. They found that the cells produced a virus,
    called PERV-PK, that could infect a range of human cells, including
    those from the kidney, lung, muscle and immune system. 

    The human immune system snuffs out the virus if it emerges from pig
    cells, researchers found. But it doesn't destroy the virus if it is
    produced by infected human cells. 

    John Coffin of Tufts University, an expert on such inherited viruses,
    said it's not clear whether pig virus infections would harm people. 

    "I think there is a demonstrable risk to the recipient of the
    transplant," Coffin said. "How we deal with that, I think, is still a
    big issue." 
7.875IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3266
    RTw  28-Feb-97 06:14    

    Sydney Olympic stadium struggles in float

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Bernard Hickey 

    SYDNEY, Feb 28 (Reuter) - The consortium building the 2000 Olympic
    Stadium in Sydney has sought permission from the International Olympic
    Committee to sell Games tickets overseas after struggling to find local
    buyers for its financing scheme. 

    The Stadium Australia group -- hoping to ride the coat-tails of Atlanta
    Games enthusiasm -- said in October it wanted to raise A$364.4 million
    (US$282.4 million) by selling packages of Olympic tickets, equity and
    stadium memberships. 

    But a lack of local buyers for the 34,400 packages, which sell for
    A$10,000 each, has twice forced underwriters to extend their deadline
    for the novel Olympic float. 

    As a result of the slow demand, Stadium Australia want to sell the
    ticket component of the package separately to overseas buyers after
    originally restricting the scheme to the domestic market. 

    "We are in negotiation with the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
    We are also talking to the Olympic committees in the U.S., U.K. and
    several other countries," a Stadium Australia spokeswoman told Reuters. 

    The underwriters must fund the project regardless of whether all the
    packages are sold, thus guaranteeing the completion of the 110,000-seat
    stadium, which is due to open in 1999 at a cost of A$660 million. 

    Each "Gold" package includes one seat at each of the stadium sessions
    during the Olympics, a seat at most sporting events at the stadium
    until 2029 and 1,000 shares in the Stadium company. 

    But city brokers said on Friday only about one third of the packages
    had been sold as Olympic enthusiasm in the wake of Australia's record
    medal haul at Atlanta had waned and the local economy had slowed. 

    "There's just not much demand for them and the talk around is only
    about 30 to 40 percent are spoken for," one Sydney broker said.

    Other brokers said repeated attempts to interest private clients had
    met with little success. 

    If the brokers are correct and the consortium fails to raise any
    further finance, the stadium's underwriters could be exposed to a
    shortfall of about A$240 million when the share and ticket offer closes
    on March 27. 

    The Stadium Australia spokeswoman said the offer was not in trouble and
    there was enough time to raise the capital, adding that "considerably
    more than one third" of the packages had already been sold. 

    "The demand has not been as great as originally anticipated locally but
    we have experienced the reverse internationally," the spokeswoman said.
    "It is a question not of whether we are going to sell them but who we
    are going to sell them to." 

    The four underwriters are ANZ Securities, Deutsche Morgan Grenfell,
    Macquarie Bank Ltd, and ABN Amro Hoare Govett. 

    REUTER
7.876IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3238
    RTw  28-Feb-97 05:30    

    Circumcision makes baby boys more sensitive to pain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, Feb 28 (Reuter) - Circumcising baby boys can make them
    super-sensitive to pain for months, Canadian researchers reported on
    Friday. 

    But using an anaesthetic cream at the time of the operation can reduce
    the effect, Anna Taddio and colleagues at Toronto's Hospital for Sick
    Children reported in the Lancet medical journal. 

    The researchers, who first reported in 1995 that the millions of
    circumcisions carried out on Jewish, Moslem and other boys each year
    could be traumatic, wanted to see if there was anything doctors could
    do to make the operations less painful. 

    Building on the earlier research, they tested 87 babies, dividing them
    into three groups -- uncircumcised, circumcised without anaesthetic and
    circumcised using a lidocaine-prilocaine cream. 

    The then videotaped and assessed the infant boys as they got routine
    vaccinations four to six months later. 

    "Circumcised infants showed a stronger pain response to subsequent
    routine vaccination than uncircumcised infants," they wrote. But the
    anaesthetic cream lessened the response. 

    "We recommend treatment to prevent neonatal circumcision pain," they
    added. 

    Taddio's group theorises that pain such as circumcision soon after
    birth somehow re-wires pain response, programming babies to react more
    strongly. 

    REUTER
7.877IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3282
    RTw  28-Feb-97 03:49    

    Labour wins UK by-election, Major now in minority

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Helen Smith 

    WIRRAL, England, Feb 28 (Reuter) - Britain's opposition Labour party
    has won a key by-election, delivering a crushing defeat to the ruling
    Conservatives just weeks before Prime Minister John Major must face a
    national election. 

    Labour's victory in Wirral South, a "safe" Conservative seat ever since
    it was created in 1983, pushed Major's government into a parliamentary
    minority and made him reliant on smaller parties for his survival to
    May, the national election deadline. 

    But it was the scale of Labour's victory that spelled out Major's
    dwindling hopes of winning his party wins an unprecented fifth term in
    office after 18 years in power. 

    Labour's Ben Chapman won the seat left vacant by the death of
    Conservative Barry Porter by a margin of 7,888 votes, overturning a
    majority of 8,183 at the 1992 election. Labour took 53 percent of the
    vote to 34 percent for the Conservatives. 

    "The people of Wirral South have spoken for Britain," Chapman told
    jubilant supporters after the result was read out early on Friday.
    "They are saying to John Major and the government: 'Enough is enough.
    The Tories (Conservatives) have been in power too long'."

    The defeated Conservative candidate Les Byrom said he was not
    disheartened. "I intend to be back in the general election in a very
    few weeks time. I believe Britain's future is with John Major and he
    will win the general election," he said. 

    But the swing to Labour was a huge 18 percent, mirroring Labour's
    nationwide poll lead which has hovered around 20 points for more than a
    year. Repeated at the national election, such a performance would give
    Labour a majority of well over 100 seats. 

    By-elections are widely seen as an opportunity for voters to register
    their dissatisfaction with the government's performance. At general
    elections, large numbers of voters remain loyal to the parties they
    elected before. 

    But no party in Britain's recent history has overcome such an electoral
    deficit in such a short time. 

    Labour leader Tony Blair said: "For Tories to dismiss this as a protest
    vote simply confirms how out of touch and arrogant they are... The
    voters of Wirral South have had their say. Now the whole country wants
    a say so that we can finally get some purpose and direction for our
    country." 

    The loss of the prosperous north west England constituency means the
    ruling Conservatives have just 322 seats in the lower House of Commons,
    one less than Labour and all other parties combined. 

    Just hours before the result, the Scottish National Party said it would
    call a vote of no confidence in the government on March 10 and called
    on other opposition parties to join it. 

    But Northern Ireland's Ulster Unionists, whose support is vital if
    Major is to be defeated in a vote of confidence, said they would not
    provoke an early election. 

    The statement by the Ulster Unionists, which came after the government
    agreed to boost their influence over affairs in Northern Ireland, gives
    Major a breathing space. 

    Pollsters were proved wrong at the 1992 general election and Major's
    party is banking on an economic boom and tax cuts to bring voters back
    to his party. 

    But all the themes that will feature at the general election were
    rehearsed at Wirral South, with the main parties blanketing the
    constituency with senior politicians, and Major's chances of hauling in
    Labour look extremely bleak. 

    REUTER
7.878IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:3243
    RTos 28-Feb-97 03:44    

    Vitamin C Deficiency Linked to Heart Attacks

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Vitamin C may be important in protecting against
    heart attacks, Finnish researchers reported Friday. 

    Men deficient in the vitamin were more than three times more likely to
    have a heart attack, they said. 

    Jukka Salonen and colleagues at the University of Kuopio studied 1,600
    men aged between 42 and 60 from eastern Finland, where people tend not
    to absorb much vitamin C and where deaths from heart disease were
    common. 

    All the men were free of heart disease at the start of the study.
    Between 1984 and 1992, 70 of the men had heart attacks. 

    They found that 91 of the men had vitamin C deficiency and of them 12,
    or 13 percent, suffered a heart attack. 

    Of the 1,500 men who did not have a vitamin C deficiency, only 58, or
    just under four percent, had heart attacks. 

    "Vitamin C deficiency...is a risk factor for coronary heart disease,"
    they concluded. 

    Vitamin C is an antioxidant -- it helps to prevent chemical reactions
    in the body that can cause heart disease and perhaps cancer as well.
    When blood fats oxidase in a process similar to iron rusting, they can
    harden and block arteries. 

    But when Salonen's group did a smaller study to see if vitamin C
    supplements would help, they found little effect. 

    Other studies have found similar results with supplements and some
    researchers say the entire fruit or vegetable containing such vitamins
    must be eaten for effects to be seen. 

    Blackcurrants, kiwi fruit and citrus fruits such as oranges are all
    high in vitamin C. 
7.879IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docFri Feb 28 1997 10:33130
    RTw  28-Feb-97 01:49    

    FEATURE - India software firms see billions in a bug

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    By Hanif Arafat 

    BANGALORE, India, Feb 28 (Reuter) - Y2K sounds like the name of a
    character from a science-fiction movie. 

    In this south Indian city, hundreds of software experts are working
    hard to turn it into a multi-billion dollar reality. 

    Indian software companies are racing against time to grab business from
    a huge market emerging from computers that were not tuned to account
    for the end of a millennium, called the Y2K (Year 2000) problem by
    industry professionals. 

    Companies in Bangalore, called India's Silicon Valley because of its
    low-cost, high-skill software writers, are pitching for deals to set
    right the internal time mechanism of computers that need correction. 

    "India is an automatic choice. I would imagine that India should rake
    in at least 10 percent of the global market share," said S.K. Mitra,
    chief executive of BAeHAL, a venture formed by British Aerospace and
    state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. 

    "India can boast of technology as well as skills at 40 percent less
    than the rate in the West," Mitra told Reuters. 

    HUGE MARKET POTENTIAL 

    According to one U.S. estimate, the global market in Y2K solutions is
    estimated anywhere between $300 and $600 billion. But leading Indian
    officials say this is not realistic. 

    "We believe that the international market for this is anywhere between
    $60 and 100 billion," Dewang Mehta, executive director of India's
    National Association of Software and Service Companies, told Reuters in
    New Delhi. 

    Software corrections are needed to save the data and functioning of
    thousands of computers built at a time when the "Millenium Bug" was not
    anticipated. 

    Mehta said Nasscom formed a task force called SIG-Y2K (special interest
    group-Y2K), which held a seminar in Luxembourg last October, in which
    48 international banks took part and listened to officials from 17
    Indian companies. 

    Fourteen of the 17 came back with orders, Mehta said. 

    "We are doing a second series of seminars in May in the United States
    and in June in Britain," he said. 

    "With all these efforts we might be able to get $2-5 billion in the
    next three years." 

    The government of the state of Karnataka some years ago set up an
    "Electronics City," which offered facilities with high-speed satellite
    communication links that helped firms talk round the clock with
    customers in far corners of the globe. 

    The offshore software business, as it is now called, has become a
    favourite theme for many other state governments, which are racing to
    set up "information technology parks." 

    "More and more companies in the United States, Japan and Europe are
    looking towards India to overcome the Millenium Bug problem," said Ajit
    Chakravarti, executive vice-president of Mindware, the export division
    of Pertech Computers Ltd. 

    PCL recently tied up with Japan's NEC Corp, which also has a
    partnership for Y2K work with Madras-based Square D Software Ltd 

    THE JAPANESE ARE COMING 

    "We are NEC's major partner here and and the contract is quite
    substantial," Chakravarti said, adding that his engineers were being
    taught Japanese to help them an advantage. 

    "All our contracts with the U.S. and Japanese companies are in the
    region of $25 million," he said. 

    PCL was eyeing a $50 million business in Calcutta and might turn down
    new clients by 1998, he said. 

    Infosys Technologies, often cited as the biggest Indian software
    success, offers Japanese courses to its 1,000-odd employees to help
    offshore solutions in Y2K. 

    Infosys is one of the five Indian companies that formed a consortium
    called Jasdic Park with five Japanese firms including Hitachi Ltd and
    Fuji Data Control. 

    Around 15-20 percent of the consortium's business will come from Y2K,
    said N.R. Narayana Murthy, Infosys' chairman. 

    Infosys also has a partnership with U.S.-based Platinum Technology, a
    leading tool vendor on the IBM mainframe computer platforms which need
    Y2K solutions. 

    BIG-TICKET CUSTOMERS 

    BAeHAL's Mitra said his firm had been awarded Millennium-related
    contracts by a major international airline and a leading U.S.-based
    group, but declined to give more details. 

    Satish Bangalore, chief executive of Command International Software, a
    subsidiary of the U.S. insurance firm Phoenix Home Life Insurance, said
    his company was targeting the insurance industry for high-growth
    business. 

    While many firms see a fast buck in the Y2K bug, Pradeep Kar, chairman
    of Microland Ltd sounded a note of caution. 

    "It is indeed an opportunity, but there must be an optimum mix," Kar
    said. "We need to invest in leading edge technologies. Y2K will only
    solve the problems of old technology." 

    India's software industry is expected to close the current 1996/97
    (April-March) fiscal year with a growth rate of 50 percent, Mehta said. 

    Exports are expected to fetch 39 billion rupees and internal sales 25
    billion, accounting for a total of $1.8 billion worth of business. In
    1995/96, India exported 25.2 billion rupees of software and sold 16.7
    billion rupees worth at home, accounting for $1.2 billion in all. 

    REUTER
7.880IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:07107
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:01 EST   REF5273

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, March 3, 1997
   
    STORMS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton has approved federal aid to
    supplement state and local recovery efforts in parts of Arkansas that
    have been devastated by tornadoes and storms. The storms killed at
    least 24 people. Storms have also swept across midwestern and southern
    states, causing deaths, and hundreds of evacuations. In Ohio, 11 people
    who'd been missing in flash flooding are now accounted for. Five of
    them had taken shelter in an old school bus on high ground. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat has arrived for
    talks tomorrow with President Clinton and other officials. The PLO
    chief wants U.S. support in stopping an Israeli plan to build homes for
    Jews in historically Arab East Jerusalem. Israel hinted it would miss a
    deadline for a West Bank troop pullout. Israeli soldiers fired on
    Palestinian workers at a roadblock and four tombstones were smashed at
    a Jewish cemetery in Hebron. The Palestinian legislature has called for
    a general strike in Palestinian areas of the West Bank tomorrow to
    protest the housing project. 
   
    BOULDER SLAYING 

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- Police have taken hair and handwriting samples
    from a couple who were in the home of JonBenet Ramsey two nights before
    she was slain. The Rocky Mountain News reports police re-interviewed
    Bill McReynolds, and his wife, Janet. JonBenet, the 6-year-old beauty
    queen, was found slain in the basement of her home on Dec. 26. She may
    have been sexually assaulted. The newspaper reports the police are
    interested in the couple partly because Janet McReynolds wrote a play
    in 1976 about sexual assault, torture and murder of a girl whose body
    is found in a basement. 
   
    McVEIGH-BOMBING 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's lawyer has suggested the Oklahoma City
    bombing trial, set for March 31, may have to be delayed. Attorney
    Stephen Jones made the comment after the Dallas Morning News quoted a
    purported defense memo in which McVeigh admitted he was responsible for
    the federal building blast that killed 168 people. Jones will not
    confirm or deny the accuracy of the newspaper's story. He told ABC that
    he plans to go to court tomorrow to tell the judge what he knows about
    the alleged memo. Jones did say that "it is not a legitimate defense
    memorandum." 
   
    CLINTON-GALA 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- After a week of stories about hundreds of guests
    staying overnight in the Lincoln Bedroom at the White House, President
    Clinton wound up his week Sunday night at the theatre where President
    Lincoln was shot. Clinton and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton had
    front row seats for the gala, which supporters said would raise more
    than $500,000 for the theatre's community outreach programs like acting
    workshops for inner-city youth. 
   
    EMPIRE SHOOTINGS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A musician who was shot in the head at the Empire
    State Building has awakened from a coma, his father said. Matthew Gross
    regained consciousness yesterday, six days after he was shot on the
    observation deck of the Empire State building. He was one of seven
    people shot by Ali Hassan Abu Kamal, a Palestinian English teacher.
    Killed in the attack was Chris Burmeister, 27, a Danish guitarist in
    Gross' rock band, the Bushpilots. The gunman also killed himself. 
   
    GARCETTI-CAMPAIGN 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- District Attorney Gil Garcetti spent $2,455,822 in
    1996 on his successful reelection campaign, six times more than his
    challenger, according to campaign election disclosure forms. Deputy
    District Attorney John Lynch spent $406,898 to challenge Garcetti. The
    reports offer evidence not only of Garcetti's fund-raising abilities
    but of the results big money can deliver in a close countywide race.
    The election was widely viewed as a referendum on the failed
    prosecution of the O.J. Simpson double-murder case. 
   
    MEXICO BORDER THREATS 

    SAN DIEGO (AP) -- Federal and local law enforcement agents have been
    relayed threats by undercover informants that Mexican drug gangs may be
    itching to kill a cop from the United States. While the threats do not
    target a specific agency, the Drug Enforcement Administration and
    Border Patrol have taken extra precautions when traveling in Mexico. 
   
    CHINA-DENG 

    BEIJING (AP) -- Honoring the wishes of the late Deng Xiaoping, his
    children and widow scattered the leader's ashes at sea. Deng died Feb.
    19 at age 92. The family members scattered Deng's ashes along with
    flower petals through a hole in the floor of a government jet, while
    other members of the entourage stood at attention. Deng's family said
    in a statement he wanted his ashes dispersed at sea. 
   
    HAWKS-PISTONS 

    AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) -- Grant Hill had 23 points, 10 assists and
    seven rebounds as the Detroit Pistons beat the Atlanta Hawks 82-75.
    Detroit has won nine of its last 10 games. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.881IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:0769
    RTw  03-Mar-97 03:28    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    SEOUL - A North Korean seeking asylum arrived at Seoul international
    airport from Beijing on Sunday, South Korean authorities said, and a
    newspaper identified the man as a former political prisoner. Monday's
    edition of the Chosun Ilbo said Kang Chul-ho contacted South Korean
    authorities while in transit on a flight from Beijing to Osaka, Japan. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania's parliament warned armed insurgents in the south of
    the country on Monday that they would be shot without warning unless
    they surrendered their weapons by 2 p.m. (1300 GMT) on Monday. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat arrived in Washington
    for a four-day visit to the United States that includes talks with
    President Bill Clinton at the White House on Monday. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israel and the Palestinians set themselves on a collision
    course over Jerusalem only days before the next deadline is reached in
    their interim peace accords. The Palestinian Legislative Council called
    a general strike, a rare move since the Palestinian uprising ended with
    the signing of a framework peace accord in 1993, for Monday to protest
    at an Israeli building project in Arab East Jerusalem. 

    - - - - 

    SANTO DOMINGO - Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori discussed the
    possibility of asylum in the Dominican Republic for Marxist rebels in a
    meeting with President Leonel Fernandez, a government source said.
    Fujimori flew in to Santo Domingo for a lightning trip to talk about
    the crisis in Lima where 20-odd Marxist guerrillas have been holding 72
    hostages at the Japanese ambassador's residence for 75 days. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - The widow of China's late leader Deng Xiaoping scattered his
    ashes at sea on Sunday in accordance with his wishes, the official
    Xinhua news agency said. 

    - - - - 

    LOUISVILLE, Kentucky - Record rains swamped the Ohio Valley, killing at
    least nine people in Kentucky and Ohio and forcing evacuation of towns
    as rivers boiled out of their banks, officials said. 

    - - - - 

    RIO DE JANEIRO - Three prisoners were holding an unknown number of
    hostages in a jail in the northeastern Brazilian town of Recife after
    an unsuccessful break-out attempt during visiting hour, a prison
    official said. 

    - - - - 

    LOS ANGELES - Actress Elizabeth Taylor spent the day resting in the
    hospital on Sunday from a mild seizure that put her back there three
    days after being discharged following surgery to remove a benign
    tumour. 

    REUTER
7.882IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:0890
    RTw  03-Mar-97 06:09    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Man escapes burning at stake in Western Samoa 

    APIA, Western Samoa - A member of the Mormon church was lucky to escape
    being burnt at the stake after refusing to obey a banishment order by
    his village council, police in the Pacific nation of Western Samoa
    said. 

    Police found Lupe Lio, 33, bound to a stake in Samalaiulu village on
    Savaii island with kindling placed around him. During tense
    negotiations, police and clergymen from nearby villages persuaded the
    Samalaiulu council not to carry out the burning. 

    Police Commissioner Galuvao Tanielu said Lio had criticised legal moves
    by the village to halt the construction of a Mormon church there.
    Orders to banish Lio remained in force, and he had moved for his own
    safety to live with relatives. 

    - - - - 

    Malaysia issues alert on missing bills 

    KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia's central bank has asked people to be alert for
    500-ringgit ($201) bills after a shipment of newly printed notes
    disappeared, police said. 

    The bills were sent recently to Bank Negara Malaysia, the central bank,
    for "approval" by its British-based printer, a police spokesman told
    Reuters. 

    A Bank Negara statement said 200 of the bills all had the same serial
    number of ZW0000000 and the word "contoh" (sample) printed on them.
    Their disappearance was discovered when a commercial bank turned over
    to Bank Negara a 500-ringgit note it received from a man who wanted to
    exchange it for smaller bills. 

    The commercial bank only realised later that the bill was new and had
    not yet been issued by Bank Negara. 

    - - - - 

    Pinochet considering a seat in the Chilean Senate 

    SANTIAGO - Former Chilean military ruler General Augusto Pinochet might
    become a senator-for-life after his term as army commander-in-chief
    ends next year, a newspaper reported. 

    Under the constitution his own government wrote in 1980, Pinochet has a
    right to a lifetime seat in the Senate as a former president, if he
    wants it. 

    "I've thought about becoming a senator-for-life, but it's not something
    I'm worrying about because when I retire I will devote myself to my
    grandchildren and to writing history," Pinocheth, 81, said in an
    interview with El Mercurio. 

    Pinochet said President Eduardo Frei's efforts to abolish lifetime
    Senate seats and nine other non-elected Senate seats was discouraging
    him from accepting the seat. 

    - - - - 

    French chefs nervously await latest Michelin guide 

    PARIS - France's top chefs were stirring their sauces with trembling
    hands in nervous anticipation of the latest edition of the Michelin
    guide, the gourmet bible set to reveal its secrets. 

    Michelin's publishers were tight-lipped, but rumours and alleged
    "leaks" were flying ahead of the release of the volume, which is to
    France's chefs what the Oscars are to Hollywood. 

    Super-chef Alain Ducasse was hoping to become the first chef in
    Michelin history to run two three-star restaurants at the same time.
    But the betting was he would win a total of five stars -- three for his
    new Paris restaurant formerly run by the legendary Joel Robuchon, and
    just two for the glitzy Louis XV in Monaco, whose kitchen he has run
    since its opening in 1987. 

    REUTER
7.883IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:08100
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:42 EST   REF5459

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Lincoln Tales Evoke a Grin

    By MIKE FEINSILBER

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Quintin Vann, a shoeshine man in downtown
    Philadelphia, thinks a night in the White House's Lincoln Bedroom ought
    be made available to folks through a lottery. 

    "Sure, send me there," laughs Ronda Danes of Dearborn Heights, Mich.,
    who sells insurance. 

    Alison Hughes of Tucson, former vice chairman of the Arizona Democratic
    Party, says she was honored to be invited to a Christmas party at the
    White House in 1995 as a reward for her party work. 

    "It is the greatest honor of your life to go there and shake hands with
    the president," she said. "I hope this opportunity is not taken away
    from the people." 

    Across the country, many political leaders and ordinary citizens shrug
    off the disclosures about President Clinton's willingness to turn
    access to the White House into a fund-raising device. 

    It may strike Washington is a scandal; around the country it seems more
    likely to evoke a grin, a wisecrack or a shrug. 

    "People are saying that it's not illegal and if he did it, what's the
    problem?" said Art Torres, the state Democratic chairman in California. 

    The polls seem to back up that view: Clinton shoots the breeze with a
    Chinese arms dealer, a Russian mobster and a Florida drug runner at
    White House coffees klatches, and his job ratings rise. 

    A Los Angeles Times poll finds his approval rating climbing to 62
    percent. It is 57 percent in a USA Today-CNN poll, 60 percent in a Pew
    Research Center sounding. "It's a little bit of, 'We've elected him,
    let's make the best of him as long as we can,"' explained Pew director
    Andrew Kohut. 

    "Why aren't we outraged? And why aren't we outraged about the lack of
    outrage?" asked Arianna Huffington, a conservative writer who is
    outraged. She is dismayed that the disclosures have not affected
    Clinton's standing. 

    Dr. Dean Ornish, author of the best-selling "Eat More, Weigh Less," was
    a White House overnighter. He feels outrage -- but over the fuss, not
    the fact of Clinton hospitality. 

    "One of the most fundamental boundaries is your home," Ornish said. "It
    should be a place of refuge." He said the Clintons should be able to
    invite whomever they want "and not have it appear on the front page of
    the newspaper." 

    Larry Longley, a Democratic national committeeman from Wisconsin, said
    the perception may be worse than the reality and that presidents have
    always rewarded supporters with access. But he worries nonetheless. 

    The disclosures are "unfortunate and embarrassing" for Clinton, Longley
    said, because of the appearance that a "sacrosanct national monument is
    being turned into a fund-raising device." 

    Joseph Zanetta, a vice president of California's Whittier College --
    and a Republican who twice voted for Clinton -- said that as a
    professional fund-raiser, he is "actually outraged at what Clinton has
    done. It's a distortion of philanthropy." 

    "There should be no quid pro quo for gifts," he said. "I like Clinton.
    I think he is a decent man. But I think he made a mistake." 

    In Oregon, Brady Adams, the Republican who leads the state Senate, said
    the Clinton sleepovers will add to distrust of government. 

    "What it says is if you have enough money you can have special
    privileges or perks when it comes to government," Adams said. "And
    that's a wrong message to send out." 

    But unless a clear quid pro quo is established, interviews across the
    country suggest that many people are unexcited by the disclosures to
    date. 

    "They supported him," said Bethany MacIndoe, 25, a homemaker in
    Princeton, N.J., "and I think they can get something back." 

    "He's the president. He lives there. He should have whomever he wants
    stay there," said Lucy Osipchic, 70, an assistant manager at a Newark,
    N.J., hotel gift shop. 

    But while she spoke, Joseph K. Brown, a Continental Airlines pilot who
    was browsing through a magazine rack, disagreed. 

    "I think it's an absolute shame," he said. 'It seems to me our country
    is being sold to the highest bidder. I think it would benefit this
    country if a lot of people in Washington would review what they learned
    in civics class in high school." 
7.884IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:08110
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:40 EST   REF5458

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Gore Action Called Inappropriate

    By KEVIN GALVIN

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Democratic Party had telephone lines installed
    in government buildings for use in Vice President Al Gore's drive to
    raise millions of dollars for the 1996 campaign, a former top aide to
    President Clinton says. 

    Gore's direct role in soliciting donations was inappropriate, two
    Democratic senators said Sunday. 

    But a White House lawyer denied any illegality or impropriety, and Dick
    Morris, who was a key campaign adviser, said he was "tickled to death"
    that Gore was so aggressive. Without the vice president's efforts, the
    Clinton-Gore would have lost re-election, he said. 

    Gore's fund-raising network raised $40 million of the $180 million
    collected by the Democratic National Committee for the 1996 campaign,
    The Washington Post reported. 

    George Stephanopoulos, former senior adviser to Clinton and now a
    regular panelist on ABC's "This Week," said on the program Sunday that
    the Democrats were broke in 1994 and 1995, and "of course the vice
    president was raising money." 

    "You set up special phones, political phones, paid for by the DNC," he
    said. 

    Asked by correspondent Sam Donaldson to elaborate, because political
    fund-raising on government property is unlawful, Stephanopoulos said:
    "You put in different lines, but the legal counsel sets it up. You put
    in special phones, special faxes, special computers that are for
    political work, for the fund-raiser work." 

    Donaldson: "But still inside of a government building?" 

    Stephanopoulos: "Sure." 

    Donaldson: "A government residence." 

    Stephanopoulos: "Absolutely." 

    Another panelist, Republican strategist William Kristol, said, "You
    cannot raise money in or from a government building." 

    Stephanopoulos replied, "Well, I mean, that's nuts." 

    While the White House counsel in 1995, Abner Mikva circulated a memo
    that said: "Campaign activities of any kind are prohibited in or from
    government buildings. ... also no fund-raising phone calls or mail may
    emanate from the White House." 

    Had he known that the DNC was arranging money-raising events in the
    White House, Mikva said in a Newsweek magazine interview published
    today, he "sure as hell would have been upset about it -- and we would
    have put a stop to it." 

    Mikva said he was unaware of coffee klatches at the White House that
    Newsweek said the DNC budgeted as "fund-raising events" and listed the
    amount "projected" to be raised from each event. 

    "Any Philadelphia lawyer knows you don't raise money in a government
    building," Mikva said. "And if they were budgeting money for them,
    that's raising money." 

    Stephanopoulos alleged that as vice president, Dan Quayle sponsored
    "fund-raisers at the Naval Observatory," site of the vice presidential
    residence. Kristol, who was Quayle's chief of staff, denied it. 

    But Rep. Henry A. Waxman, D-Calif., demanded an investigation by the
    House Government Reform and Oversight Committee of a reception Quayle
    gave at the observatory on Sept. 23, 1990, in honor of "the Republican
    Senatorial Inner Circle," a group of major GOP donors. 

    Sens. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., and Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J.,
    criticized Gore for making the calls but denied Republican claims that
    administration officials violated the law. 

    "I'm not going to be in the business of defending the undefendable, and
    what is more I do not personally believe it is appropriate for the
    president or the vice president of the United States to directly
    solicit contributions," Torricelli said on Fox. "It's inappropriate,
    but it is not a legal issue." 

    "Vice President Gore was part of an effort to compete against the
    Republicans," White House counsel Lanny Davis said on CNN's "Late
    Edition." "He did nothing wrong and nothing illegal. The suggestion of
    any coercion is completely baseless." 

    The Post said the three previous vice presidents never made such direct
    requests for contributions. The newspaper reported that several donors
    privately complained that Gore's calls were inappropriate. 

    Many of those contacted operated businesses that relied on government
    contracts or assistance. 

    In one instance DSC Communications of Texas reportedly gave a $100,000
    contribution to the Democrats as a "thank you" for the Commerce
    Department's efforts on behalf of DSC's bid to win a $36 million
    telecommunications contract in Mexico. 

    Davis said the department's mission is to boost U.S. businesses abroad
    and that the donation influenced no government action. 
7.885IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:0993
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:39 EST   REF5453

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    CIA Cuts Off Its Informants

    By JOHN DIAMOND

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Seeking to redirect its focus on post-Cold War
    issues and improve its human rights reputation, the CIA has fired more
    than 1,000 of its foreign informants, about one-third of the roster. 

    The "agent scrub," described by officials who spoke on condition of
    anonymity, cleared the rolls of outdated or unproductive informants,
    many holdovers from the Cold War years whose information is no longer
    so eagerly sought by the CIA. 

    It also cut sources deemed too deeply involved in human rights abuses,
    terrorism and other acts of violence. Such paid informants are
    sometimes referred to as "agents" but are neither CIA employees nor
    U.S. government officials. 

    Two government officials confirmed the existence of the agent scrub in
    interviews Sunday. The weeding-out process was disclosed Sunday in The
    Washington Post. 

    A CIA spokesman would not discuss the agent-review process. Former CIA
    Director John Deutch, who initiated the process, said, "I cannot get
    into agent matters." 

    Deutch, however, said in a speech last fall that the CIA had
    "substantially increased the number of new sources reporting to us
    about terrorist groups." Those gains reflect the post-Cold War priority
    shift from the Soviet Union to threats such as terrorism, weapons
    proliferation and narcotics. 

    The gains apparently have been more than offset, in raw numbers, by
    informants of other types of information who have been dropped from the
    rolls. 

    While not publicly disclosed, the review has come to the attention of
    lawmakers on committees that oversee the CIA. Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.,
    vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, cited in an
    interview the growing number of CIA reports to lawmakers about
    unreliable or unproductive agents being dropped from the rolls. 

    Deutch explained the review process in a speech at Georgetown
    University last September. 

    "What has been happening is that responsible officers in the CIA have
    been making judgments about the value of the intelligence gained versus
    the risk of dealing with these individuals," he said. "The rules we
    have put in place reflect higher standards for trade craft, agent
    validation and counterintelligence." 

    Deutch had told the House Intelligence Committee last year that the CIA
    would continue to deal with unsavory characters and that headquarters
    had yet to reject any requests for new informants based on human rights
    concerns. 

    Officials said Deutch began the weeding-out initiative in response to
    vociferous criticism of the CIA over human rights abuses by informants
    in Guatemala. 

    Former Rep. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., now a senator, brought to light
    the case of Guatemalan Col. Julio Roberto Alpirez and his knowledge of
    the slaying of a U.S. citizen and of the death in captivity of a
    Guatemalan guerrilla married to an American lawyer. 

    The CIA review of its informants appeared to have been widely known
    among the tightknit community of former CIA officials. 

    "There is no question that a review has been under way for some time of
    all the agency assets and informants," said Vincent Cannistraro, a
    former member of the CIA's clandestine service and one-time director of
    intelligence programs at the National Security Council. 

    Cannistraro said he is concerned that the review threatens to cut off
    the government from the only people who can provide valuable
    information on terrorist cells and arms-proliferation cartels -- the
    participants. 

    "Political correctness has really infected the clandestine services,"
    Cannistraro said. "If you're going to be collecting information on bad
    characters, you're going to be dealing with bad characters." 

    Disclosure of the agent scrub could play an important role in the
    current battle over Senate confirmation of Anthony Lake as the next CIA
    director. Torricelli has said he will block Lake's approval until he
    receives assurances that the CIA is abiding by new human rights
    guidelines. 
7.886IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:0929
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:18 EST   REF5328

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Liz Taylor To Have More Tests

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Elizabeth Taylor was expected to remain in the
    hospital to undergo further testing after she suffered a seizure, which
    doctors said is common following brain surgery. 

    Miss Taylor was in good condition on Sunday, a hospital spokesman said. 

    "Everything is perfectly normal," Ron Wise of the Cedars-Sinai Medical
    Center said. "She seems to be fine. She's very alert and her spirits
    are good, and she's not had a repeat of whatever it was." 

    Miss Taylor, 65, had the seizure at her Bel-Air home on Saturday. It
    came nine days after surgeons removed a benign, golfball-sized tumor
    from her brain. 

    Doctors have not indicated when the two-time Academy Award-winning
    actress will be released, Wise said. 

    He and Miss Taylor's publicist said that seizures are common following
    neurosurgery. 

    "The doctors have done tests and they've ruled out anything serious,"
    Shirine Ann Coburn said. "She's going to remain at the hospital for
    awhile for further testing." 
7.887IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:0929
    AP 2-Mar-1997 23:24 EST   REF5098

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    1 Dies in Utah Plane Crash

    SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- One person died and at least three others were
    injured Sunday night when a small aircraft crashed into an empty field
    on approach to Salt Lake International Airport. 

    Details were sketchy, but air traffic control spokesman Brian Pitts
    said the international's tower confirmed the twin-engine, 10-seat
    aircraft was making its approach about 7:15 p.m. when it went down
    about 2 miles south of the runway. 

    A snowstorm had moved into the area about the same time, but
    authorities said it was too early to say if weather played a role in
    the crash. 

    A dispatcher with the Salt Lake City Police Department confirmed one
    fatality had been reported. Six people in all were believed to have
    been on the plane. 

    A nursing supervisor at LDS Hospital confirmed one victim, a
    59-year-old male, had been brought into emergency in serious condition.

    The nursing supervisor, who declined to give her name, also understood
    that emergency crews were still extricating victims from the wreckage
    about an hour after the crash. 
7.888IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:1863
    AP 2-Mar-1997 23:02 EST   REF5055

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Town Copes With Teen Overdoses

    By BRIAN MELLEY

    Associated Press Writer

    WOBURN, Mass. (AP) -- Parents and friends prayed Sunday at church
    services for the 14 teen-agers who overdosed on a muscle relaxant at a
    youth dance. 

    "They are nice kids, that's the whole thing. It very easily could have
    been my daughter," said Debra Schindler, outside services at the United
    Methodist Church in this city nine miles northwest of Boston. 

    The drug, Baclofen, was taken from a mail-order shipment sent to an
    unidentified man who said he never got the medication, Middlesex
    District Attorney Tom Reilly said. The man is not related to any of the
    teens, he said. The drug is used to treat cerebral palsy and multiple
    sclerosis. 

    Police are looking for a second bottle of pills containing the
    antibiotic Hiprex, which was part of the shipment, Reilly said. 

    It was not immediately clear what problems the antibiotic could cause
    or if any of the children took that medication. 

    Two of the eight teens still hospitalized remained in critical
    condition Sunday. All of the victims should recover fully, hospital
    officials said. 

    Sunday's services came two days after 14 teens were felled by overdoses
    of the prescription muscle relaxant Baclofen at a Boys and Girls
    Club-sponsored dance. 

    Most of the girls were celebrating their selection as school
    cheerleaders, and the teens gobbled as many as 35 pills before they
    started "dropping like flies," as an emergency medical technician put
    it. 

    Baclofen, which often is used to treat cerebral palsy and multiple
    sclerosis, was brought to the dance by a girl who also was felled by an
    overdose. Authorities are not identifying her. 

    While some Woburn middle school students are aware of drug use at their
    schools, they say the teen-agers who overdosed were not part of that
    crowd. 

    "They were, like, wicked good students in school," said James Caterino,
    14, who left the dance before the teen-agers began falling ill. Some
    students speculated that peer pressure made the teens take the pills. 

    "I think this was an aberration. The facts are that there are bad
    things available to our kids," said Jan Fuller, a parent and church
    leader. "I think things like this can happen anywhere -- they're just
    children."
    
    [I have looked up the drug and its overdose effects. This could cause
    them to lose their kidneys and will most decidedly make them viloently
    ill for quite some time. - Jamie.] 
7.889IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:1855
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:36 EST   REF5440

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Peru Leader Seeks Rebels' Asylum

    By MICHELLE FAUL

    Associated Press Writer

    SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) -- Peru's president is
    discussing asylum for rebels holding 72 hostages in Lima, in a quest
    that is taking him to the Dominican Republic and possibly on to other
    Caribbean nations. 

    President Alberto Fujimori played down his sudden visit Sunday to the
    Dominican Republic, saying that "refuge, or an exit to another country,
    might be necessary at some point and therefore we're talking about this
    informally." 

    A statement issued by Fujimori and his Dominican counterpart, Leonel
    Fernandez, late Sunday said only that they had discussed "the situation
    of the hostages." Presidential aides refused to elaborate. 

    They also would not comment on reports that Fujimori might visit Cuba
    and Jamaica next. Those countries have also been named as possible
    havens for the Tupac Amaru rebels, should a deal be worked out to end
    their hostage-taking at the Japanese ambassador's mansion in Lima. 

    Fujimori said Sunday morning before leaving Lima that he had contacts
    with other countries that he would not name. 

    He said the Dominican Republic might not be an acceptable destination
    for the rebels, raising speculation it could be considered as a
    temporary refuge. 

    Fernandez and the Peruvian leader had met last month to discuss the
    same topic. 

    About 15 guerrillas seized the ambassador's mansion during a party Dec.
    17. They have freed hundreds of captives but still hold 72 men,
    including the ambassadors of Japan and Bolivia and several high-ranking
    Peruvian officials. 

    In 1993, the Dominican Republic granted asylum to two members of the
    Yolaina Commando who had seized Nicaragua's embassy in Costa Rica and
    held several diplomats hostage for 12 days. 

    For years, the Dominican Republic has provided asylum to five members
    of the Basque separatist group ETA who moved there in 1989 at Spain's
    request. 

    In Lima, talks resume today between the government and Tupac Amaru
    rebels -- the eighth in the 11-week crisis. The last meeting was
    Thursday. 
7.890IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:19114
    AP 3-Mar-1997 1:25 EST   REF5387

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Old Tongues Revive in Ex-USSR

    By ANGELA CHARLTON

    Associated Press Writer

    KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -- Three years ago, Leonid Kuchma spoke only Russian
    in public and could barely form a sentence in Ukrainian. Now, as
    Ukraine's president, he speaks only Ukrainian. 

    At least he tries to. 

    "He speaks 'Kuchmese,' a kind of Ukrainian with Russian words thrown in
    when he can't think of the translation," complains Olena Timoshenko, a
    language instructor. 

    Kuchmese makes good joke fodder, and it's also a high-profile example
    of the linguistic dilemma facing millions of people across the former
    Soviet Union, where the Russian language once ruled. 

    The breakup of the Soviet empire created 15 independent countries.
    After decades of suppression under Soviet rule and before that czarist
    regimes, local languages are being revived, even if citizens are a bit
    rusty and, in some cases, the languages are poorly suited for modern
    life. 

    Language issues galvanized independence movements from the Baltics to
    Central Asia before the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. But trying
    to forge new national identities with old languages has proven a tricky
    task. 

    And it's left a trail of tired tongues. 

    Political scientist Nurbulat Masanov wants no part of the drive to
    promote Kazak, a Turkic language of nomads, in the Central Asian nation
    of Kazakstan. 

    "There are dozens of words to describe a camel" in Kazak, he said.
    "There are no words for modern technology or science." 

    Kazakstan is home to more than 100 ethnic groups, and just 35 percent
    of the population speaks Kazak, while a solid majority speaks Russian.
    Many people fear government efforts to make Kazak the official language
    will threaten the delicate balance among the ethnic groups. 

    In neighboring Kyrgyzstan, Yevgenia Tarasenko had to leave her job at a
    television station when the management ordered all staff meetings to be
    held in Kyrgyz. 

    "I told them I was willing to learn Kyrgyz, but I couldn't do it from
    one day to the next," said Tarasenko, a Russian speaker. 

    The station's plan bombed because not enough employees spoke decent
    Kyrgyz. It soon switched back to Russian, and asked Tarasenko to
    return. 

    The millions of Russians scattered across the former Soviet territory
    are particularly wary of these word games. They are often targeted by
    nationalist language policies, a sort of revenge for the Communist
    Party drive to create a Russian-speaking union. 

    Then there's the problem of multi-ethnic households, a widespread
    product of Soviet-era deportations and relocations. What do you do when
    Mom speaks Russian, Dad speaks Moldovan, Grandma speaks Belarusian and
    the kids are learning Uzbek in school? 

    For Masanov, the Kazak political scientist, practicality should win out
    over politics when it comes to language. 

    "Frankly, I don't care whether my children learn Kazak," he said. "I
    want them to know English." 

    The tiny Baltic nations have scrambled to forget Russian as fast as
    they once learned it. Just five years after their independence from
    Moscow, Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians are more likely to say
    "good-bye" than "do svidanya." 

    Back in Ukraine, Kuchma's linguistic flubs may peeve purists, but no
    one denies that his perseverance has done wonders for reviving
    Ukrainian, a melodic Slavic language sometimes dismissed as a backwoods
    dialect. 

    Speaking publicly in Ukrainian was a daring move for Kuchma, a former
    nuclear missile plant director, who grew up speaking only Russian in
    heavily Russified eastern Ukraine. 

    As prime minister in 1993, he still spoke only in Russian. But when he
    began campaigning for president the following year, out came his
    Ukrainian. 

    Critics ridiculed his rough Russian accent. They trashed him for
    littering his speech with Russian words cheaply disguised with
    Ukrainian suffixes. 

    The country's Russian speakers -- the bulk of his supporters -- had a
    bitter surprise after his election victory. 

    Instead of championing Russian-language rights, Kuchma stopped speaking
    Russian altogether, at least in public. He even pushed to make
    Ukrainian the only state language. 

    Some say his efforts have backfired, producing a head of state who
    sounds less intelligent than he is. Students compete to count his
    grammatical mistakes. One group reportedly created its own glossary of
    the president's peculiar phrasings. 

    But not everyone is critical. 

    "Would I want my kids to sound like Kuchma? No," said Irina Rylchik, a
    Ukrainian mother of two. "But good for him for trying." 
7.891IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:1931
    AP 2-Mar-1997 21:23 EST   REF5614

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pakistanis Now Get Sunday Off

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -- For the first time in 20 years, Pakistanis
    had the day off Sunday -- a change that is part of the new government's
    desire to increase Pakistan's economic competitiveness. 

    For two decades, Friday, the Muslim holy day, had been the traditional
    day off in this Islamic country of 140 million people. 

    But Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif reverted to a Sunday holiday schedule,
    saying idle Fridays reduced Pakistan's ability to compete on the
    international market. 

    Sharif, newly appointed to his post, has pledged to improve Pakistan's
    troubled economy. He said workers should have a half-day off on
    Fridays. 

    The Koran, the Muslim holy book, does not require the faithful to stop
    working on Friday, he said. Rather, it states that people should leave
    their jobs to pray and then return to work. 

    Devout Muslims pray five times a day, but Friday is considered the
    holiest day of the week. 

    Some right-wing religious parties demonstrated Friday to protest the
    change, but most people went to work. The stock exchanges, banks and
    most businesses were open Friday and closed on Sunday. 
7.892IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:1957
    AP 2-Mar-1997 21:17 EST   REF5610

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Group: Australia Draws Mob Money

    CANBERRA, Australia (AP) -- Australia attracts investment and
    money-laundering of the ill-gotten gains of overseas criminals,
    National Crime Authority chairman John Broome said Monday. 

    Broome said there was no doubt sums of criminal money were coming here
    but it was difficult to say how much. 

    He said all the things that were positive for the economy made
    Australia attractive for criminal investment and money laundering. 

    Speaking to the parliamentary committee on the National Crime
    Authority, Broome said Australia had an open financial system, money
    could be moved freely in and out and it was obviously a good investment
    location. 

    "Another reason why it is attractive is that there is a fairly
    substantial volume of funds coming and going legitimately and therefore
    it's easier to hide any funds which you may be putting in," he said. 

    Broome said it had to be remembered that often before criminal funds
    reached Australia, they went through a number of loops so that their
    origin was unknown. 

    "So you can't with any certainty say this is criminal proceeds being
    invested," he said. "There may be some transactions which ... are
    somewhat difficult to explain. But that at the end of the day isn't
    proof of anything. 

    "People are entitled to move funds in and out of accounts in Australia
    they see fit." 

    Broome said the allegations of Japanese Yakuza organized crime money
    laundering published by the Financial Review last month related to a
    secret assessment which concluded there was no substantial evidence of
    funds invested in Australia which could be traced to criminal sources. 

    "That's because the very nature of money laundering is to make the
    origin less clear," he said. 

    "And so, usually these things will go through three or four sources
    before they will end up here, if this is to in fact be the place where
    funds are kept for some time. 

    "We may be part of a loop where it comes and goes very quickly. We may
    be an investment place because the assets can be liquidated fairly
    quickly if you want to in fact access your funds. 

    "Does it happen? Yes it does." 

    Broome said there was little empirical work on the volumes of money
    laundering. 
7.893IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:1999
    AP 2-Mar-1997 20:42 EST   REF5590

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    State of Emergency in Albania

    By MERITA DHIMGJOKA

    Associated Press Writer

    TIRANA, Albania (AP) -- More violence and shooting broke out Sunday,
    Parliament declared a state of emergency and the prime minister said
    even a new government could not save Europe's poorest country from its
    descent into chaos. 

    President Sali Berisha said Sunday he would "employ all measures under
    the law, even the most difficult ones, against this rebellion." He gave
    no further details in his televised speech. The state of emergency
    allows the army to be deployed to quell public unrest and protect
    public buildings and key roads. 

    Albania has been convulsed by weeks of riots and protests growing out
    of public rage over the collapse last month of popular, high-risk
    investment schemes in which nearly every Albanian lost money. 

    After Berisha's address, protest leaders in Vlora -- who had threatened
    a march to the capital Monday if the president does not form a new
    government made up of non-partisan technocrats -- told protesters to
    stay home. 

    "We don't want blood," one organizer told the thousands of people
    gathered at Vlora University. Violence had exploded in Vlora, 70 miles
    south of Tirana, on Friday. 

    But unrest broke out in the southern border city of Gjirocastra on
    Sunday evening, with people firing guns at the police station, a local
    reporter said. 

    In the capital, several foreign journalists were attacked Sunday
    outside Parliament by several men the reporters believed were secret
    police. An Associated Press reporter was violently shoved and staff
    from the British Broadcasting Corp. and World Television News also were
    assaulted. It was not immediately clear if there were any serious
    injuries. 

    Inside Vlora University, about 40 students entered the 11th day of a
    hunger strike aimed at forcing Berisha's ruling Democratic Party to
    relinquish power. 

    Bowing to public pressure, Berisha on Saturday ordered his Cabinet to
    resign, saying he will replace the ministers with other members of his
    Democratic Party to be approved by the Socialists and other opposition
    groups. 

    But Prime Minister Aleksander Meksi told The Associated Press on Sunday
    that a new government would not stop the country's descent into chaos.
    He said he agreed to step down only because a government must resign
    "when it's not able to handle a situation." 

    Berisha, who has not agreed to resign, said the new government would
    face huge challenges, including restoring public order and winning the
    trust of political parties in Albania, which is tucked in between
    Greece and Yugoslavia on the Adriatic Sea. 

    The president on Sunday called the protests "a communist rebellion
    backed by foreign intelligence agencies." 

    The government had hoped the political shuffling would mollify
    protesters, who blame the administration for not warning them about the
    riskiness of the pyramid schemes, which pay generous interest rates to
    early investors but collapse when deposits dry up. 

    However, by Saturday, Albania's southern region had erupted in
    lawlessness. Carloads of weapons were distributed throughout the
    countryside, and young men in the port city of Vlora fired a constant
    barrage of bullets into the air. 

    Meksi said it would take at least a year to regain control of the
    country's arsenal. 

    "It will be difficult to gather again tens of thousands of guns that
    the Defense Ministry left in the hands of criminals, rebels or
    desperate people," he said. 

    He blamed "the most extremist elements" in the Socialist Party -- the
    renamed Communists -- for the chaos. 

    Police and demonstrators clashed on Friday in Vlora; at least four
    people were killed and 20 others wounded. At least one person was
    killed by stray bullets, said Stavri Marko, a reporter for the
    independent Gazeta Shqiptare. 

    The next night, in the port of Saranda, about 90 miles south of Tirana,
    rioters set fire to a police station, a secret police office and a
    court, and freed jail inmates, state television said Sunday. 

    About 6,000 demonstrators clashed with police Saturday in Tirana. At
    least two police were beaten after demonstrators stormed a police
    station. The Interior Ministry said seven people were injured. 
7.894IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:2081
    AP 2-Mar-1997 19:34 EST   REF5547

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monkey Cloning Fuels Controversy

    By BOB BAUM

    Associated Press Writer

    BEAVERTON, Ore. (AP) -- Researchers have produced two monkeys with a
    procedure similar to that used to clone a sheep in Scotland, a
    development expected to help research into AIDS, alcoholism, depression
    and other illnesses. 

    The cloning of the rhesus monkey is less dramatic than the cloning of
    the sheep because primitive embryos, rather than adult animals, were
    duplicated. But it marks the first time it has been used to reproduce
    animals so closely akin to humans. 

    "Everyone is really excited about the potential of this and I think
    it's going to make for much, much better science, and much better
    experiments," said M. Susan Smith, director of the Oregon Regional
    Primate Research Center, where research the was conducted. 

    The cloning procedure, known as nuclear transfer, clears the way for
    producing genetically identical monkeys that will greatly simplify
    research, Donald Wolf, a senior scientist at the Oregon Regional
    Primate Research Center, said at a news conference Sunday. 

    With genetically different animals, there's always the possibility that
    results are due to variations among animals rather than to whatever is
    being tested. Genetically identical monkeys would be a boon to research
    because scientists could be more confident of their research results. 

    Scottish researcher Ian Wilmut, who created Dolly the sheep, called the
    Oregon development "an important step, but the material they used is
    fundamentally different and easier to work with." 

    Scientists created the two monkeys by developing embryos by taking a
    set of chromosomes from each of the eight cells in a primitive monkey
    embryo and inserting them into egg cells where the DNA had been
    removed. 

    They were then implanted into surrogate mothers through in vitro
    fertilization. 

    The two monkeys born in August are indistinguishable from others their
    age. They are being raised by their surrogate mothers and probably will
    live out a life of 15 to 20 years, researchers said. Researchers want
    to see how the animals reproduce. 

    Wolf, who also is director of the human in vitro fertilization
    laboratory at Oregon Health Sciences University, said he has already
    begun the process of producing a set of monkeys that would be
    identical. 

    Because monkeys are so closely related to humans, the Oregon research
    adds fuel to the growing controversy over the recreation of life
    through science. 

    "The downside is that this is one step in the direction of suggesting
    that nuclear transfer can be done in human beings," Wolf said. "Of
    course, we have absolutely no interest in even cloning an adult monkey,
    let alone cloning a human being." 

    Wolf and Smith said animal rights activists should like the development
    because it means far fewer animals will be used in research because of
    the uniformity of the monkey clones. 

    "Where you once needed 20 or 30 animals, maybe now you'd need only
    three or four," Smith said. 

    And while the cloning of adult humans is a more distant possibility,
    the scientists are well aware of the specter they have raised. 

    "The idea that there is a rich person who is a maverick or an eccentric
    or worse out on some island is what we call the Jurassic Park
    syndrome," said Russ Meintz, director of the Center for Gene Research
    and Biotechnology at Oregon State University. "It's more science
    fiction than reality." 
7.895IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:2091
    AP 2-Mar-1997 17:00 EST   REF5027

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Calorie Burning Gene Found

    By MALCOLM RITTER

    AP Science Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Talk about a feverish attempt to lose weight:
    Scientists have discovered a gene that might someday help people shed
    pounds in exchange for a slightly higher body temperature. 

    The gene appears to make people burn off calories, and it might help
    explain why some people are prone to getting fat. 

    The hope is that researchers can find a drug to make it work harder, so
    the body will burn off more calories rather than storing them as fat. 

    That would raise body temperature. A person might be able to lose five
    pounds a year with every one-tenth of a degree increase in body
    temperature, estimated researcher Craig Warden of the University of
    California, Davis. 

    It will take further study to see how much of a temperature increase
    people could safely stand, he said. He and colleagues at Davis and
    elsewhere announce the discovery in the March issue of the journal
    Nature Genetics. 

    "I think this is probably a major discovery for obesity," said an
    authority on fatness, Dr. Albert Stunkard of the University of
    Pennsylvania. 

    Scientists haven't known how people's bodies regulate their weight,
    steering them toward a given weight despite dieting or bingeing,
    Stunkard said. The newly discovered gene could play a big role, he
    said. 

    It might lead to a weight-loss drug, he said, adding, "I'll bet you the
    drug companies are hovering like vultures over this finding." 

    Cells of the body burn calories to get energy to do their jobs --
    making our hearts beat, our legs move, our thoughts form -- and to
    generate heat for body temperature. 

    Warden believes the newfound gene is an energy thief. It gives rise to
    a protein that steals some of the energy cells generate. That means
    cells have to burn extra calories to make up for the loss. 

    If scientists can prod the gene into making more of this
    energy-stealing protein, cells would have to burn still more calories. 

    Researchers already knew of another gene that promotes energy theft,
    and drug companies are studying drugs to make it more active. But that
    gene, called UCP1, is active only in brown fat, which is sparse in
    adults. 

    In contrast, newfound gene UCP2 is at work in every human tissue Warden
    has checked, especially ordinary white fat and muscle, he said. And its
    protein appears to be about 20 times more abundant in the body than the
    protein from UCP1. 

    So the newfound protein is probably a better bet for weight loss, he
    said. 

    Some people may be prone to getting fat because their UCP2 isn't active
    enough, Warden said. Indeed, his group found that the gene was less
    active in a strain of obesity-prone mice than in a strain that resists
    putting on weight. 

    In the obesity-resisting mice, a high-fat diet cranked up the gene's
    activity. 

    Researchers also found that in mice chromosomes, UCP2 is located in a
    place previously thought to hold an unidentified obesity gene. There's
    a hint of the same thing in people, Warden said. 

    Warden's work is "exceptionally interesting and provocative," said Dr.
    Jeffrey Flier, who studies obesity at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
    Center in Boston. 

    Flier agreed the discovery might lead to weight-loss drug. But first
    scientists have to figure out what turns the new gene on and off, he
    said. 

    Flier also said that if somebody takes a drug that kicks the gene into
    overdrive to burn more calories, nobody knows whether the body would
    compensate by eating more. 

    Still, he said, "I'm pretty excited about where this is going." 
7.896IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:20103
    AP 2-Mar-1997 12:02 EST   REF5157

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Doctor's Journal Offers Glimpse

    By LINDA A. JOHNSON

    Associated Press Writer

    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- Tattered and water-damaged, a New Jersey country
    doctor's daily journal from the 1820s provides a fascinating, sometimes
    gruesome, glimpse of medicine long before anesthesia, antibiotics and
    formal medical training. 

    The daybook Dr. Seymour Halsey kept from 1824 through 1827, when he
    practiced in Sparta, Sussex County, was recently discovered in a
    basement and donated to the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
    Jersey Libraries. 

    "He did a lot of bleeding," said Barbara S. Irwin, managing librarian
    of the libraries' special collections. She referred to a procedure then
    believed to relieve many ills by removing toxins from the body. 

    Bleeding, often done by pressing a heated glass cup against the skin
    until the cup filled with blood, cost a mere 23 cents, according to
    Halsey's records. His bill rose to 63 cents for the procedure if he
    made a house call -- which Halsey did for most cases. 

    Unfortunately, Irwin said, "They (the doctors) didn't wear rubber
    gloves. People became infected and died." 

    Other mainstays of Halsey's practice included giving emetics to induce
    vomiting, cathartics to trigger bowel movements and dispensing other
    popular medicines of the day, from snake root and caster oil to
    quinine, expectorants and various salts. Halsey also gave many patients
    laudanum, a solution of opium in alcohol, to treat nervous disorders. 

    Because dentistry was not yet a specialty, he also did minor dental
    surgery, including extracting teeth, again for just 23 cents. 

    The prices listed next to each patient's name and case description are
    just as remarkable as the treatments when compared to today's
    standards. Tooth extraction, for example, now costs an average of $80,
    according to the American Dental Association. 

    Delivering a baby -- described in the journal partially in Latin by the
    words "abstract foetus ex utero" -- cost $3, and Halsey billed the
    charge to the husband, with the notation "for wife." Today, a
    noncomplicated vaginal delivery costs $2,064 and a Caesarean section
    costs $3,483 on average in New Jersey, according to the New Jersey
    Hospital Association. 

    Halsey charged patients 50 cents for follow-up house calls; today,
    house calls are pretty much priceless. 

    Born in 1802 in Monroe, Morris County, Halsey studied medicine as an
    apprentice in Morristown before opening his own practice in Sparta in
    1824 at age 22. Five years later he moved to New York, where he
    "attended a course of lectures at the College of Physicians and
    Surgeons, graduating in 1830," according to a local history. 

    After working briefly in a New York hospital, he took up practice in
    Newark for a few years before friends persuaded him to move to
    Vicksburg, Miss. He served as a surgeon in the Mexican War, suffered a
    foot wound during his two-year service, married a widow in Vicksburg
    and died there in 1852 at 49, according to other documents in the
    libraries' New Jersey Medical History Collection. 

    Halsey's daybook joins thousands of other historical medical documents
    and items in the collection in Newark, from a 1725 edition of Andreas
    Vesalius' "The Fabrica," which is credited with turning anatomy into a
    science, to two boxes of 19th-century homeopathic remedies and texts
    about New Jersey notables such as Rutgers microbiologist Selman Waxman,
    who won the Nobel Prize for discovering the cure for tuberculosis. 

    "What we're trying to do is document the history of medicine in New
    Jersey," Irwin said recently. "Things that happened in New Jersey have
    impacted the nation." 

    Among the firsts credited to New Jersey physicians and researchers are
    the development of rehabilitative medicine and of the Apgar test,
    invented by Dr. Virginia Apgar, to determine a newborn's health. 

    More recently, Dr. James Oleske of UMNDJ's New Jersey Medical School
    was among the first to identify pediatric AIDS, and colleague Patricia
    C. Kloser there established the first women's AIDS clinic at University
    Hospital in Newark. 

    While Halsey's daybook contains nothing so dramatic, it gives an
    interesting picture of the average physician nearly two centuries ago.
    He or someone else apparently considered the journal unimportant,
    pasting poems and other writings on top of the book's first pages. 

    Irwin said those are being peeled off, and a paper conservator will
    remove mold from the journal before it is placed in an acid-free binder
    for display. 

    ------

    EDITOR'S NOTE: For more information on the libraries' collection, visit
    its World Wide Web site at www.umdnj.edu and look under special
    collections. 
7.897IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:2123
    RTw  03-Mar-97 06:23    

    Tehran blast injures more than 20, two critically

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBAI, March 3 (Reuter) - More than 20 people were injured, two
    seriously, in an explosion in an eastern Tehran suburb on Sunday
    afternoon, Iranian television reported. 

    It said the blast occured when two people were illegally mixing about
    160 kilograms (350 pounds) of flammable materials in the Iranian
    capital's Narmak district. 

    The two were in critical condition and about 20 others were also
    injured, the television monitored by the British Broadcasting
    Corporation said. 

    The windows of houses in a 150 metre (yd) radius were shattered and the
    building in which the explosion occured was badly damaged, the
    television added.

    REUTER
7.898IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:22147
    RTw  03-Mar-97 03:39    

    FEATURE - Uphill struggle for Europe's car makers ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Uphill struggle for Europe's car makers in 1997 

    By Neil Winton 

    GENEVA, March 3 (Reuter) - Europe's car markets are now "mature" and
    manufacturers don't like it. 

    For car makers, gathering here for the annual car show, "mature"
    represents a merciless group of enemies in the form of stagnant
    markets, unending downward pressure on prices and profits, as well as
    chronic overcapacity. 

    Mature means ever tougher competition; never being able to relax.
    Mature means consumers have the upper hand. 

    And experts say this describes western Europe's car market prospects
    for 1997. 

    "This market is really maturing and reaching saturation point. In
    mature markets you can only get additional sales by pinching from
    someone else," said Peter Schmidt, from Britain's Automotive Industry
    Data. 

    In the good old "immature" days which came to a head in the 1980s,
    sales stopped advancing only when a recession hit. Then they would
    bounce back even more strongly. The only thing accelerating faster than
    sales would be prices and profits. 

    This all came to an end in 1993, when the recession smashed sales down
    by more than two million. 

    The market has never recovered its old vigour, and has stumbled back to
    life only with government subsidies, and hugely expensive price cuts
    and incentive schemes from the companies. 

    Consumer confidence, shaken by the recession in the early 90s, has been
    held back as governments effectively deflated economies to qualify for
    the Maastricht budgetary conditions for European Monetary Union
    qualification. 

    TOUGHER COMPETITION AHEAD 

    The future promises ever tougher competition, as Korean producers like
    Daewoo and Hyundai build on their bridgehead. Korean producers had a
    market share of 1.9 percent last year. 

    Japanese car companies led by the giant Toyota  are regrouping for a
    renewed attack, after the strength of the yen crippled their sales
    efforts. Japanese companies captured 10.7 percent of western Europe's
    sales last year, with a growing proportion supplied from plants in
    Britain. 

    And looking deep into the future, the European industry may come under
    threat from emerging producers in Latin America, India, Central Asia,
    and China. 

    The German mass car manufacturer Volkswagen  widened its lead at the
    top of the league last year with a 17.2 percent market share.

    Analysts say they expect VW, and its Audi, SEAT and Skoda brands, to at
    least consolidate its lead in 1997. 

    They say the five remaining mass car makers have no chance of narrowing
    the gap. Hanging on to current market shares will be tough enough. 

    Last year General Motors with its Opel and Vauxhall brands was second
    with 12.5 percent, followed by PSA Peugeot Citroen of France (11.9
    percent), Ford (11.6), Fiat of Italy (11.2), and France's Renault
    (10.1). 

    French companies will have a particularly tough time this year with the
    ending of government incentives to replace old clunkers and polluters
    with new cars. 

    Italy's decision to institute a similar plan this year will help Fiat. 

    INCENTIVES HAVE LITTLE LONG-TERM 

    But analysts say these incentives have little long-term impact. They
    simply steal sales from future years. 

    "We will see a feeble recovery this year, with sales rising about 1.5
    percent, so essentially the west European market is stagnant," said
    Arthur Maher, head of European forecasting at J.D. Power-LMC Automotive
    Services. 

    This is at the low end of forecasts. But the high end isn't far away.
    Investment bank Salomon Brother's sees 3.0 percent growth, the
    Economist Intelligence Unit forecasts 2.2 percent, and McGraw Hill's
    DRI expects 1.9 percent. 

    Sales last year totalled 12.8 million. 

    Maher said previous sales cycles registered a powerful rebound,
    bouncing between eight and 10 percent, with four to five percent of
    steady growth until the end of the cycle. 

    "Now we are seeing two to four percent growth, and that's being driven
    by incentives," Maher said. 

    Nigel Griffiths, European auto analyst at DRI agrees. 

    "Since the shock of 1993, where we've seen growth above trend, it's
    been because of incentives," Griffiths said. 

    Griffiths said that there have not only been incentives in the form of
    price cuts, but also hidden ones with manufacturers adding extras like
    air conditioning and airbags. 

    But manufacturers have been busily adding capacity, even while sales
    were haemorrhaging. Europe has the capacity to make about 16 million
    cars a year, with sales close to 13 million. 

    Car makers need to crank up production to as near as capacity as
    possible to keep costs down. But then they are forced to cut prices
    ruthlessly to hang on to market share. 

    If they all do this, profitability goes out the window, with only
    specialists like Mercedes, BMW and VW's Audi able to hold prices and
    margins. 

    "Yes, there are too many cars, too much capacity chasing too few
    consumers," said John Lawson, automotive analyst at Salomon. 

    EUROPEAN CARS HEAD U.S. LUXURY MARKET 

    "But let's not get too gloomy. Europeans are doing pretty well in the
    U.S. right now. In the upscale market in the U.S., the Europeans are
    the only ones making any headway. The luxury car market in the U.S. is
    dead apart from Europeans (like BMW, Mercedes, Audi, and Ford's
    Jaguar)," Lawson said. 

    And Lawson said the Geneva car show, which opens to the public from
    March 6 to the 16th, signals the start of a flood of new models. 

    "1997 is shaping up to be a big year for new models, although most will
    be in Frankfurt next autumn. We reckon there are 18 important new
    models this year, which represents about 20 percent of the cars on sale
    in Europe," Lawson said.

    REUTER
7.899IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:22152
    RTw  03-Mar-97 03:35    

    FEATURE - Cable modems promise to end the World ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Cable modems promise to end the World Wide Wait 

    By Neil Winton, Science and Technology Correspondent 

    LONDON, March 2 (Reuter) - You sit down in front of your personal
    computer and send an "E mail" to a friend on the other side of world. 

    It's a hassle-free operation and you smugly congratulate yourself for
    being at the cutting edge of technology. 

    You try something a little more daring. Perhaps a surf across the
    Internet, the world-wide network of personal computers linked by
    telephone lines. 

    Why not a visit to a newspaper on the World Wide Web such as the Wall
    Street Journal Interactive Edition, or the London Electronic Telegraph?
    Or take at look at the bargains available from your friendly, virtual
    superstore. 

    But this time you are stymied by the Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde nature of
    information technology. Instead of the promised seamless, effortless
    cruise for mind-expanding knowledge, you come up against the
    head-banging barrier of the not-quite-ready-for-prime-time modern
    personal computer. 

    The Internet server company has responded to your call with an endless
    engaged signal, or has accepted your call, switched you to the
    appropriate web site but given you a week old edition of the newspaper,
    or the wrong page, or has taken 20 minutes to download graphics which
    are then sabotaged by a dropped telephone line. 

    The software crashes and says "fatal error 72, shut down your
    application or risk losing your work." 

    After a couple of hours of this, you are cursing the inventor of the
    computer and have to be restrained from smashing the machine to pieces
    with a sledgehammer. 

    Cable modems should put an end to all that. 

    CABLE COMPANIES SEE NEW REVENUE 

    A cable modem links a PC to digital data, but instead of using dated
    telephone technology which has only limited capacity, it links users to
    data flowing freely down cable networks designed to carry television
    programmes. 

    This would guaranteee almost instant access to information across the
    Internet. Even video would spurt on to your PC screen. 

    Not surprisingly, this prospect has excited the cable companies, which
    see the prospect of juicy new revenues. 

    Traditional telephone companies may be twitching nervously. They had
    always expected to be the natural heirs to this "broadband" technology
    with their Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line which can more or less
    match cable modems for capacity. 

    Now it seems there will be upwards of five years before ADSL is
    available, and this leaves the cable operators a tasty window to
    maximise profits before the competition gets too hot. 

    "The current system is like sipping a milk-shake through a straw," said
    John Davison, senior consultant at high technology researcher Ovum. 

    "That to me was always a deeply unsatisfying experience. You just got a
    restricted amount. Cable modems allow you to drink deeply," said
    Davison. 

    According to an Ovum report, cable modem users will increase from
    almost zero today to 4.4 million in 2000 and to more than 19 million by
    2005 in North America, western Europe and parts of Asia and the
    Pacific. But growth will peak in 2001 and 2002 and then fall back as
    competition from traditional telephone companies and new satellite
    systems hots up. 

    U.S. researcher Forrester also waxes lyrical about cable modems. 

    "Cable modems deliver about one megabit per second of bandwidth in a
    typical installation, roughly the same as a desktop PC on an office
    network. They bring immediate relief to the World Wide Wait," the
    Forrester report said. 

    The Forrester report also concluded - 

    -Cable modem services will be the most widely available middleband
    technology for U.S. consumers. By 2001, seven million households will
    have signed up. 

    -Sheer speed and "always on-line" quality will woo consumers. 

    -This quality improvement will transform PC use and trigger electronic
    commerce. 

    Cable modem use will stir the cable industry, which Ovum describers as
    a sleeping giant. 

    "Traditionally, cable has been viewed as a utility, publicly owned,
    highly regulated, a low margin business. Cable is moving from a simple
    distributive model to that of interactive service provider," said
    Ovum's Davison. 

    In Europe, France Telecom (FTE.PA), Germany's Veba (VEBG.F), and cable
    companies in the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden, and Britain are
    conducting trials to gauge consumer reaction, and test for technical
    problems. 

    HURDLES TO OVERCOME 

    But this won't be a licence to print money for cable operators. There
    are expensive technical problems to overcome, and large investments
    will have to be made. 

    Dean Bubley, analyst at technology consultancy Datamonitor, said there
    are undoubted advantages from the higher capacity, but there are
    impediments. 

    "Significant investment is required by cable companies, and there are
    other hidden costs. They have to recruit and train customer service
    representatives, and there's the installation question. Most PCs will
    need to be upgraded, and that will take an experienced cable engineer
    from two to four hours per household," Bubley said. 

    And the traditional big telephone companies will not stand idly by and
    watch cable companies cream off this profitable business. 

    "The telcos (big phone companies) will have a strong role to play;
    they've been slow coming to the Internet, but they've recently woken up
    to this and they're investing an enormous amount of money," said Yankee
    Group analyst Chris Champion. 

    Datamonitor's Bubley said that by the end of 2000, about 30 million
    western Europeans will have access to the online world. 27.7 million
    households with use either a PC or a less powerful network computer,
    and the rest will have WebTV - which allows a plain old television to
    gain access to the Internet. 

    This will include about nine million with high-powered access, of which
    3.9 million will be cable modems, and about three million with an
    uprated telephone connection. 

    "The remainder will be a combination of satellite, wireless, and
    various other technologies that we are not even talking about as yet,"
    Bubley said. 

    REUTER
7.900IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 11:2258
    RTw  03-Mar-97 01:30    

    Britain thown into new confusion over Europe

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Patricia Reaney 

    LONDON, Mar 3 (Reuter) - A cabinet minister created new confusion over
    Britain's policy towards the European Union by ruling out early entry
    into a single European currency and then backtracking a few hours
    later. 

    The row was unwelcome news for Prime Minister John Major, coming just
    after a humiliating by-election defeat forced his Conservative
    government into a minority in parliament and just weeks before he faces
    an uphill battle in a general election due by May 22. 

    In apparent contradiction to Major's stated "wait and see" policy,
    Health Minister Stephen Dorrell said in a television interview early on
    Sunday: "We shan't be joining a single currency on January 1, 1999." 

    But he later issued a statement through Conservative Party Head Office
    saying that what he had said was not at odds with the government's
    policy. 

    "I entirely agree with the government position and no words I used on
    The Dimbleby Programme were intended to question it," he said. 

    "We have not ruled out joining the single currency on January 1, 1999.
    We have said we believe the likelihood of our doing so is extremely
    small." 

    The opposition Labour Party, which has a big lead in the opinion polls,
    said the incident proved that the Conservatives were in complete
    disarray. 

    "You can't understand what this government means from day-to-day and
    hour-to-hour," Labour's deputy leader John Prescott told Sky
    television. "It's utter confusion and chaos." 

    It was not the first time that ministers had been caught at apparent
    odds over Europe. Two weeks ago Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, in
    what appeared to be a shift from a carefully-planned neutral policy,
    said the government was "on balance hostile" to a single currency. 

    Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) Kenneth Clarke denied
    Rifkind's comments signified a policy switch and dismissed his remark
    as a slip of the tongue. 

    The two ministers later issued a statement saying that the government's
    position had not changed. 

    "You can't have a government with such confusion," said Prescott. "This
    is a government that really can't lead and it's got a party that can't
    be led. The quicker we have the election the better." 

    REUTER
7.901IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:2488
7.902IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:2928
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    Water firm issues health alert

    HUNDREDS of thousands of householders were told last night to boil
    their drinking water after an outbreak of diarrhoea.

    The warning was issued by Three Valleys Water to its customers in
    Watford, St Albans and parts of north-west London. It follows advice by
    public health officials following 32 cases of stomach bugs, possibly
    caused by cryptosporidium - an organism commonly found in farm and
    domestic animals. The organism was discovered in samples of water
    during tests carried out with local health authorities.

    The company was delivering notices to nearly 300,000 homes letting
    customers know what action they should take.

    Dr Lorna Willocks, a consultant epidermiologist, said: "Reports of
    cryptosporidium during the last week have shown an increase in the
    three areas. We have been working in close co-operation with the water
    company and others tracking down the source of infection. Cases are
    found all year round, with peaks occurring in spring and autumn, but
    the level of recent cases is higher than the normal expected seasonal
    average. Anyone who lives in the area and has had diarrhoea for several
    days should contact their GP."

    Water for drinking, cleaning teeth and preparing food, including
    babies' feeds, needs to be boiled, the company said.
7.903IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:3866
7.904IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:3968
7.905IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:4589
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    Bishop bars black woman vicar from parish church
    
    By Maurice Weaver 

    BRITAIN'S first black woman team vicar has been ordered to resign her
    living after standing up in church to complain that her senior male
    colleague was belittling her and using her "as a doormat".

    The Rev Eve Pitts, 46, a team vicar of St Nicolas's Church, Kings
    Norton, Birmingham, who rejected her bishop's resignation demand, has
    been barred from preaching at the 13th-century church. Yesterday Mrs
    Pitts, a former civil servant, said she was "devastated" at the
    decision by the Bishop of Birmingham, the Rt Rev Mark Santer. "I cannot
    think straight," she said. "My brain is in turmoil about it."

    The split between Mrs Pitts and the senior cleric, the Rev Martin
    Leigh, follows a long period of vestry acrimony. She has complained of
    being humiliated and excluded from parish decision-making. In a letter
    read to worshippers at the church yesterday the bishop said Mrs Pitts's
    public outbursts had "made it impossible for her to continue to
    function effectively" in her present role. He added: "Her continuing
    presence is good neither for the parish itself, nor for herself and her
    family."

    The row in the parish, which spans a south Birmingham area of
    middle-class affluence and bleak council estates, has caused a deep
    emotional schism in the parish and led to demands for an independent
    inquiry. Mr Leigh is on sick leave, the parish magazine blaming "the
    stress under which he has been put in the parish". Visiting clergy are
    helping out and Mrs Pitts is restricted to conducting services in a
    council estate community centre.

    Jo Haynes, a member of the diocesan church council, said: "When we
    heard we were getting a black woman priest I admitted I wondered how
    she would get on in an 'establishment' area like this. But Eve has been
    a breath of fresh air in this parish - a gifted preacher and a truly
    wonderful Christian."

    The Rev Theo Samuel, of the Association of Black Clergy, who has taken
    up Mrs Pitts's case, blamed "elitism and unwitting colour prejudice"
    which, he said, had led to Mrs Pitts feeling "shut out" by the other
    clergy. "They would deny colour prejudice and do so with conviction,"
    he said. "But their background means they cannot come to terms with the
    idea of a black person doing the job properly. Eve Pitts felt
    effectively demoted by her colleagues and had no choice but to stand up
    and defend herself." 

    Mr Samuel, who is the vicar of St Martin's in West Drayton, London,
    added: "Mrs Pitts should not have spoken publicly as she did, but she
    is a vicar and has been treated as a curate. She has every right to be
    upset and the Church has no idea when it comes to good employment
    practice."

    But the Rev Roger Bristow, one of the other team vicars, said: "This
    situation has nothing to do with race or gender. Martin Leigh and the
    other staff continue to have very good relationships with all the black
    members of our congregations. We are committed to women's ministry and
    work well together with our colleagues. Martin Leigh has behaved
    honourably in his dealings with Eve in his efforts to find a resolution
    to her difficulties within the team. I am greatly saddened that it has
    come to this."

    After conducting morning service at the community centre, Mrs Pitts
    said: "I am still a Christian and still a priest. I will be guided by
    that in what I do." Mrs Pitts, who has held her present post since
    1994, said: "Things were wrong from the start. I accept I was the wrong
    appointment. But I don't want to stir up more trouble by saying more at
    present." She acknowledged that she and Mr Leigh had not got on for
    some time.

    Matters came to a head when she stood up during a service late last
    year and delivered a statement expressing her unhappiness and
    complaining about the way she said Mr Leigh treated her. Mrs Haynes
    said: "It wasn't an emotional outburst. She just said she wanted
    everyone to know what was going on." Mrs Pitts made a second statement
    before the parochial church council.

    Sue Primmer, speaking for the bishop, said it was the public outbursts
    which led to his decision to act. Miss Primmer said: "It is not what
    went wrong in the parish - it was the manner in which she made it
    public. Mrs Pitts disrupted an act of public worship by her statement
    and raising her complaints at the PCC meeting was out of place."

    The bishop has expressed his "complete confidence" in Mr Leigh but also
    praises Mrs Pitts as a "talented pastor". If she agreed to resign it
    would have been on full stipend and with permission to remain in her
    parish house, he said.
7.906IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:4759
7.907IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:4936
7.908IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:5134
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    41 party-goers injured in coach crash

    FORTY-one people were hurt yesterday when a coach full of young
    party-goers returning from a 21st birthday celebration crashed in high
    winds.

    Three people were trapped inside the coach, which landed on its side in
    a 12ft ditch, and had to be cut free from the wreckage by firemen. One
    passenger was seriously injured. The accident happened on the A1121
    near Boston, Lincs, at 4am.

    The coach, which was carrying 42 passengers, all in their late teens or
    early 20s, was returning from the MGM nightclub in Nottingham where
    Katy Halifax had held her birthday celebrations.

    Miss Halifax, of Wyberton, near Boston, sustained a broken pelvis and
    cuts which needed 21 stitches. She was one of eight passengers detained
    in hospital. Her 23-year-old brother, Ian, was on the coach with his
    girlfriend Angie Bilbie, 25, a nurse at Addenbrooke's Hospital,
    Cambridge.

    Mr Halifax, who suffered minor injuries and managed to crawl through a
    window, said: "People were panicking." He had joined fellow passengers
    in helping others to safety.

    Ian Stevenson, of Boston, the 33-year-old coach driver, was among the
    injured but was allowed to go home after treatment.

    The 15-year-old coach, owned by Brylaine Travel, of Wyberton, was not
    fitted with seat belts. Police said investigations were continuing and
    they would be preparing a report for the Department of Transport, which
    issues licences to public service vehicle operators.
7.909IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:5433
7.910IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:5533
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    Fight to save stocks of cod 'is being sabotaged'
    
    By Charles Clover, Environment Editor 

    CONSERVATION to halt the collapse of cod stocks in the North Sea is
    being undermined by some European countries who fear their fish quotas
    would be reduced.

    Leaked drafts of a declaration due to be given at a meeting of
    fisheries and environment ministers in Bergen, Norway, next week,
    indicate that some EU countries, led by Spain and France, have diluted
    many of the measures. A special one-day hearing of the science and
    technology select committee at the House of Lords tomorrow has been
    called to discuss what can be done.

    John Gummer, the Environment Secretary, is known to be in favour of
    stronger measures. He has little sympathy for those who are not
    prepared to stick to agreed conservation plans, but it is felt that he
    is not being critical enough.

    Plans to save cod stocks have been watered down, as have measures to
    curb industrial fishing of sand eels, one of the cod's main sources of
    food. Areas of the North Sea were to be closed to fishermen to protect
    wildlife, but this is now unlikely although the principle has been
    approved by ministers.

    Spain and France are not members of the North Sea Conference, a
    grouping of eight EU countries bordering the North Sea, plus Norway,
    which is hosting next week's meeting. But the EU, under pressure from
    them, refuses to accept that the eight North Sea states, acting with
    Norway, can "agree" anything.
7.911IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:5754
7.912IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 15:5930
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    Man cleared of murder to sue police

    THE man cleared of murdering Vikki Thompson, a mother of two, has been
    granted legal aid to sue the police for wrongful arrest and
    prosecution.

    Mark Weston, 21, unemployed, was acquitted in December of killing Mrs
    Thompson, 30, who died in hospital six days after she was bludgeoned
    with a stone as she walked her dog on a path close to her home in
    Ascott-under-Wychwood, near Oxford, on Aug 12, 1995.

    Mr Weston, a former odd-job man who lived with his parents near Mrs
    Thompson, was arrested and charged with her murder four months later.

    He spent 10 months in jail awaiting trial. The jury at Oxford Crown
    Court took 50 minutes to clear him after a 14-day trial in which it had
    heard that footprints found around the murder scene did not match his.

    A key prosecution witness who claimed to have seen him in the lane
    where Mrs Thompson was found on the day of the attack later admitted it
    might not have been Mr Weston or the right day.

    Mr Weston said yesterday: "Of course I want compensation, but all I
    really want is a written apology from Thames Valley Police admitting
    they were wrong."

    Mr Weston, described in court as a loner, added: "All this wrecked my
    life. I had a girlfriend before all this happened - now I haven't."
7.913IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:0147
7.914IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:0452
7.915IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:0720
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    Campaign to expose the whereabouts of sex offenders

    AS ministers and police continue to debate the Government's future
    policy on convicted paedophiles, a campaign for communities to be told
    where they are living is gathering momentum.

    The organisers of People Power have more than 80,000 names on a
    petition calling for tighter curbs on child abusers when they leave
    jail.

    The campaign is being led by Gill Turner, 43, and Cathy Frost, 36,
    friends of the mother of nine-year-old Daniel Handley, who was abducted
    and murdered by two convicted paedophiles in 1994. The Home Office is
    considering whether neighbours should be told about known sex offenders
    in their community.

    But police believe that publishing names of offenders could lead to
    public "over-reaction and violence".
7.916IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:0955
7.917IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:1257
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 3 March 1997 Issue 647

    King Hussein gives one of his palaces to house orphans
    
    By Anton La Guardia, Middle East Correspondent 

    KING Hussein of Jordan is giving up one of his palaces in Amman to
    house orphaned children, in a gesture that has surprised even
    government officials.

    The monarch ordered Prime Minister Abdel-Karim Kabariti at the weekend
    to convert the Hashimiyyeh Palace, a guest palace which has housed
    dignitaries ranging from the Israeli prime ministers to Iraqi
    defectors, "as soon as possible".

    King Hussein announced that he and Queen Noor will be moving out of the
    main Nadwa palace, in the centre of Amman, into what Jordanian
    newspapers described as a "modest home" outside Amman, to be known as
    "The Gate of Peace". The Nadwa Palace, a compound on a leafy hill which
    is now the king's home and office, will become Jordan's official guest
    residence.

    The changes in royal accommodation have ostensibly been prompted by the
    king's pang of conscience at the appalling conditions of an orphanage
    run by a charity under royal patronage. King Hussein said he has been
    unable to sleep since he and Queen Noor visited the Al-Hussein Social
    Welfare Foundation last Thursday.

    He said he found the shelter crowded, old and dirty. The children were
    malnourished, and had no proper medical care. "All these scenes and
    images will not be removed from my conscience as long as I live," he
    said. "These innocent souls require mental, psychological, physical and
    moral development which we should all provide for them." Officials in
    Amman privately disputed that conditions at the orphanage were as grim
    as the king described. One said:"There is plenty of room for
    improvement. There is no malnutrition. It's not like Romania, but they
    don't eat palace food."

    The king's gesture may have been an attempt to assuage Jordanian
    resentment at the failure of the economy to recover, even after the
    country made peace with Israel. Bread riots broke out in the south of
    the country last August. The king used the announcement to make a
    scathing attack on waste and inefficiency in the Jordanian bureaucracy. 

    King Hussein is fond of grand gestures. In 1992, he sold a country
    house near London to raise funds for the restoration of Jerusalem's
    Dome of the Rock.

    The king's retreat outside Amman may restart speculation that he is
    about to retire, although officials deny this . However, officials
    consider that the 61-year-old, who has been treated for cancer, is
    increasingly concerned with his legacy. "It is very much in the Arab
    tradition that as you grow older, you want to do things for the
    people," one official said. "The king has had a very hard life. Death
    can come at any time."

    The Hashimiyyeh Palace overlooks the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
7.918IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:2091
7.919IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docMon Mar 03 1997 16:2790
7.920IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:02111
    AP 4-Mar-1997 0:59 EST   REF5454

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, March 4, 1997
   
    DU-PONT-LAWSUIT 

    MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -- The wife of slain Olympic wrestler David Schultz
    filed a wrongful death lawsuit Monday against multimillionaire John E.
    du Pont, saying he "must be held responsible for the murder of my
    husband." Nancy Schultz's lawsuit seeks unspecified compensatory and
    punitive damages from du Pont, who was found guilty of third-degree
    murder but mentally ill last week. 
   
    GORE-POLITICS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vice President Al Gore vows he will no longer
    solicit campaign money from his White House office -- even though he
    says there's nothing wrong with doing so. Gore told reporters he made
    only a few calls in search of contributions and that he used a
    Democratic National Committee credit card. But while it's illegal for
    federal employees to solicit money in federal buildings, Gore says he
    was not subject to that restriction. In the past week, questions have
    been raised over the vice president's aggressive fund-raising role in
    the Democratic Party's 1996 re-election bid. 
   
    MICROSOFT-BUG 

    SEATTLE (AP) -- A serious security flaw has been discovered in
    Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer browser that could potentially
    allow the operator of a Web site to secretly run programs stored on
    someone's personal computer. Microsoft officials said today they were
    testing a solution for the problem and expected to have it quickly
    posted to the company's site on the World Wide Web. Paul Balle, a
    product manager for Microsoft's Internet Explorer team, said the
    software bug was discovered by a student at Worcester Polytechnic
    Institute in Worcester, Mass. 
   
    BOMBING-McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- In a new twist to the trial of Oklahoma City bombing
    suspect Timothy McVeigh, a source tells the CBS Evening News that
    McVeigh's purported confession leaked on the Internet was actually
    faked by his defense team. An unidentified source told CBS that it was
    the defense that wrote the statement, as part of an attempt to get a
    witness to change his story by confronting him with McVeigh's
    "confession." But later, in a statement given to CNBC's Rivera Live,
    McVeigh's defense team said McVeigh's alleged confession was fabricated
    not to make the witness change his story but to persuade the witness to
    talk to them. McVeigh's lawyers said it was an attempt to divert his
    suspicion and get him to talk. 
   
    EXECUTION-WITNESSES 

    SAN FRANCISCO -- The public and the media have a First Amendment right
    to view an execution from beginning to end, a federal judge ruled in a
    decision released today. U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker wrote:
    "Short of waging war, capital punishment indisputably represents the
    ultimate exercise of state power." The case grew out of the February
    1996 execution by lethal injection of "freeway killer" William Bonin at
    San Quentin. Walker on Friday issued a summary judgment in favor of the
    California First Amendment Coalition, which includes The Associated
    Press. 
   
    UNABOMBER 

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Defense lawyers for Theodore Kaczynski asked
    a judge to throw out all evidence from the Unabom suspect's Montana
    cabin, claiming it was unlawfully seized. The evidence includes a
    journal in which prosecutors say the wilderness recluse and former
    University of California-Berkeley math teacher admits responsibility
    for all of the Unabomber explosions. The defense claims the search was
    a violation of Kaczynski's Fourth Amendment protection 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress' nonpartisan fiscal analysts concluded that
    President Clinton's budget-balancing plan would leave a $69 billion
    deficit in 2002, rather than the $17 billion surplus he claims. The
    long-anticipated conclusion by the Congressional Budget Office was
    immediately used by Republicans to assert that Clinton's
    balanced-budget package falls well short of delivering on its promise
    to end federal deficits. They also criticized the president for
    delaying 98 percent of his plan's savings for 2001 and 2002 -- after
    Clinton has left the White House. 
   
    SPY PLEA 

    ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- The highest-ranking CIA official ever to be
    charged with espionage pleaded guilty today to selling secrets to the
    Russians. Harold Nicholson admitted to a single charge of conspiracy to
    commit espionage. Prosecutors dropped two other charges. Nicholson
    still could receive up to life in prison and a $250,000 fine. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar rose against the yen in morning trading
    Tuesday, sending Tokyo stock prices higher. The Nikkei rose 257.03
    points to 18,686.16 points at the end of the morning session. In New
    York, the Dow Jones industrial average closed at 6,918.92, up 41.18.
    The Nasdaq closed at 1,311.18, up 2.18. 
   
    BULLS-BUCKS 

    Michael Jordan has became the NBA's No. 7 scorer tonight, despite given
    up basketball for virtually the entire 1985-86 season to injury. Jordan
    put in 31 points Monday night -- giving him 26,277 in his career -- as
    the Bulls rolled to a 108-90 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARK KENNEDY 
7.921IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0391
    RTw  04-Mar-97 03:23    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    VIENNA - Albania's beleaguered government, watched anxiously by its
    neighbours, has moved to smother violent unrest sweeping Europe's
    poorest country and one of its diplomats acknowledged that part of the
    south was out of control. After weeks of unrest sparked by the collapse
    of fraudulent pyramid schemes, officials issued orders to shoot armed
    rioters on sight, imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew and curbed press
    freedoms after parliament declared a state of emergency. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States said it strongly regretted Albania's
    imposition of emergency measures and a vote by the Balkan country's
    parliament to re-elect President Sali Berisha. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean President Kim Young-sam, seeking to restore his
    political fortunes following a loans scandal, appointed a new prime
    minister with a reputation for political integrity. Koh Kun, 59, was a
    mayor of Seoul from 1988-90 under former president Roh Tae-woo, but
    quit the post after a row with Roh's administration over a corrupt land
    deal. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - North Korea crossed a major hurdle by agreeing to attend a
    briefing on Wednesday on a U.S.-South Korea peace talks proposal, but
    actual negotiations may not start until around July, a senior U.S.
    official said. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israel has brushed off U.S. President Bill Clinton's
    criticism of its plan to build a new Jewish neighbourhood in Arab East
    Jerusalem, saying work will begin on the project this week. 

    - - - - 

    ARKADELPHIA, Arkansas - Rescue workers and repair teams poured into
    Arkansas to help stunned residents recover from devastating weekend
    tornadoes that killed 25 people and wrecked scores of businesses and
    homes. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - European Union leaders are prepared to take further tough
    budgetary action to ensure their countries qualify for European
    Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), Britain's Guardian newspaper quoted
    the European commissioner for monetary affairs Yves-Thibault de Silguy
    as saying. 

    - - - - 

    KUALA LUMPUR - The chairman and chief executive officer of national
    carmaker Proton Bhd, Yahaya Ahmad, and his wife were among three people
    killed in a helicopter crash, an official at Proton's parent DRB-Hicom
    told the national Bernama news agency. 

    - - - - 

    KISANGANI, Zaire - The sight of thousands of exhausted Hutu refugees
    trudging down jungle paths in eastern Zaire where armed rebels are
    pressing their advance has refocused world attention on the central
    African country's civil war. 

    - - - - 

    SYDNEY - A 70-year-old Sydney woman has become the fourth Australian to
    commit suicide under the world's only voluntary euthanasia law in the
    remote Northern Territory, a euthanasia supporters group said. The
    unidentified woman suffered from cancer. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - Hundreds of minor earthquakes continued to strike a Japanese
    resort area south of Tokyo on Tuesday, causing some damage and halting
    local rail traffic. There were no reports of injuries, police said. 

    - - - - 

    LOS ANGELES - Actress Elizabeth Taylor will remain in hospital for
    another day or two following a brain seizure that put her back in the
    hospital shortly after she was discharged following brain surgery, a
    spokesman said. Doctors said the two-time Oscar winner was listed in
    "good" condition and that no further complications were anticipated. 

    REUTER
7.922IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0498
    AP 4-Mar-1997 1:15 EST   REF5490

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Energy Policy Goes AWOL

    By WALTER R. MEARS

    AP Special Correspondent

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- No crisis, no issue, so U.S. dependence on imported
    oil has been increasing with scant notice, past the 50-percent level
    once set by Congress as the national peril point. 

    There's plenty of fuel, lines at the gasoline pump are long forgotten,
    and prices are stable, down a bit. The moral equivalent of war, Jimmy
    Carter's phrase for his energy conservation drive, has yielded to the
    actual equivalent of indifference. 

    Imports reached 53 percent of U.S. consumption during the week ended
    Feb. 21, Sen. Jesse Helms said in one of his weekly reports on oil
    imports. He said "politicians had better ponder the economic calamity"
    that would hit should foreign producers shut down supplies or sharply
    increase their prices. 

    The North Carolina Republican, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee, began putting the import reports in the Congressional Record
    more than a year ago, saying they reflect an "increasingly dangerous"
    situation. 

    Energy policy moved up the political agenda only when gasoline prices
    went up sharply in the winter and spring of 1996, prompting rival
    attempts to push them down, effectively encouraging consumption. 

    That's the opposite of the energy policies Carter and Richard Nixon
    pushed when there were crises to confront. Nixon's was prompted by the
    Arab oil embargo of 1973; at the time, imports accounted for about 35
    percent of U.S. consumption. The gas lines and soaring prices that
    resulted led Nixon to propose what he called Project Independence,
    production and conservation steps aimed at making the United States
    energy self-sufficient in 1980. 

    But after the crisis, imports went up, past 40 percent and counting
    when Carter took office in 1977. Prices had soared, fuel fueling
    inflation. Carter made energy his priority; the four nationally
    televised addresses of his first year in office all dealt with the
    issue. 

    Carter said imports should be cut by nearly one-third by 1985, but they
    increased, despite the conservation measures he won, and despite the
    nearly doubled prices and another round of shortages in 1979 and 1980. 

    The American Petroleum Institute reported imports this January equaled
    50.9 percent of U.S. consumption. That was the same as a year earlier.
    But government analysts forecast increasing dependance in the decade
    ahead, to as much as 60 percent of American consumption by 2015,
    according to the General Accounting Office. 

    Congress voted in 1990 to declare that 50 percent dependence on
    imported oil represented the "peril point" for U.S. security. 

    The industry maintains that technological advances and political change
    have created new overseas sources and reduced the potential impact of
    another disruption in Middle Eastern oil supplies. 

    But that can't be guaranteed. More than 20 percent of U.S. imports come
    from the Middle East. 

    After the first oil shock, Congress created the Strategic Petroleum
    Reserve in 1975, to store crude oil for emergency use. It now holds
    about 563 million barrels of oil, a cushion against the possibility of
    future disruption of imports, which were running at about 7.2 million
    barrels a day in late February. 

    No oil has been added to that stockpile since mid-1974, and none is
    proposed in the budget for next year. The administration sold about 25
    million barrels from the reserve in 1996, part of it as President
    Clinton sought to stem the increase in gasoline prices. Republicans
    were pressing that as an issue, seeking to lower the federal gasoline
    tax for the balance of the campaign year. 

    Eventually, prices went down anyway, as oil analysts had said they
    would, and the issue vanished. 

    Clinton's budget proposes $708 million for energy conservation
    programs, an increase, but back in the fine print, not on the priority
    list. 

    Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., raised the oil import question in advocating
    increased appropriations for mass transit as part of the highway bill
    that will have to be renewed by Sept. 30. 

    Specter called mass transit "a key weapon in our effort to reduce our
    dependence" on foreign oil and the risk that entails. 

    But budget balancing is atop the agenda now, and that is more likely to
    mean cuts than increases. Without a crisis, energy policy is a
    footnote. 
7.923IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0587
    AP 4-Mar-1997 1:14 EST   REF5470

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Kaczynski Defense Makes Motion

    By JOHN HOWARD

    Associated Press Writer

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Defense lawyers say the FBI twisted the
    comments of Unabom suspect Theodore Kaczynski's relatives to justify a
    search of his Montana cabin. 

    In a motion asking U.S. District Garland Burrell to throw out all
    evidence taken from the cabin, federal defenders Quin Denvir and Judy
    Clarke argued Monday that the search warrant was obtained improperly. 

    Attached to the motion were sworn declarations from David Kaczynski,
    the suspect's brother, and Wanda Kaczynski, their mother, contending
    federal agents had distorted their comments. 

    The defense said the distortions existed in at least a dozen of the
    scores of paragraphs contained in the 104-page FBI affidavit supporting
    the search warrant. 

    "The affidavit attempted to seduce the reader by its detail, but really
    it was like a spinning compass, not pointing in any true direction,"
    the defense lawyers said. 

    It was David Kaczynski who, through an attorney, first alerted
    investigators that his 54-year-old brother Theodore could be involved
    in the Unabom case. 

    But in the new declaration given to defense lawyers, David Kaczynski
    says federal agents wrongly characterized his suspicions. 

    "It states that I told the FBI in mid-February that I believed my
    brother was responsible for the Unabom events," David Kaczynski said.
    "I told the FBI in mid-February that I had suspicions that he could be
    involved and hoped that he could be ruled out as the Unabomber." 

    The agents' characterization that his belief was certain "does not fit
    the tone or spirit of what I told the FBI," David Kaczynski said. 

    Wanda Kaczynski says the FBI affidavit "is misleading where it states
    that I noted Ted fit the description of the 'Unabomber' and that I
    believed he must be stopped." 

    "I did not say that the description fit Ted, but only that he lived
    alone and was against technology," Wanda Kaczynski said. 

    David and Wanda Kaczynski do not have listed telephone numbers and
    could not be reached for additional comment Monday. 

    Tony Bisceglie, the lawyer who represents David Kaczynski, said Monday
    that he had not seen the defense motion. But he said he was familiar
    with the statement David Kaczynski had given to his brother's lawyers. 

    "What you need to know is that neither David nor myself nor Wanda
    reviewed the FBI affidavit before it was filed in the application for a
    search warrant," Bisceglie said. "So David and Wanda's affidavits
    indicate some inaccuracies or differences of recollection they had." 

    Monday was the deadline for the suppression motion, a routine procedure
    in which defense lawyers attempt to shut out as much evidence as
    possible. The motions are rarely successful. The government has two
    weeks to respond. 

    Prosecutors could not be reached for comment. A man who answered the
    telephone at the U.S. attorney's office Monday evening said the media
    spokeswoman had left for the day. 

    If successful, the motion could exclude such evidence as Kaczynski's
    personal journal, in which prosecutors say Kaczynski admits
    responsibility for all of the Unabomber explosions. 

    The defense motion also asks that any statements made by Kaczynski
    following his April 3, 1996 arrest be disregarded. 

    Kaczynski faces a 10-count federal indictment in connection with four
    explosions which left two people dead and two others maimed. 

    He has also been indicted in New Jersey in a fatal bombing there, and
    prosecutors have said they believe he is behind all 16 of the bombings
    attributed to the elusive anti-technology terrorist known as the
    Unabomber. 
7.924IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0524
    AP 4-Mar-1997 0:41 EST   REF5406

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    D.C. Board Nixes Barry's Budget

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The District of Columbia's financial control board
    rejected a 1998 budget plan by Mayor Marion Barry for the third time
    Monday. 

    Barry resubmitted the budget proposal to the congressionally created
    five-member panel on Friday, but it was returned because although it
    balances the budget in 1998 the city would have deficits in following
    years. 

    The board also complained that Barry was not specific about many of the
    planned reductions. 

    It includes a $4.6 million increase for the police department and a $21
    million cut for schools. 

    The mayor has 15 days to redo the plan before it goes to the control
    board again and to the D.C. Council. The final draft of the $5.1
    billion proposal will be sent to Congress in June. 
7.925IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0539
    AP 4-Mar-1997 0:03 EST   REF5365

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Du Pont Faces Wrongful Death Suit

    MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -- The wife of slain Olympic wrestler David Schultz
    filed a wrongful death lawsuit Monday against multimillionaire John E.
    du Pont, saying he "must be held responsible for the murder of my
    husband." 

    Nancy Schultz's lawsuit seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive
    damages from du Pont, who was found guilty of third-degree murder but
    mentally ill last week. 

    Mrs. Schultz is also seeking damages for assault, saying du Pont
    pointed a gun at her after shooting Schultz to death at the chemical
    heir's Newtown Square estate on Jan. 26, 1996. 

    "Our family was devastated by Dave's brutal murder and I am pursuing
    the civil case in an effort to provide for the security of my
    children's future," she said in a statement. 

    Jurors acquitted du Pont of assaulting Mrs. Schultz, but convicted him
    on one count of assault for pointing the gun at his own security
    consultant. 

    The chemical fortune heir could spend up to 40 years -- or as little as
    five -- behind bars. He also faces a $50,000 fine when sentenced on
    April 22. He will likely begin his sentence in mental hospital and go
    to prison only if he is deemed cured. 

    Schultz, 36, an Olympic gold-medalist, lived with his wife and two
    children in a house on du Pont's estate, where he and other wrestlers
    trained at a world-class sports complex. 

    Du Pont already faced several civil lawsuits, including one filed by
    his former ghostwriter, and his family is seeking control of his
    estate. 
7.926IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0530
    AP 3-Mar-1997 23:37 EST   REF5321

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Toilets Yield Tons of Cocaine

    MIAMI (AP) -- Customs inspectors seized 3,250 pounds of cocaine in
    toilets shipped from Colombia on Monday. 

    A drug-sniffing dog led agents to the drugs during a routine inspection
    at the Port of Miami, said Michael Sheehan, a spokesman for the Customs
    Department. 

    "We searched every container on the ship. One of our dogs went
    berserk," he said. 

    One container held boxes with toilets and other unmarked boxes with
    cocaine with an estimated wholesale value of $25 million, Sheehan said.
    The drug packages were covered in oil, an apparent attempt to conceal
    the scent of the cocaine. 

    The shipment came in on the Cypriot-registered cargo ship Colombia.
    Sheehan declined to identify the toilets' shipper or their destination.

    The cocaine was seized as trade officials from North, South and Central
    America were meeting across town to discuss the fight against drug
    trafficking. 

    Customs has seized 9,250 pounds of cocaine at the port this fiscal
    year, and 23,000 pounds in the year that ended Sept. 30. 
7.927IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0564
    AP 3-Mar-1997 23:34 EST   REF5318

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Settlement in False Memory Suit

    APPLETON, Wis. (AP) -- A woman who accused her psychiatrist of
    malpractice for diagnosing her with 120 separate personalities and
    putting her through an exorcism settled her lawsuit out-of-court Monday
    for $2.4 million. 

    The settlement between Nadean Cool, a former nurse's aide, and Dr.
    Kenneth Olson came as the trial was entering its fifth week. 

    "We're delighted," said William Smoler, speaking for Ms. Cool and her
    children. "It's a fair resolution to a long case, and my clients are
    real happy." 

    Olson's lawyer, David Patton, said the doctor correctly diagnosed
    multiple personality disorder, and that the settlement includes no
    admission of liability. 

    "Dr. Olson was looking forward to testifying at the trial," he said. He
    is now practicing psychiatry in Bozeman, Mont., and couldn't be reached
    for comment. 

    Ms. Cool, 44, testified that her treatment from 1986 to 1992 left her
    suicidal and haunted by false memories. 

    She said Olson told her the multiple personalities -- one of which, he
    said, was Satan himself -- were the result of abuse she suffered as a
    youngster, brought out through hypnosis. 

    But Smoler said the therapy brought out memories of abuse that never
    actually occurred. 

    Ms. Cool said did not believe she was possessed by the devil but agreed
    to the exorcism because she relied on Olson's advice. 

    She said she was strapped to a bed for the exorcism at St. Elizabeth
    Hospital in Appleton, where they both worked, and Olson prayed softly
    and recited the Catholic rite of exorcism. 

    When she became frightened and asked him to stop, she said he told her
    that was simply Satan inside of her telling him to stop. 

    "I remember saying, 'Please, I'm done. I think Satan has left. Please
    let me up,"' she testified. "I remember lying there and looking up at
    the ceiling and feeling dead inside and thinking that part of me was
    gone." 

    Olson hypnotized Ms. Cool numerous times and told her different
    personalities identify themselves during hypnotherapy, she testified. 

    "He would say, 'Who are you? You deserve a name,' and I would come up
    with a name" she testified. 

    Ms. Cool testified that the therapy caused nightmares, flashbacks,
    daily thoughts of death, and, eventually, the need for hospitalization.
    He also prescribed drugs that caused her to hallucinate. 

    "I would see decapitated heads coming out of my oven. I would see blood
    splattered on walls. I would see blood coming out of the shower. I
    would stand there and cry every time I had to clean up," she said. 
7.928IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:05103
    AP 3-Mar-1997 23:25 EST   REF5217

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh Lawyer Accuses Newspaper

    By STEVEN K. PAULSON

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's lawyer demanded an investigation
    Monday of The Dallas Morning News, accusing the newspaper of stealing
    hundreds of files from his computer, including a purported confession
    from the Oklahoma City bombing defendant. 

    Stephen Jones, while denying that the statement was in fact a
    confession, said: "There is no justification whatever for this criminal
    act." 

    Morning News lawyer Paul Watler said the newspaper "met the highest
    ethical standards." 

    "We did not break any laws," he said. "We have no fear of criminal
    repercussions." 

    Jones said that the newspaper broke into the defense's computer files
    and obtained hundreds of documents for McVeigh and co-defendant Terry
    Nichols, as well as 25,000 FBI files. Jones offered no proof that theft
    was committed. 

    In a story the newspaper published online Friday -- the deadline for
    1,000 potential jurors to respond to a court questionnaire -- the
    newspaper cited what it said was a defense memorandum that said McVeigh
    admitted to driving the explosives-laden truck that demolished the
    Oklahoma City federal building in April 1995. The memo said he chose a
    daytime attack to ensure a "body count." 

    "It is not a legitimate defense memorandum," Jones said. "It is not a
    confession of Tim McVeigh." 

    Asked about Jones' demand for an investigation, U.S. Justice Department
    spokeswoman Leesa Brown said, "Right now we have not received anything
    formally from him." 

    Michael Tigar, Nichols' lawyer, said the only documents he gave to
    Jones were witness statements that have also been given to prosecutors.
    "None of Mr. Nichols' confidential internal memoranda or attorney
    client privileged materials have been compromised." 

    Jones said he is considering asking for a 90-day delay in the trial as
    a "cooling-off period." He also said he would seek to have the trial
    moved if the newspaper published any more stories from the documents. 

    He also said he would file a complaint with the Texas Supreme Court
    asking for an investigation into whether the reporter, Pete Slover, who
    is also a lawyer, should be disbarred. 

    In 1990, Slover pleaded no contest to trespassing for entering the
    Ellis County clerk's office after it closed and spending two hours
    there alone. He told his editors he entered the building through an
    unlocked side door to see if a clerk could show him records related to
    a double homicide. 

    At the time, newspaper executives said it was a misunderstanding and
    said Slover did not intend to break the law. He was placed on six
    months probation, fined $1,000 and ordered to perform 150 hours of
    community service. 

    Before Jones' news conference, Morning News executives filed a
    statement in court saying they would not report any more information
    "from material used as the source of the previous articles." 

    The newspaper said it "remains sensitive to the tension between Mr.
    McVeigh's fair trial rights and the national public interest in this
    case." 

    Editor Ralph Langer said the statement was in answer to concerns about
    disrupting the trial. He said the information already published by the
    newspaper was of overriding public significance, but "any further
    articles based on the defense reports would not rise to the same level
    of importance." 

    All copies of the materials were turned over to the newspaper's lawyers
    for safekeeping, the Morning News said. Jones demanded that the
    documents be returned, saying they belong to the U.S. government. 

    On Friday, Jones said he thought the material was a hoax perpetrated by
    someone trying to "set this newspaper up." 

    Monday, an unidentified source told the "CBS Evening News" that it was
    the defense that faked the statement, as part of an attempt to get a
    witness to change his story by confronting him with McVeigh's
    "confession." 

    Later, in a statement given to CNBC's "Rivera Live," McVeigh's defense
    team said the earlier statement was fabricated not to make the witness
    change his story but to persuade the witness to talk to them. 

    McVeigh's lawyers said they believed the witness had a history of
    incitement to violence and may have been involved in the bombing
    conspiracy, so, in an attempt to divert his suspicion and get him to
    talk, they say they concocted a confession from McVeigh and planned to
    show it to the witness. 
7.929IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0575
    AP 3-Mar-1997 22:36 EST   REF5911

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cities Rated by Pudginess

    By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Can a city make you fat? 

    The possibility is posed by a new study that ranks the nation's big
    cities by the weight of their residents. It attempts to draw
    conclusions on why fat flourishes more in some cities and less in
    others. 

    The 33-city study, issued by the Coalition for Excess Weight Risk
    Education, found overall that cities with high unemployment rates, low
    per capita income, high annual precipitation rates and a high number of
    food stores per capita and larger numbers of black residents tend to
    have higher rates of obesity. 

    Called The National Weight Report, the study found that restaurant-rich
    New Orleans has the nation's highest obesity rate at 37.5 percent of
    adult residents while outdoor-living Denver has the lowest at 22.1
    percent. 

    Besides New Orleans, the high-weight metropolises include Norfolk, Va.,
    33.9 percent; San Antonio, 32.9 percent; Kansas City, Mo., 31.6
    percent; Detroit, 31 percent; and Cincinnati; 30.7 percent. 

    Easiest on the scales after Denver are Minneapolis, 22.6 percent; San
    Diego, 22.9 percent; Washington, D.C., 23.8 percent; Phoenix, 24.3
    percent; St. Louis, 24.8 percent; and Tampa, Fla., 24.9 percent. 

    Why the differences? 

    The study said its research produced some ideas. 

    Many people in Atlanta, it said, reported eating fried foods, eating
    many of their meals away from home and having a deep loyalty to
    "Southern style comfort food," high in fat and calories but reflecting
    a sense of family and regional heritage and tradition. 

    Ethnic food may be a fat builder in Cleveland, the survey said. And it
    said many people blamed the harsh winters for prompting them to eat
    meat and buttermilk and biscuits and french fries to help them fuel up.

    People in Phoenix said they tended to gain weight during the summers
    when it is too hot to exercise. But they said that may be
    counterbalanced by the desire to look good in tight-fitting summer
    clothing. 

    The National Weight Report is based on a list created by the federal
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which gathered the date
    from the National Health Interview Survey for the years 1990 and 1993.
    About 20,000 people, ages 20 to 74, reported their height and weight. 

    The report has a serious purpose: portraying obesity as a major public
    health problem. 

    "As the second leading preventable cause of death in the United States,
    it results in some 300,000 deaths annually and contributes to major
    diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, cancer and stroke," the weight
    coalition said. 

    The Washington-based organization is composed of the American Diabetes
    Association, the American Association of Diabetes Educators, the
    American Society for Clinical Nutrition, the North American Association
    for the Study of Obesity and four pharmaceutical manufacturers. 

    It describes its mission as promoting ways to prevent and reduce health
    risks associated with excess weight through healthy lifestyles,
    nutrition, physical activity and other means. 
7.930IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0547
    AP 3-Mar-1997 23:29 EST   REF5271

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: '80 Iran Rescue Scrapped

    LONDON (AP) -- The U.S. military modified a huge transport plane with
    rockets to land like a helicopter so it could attempt a second rescue
    of 52 American hostages in Iran in 1980, Jane's Defense Weekly
    disclosed Monday. 

    The work was done after a helicopter collided with a C-130 military
    transport in the Iranian desert, killing eight American servicemen, in
    a first attempt to rescue the hostages held in Tehran. 

    Jane's said a second rescue attempt never went ahead because the
    modified C-130 Hercules transport crashed on the runway after a rocket
    fired prematurely on a test flight, ripping off the plane's right wing.

    While a second C-130 -- also modified as a short takeoff and landing
    aircraft -- was being prepared, Iran announced that it planned to
    release the hostages, Jane's said. 

    Gary Sick, national security adviser under President Carter, said a
    second rescue mission was never authorized. 

    "There certainly was contingency planning for a second rescue mission.
    That plan was never formally presented to the president and never
    attempted," Sick said by telephone from New York City. 

    According to Jane's, after the first disaster the Air Force launched a
    $30 million program to land an aircraft in a space the size of a
    football field with a 33-foot-high obstacle at either end. 

    Jane's did not say where the modified plane was to have landed in
    Tehran. 

    Engineers at the Lockheed-Georgia Company, which manufactured the
    C-130, carried out radical modifications: Four pairs of anti-submarine
    rockets were mounted around the cockpit which enabled the plane to slow
    down, cushioned by four pairs of Shrike missiles, Jane's said. 

    The magazine published frames from video footage showing the abortive
    operational test on Oct. 29, 1980. 

    According to Jane's, U.S. Air Force interest in the project, codenamed
    "Credible Sport," waned after the hostages were freed. 
7.931IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0536
    AP 3-Mar-1997 21:22 EST   REF5882

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S. Korea Prime Minister Named

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- President Kim Young-sam named on Tuesday a
    former Seoul mayor as prime minister, part of a government shakeup
    after a major bribery scandal. 

    Koh Kun, 59, was expected to be approved to the largely ceremonial post
    by the National Assembly later Tuesday. The one-house Parliament is
    controlled by the ruling party. 

    Koh's appointment would be followed by a shakeup of the Cabinet,
    possibly Wednesday, ruling party officials said. 

    Kim already has reshuffled his secretarial staff, naming a former home
    minister as his new chief of staff. 

    Local newspapers, quoting various government sources, said the expected
    Cabinet shakeup would affect seven or eight posts, mostly in economic
    and social affairs ministries. The foreign and security-related
    ministers would be retained, they reported. 

    In a nationally televised speech last week, Kim apologized for the
    bribery scandal, in which some of his key aides were involved, and
    promised to restore his government's credibility. 

    Koh, now a university president, has headed the home, transportation
    and agriculture ministries under past governments. His appointment was
    not expected to bring any major changes in government policies. 

    Economic recovery is the most pressing task Kim's government faces.
    South Korea posted a record $23.7 billion current-account deficit last
    year. 
7.932IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0528
    AP 3-Mar-1997 19:22 EST   REF5818

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saddam Hussein Sues Magazine

    PARIS (AP) -- Saddam Hussein has sued a French magazine for defamation
    for calling the Iraqi president an "executioner" and a "monster," among
    other things. 

    The September article in Le Nouvel Observateur, "The Unbearable
    Likeness of an Executioner," also called Saddam a "perfect cretin," and
    "murderer." 

    At a hearing Monday, the defense argued that the court should throw out
    the case. Lawyer Sylvie Couturon said the Iraqi strongman was wrong in
    filing the defamation suit as if he were a common citizen. 

    Martine Valdes-Boulouque, the government's assistant prosecutor,
    agreed, saying it should be filed as "an offense against a foreign head
    of state." 

    But Saddam's lawyer, Patrick Brunot, argued his client could only file
    as a common citizen and not as a head of state, because Paris and
    Baghdad cut diplomatic relations in February 1991, during the Gulf War.

    Judge Martine Ract-Madoux took the motion under advisement and planned
    to announce April 1 whether the trial may proceed. 
7.933IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0673
    RTw  04-Mar-97 05:55    

    Stop stun guns, electroshock treatment - Amnesty

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Paul Majendie 

    LONDON, March 4 (Reuter) - Amnesty International called on police and
    prison officers around the world on Tuesday to stop using stun guns and
    electro-shock belts and batons. 

    "There is far too much torture, cruelty and degrading treatment," said
    Brian Wood, author of a report by the pressure group that offered a
    grim catalogue of human rights abuses. 

    Amnesty said modern electro-shock stun weapons were fast becoming the
    torturer's high-technology tool of choice. 

    Victims were tortured with shocks to their genitals and inside the
    vagina and rectum. Electro-shock belts sent 50,000 volts through a
    suspect's liver. 

    Mediha Curabaz, a 25-year-old Turkish nurse, told Amnesty she was
    tortured by police. "They thrust the electric truncheon violently into
    my sexual organs and I felt a pain as if I was being drilled there with
    an electric drill," she said. 

    "They immediately laid me down on some ice. I started to bleed at this
    stage and fainted. Before I had fully come round, they forced me to
    sign papers." 

    A university professor from Zaire, named as Roberto, said he was
    subjected to electro-shock torture. 

    "They worked on me again with the electric baton on the nape of the
    neck and in the genitals. It hurt so much that even now when I speak it
    is difficult to keep my head still as the back of my neck hurts very
    much," he told Amnesty. 

    Amnesty documented cases of electro-shock torture in 50 countries and
    said at least 100 companies around the world had marketed such weapons. 

    "Many governments, including the USA which is the largest producing
    country, allow this trade and some such as France have helped to
    promote it," Wood said. 

    He said company salesmen and directors were responsible for the misuse
    of electro-shock weapons because they knowingly sold them to torturers. 

    "We are effectively calling for a ban until governments can demonstrate
    they are safe," he told reporters. 

    The report called for much tougher international export controls and
    said it had become a fast-growing global business. 

    "Taiwanese stun batons were exhibited for sale in Shanghai, Brazilian
    stun batons were exhibited for sale in Washington, Chinese and Russian
    stun batons were exhibited for sale in Paris," the report said. 

    It said the marketing of stun weapons in the US, France, Taiwan,
    Israel, South Africa and Japan "is also increasingly aimed at private
    security companies and even private consumers." 

    Amnesty protested at the introduction in the United States of
    remote-controlled electro-shock stun belts for prisoners because they
    appeared to degrade and could be misused. 

    "The belts have been proposed for use on prisoners working in chain
    gangs in Wisconsin and are increasingly being used on prisoners during
    judicial hearings," it said.

    REUTER
7.934IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0649
    RTw  04-Mar-97 03:24    

    Tough EU budgets ahead to meet EMU terms-official

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, March 4 (Reuter) - European Union leaders are prepared to take
    further tough budgetary action to ensure their countries qualify for
    European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), European commissioner for
    monetary affairs Yves-Thibault de Silguy was reported on Tuesday as
    saying. 

    Britain's Guardian newspaper quoted de Silguy as saying the commission
    had taken into account higher unemployment in Germany when it made its
    economic forecasts last November. 

    "But it is more important to take into consideration the firm
    commitment of our governments to respect the (Maastricht) conditions
    and to take, if necessary, corrective measures to be sure that these
    conditions will be respected," de Silguy said. 

    EMU is scheduled to start on January 1, 1999, and de Silguy said any
    postponement was not possible. 

    "I am sure that if we have to postpone it would be the end of monetary
    union. The result in economic terms would be dreadful. The message to
    financial markets will be that member states don't want to reduce their
    excessive deficits and don't want lower inflation rates," he told the
    Guardian. 

    "From markets we will have a reaction in terms of higher interest rates
    and that would be dreadful for growth and job creation." 

    He said it was out of the question to make concessions to countries to
    help them qualify. 

    "For me, it's out of the question to fudge the figures or cook the
    books or to interpret the criteria too loosely," he said. 

    "It will be strict. If member states are not ready to join at the start
    they will join later." 

    He said he rejected the idea that a post-monetary union Europe would
    have a system of fiscal transfers, such as that in the United States,
    to help even out imbalances in economic performance. 

    "The U.S. is a federal state. That is not the case in Europe," he said. 

    REUTER
7.935IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docTue Mar 04 1997 10:0679
    RTw  03-Mar-97 22:50    

    Iraq admits chemical weapons; U.N. sanctions stay

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Evelyn Leopold 

    UNITED NATIONS, March 3 (Reuter) - After hearing Iraq was probably
    still concealing details of clandestine weapons programmes, the U.N.
    Security Council on Tuesday maintained the stiff economic sanctions
    imposed on Baghdad since its 1990 invasion of Kuwait. 

    "Getting Iraq to comply is like pulling teeth from somebody who doesn't
    want to open up his mouth," said U.S. Ambassador Bill Richardson after
    the sanctions review that is linked to scrapping Iraq's chemical,
    biological and ballistic weapons. 

    The Security Council decision was made during its regular 60-day review
    of Iraqi Gulf War sanctions. 

    Rolf Ekeus, head of the U.N. Special Commission (UNSCOM) in charge of
    ridding Iraq of dangerous arms, revealed that Iraq had admitted to
    producing as much as 8,377 pounds (3,800 kgs), or three tons, of the
    deadly nerve gas VX in 1990 after having said it had only made a few
    grams. 

    He said this came in a declaration from Baghdad last October but his
    inspectors had been unable to verify the quantity produced or how much
    had been destroyed. 

    "Iraq says that the quantity was so low it was not worth much because
    it quickly deteriorates. And then it said it quickly destroyed the
    results of this in secrecy instead of handing it over to our
    inspectors," Ekeus said. 

    In mid-1995, Ekeus reported that his inspectors had been unable to
    account for precursors or ingredients to produce at least 250 tons of
    VX, which is 10 times deadlier than sarin, the agent used in the 1995
    Tokyo subway attack. Iraq claims to have destroyed them all in the
    desert. 

    Ekeus said Iraq still needed to produce "documentation about the secret
    destruction it has carried out and access to personnel involved so we
    can interview them. And it has to hand over the remnants of what
    remains of its weapons capability." 

    "They have given us the sites in the sand where destruction was to have
    taken place but it is impossible to see if that responds to what we
    know Iraq has acquired." 

    Ekeus also reported a year ago his inspectors did not have enough proof
    that Iraq had destroyed germ warfare agents or plans for long-range
    missiles that could hit Europe. 

    Earlier this year U.N. inspectors found evidence engineers were
    conducting research work related to the development of banned
    long-range ballistic missiles by downloading a software package from
    Iraqi computers. But Ekeus said "we do not see that Iraq has managed to
    go from that work into production." 

    Iraq, however, recently did allow the inspectors, after four months of
    confrontation, to export some missile engine parts dug up in the Iraqi
    desert so they can be analysed by U.S. experts in Huntsville, Alabama.
    The purpose is to determine whether the engines were taken from some of
    the missiles not accounted for earlier. 

    British Ambassador John Weston said Iraqi Foreign Minister Mohammed
    Saeed al-Sahaf, in his recent visit to New York, said Baghdad was ready
    to enter a "cooperative phase." 

    "The United Kingdom hopes that this will be converted into fact. Hope
    springs eternal in this matter," he said. 

    Ekeus also denied reports he was leaving his post shortly, saying "I am
    always looking for the moment I can leave this job but I am still
    hanging in there." 

    REUTER
7.936IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 10:56105
    AP 5-Mar-1997 1:01 EST   REF5324

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, March 5, 1997
   
    FLOODS 

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -- The Ohio River is surging to its highest level
    in 30 years and flooding dozens of towns as the crest moves downstream.
    Flooding has forced tens of thousands from their homes from West
    Virginia to Tennessee. The river has yet to crest at Cincinnati,
    Louisville and other cities. In Louisville, Ky., workers have been
    bolting the gates shut in the city's huge floodwall to keep the water
    out. A total of 50 deaths are blamed on the flooding and weekend
    tornadoes across the region. 
   
    CLINTON GUNS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton plans to endorse a Senate bill
    that would make it illegal for non-immigrant foreigners to carry or buy
    firearms. The new proof-of-residency requirements for foreigners
    purchasing guns come in the wake of a Palestinian's killing spree atop
    the Empire State Building, officials said Tuesday. The new regulations
    will require legal aliens to submit a photo ID plus other documentation
    -- such as utility bills -- to prove they have been in country for at
    least three months, one White House official said. 
   
    FUND-RAISING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott said today Vice
    President Al Gore's fund-raising tactics in 1996 raise a "serious
    question" of wrongdoing and warrant investigation by an independent
    prosecutor. But President Clinton defended the vice president's all-out
    effort, saying "we had to do everything we could" to be competitive in
    last year's presidential race. Clinton, standing alongside Gore at the
    White House, said he agreed with Gore's conclusion that he had done
    nothing illegal by using his White House office to solicit campaign
    money. On Capitol Hill, House Speaker Newt Gingrich likened the
    Democrats' fund-raising tactics to the Watergate abuses 20 years ago. 
   
    MICROSOFT-WEB 

    SEATTLE (AP) -- Microsoft programmers were working around the clock to
    fix a flaw in its Internet Explorer browser that could allow a Web site
    operator to secretly run programs or ruin files in someone else's
    computer. The company said today a remedy, which Internet Explorer
    users could download from its World Wide Web site, should be available
    tomorrow. Microsoft said it had no reports from customers of security
    breaches. But company officials consider the flaw a serious problem
    because it potentially could allow an electronic attacker to bypass the
    browser's security system and severely damage software stored on a
    computer's hard drive. 
   
    GERMAN-PROTESTS 

    DANNENBERG, Germany (AP) -- Police dragged away thousands of
    demonstrators early Wednesday who staged a sit-in at a train station in
    hopes of blocking the last leg of an atomic waste transport. After a
    day of violent confrontations with police, some 4,000 demonstrators
    gathered tonight on a street near the train station in this northern
    German town, pledging to stop the waste from getting to its final
    destination in the nearby town of Gorleben. But hundreds of officers
    blocked off the area after midnight, ordering the crowd to disperse.
    But clashes continued late into the night with as many as 500
    demonstrators attacking police with Molotov cocktails. Some 250 were
    arrests. 
   
    WHITEWATER-HUBBELL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Clinton administration officials disclosed that
    prosecutors have issued subpoenas to the White House in their probe of
    Whitewater figure Webster Hubbell. White House counsel Chuck Ruff has
    sent a memo saying prosecutors want all documents about a wealthy
    Indonesian family that hired Hubbell. Whitewater prosecutors and
    Republicans on Capitol Hill are delving into payments to Hubbell over
    the past 2 1/2 years by Clinton allies. Hubbell was associate attorney
    general in the first year of Clinton's presidency. 
   
    CLINTON-CLONING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton today barred spending federal
    money on human cloning. He also urged a halt in private research until
    the ethical impact is better understood. Citing the cloning of an adult
    sheep in Scotland, Clinton asked the National Bioethics Advisory
    Commission last week to review the ramifications cloning would have for
    humans and report back to him in 90 days. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was at 121.91 yen, up 0.22 yen from its late
    level in Tokyo Tuesday. The Nikkei fell fell 129.66 points to 18,435.12
    points in morning trading. In New York, the Dow industrials closed at
    6,858.72, down 66.20. The Nasdaq closed at 1,317.37, up 6.19.
   
    RODMAN-SUSPENDED 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Dennis Rodman has been suspended for the third time
    this season, a one-game NBA ban for "deliberately striking" Milwaukee's
    Joe Wolf in the groin. It is Rodman's fourth suspension -- totaling 20
    games -- since joining the Chicago Bulls before last season. The
    forward will miss tomorrow night's home game against San Antonio and
    will be fined $7,500. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.937IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 10:5940
    Updated at Tuesday, March 4, 1997, at 2:00 pm Pacific time.

    *Reuters World News Highlights* 

    TIRANA - Albania's main opposition Socialist Party said it had urged
    President Sali Berisha in talks to agree to a new broad-based
    government to help end the unrest gripping the south of the country. 

    An Albanian military plane landed in southern Italy and its two pilots
    asked for political asylum, the Italian Defense Ministry said. 

    NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana, stressing the alliance was not a
    world policeman, ruled out NATO military intervention. 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered police to
    close four Palestinian Authority offices in Arab East Jerusalem, his
    office said. 

    ANKARA - Turkey's embattled Islamist-led coalition survived a censure
    motion vote in the face of a military challenge which has strained the
    unity of the ruling alliance. 

    DANNENBERG, Germany - Hundreds of masked militants lobbed fire bombs
    and pelted police with stones in northern Germany to protest a
    controversial nuclear waste shipment that was on its way to a dump. 

    WASHINGTON - President Clinton banned federally funded human cloning
    and asked private scientists voluntarily to enact a similar moratorium
    while government advisers review the ethically troublesome issue. 

    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin backed Prime Minister Viktor
    Chernomyrdin's plan to restructure his government and scotched rumours
    that the premier himself might lose his job in the near future. 

    GENEVA - More than 1,700 Turkish Kurds have left a troubled refugee
    camp of 15,000 in northern Iraq in recent days, the United Nations
    refugee agency said. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
                            
7.938IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 10:59106
    AP 5-Mar-1997 1:24 EST   REF5387

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Senate Fails Budget Amendment

    By JIM ABRAMS

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The one-vote defeat of the balanced budget amendment
    in the Senate shifted attention to congressional and White House
    attempts to come up with a real balanced budget by 2002. 

    Both sides say they want that, and each is already accusing the other
    of political deceit. 

    The demise of the constitutional amendment for the third time in three
    years Tuesday appeared to erode what's left of the bipartisan spirit
    that heralded the start of this Congress. 

    Republicans said President Clinton's plan to balance the budget by 2002
    was based on false premises and demanded he rewrite it. Democrats said
    it was "inexcusable" for Republicans to ask Clinton to rewrite his
    budget when they haven't produced their own. 

    Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, frustrated
    again in his longtime quest for a balanced budget amendment, attacked
    Clinton for opposing the amendment while displaying a "lack of fiscal
    integrity" in his own plan. 

    "What kind of a fool does he think we are?" Hatch asked. 

    Clinton said he was pleased with the amendment's defeat but added, "At
    the same time, let me be clear: While I oppose a constitutional
    amendment, I am committed to achieving the bipartisan goal of balancing
    the budget by 2002." 

    The vote on the balanced budget amendment was 66-34, one short of the
    two-thirds majority needed to amend the Constitution. That was
    identical to the vote in 1995, when a single Republican, then-Sen. Mark
    Hatfield of Oregon, voted against it. Last year the vote was 64-34. 

    This time, with all 100 senators taking their seats in the Senate
    chamber to show the gravity of the vote, all 55 Republicans and 11 of
    the 45 Democrats supported the amendment. 

    House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, said the House, which passed
    the measure in 1995, would take it up this year, but set no date. "We
    will regroup the effort and determine the best time and place to move
    forward," he said. 

    Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., predicted the House would
    pass the measure in the next month or two, and the Senate would then
    consider taking it up again. "This is an issue that will not go away,"
    he said. 

    House action this year stalled when some Republicans joined Democrats
    in voicing concerns that Social Security recipients could lose benefits
    unless the Social Security trust fund was removed from general budget
    calculations. 

    Hatch, the chief GOP sponsor, accused Democrats of "sheer unmitigated
    demagoguery" for telling senior citizens that their Social Security
    checks would be at risk. 

    Despite the narrow margin, there was little suspense: All 100 senators
    had announced their decisions by last week, when the last undeclared
    lawmaker, freshman Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., said he would vote
    against it. 

    Several Democrats said they wanted a constitutional amendment but
    opposed the Republican version because they said it left Social
    Security vulnerable to future budget cutters and set too high a barrier
    for waiving the balanced budget requirement in times of recession or
    war. 

    The defeated GOP-crafted version states that a three-fifths majority in
    both houses is needed to allow a deficit in any year after 2002, and
    has a national security exemption only in times of war. 

    "Until we take Social Security off the table it is very unlikely an
    amendment will ever pass," said Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle,
    D-S.D. 

    Republicans, wounded by the defeat of their major agenda item, took the
    offensive, citing estimates by congressional budget analysts that
    Clinton's budget plan would still leave the federal government $69
    billion in debt in 2002. 

    Armey joined GOP budget chairmen in demanding that Clinton submit a new
    budget. Daschle responded by holding two news conferences to blast
    Republicans for failing to produce their own budget. 

    "I think that it's inexcusable for them to be so audacious to ask the
    president to come and deliver yet another budget when they have yet to
    provide the first one," he said. 

    But Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, said that since Clinton worked to defeat
    the constitutional amendment, "the onus is on his back to produce a
    balanced budget that works and is real." 

    Democrats say the Clinton budget will balance because it is based on
    more accurate estimates than those provided by congressional experts
    and it contains mechanisms to terminate tax cuts if budgetary
    projections change. 
7.939IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 10:5981
    AP 5-Mar-1997 0:29 EST   REF5278

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh's Trial Set for March 31

    By SANDY SHORE

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's lawyers decided Tuesday not to seek a
    delay in his trial, saying they believe the Oklahoma City bombing
    suspect can get a fair trial despite a newspaper story on his purported
    confession. 

    The defense team made the decision after discussing options with
    McVeigh, and then meeting with U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch and
    prosecutors. 

    "We did not ask for a continuance. We gathered with the government and
    with the judge and we were all on the same page," lawyer Stephen Jones
    said as he left the 45-minute meeting at the federal courthouse. 

    He said jury selection will start as scheduled, on March 31. 

    "That's what our client wants and that's what we want and I think
    that's what everybody wants," he said. 

    Prosecutor Pat Ryan said he did not believe a delay was necessary. 

    "I share the confidence of Mr. Jones and the court that the people here
    will be able to give Mr. McVeigh a fair trial," he said. 

    The meeting came a day after Jones said he was considering a 90-day
    delay in the start of McVeigh's trial because of a story published by
    The Dallas Morning News. The paper cited the defense memorandum that
    said McVeigh admitted to driving the explosives-laden truck that
    demolished the Oklahoma City federal building in April 1995. 

    Jones accused the newspaper of basing its story on a document he said
    it stole from his computer files. The defense later said the confession
    was a ploy to elicit statements from someone else the defense suspected
    in the bombing. 

    In Oklahoma, an investigative reporter told Oklahoma City radio station
    KTOK that an investigator for the defense team had written the "hoax
    document" and shown it to him about a year ago. 

    J.D. Cash, a reporter for the McCurtain Daily Gazette, said
    investigator Richard Reyna showed the document to him while they rode
    in a van together. 

    "As I started down through it, I started realizing this stuff was like
    a Mickey Spillane novel," Cash told the radio station. "For instance,
    the part about ... 'Mr. McVeigh looked up into my eyes and said we
    needed a big body count.' 

    "I started chuckling. He (Reyna) said, 'What's wrong?' And I said,
    'Your creative juices were flowing when you did this."' 

    The Washington Post reported similar comments by Cash in Wednesday's
    editions. 

    Ralph Langer, executive vice president and editor of the Morning News,
    said Cash's statements change nothing. 

    "We have heard nothing which causes us to change our evaluation of the
    material on which we based the story," he said. "We have not identified
    our source to anyone, and we don't intend to do so now." 

    Neither Ryan nor Jones had an heightened concern about selecting an
    impartial jury. 

    "We'll give more attention to the extent to which jurors have seen
    maybe accounts of this case, but other than that we expect the jury
    selection process to go forward as planned," Ryan said. 

    McVeigh and co-defendant Terry Nichols are charged with murder,
    conspiracy and weapons-related charges in the bombing, which killed 168
    people. Nichols will be tried after McVeigh, but a date has not been
    set. 
7.940IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0029
    AP 4-Mar-1997 23:24 EST   REF5030

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Clinton Clamps Down on Gun Sales

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Clinton administration is adopting new
    proof-of-residency requirements for foreigners purchasing guns in the
    wake of a Palestinian's killing spree atop the Empire State Building,
    officials said Tuesday. 

    President Clinton also scheduled an Oval Office ceremony with law
    enforcement officials on Wednesday to endorse a Senate bill that would
    make it illegal for non-immigrant foreigners to carry or buy firearms. 

    The new regulations that can be adopted under present law will require
    legal aliens to submit a photo ID plus other documentation -- such as
    utility bills -- to prove they have been in country for at least three
    months, one White House official said. 

    The initiatives were prompted by the shooting of seven tourists last
    month at the Empire State Building in New York by a Palestinian teacher
    who arrived in December on a tourist visa and purchased a gun in
    Florida. 

    Clinton also will sign a directive requiring that all guns carried by
    federal law enforcement officers be equipped with child-safety locks.
    Last month Clinton called for a law that would mandate the same locks
    for all guns sold in the United States. 
7.941IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0343
    AP 4-Mar-1997 22:53 EST   REF5009

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Army Trainee Claims Coercion

    ABERDEEN, Md. (AP) -- An Army trainee caught in a sex scandal at
    Aberdeen Proving Ground said Tuesday that military investigators
    coerced her into revealing she had sex with a drill instructor. 

    Pvt. Toni Moreland said she only told military investigators she had
    sex with Staff Sgt. Marvin Kelley because they said he would be jailed
    on a rape charge if she did not admit they had consensual sex. 

    "They basically coerced everything I said out of me," said Ms.
    Moreland, 21, of St. Louis. "They called me a liar and this and that.
    They said he was accused of raping me. They kept calling me a liar,
    saying my roommates had already told them that I did (have sex with
    Kelley)." 

    Ms. Moreland initially told the Army she did not have sex with Kelley
    but later admitted it. She faces a court-martial on charges of lying. 

    John Yaquiant, a spokesman for the training facility 30 miles north of
    Baltimore, would not comment on Ms. Moreland's allegations that she was
    coerced. 

    Kelley has not been charged and Yaquiant wouldn't confirm or deny he is
    under investigation. 

    The Associated Press found no telephone listing for Kelley in the
    Aberdeen area and Yaquiant wasn't sure if Kelley was still stationed at
    the facility. 

    Seven drill instructors at Aberdeen have been charged with sexual
    harassment, rape or consensual relations with recruits. Sex between
    drill instructors and recruits is prohibited in the military. Four of
    the seven are under court-martial and three have been discharged or
    dealt with administratively. 

    About a dozen other drill instructors were suspended and are either
    under investigation or have already faced administrative sanctions,
    Yaquiant said. 
7.942IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0373
    AP 4-Mar-1997 21:19 EST   REF6037

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Freeh Cites Computer Crime

    By PAT MILTON

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The FBI needs worldwide cooperation among law
    enforcement agencies to catch bandits in cyberspace -- a new frontier
    where international borders do not exist, FBI Director Louis Freeh said
    Tuesday. 

    "Computers are the new way that criminals and terrorists have found to
    achieve their objectives," Freeh told the International Computer Crime
    Conference in Manhattan. 

    Freeh cited three recent cases in which a computer was the weapon used
    to commit crimes against a bank, the flying public and a 911 system. 

    In one, someone with a laptop computer in St. Petersburg, Russia, tried
    to gain access to millions of dollars in a U.S. bank. In another, a
    convicted terrorist used a laptop to create plots to blow up a dozen
    U.S. airliners. 

    And a young man in Sweden hacked his way into computers in Florida to
    shut down a 911 emergency call system for an hour, crippling the
    networks responsible for speedy responses by police, fire, and
    ambulances. 

    Freeh called the Florida incident a "dress rehearsal for a national
    disaster" and said the agency must prepare for the "absolutely
    catastrophic" as part of its mission to protect public safety and
    ensure national security. 

    Law enforcement is "playing the catch-up game" in its efforts to deal
    with cyberspace criminals, he said. The FBI recently established
    computer crime squads in New York, San Francisco and Washington. 

    New FBI recruits finish their training "with their firearms and badges,
    but they are also now leaving with a laptop computer," Freeh said. 

    "We chase fugitives over fences as well as cyberspace now," said Freeh,
    who was an agent in the 1970s. 

    Back then, the agency obtained court orders to seize boxes of business
    files, record books and ledgers as evidence. "Now, agents get court
    orders to seize hard drives and computer discs to support their cases,"
    he said. 

    James Kallstrom, an assistant FBI director whose New York office
    organized the conference, called it a "great time and a perilous time"
    because computers present both benefits and dangers to society. 

    "We are moving from the industrial age into the information age," he
    said. "In fact, we have one foot in both ages." 

    Computers now carry formulas for new drugs, keys to money systems and
    secrets of cutting edge technology, all of which must be protected, he
    said. 

    He called for a partnership between law enforcement and corporations to
    produce a common strategy to combat computer crime. 

    "We have places like Fort Knox where we protect the gold supply and we
    build walls and parapets and razor-wire fences," he said. 

    "I don't think we have a moat with alligators but we have physical
    security around this precious gold sitting there and yet, today,
    routinely, we take things with the same great value ... and we wonder
    out loud if some 12-year-old can go in and steal it," he said. 
7.943IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0487
    AP 4-Mar-1997 22:30 EST   REF6077

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    German Protesters Attack Police

    By CLAUS-PETER TIEMANN

    Associated Press Writer

    DANNENBERG, Germany (AP) -- Police dragged away thousands of
    demonstrators early Wednesday who staged a sit-in at a train station in
    hopes of blocking the last leg of an atomic waste transport. 

    After a day of violent confrontations with police, some 4,000
    demonstrators gathered Tuesday night on a street near the train station
    in this northern German town, pledging to stop the waste from getting
    to its final destination in the nearby town of Gorleben. 

    But hundreds of officers blocked off the area after midnight, ordering
    the crowd to disperse. 

    Getting no response, they began hauling the demonstrators behind police
    lines one by one, preventing them from returning to their comrades. The
    protesters did not resist. 

    Authorities said they planned to go ahead with the shipment of the
    nuclear waste soon after daybreak Wednesday, having secured a road from
    Dannenberg to the storage site in Gorleben despite pitched battles with
    protesters the day before. They made some 250 arrests. 

    Clashes continued late into the night, however, with as many as 500
    demonstrators attacking police with slingshots and Molotov cocktails. 

    The main road between Dannenberg and Gorleben has been practically
    disabled by scores of tractors -- some cemented to the surface -- and
    deep holes that protesters dug to make the road unusable for heavy
    trucks. 

    Protesters also said they tunneled under an alternate route to weaken
    the road, blockading it with fallen trees and other obstacles. But
    police said they were not sure if the protesters had actually tunneled
    under that route. 

    Police would not say which roads they would take in moving the waste on
    Wednesday. 

    At Dannenberg, the focal point of the protests, the nuclear waste was
    unloaded from a freight train Tuesday and loaded onto flatbed trucks
    for the 10-mile final leg to Gorleben. About 10,000 demonstrators
    camped around the transfer site. 

    In the biggest and costliest security operation in postwar Germany,
    30,000 police officers have been deployed to protect the shipment and
    to keep protesters from blocking it. 

    More than 200 officers were on board and police helicopters flew
    overhead Monday as the train began its 420-mile journey before dawn
    from a temporary holding site at Walheim, just north of Stuttgart. 

    The nuclear waste from German power plants was returning from
    reprocessing in France under an agreement mandating its return to
    Germany for storage. Germany has no reprocessing plant. 

    The six special containers with nuclear waste, each weighing several
    tons, arrived in Dannenberg on Tuesday by rail after an eight-hour
    delay. 

    The last stretch of the train journey repeatedly was delayed by
    protesters pushing through police cordons and lying across the tracks.
    Two men cemented themselves to the tracks and had to be dislodged by
    police using jackhammers. 

    Masked militants also used a stone to smash the window of a police
    cruiser and tried to open its doors early Tuesday. The officers drove
    off and were not hurt, police said. 

    In a separate incident, two other police officers were slightly injured
    when they were hit by stones. 

    A passenger train rammed into an abandoned car early Tuesday outside a
    town 150 miles south of Dannenberg. No one was injured and police said
    the stolen vehicle had been left there as part of the anti-nuclear
    protest. 

    On Monday, 21 people were arrested in Dannenberg for blocking railway
    tracks as the train pulled in with the nuclear wastes. 
7.944IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0421
    AP 4-Mar-1997 22:07 EST   REF6063

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Official Says UN Can't Pay Bills

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Saddled with more than $2 billion in debts, the
    United Nations stays afloat by not paying some of its bills for
    peacekeeping operations, the U.N. chief financial officer said Tuesday.

    "One group of member states finances another," Joseph Connor said. The
    United States owes about $1 billion to the organization. 

    The United Nations borrows from a separate fund established to finance
    peacekeeping operations, which is supposed to reimburse countries for
    their expenses in sending troops to peacekeeping missions around the
    world. 

    The United Nations owes France about $135 million and Britain about $80
    million. The list of countries that have not been reimbursed continues
    with the Netherlands, Pakistan and India. 
7.945IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0440
    AP 4-Mar-1997 21:54 EST   REF6052

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Dominican Diplomat Removed

    By JOSE MONEGRO

    Associated Press Writer

    SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) -- The president withdrew his
    ambassador to Haiti on Tuesday, amid rising tension over his
    government's mass deportation of Haitian immigrants. 

    President Leonel Fernandez reassigned Ambassador Eladio Kniping
    Victoria to Panama, the president's office said in a statement. There
    was no word when a successor would be named or on the reason for the
    move. 

    In the last six weeks, the Dominican Republic has expelled about 20,000
    people of Haitian descent, many forced out with just the clothes they
    wore. Others had to leave behind children. The Dominican Republic has
    said the immigrants were in their country illegally. 

    The countries share the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. Thousands of
    impoverished Haitians seek work in the Dominican Republic, whose
    economy is healthier. 

    Haiti has said many of the deportees were Dominican-born and that
    Dominican authorities have been rounding up anyone who they believe
    looks Haitian. 

    Most Haitians are descended from African slaves; Dominicans are of
    mixed African and European descent. 

    Haitian President Rene Preval has accused the Dominicans of treating
    the deportees like "animals." 

    Last week, Fernandez agreed to call a temporary halt to the
    deportations. 
7.946IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:04114
    AP 4-Mar-1997 19:38 EST   REF6001

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Violence Erupts in Albania Chaos

    By JUDITH INGRAM

    Associated Press Writer

    TIRANA, Albania (AP) -- Soldiers in tanks and police with shoot-to-kill
    orders rushed Tuesday into southern Albania, where crowds looted state
    grain reserves, trashed factories and fired guns in the streets. 

    Across the country, Albanians stocked up on staple foods as special
    forces in black uniforms and ski masks manned roadblocks, backed by men
    in civilian clothes carrying rifles. 

    A pair of air force pilots defected to Italy in their MiG-15,
    requesting political asylum, they said, because they had been ordered
    to open fire on a column of civilian vehicles. 

    Opposition members claimed the government bombed one southern town, and
    in the port city of Vlora, children played in the abandoned police
    station. 

    Vlora has been at the center of violence that began six weeks ago to
    protest failed investment schemes in which nearly every Albanian lost
    money, and has since escalated into general anti-government unrest. 

    The government has imposed censorship, forbidding reporters to travel
    to the area and restricting what Albanian news media can say about the
    unrest. Because of that, it was impossible to gather a complete picture
    of the situation Tuesday. 

    But even the government has acknowledged that much of southern Albania
    is out of its control. 

    In Vienna, former Chancellor Franz Vranitzky said he would lead a
    delegation of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    to help facilitate dialogue between all political groups. 

    The European Union also said it would soon send ministers to the
    country, and NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana on Tuesday ruled out
    military intervention. "Politics has to be done, diplomacy has to be
    done," Solana said in London. 

    But dialogue seemed far away. President Sali Berisha ruled out a
    coalition between his Democratic Party and the opposition Socialists,
    accusing them of having ruined "the constitutional order and Albanian
    democracy through armed rebellion." 

    State television reported Tuesday that tanks had arrived in
    Gjirokastra, 120 miles south of the capital, Tirana. It said there had
    been no shooting in the area since the tanks arrived. 

    But if the announcement was meant to instill confidence, the
    accompanying footage undercut the message: A tank could be seen trying
    to pull another from a roadside ditch it had fallen into. 

    The defecting pilots, a major and a captain, said they were on an
    observation mission when they were ordered to open fire. 

    "We fled because they gave us the order to fire on a column of civilian
    vehicles near Gjirokastra," Capt. Agrae Dasci told reporters in Lecce,
    southern Italy. The asylum requests were being considered. 

    Britain's Channel 4 television, which had a reporter in the southern
    city of Saranda, quoted armed opposition members arriving from Delvina,
    12 miles away, as saying that the small town had been bombed by
    government aircraft. There was no word on casualties, and no
    independent confirmation. 

    Channel 4 also said Saranda's pro-government mayor had been beaten
    Monday night and gone into hiding. 

    Vlora, 60 miles south of Tirana, also appeared to remain outside state
    control. 

    A 4-year-old girl was shot and killed Tuesday as she played in her yard
    in Vlora, hospital officials said. Three of her playmates were injured. 

    A Vlora resident, speaking by telephone on condition of anonymity, said
    people were terrified to go outside because the shooting was
    relentless. 

    The resident said looters broke into state grain reserves in Pusi i
    Mezinit, just outside Vlora, and that trucks waited in line for
    loading. State news media later said 3,000 tons of grain were carted
    away. 

    And Vefa, the biggest investment scheme still officially intact, said
    all of its business property in Vlora, including a hotel complex,
    industrial park and about six factories, were destroyed. State radio
    estimated the damage at $50 million. 

    State television said police and the army controlled the national
    highway at Gjirokastra. Road blocks were set up elsewhere along the
    highway, and at the entrances to cities. Cars were searched, travelers
    were frisked and their identity papers checked. 

    Alfred Peza, a journalist for the Koha Jone daily, the most critical
    among Albania's independent news media, was beaten at a checkpoint and
    detained when he and a reporter for Italy's Corriere della Sera stopped
    in Fieri on their way back to Tirana. 

    Despite blanket police presence in the capital overnight -- 48 people
    were arrested for breaking the 8 p.m.-7 a.m. curfew -- a coffee shop
    popular with journalists and political opposition members was
    firebombed. 

    Only the ruling party's newspaper published Tuesday; all independent
    and opposition papers refused to submit their stories to the government
    censor for approval. 
7.947IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0536
    AP 4-Mar-1997 19:35 EST   REF5997

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Le Pen Denies Jewish Statements

    PARIS (AP) -- Far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen said Tuesday he never
    said French President Jacques Chirac was controlled by Jewish groups --
    and promised to sue two journalists who say he did. 

    The alleged remarks are in a book titled "Story of a President" that is
    being published this week in France. 

    The remarks, widely reported over the weekend, caused new furor over Le
    Pen's National Front party, which won its fourth city hall in France
    last month. 

    "This gross manipulation ... is symptomatic of a system in ruin that
    uses lies to save its head," Le Pen said in a statement. He also
    promised to sue the authors' "accomplices" who repeated the remarks. 

    The book quotes Le Pen as saying Chirac is controlled by Jewish
    organizations -- "notably the famous B'nai B'rith" -- and accepted
    money from them in exchange for losing 1988 elections to avoid a
    coalition with Le Pen, Le Monde newspaper reported Sunday. 

    The president of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, Abraham
    Foxman, denied those reports. Chirac has made no comment. 

    The report came a day before Chirac was to meet with Jewish community
    leaders and speak on Vichy France's responsibility in the arrest and
    deportation of Jews during the Holocaust. 

    Polls show the far-right party's national support at about 15 percent.
    Le Pen has been involved in dozens of lawsuits, winning some and losing
    others. 
7.948IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0556
    AP 4-Mar-1997 18:55 EST   REF5965

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saddam Puts Power in Hands of Son

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Saddam Hussein has made his younger son, Qusai,
    the second-most-powerful man in Iraq following an attempt on the life
    of his other son, Iraqi dissidents said Tuesday. 

    The 31-year-old Qusai now handles day-to-day affairs of the army,
    security forces and several government agencies, according to the
    dissidents, who spoke in telephone interviews from Amman, Jordan. They
    quoted what they said were reliable sources inside Iraq. 

    One key move was to promote Qusai (pronounced Qu-SAY) to deputy
    commander of the armed forces, which gives him overall control of the
    army and security forces, said the dissidents, who spoke on condition
    of anonymity. 

    The reported grooming of Qusai, already a powerful figure in Iraq's
    ruling elite, followed a Dec. 12 assassination attempt on Saddam's
    other son, Odai, in Baghdad. 

    Assailants shot at Odai's car in the Baghdad suburb of Mansour. Long
    considered Saddam's heir apparent, Odai remains hospitalized and,
    dissidents say, partially paralyzed. He was believed shot at least
    eight times. 

    Qusai has served as commander of the Special Security Apparatus, which
    oversees other security branches, and a supervisor of the elite
    Republican Guard forces. 

    The decision to make him deputy commander of the armed forces has not
    been made public, the dissidents said. Saddam is commander-in-chief. 

    In addition to that post, Qusai was put in charge of the Economic
    Committee, a government agency that oversees all the state's oil, trade
    and financial transactions, they said. 

    Qusai has shown less of an inclination for the publicity and flamboyant
    style that characterized the 33-year-old Odai. 

    But Iraqi opposition groups have reported at least three attempts on
    Qusai's life in the past month. The reports were impossible to
    independently confirm and the secretive Iraqi government has not
    commented on them. 

    The Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, based in Iran, said
    Tuesday that the latest attempt occurred on Feb. 27 while Qusai was
    leaving his office at a Republican Guard camp in Baghdad. 

    A bomb was detonated by remote-control only seconds after he left his
    headquarters, but Qusai was not injured, said the group. It said three
    gunmen then opened fire but missed Qusai. Two were killed and the third
    was arrested. 
7.949IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0580
    AP 4-Mar-1997 19:28 EST   REF5992

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Links Powder, Ovary Cancer

    By PEGGY ANDERSEN

    Associated Press Writer

    SEATTLE (AP) -- Women may increase their risk of ovarian cancer by
    using powder in their genital area, particularly in sprays, a study
    suggests. 

    The researchers cautioned that the study did not look at how much
    powder the women used or exactly what was in it in some cases. 

    But they said that because the use of powder in the genital area is so
    prevalent -- up to half of all women, by some estimates -- that even a
    modest increase in risk could have a real effect on the incidence of
    ovarian cancer. 

    The study, from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the
    University of Washington, was reported in the March 1 issue of the
    American Journal of Epidemiology. 

    The study involved 313 white women in three western Washington
    counties, 20 to 79 years old, who were diagnosed with ovarian cancer in
    1986 through 1988. They were compared with 422 women with no history of
    ovarian cancer. 

    The researchers looked at cornstarch, talcum powder, baby powder,
    deodorant powder and scented bath powder, and four ways of using it: in
    genital sprays, by direct application after bathing, by storing
    diaphragms in powder and by applying powder to sanitary napkins. 

    Women who used sprays were found to have a 90 percent increased risk of
    ovarian cancer, though the study noted that some sprays did not contain
    powder. The researchers raised the possibility that some unidentified
    chemical substances -- and not the powder itself -- may be at fault. 

    Women who routinely powdered after bathing had a 60 percent increased
    risk of ovarian cancer. No increase in risk was noted among those who
    applied powder to sanitary napkins or who stored their diaphragms in
    powder. 

    Overall, the study found a 50 percent increase in risk for women who
    used one of the four methods, epidemiologist Linda Cook said. But she
    cautioned that the study considered a woman a powder user regardless of
    how often she used it or how she applied it. 

    At least six other studies have found a similar elevation in risk, Cook
    noted. But she said it would be premature to make any kind of health
    recommendation. 

    "I certainly find the results of this study suggestive, but they're not
    conclusive," Cook said. 

    Dr. Jonathan Berek, of the University of California at Los Angeles
    Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, agreed. 

    The subject "needs to be dealt with in a much larger type of study
    whose methodology is better and that doesn't just rely on recollection
    of whether you used (powder) or not," said Berek, who was not involved
    with the study. 

    "People who have gotten cancer are much more likely to remember things
    than those who have not," he said. "That's one of the flaws with using
    recall to document something." 

    He noted that some of the participants used oral contraceptives, which
    may have a protective effect and are considered "the single most
    important variable other than having your ovaries taken out" in ovarian
    cancer risk. 

    Ovarian cancer has a high death rate, mainly because there is no way to
    test for it and cases are often advanced by the time they are detected. 

    The survival rate for women five years after they are diagnosed with
    ovarian cancer is between 30 percent and 35 percent, Cook said. 
7.950IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0664
    RTw  05-Mar-97 00:26    

    Belgium cancels Renault car order in closure row

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Jeremy Lovell 

    BRUSSELS, March 4 (Reuter) - The diplomatic battle between France and
    Belgium over the closure of French carmaker Renault's Brussels plant
    had concrete repercussions on Tuesday when the Belgian interior
    ministry cancelled an order for 150 cars. 

    "It is impossible to continue," Belgian Interior Minister Johan Vande
    Lanotte told RTBF radio. 

    "Public authorities must work with private enterprise and buy the best
    value. But there is nevertheless a minimum of respect that must be
    observed and therefore I have cancelled the order for 150 vehicles that
    was planned," he said. 

    "When there is a company that decides, against all the rules to close a
    firm....that is running well...It shocks people," he said. "I as the
    responsible minister...must take account of this and cannot put it to
    one side." 

    Renault France announced on Thursday, unexpectedly and without
    consulting its Belgian workforce, it was closing its Belgian car plant
    at Vilvoorde on the outskirts of Brussels with the loss of 3,100 jobs. 

    Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene, who lives in Vilvoorde, immediately
    denounced the decision as unacceptable. 

    The Belgian government said on Monday it would take Renault to court
    over its flouting of European and Belgian rules on consulting workers
    on important decisions. 

    The European Commission is due to discuss the matter at its regular
    weekly meeting on Wednesday, but Competition Commissioner Karel Van
    Miert, a Belgian, has already spoken out against the Renault move. 

    Some 4,000 workers marched through Brussels on Monday in protest at the
    closure, and anti-French feeling is running high in the country. 

    One Francophone Belgian newspaper called on Tuesday for a boycott of
    French goods in retaliation against Renault, in which the French
    government still has a substantial stake. 

    Dehaene spoke by telephone to his French counterpart Alain Juppe on
    Monday, but he told British radio on Tuesday Juppe had said it was out
    of his hands. 

    Dehaene said a boycott was not government policy, but the national mood
    was such that Belgian people might decide in any case not to buy French
    goods. 

    Renault has so far stood by its decision. 

    The Renault debacle marks a new low point in Franco-Belgian relations,
    already pockmarked by rows over French reluctance to cooperate with
    investigations into bribery allegations against leading French
    industrialists, nuclear policy and border checks. 

    REUTER
7.951IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0637
    RTw  04-Mar-97 22:04    

    No sex please we're students, says Oxford college

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 4 (Reuter) - Sexually frustrated students at an Oxford
    University college have appointed a sex snoop to patrol the grounds in
    an effort to stamp out public kissing, cuddling, and the more
    passionate shows of affection. 

    Undergraduates at Exeter College also voted to ban heavy petting in the
    dining room and to split the Junior Common Room into two areas, one for
    heavy petting and one for light petting. 

    The moves follow growing complaints from some students at the mixed-sex
    college that couples are too public in their petting, leaving single
    students feeling left out. 

    "With people who are excessive in their petting in public it can be
    deemed offensive especially around about Valentine's Day," student Alex
    Potts told Reuters on Tuesday. 

    Following the motion passed on February 23, Roger Evers, a third year
    classics student, will now patrol the college grounds and issue advice
    to persistent offenders. Some students suggested he should carry a
    bucket of cold water. 

    The students also supported a motion banning sexual intercourse in the
    college library between three and eight in the morning. 

    Asked if sex in the college library was a common relief from the
    boredom of studying, Potts replied in a depressed tone: "It hasn't
    happened to me yet, but you live and hope. I'm told a lot of sex does
    go on in Oxford libraries." 

    REUTER
7.952IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:07103
    RTw  04-Mar-97 22:01    

    Jockeying for succession adds to Major's woes

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Gerrard Raven 

    LONDON, March 4 (Reuter) - Unity, according to a British political
    saying, is the Conservative party's secret weapon. How Prime Minister
    John Major must wish it were still true. 

    With his Labour opponents set to storm into government for the first
    time since 1979, Major's desperate appeals for his colleagues to forget
    their differences and rally to the party's defence are falling on deaf
    ears. 

    Every time a senior Conservative deviates from the party line or
    attacks a colleague, the move is seen by Labour and the press as an
    early manoeuvre in the battle to succeed Major as party leader
    following the expected election defeat. 

    "Too many Conservatives accept defeat, and some even welcome it for the
    refreshment it would supposedly give the party in opposition,"
    commentator Lord Woodrow Wyatt wrote in Tuesday's Times newspaper. 

    "Others are shamelessly jockeying for leadership positions after an
    election defeat. Why should the public vote for a party which, apart
    from its leader, has no real heart for winning?" 

    Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind and Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell,
    once seen as pro-European members of the cabinet, have both moved to
    the right to please the powerful Euro-sceptic wing of the party. 

    Despite Major's wait-and-see policy on a European single currency,
    Rifkind said the government was "on balance hostile" to the idea.
    Dorrell went further, ruling out British membership if the currency
    goes ahead as planned in 1999. 

    In other signs of disunity, right-wing former party chairman, Lord
    Norman Tebbit, recently attacked the past conduct of moderate Deputy
    Prime Minister Michael Heseltine as "tasteless, tacky if not
    dishonourable, and self-centred." 

    And Sir Edward Heath, Conservative prime minister between 1970 and
    1974, backed Labour policies on a minimum wage and a Scottish
    parliament, being denounced for his pains by one right-wing
    Conservative MP as "a damaging source of disunity." 

    All these incidents come within three months of an election, assuming
    it is held on Major's preferred date of May 1, and with the
    Conservatives trailing Tony Blair's Labour Party by around 20 points in
    the opinion polls. 

    Political analysts believe the controversy within the party over the
    single currency -- the biggest source of disunity -- is fuelled by both
    political principle and leadership ambition. 

    "There are some strong feelings on the right of the party, that's a
    genuine expression of conviction," said Eric Shaw of Stirling
    University. 

    "But there is a lot of tactical shifting on the part of people not
    clearly on the right, such as Dorrell or Rifkind." 

    Who would replace Major should he stand down after an election defeat
    depends partly on how humiliating that defeat turns out to be. Rifkind,
    for instance, could well lose his own marginal seat in parliament in a
    Labour landslide. 

    A Guardian newspaper poll on Tuesday showed that 24 percent of
    Conservatives voters would want Major to soldier on after an election
    defeat. Heseltine and former prime minister Margaret Thatcher were most
    heavily favoured as replacements. 

    But Heseltine and Thatcher are almost certainly too old to take the
    helm of a party in opposition for up to five years. 

    The battle could lie between Dorrell, Rifkind, Defence Secretary
    Michael Portillo, Home Secretary Michael Howard, Welsh Secretary
    William Hague, and John Redwood, the man who resigned from the cabinet
    in 1995 to challenge Major for the leadership. 

    Bookmakers William Hill make Portillo 3-1 favourite with Heseltine and
    Howard bracketed at 4-1. Hague is 6-1. Analysts doubt Rifkind or
    Dorrell, once said to be Major's preferred choice, have improved their
    chances with their moves to the right. 

    "While you appeal to one group within the party with your comments, you
    incur the wrath of another group. It's evenly balanced," said David
    Sanders of Essex University. 

    But observers believe that whoever wins could inherit a poisoned
    chalice, with infighting flaring up still further when the party is
    freed of the restraints of office. 

    Peter Kellner, an independent political analyst, sees some
    pro-Europeans "flaking off" from the party and senior figures freed by
    defeat at the polls to place themselves at the head of warring
    Conservative factions. 

    "Leaders of the factions will emerge after the election because the
    putative leaders are in the cabinet and they are gagged," he said.
7.953IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0737
    RTw  04-Mar-97 21:41    

    london theatre critics face taste of own medicine

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, March 4 (Reuter) - Four London theatre critics have agreed to
    cross the footlights to direct a play and see how they like being
    reviewed by their usual victims. 

    The coup de theatre follows a series of virulent attacks on critics by
    the likes of actor-director Steven Berkoff, who last year accused a
    reviewer of "spewing off his frustration and venom from a life of
    miserable flops." 

    Guardian newspaper critic Michael Billington, who is to direct a Harold
    Pinter play, said on Tuesday he was looking forward to learning more
    about the craft of theatre from the other side of the curtains. 

    "I think it would be timorous not to seize the opportunity offered...it
    would be very boring if it was simply used by people who have some
    revenge motive," Billington said. 

    Stephen Daldry, director of the experimental Royal Court theatre, will
    review Evening Standard critic Nicholas de Jongh's production of a play
    by Jean Anouilh. 

    "Perhaps I, or all of us, will turn out to be whipping boys and subject
    to excoriating reviews...But perhaps the whole process may siphon off a
    little of the accumulated bile which is stored and festered in some
    thespian hearts," said de Jongh. 

    The four plays are due to be performed in south London in April. The
    three other directors turning critic for the night have yet to be
    named. 

    REUTER
7.954IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0730
    RTw  04-Mar-97 21:27    

    EU considering special summit after UK election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BRUSSELS, March 4 (Reuter) - European Union leaders have discussed
    holding a special summit after Britain's elections to see what a new
    government in London may be willing to accept in a new EU treaty, EU
    officials said on Tuesday. 

    The possibility of an extraordinary summit emerged at a meeting of the
    mainly Christian Democrat European People's Party being attended by
    German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar
    and Italian premier Romano Prodi. 

    "There may be an extra summit in May," Austrian Foreign Minister and
    Vice Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel said. 

    He would give no further details, but EU officials noted that the
    British election, at which the opposition Labour Party is expected to
    triumph, would likely be held on May 1. 

    "We don't want to go at full speed into Amsterdam without knowing the
    British position," one official said, referring to the Amsterdam summit
    in June where a new EU treaty is supposed to be agreed. 

    Britain's ruling Conservative Party opposes many of the proposals
    supported by its EU partners. The Labour Party is widely viewed as more
    sympathetic.
7.955IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docWed Mar 05 1997 11:0786
    RTw  04-Mar-97 19:18    

    English soccer bribes trial ends in anti-climax

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
 
    By David Ljunggren 

    WINCHESTER, England, March 4 (Reuter) - A high-profile soccer
    match-rigging trial ended in anti-climax on Tuesday when the jury
    failed to reach a verdict against former Liverpool goalkeeper Bruce
    Grobbelaar and his three co-defendants. 

    The prosecution immediately announced it would press for a retrial but
    said a final decision on whether to start again would be taken in the
    next few days. The trial had lasted exactly eight weeks. 

    Grobbelaar and former Wimbledon goalkeeper Hans Segers -- accused of
    rigging top-level matches for an Asian betting syndicate -- walked out
    of the court into the pouring rain without saying a word. 

    Ex-Wimbledon striker John Fashanu, charged with being a middleman in
    the alleged conspiracy, also declined to comment. 

    "Bruce is extremely disappointed that after nearly two and a half years
    this matter has not been put to rest. We had hoped for a positive
    result, but it was not to be," Grobbelaar's solicitor David Hewitt told
    reporters. 

    "Bruce maintains his innocence as he has done throughout the trial. One
    thing which emerged from the trial is that Bruce has never thrown or
    attempted to throw a football match in his life," he said. 

    Malaysian businessman Heng Suan Lim, also accused of paying the two
    keepers to throw matches, told reporters he would continue to maintain
    his innocence. 

    The jurors had been deliberating for just under 11 hours when they sent
    a note to judge Simon Tuckey saying they were hopelessly split. Tuckey
    then called them to court and asked whether there was any chance of
    them reaching a verdict. 

    "I don't believe so, my lord," replied the foreman. 

    "I think that's it," announced Tuckey. "I have no alternative but to
    discharge the jury from giving a verdict in this case." 

    Tuckey then asked prosecutor David Calvert Smith what the Crown, or
    prosecution, planned to do. 

    "It is normal in these cases for the prosecution to seek a fresh trial
    with a new jury. That is the Crown's current intention," said Calvert
    Smith. "A decision will be made either by the end of next week or
    hopefully by the end of this week." 

    Once the proceedings were over Segers stared at the ceiling and let out
    a loud sigh while Fashanu slowly shook the hand of one of his lawyers. 

    Dutch-born Segers, who during the trial admitted to extra-marital
    affairs, walked away from the court arm-in-arm with his wife Astrid,
    leaving lawyer Mel Goldberg to comment for him. 

    "We are very disappointed. At the moment it's likely to be a retrial.
    This is very unsatisfactory for the defendants, the Crown and the
    lawyers," he told reporters. 

    Grobbelaar, who was born in Zimbabwe, also faced a charge of accepting
    2,000 pounds ($3,233) as an inducement to throw a match. All four men
    deny the charges, although Lim admitted to paying the two goalkeepers
    for predicting the results of English and Dutch soccer matches. 

    Much of the prosecution evidence came from Chris Vincent, a former
    business partner of Grobbelaar's who secretly taped the keeper as he
    appeared to admit to having thrown games. 

    Grobbelaar said he had faked the admission to trick Vincent, who told
    the court he had accompanied the keeper to London to receive 40,000
    pounds in late November 1993 for throwing an away game against
    Newcastle. 

    All four defence lawyers portrayed Vincent as a treacherous liar who
    had invented the story to make money from the case. In his summing-up
    Tuckey said the jury should Vincent's evidence with caution because he
    had a motive for lying. 

    REUTER
7.956IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:17126
    AP 6-Mar-1997 1:07 EST   REF5406

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, March 6, 1997
   
    MIDWEST FLOODS 

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -- The Ohio River is expected to crest Thursday
    morning at 38.5 feet in Louisville, where it reached 37.8 feet on
    Wednesday. The river, raging at its highest level in a generation,
    swamped more towns up and downstream from Louisville on Wednesday and
    may not let up until next week. Towering flood walls protected
    Kentucky's largest city from the river, which roiled 14 feet above
    flood stage. But low-lying towns along the river were vulnerable. The
    river was constantly being filled by runoff from a foot of rain over
    the weekend. The area received another quarter inch of rain Wednesday. 
   
    HUBBELL 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Clinton friend Webster Hubbell received more than
    $400,000 from about a dozen enterprises after he was forced to resign
    as associate attorney general in 1994, The New York Times reports. The
    newspaper said much of the money came from businesses controlled by old
    friends of President Clinton and campaign donors -- some of them guests
    at fund-raising coffees and overnight stays at the White House. It
    quoted government records and associates of Hubbell for its estimate of
    Hubbell's income. 
   
    PERU-HOSTAGES 

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Peru's government and rebel negotiators exchanged
    proposals today for ending the 11-week hostage crisis, but it was
    unclear after the meeting whether either side was receptive to the
    other's offer. The rebels have insisted on freedom for hundreds of
    their jailed comrades before they release the last 72 hostages they
    have been holding since Dec. 17. 
   
    MINORITY HOMES 

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Despite concerted efforts and laws to the
    contrary, ethnic minorities in San Francisco still face more obstacles
    to buying a home than do whites, according to a study released today by
    the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Subtle forms of
    discrimination begin in the search process and show up again and again
    through the purchase and the loan, according to the report. 
   
    FUND-RAISING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Administration aides say the first lady's chief of
    staff accepted a $50,000 check in the White House from a
    Taiwanese-American businessman in 1995. The Democratic National
    Committee says the money's being returned because its origin is
    unclear. 
   
    COLOMBIA-US-DRUGS 

    BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- Colombia, the world's second leading coca
    producer, is temporarily halting its drug crop eradication program, the
    government announced. Colombians were infuriated by the Clinton
    administration's decision, for a second straight year, to brand the
    country as uncooperative in fighting narcotics. 
   
    KOREA TALKS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Aides from North and South Korea sat down together for
    the first time in 25 years to talk about peace. In a New York hotel
    room, the Americans and South Koreans briefed the North Koreans on a
    proposal for talks, to include China, to produce a peace treaty
    formally ending the Korean War. 
   
    ALBANIA 

    SARANDA, Albania (AP) -- Government jets bombed a southern town today
    and anti-government militants commandeered tanks and fired
    anti-aircraft guns as weeks of unrest erupted into an armed revolt in
    southern Albania. The two sides fired at each other across a river east
    of Vlora, the city at the center of the conflict. Albania's foreign
    minister, meanwhile, acknowledged that the situation in Vlora, Saranda
    and Delvina was "out of control." 
   
    BREAST IMPLANTS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A study has found women who get breast implants after
    mastectomies for cancer face a high risk of complications. The Mayo
    Clinic study says they're three times more likely to have problems than
    women who get implants for cosmetic reasons. 
   
    ARAFAT-US 

    PLAINS, Georgia (AP) -- Yasser Arafat got a small taste of small-town
    America during a visit to Jimmy Carter's hometown, where the former
    president and the Palestinian leader discussed Mideast peace over
    cookies and coffee. Earlier at the United Nations, Arafat said Israel's
    decision to build a Jewish housing project in east Jerusalem brought
    the peace process to a "critical phase." Arafat also met with Jewish
    leaders before he left New York for his visits with Carter and former
    President Bush in Houston. 
   
    SIMPSON-CUSTODY 

    SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -- The parents of the late Nicole Brown Simpson
    have taken the first step toward appealing a judge's decision returning
    her two children to O.J. Simpson, an attorney said today. A judge gave
    Simpson custody after he was acquitted of murdering his ex-wife and her
    friend Ronald Goldman, but before a civil jury found him responsible
    for their deaths in the 1994 knife attack. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The Nikkei rose 86.04 to 18,359.55 in trading in Tokyo on
    Thursday. The dollar traded at 120.87 yen, down 0.75 yen. In New York,
    the Dow industrials closed at 6,945.85, up 93.13. The Nasdaq composite
    index closed at 1,329.09, up 11.72. 
   
    WISCONSIN-INDIANA 

    BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -- Bob Knight reached another coaching milestone
    with his 700th victory and Indiana took a big step toward an at-large
    NCAA tournament bid. Andrae Patterson scored 18 points Wednesday night
    as the No. 25 Hoosiers beat Wisconsin 70-66, making Knight the eighth
    Division I coach to win 700 games. It also kept Indiana (22-9, 9-8 Big
    Ten) in contention for a tourney berth going into the final
    regular-season game Saturday at Michigan State. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.957IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1784
    RTw  05-Mar-97 21:58    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    TIRANA - Government troops fought with armed insurgents in southern
    Albania as opposition politicians called on the West to exert pressure
    on President Sali Berisha to help end the crisis. 

    In the first major clash after three days of emergency rule, the
    Albanian army pulled back from fierce fighting near a village to the
    east of the Adriatic port of Sarande, eyewitnesses said. Four villagers
    and at least two soldiers were reported wounded in exchanges that
    lasted about 40 minutes. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin, in the first major policy statement
    of his second term, said he would launch a sweeping anti-corruption
    drive to restore order to the Russian economy, where graft and crime
    are strangling market reforms. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli police said it had issued warnings to four
    Palestinian offices in East Jerusalem to close on their own accord
    within 96 hours or face forced shut down. 

    - - - - 

    UNITED NATIONS - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat told Security
    Council members that Israel was harming the Middle East peace process
    by planning a new Jewish neighbourhood on the southern edge of East
    Jerusalem, captured during the 1967 Middle East war. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Zaire's government, under pressure from rebel advances in
    the east, expelled 11 U.N. aid workers despite negotiations to head off
    the deportations, U.N. sources said. 

    Defeated Zairean soldiers surrendered their weapons to rebels in the
    eastern town of Kindu and the rebel army was reported to be closing in
    on the strategic northeastern capital of Kisangani. 

    - - - -  

    GORLEBEN, Germany - A controversial nuclear waste shipment arrived by
    road at a dump in northern Germany, completing the last leg of a
    journey that thousands of anti-nuclear activists had tried to stop.  

    - - - -  

    ANKARA - Turkey's military-dominated National Security Council said
    Islamist Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan had signed a council
    statement demanding a crackdown on religious activism.  

    - - - - 

    STUTTGART, Germany - German Chancellor Helmut Kohl urged U.S. Defence
    Secretary William Cohen to keep thousands of American troops in Germany
    and expressed optimism over improvement in NATO-Russia relations.  

    - - - -  

    NEW YORK - South Korean, North Korean and U.S. officials sat down at
    the same table for the first time to begin discussing proposals for
    international talks on ending the technical state of war on the Korean
    peninsula.  

    - - - -  

    BEIJING - China said it had arrested several suspects and solved last
    week's bomb attacks that killed nine people and wounded 74 in the
    restive far western region of Xinjiang.  

    - - - - 

    ELFAST - Deadlocked Northern Ireland peace talks were adjourned on
    Wednesday to allow parties to prepare for a British general election
    seen as crucial to peace prospects in the troubled province.  

    REUTER 
7.958IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1738
    AP 6-Mar-1997 0:49 EST   REF5404

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Student Dies in School Stabbing

    By DAVID WILKISON

    Associated Press Writer

    BAYONNE, N.J. (AP) -- Two students were stabbed, one fatally, in the
    corridors of Bayonne High School Wednesday by an attacker who may have
    been avenging vandalism to a car, said friends of the victims. 

    Aubrey Taylor, 18, died of a stab wound to the heart. Akim Garland, 17,
    was in stable condition with stab wounds that pierced his liver. 

    The attacker apparently fled the building. Hudson County prosecutor
    Patrick Raviola said police were looking for a specific suspect, but he
    wouldn't comment on any details of the case. 

    The school's 2,100 students were advised of the stabbings, and more
    than 20 counselors were on hand to discuss what happened. 

    Jose Morales, 18, a friend of Taylor's, said he believed the stabbing
    was over damage done to another's car that may have involved Taylor or
    another person he was with. 

    "Somebody broke the fog lights of somebody's car and I guess they got
    into a fight about it and they came up here today in school," said
    another friend, 16-year-old Anthony Stackow. 

    Mayor Len Kiczek, who said the city had just one murder in 1996 and two
    the year before, said he spoke to parents who flocked to the school
    after the killing was reported. 

    "They will be looking for justice," he said. "We told them that we will
    do everything we can ... to see that that happens." 
7.959IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1751
    AP 5-Mar-1997 23:59 EST   REF5163

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    British Nanny Charged With Murder

    By CAROLYN THOMPSON

    Associated Press Writer

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -- A grand jury returned the most serious charge
    possible Wednesday against a British au pair accused of killing a
    9-month-old baby in her care: first-degree murder, which carries an
    automatic penalty of life in prison without parole. 

    Prosecutors say Louise Woodward, 19, violently shook 9-month-old
    Matthew Eappen at his Newton home last month then caused his head to
    slam into a hard object, leaving a 2 1/2-inch fracture in his skull.
    The baby died a week later. 

    "She can think of nothing that she did that day that would cause
    Matthew to have any sort of seizure at all," her mother, Susan Woodward
    of Chester, England, told British television upon hearing of the
    charge. 

    "She took very good care of him and did everything she could to help
    him when he was in difficulties," Mrs. Woodward said. "She realizes she
    has to go through this process in order to prove her innocence." 

    Several legal experts were surprised at the charge. The grand jury
    could have returned lesser charges of second-degree murder or
    manslaughter. 

    "First-degree murder requires premeditation and malice aforethought,"
    said Joseph Balliro Sr., a prominent criminal defense attorney in
    Boston. "In other words, the district attorney is going to have to
    persuade a jury that this girl intended to kill this kid." 

    The case has generated a maelstrom of publicity in the United States
    and Europe, with reporters from several British outlets crowding court
    appearances. 

    Stephen Lyons, a Boston defense lawyer, said the attention may have
    played a part in the grand jury action. 

    "The intense publicity has put a great deal of pressure on prosecutors
    to do what they think the public wants in this case," he said. 

    The baby's parents, Drs. Deborah and Sunil Eappen, urged the judge to
    continue holding the teen without bail, saying the murder charge makes
    her "only more likely to want to avoid trial." 
7.960IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1742
    AP 5-Mar-1997 23:29 EST   REF5096

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Union Claims Detroit Paper Spied

    By JOHN HUGHES

    Associated Press Writer

    DETROIT (AP) -- Union officials accused Detroit Newspapers Inc. of
    using an employee to spy on them. The company Wednesday called the
    claim ludicrous. 

    The unions -- which have been in a labor dispute with The Detroit News
    and the Detroit Free Press since July 1995 -- made the allegation in a
    complaint filed Wednesday with the National Labor Relations Board.

    James Victor Holley said he reported union strategies and activities to
    a top company official from 1990 until about a month before his
    dismissal in December from the production company's circulation
    department. 

    "They made a deal," Holley said at a union news conference. "They
    promised to give me a better job and more money if I would become their
    spy." 

    Company officials said Holley never provided information on unions and
    was not asked to do so. 

    Frank Vega, president and chief executive officer of Detroit
    Newspapers, said the company "will be pleased to cooperate with the
    National Labor Relations Board to prove there is absolutely no truth in
    these charges." 

    On Feb. 14, the six striking union locals made an unconditional offer
    to end their 19-month walkout. The newspapers accepted the offer five
    days later. 

    But the unions contend the newspapers in effect rejected their offer by
    vowing to retain 1,200 replacement workers, leaving few jobs
    immediately available for returning strikers. 
7.961IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1871
    AP 5-Mar-1997 23:01 EST   REF5013

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bank Robber Has Abuse History

    By DEBORAH HASTINGS

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Police investigating the background of Hollywood
    bank robbers discovered that one had a history of abusing and
    neglecting mentally retarded patients at his mother's home care
    business. 

    On Tuesday, officers found a mentally disabled woman, covered in urine
    and feces, locked in a dark room at a Pasadena business owned by Emil
    Matasareanu and his mother, Valerie Nicolescu. 

    Matasareanu, 30, a Romanian emigre, and his alleged accomplice, Larry
    Eugene Phillips, 26, died in a gunfight Friday after a botched Bank of
    America holdup. Sixteen police officers and civilians were wounded or
    injured in the battle, which was televised live by news helicopters. 

    The allegations of abuse date to 1989 at Valerie's Villa, Ms.
    Nicolescu's in-home care business for mentally disabled adults in
    Altadena. Two incidents involve Emil, who worked for his mother. 

    Ms. Nicolescu was licensed by the state in 1982 to care for as many as
    six mentally disabled adults at her home, collecting government
    reimbursements that now range from $1,000 to $4,000 per month. 

    But her license was suspended last year after she refused entry to a
    fire inspector. Now she's under investigation by Pasadena police and
    prosecutors, and Social Services is investigating her for operating
    without a license. 

    "She's not supposed to be operating any facility of any kind," said
    Elizabeth Sandoval, senior staff counsel for the Community Care
    Licensing division of the Social Services department. 

    The disoriented, 44-year-old woman, whose identity was withheld under
    confidentiality laws, was found at Dechebal Inc., a Pasadena software
    business which lists Matasareanu as president and his mother as
    secretary. 

    Ms. Nicolescu's phone was not answered Wednesday. Her attorney, Howard
    Rotter, did not return a phone call. Pasadena police Lt. Rick Law said
    the woman will not be questioned until after her son's funeral. 

    Sandoval said her office, which licenses and regulates community care
    sites, got involved in 1995 when Ms. Nicolescu abandoned two patients
    at Pasadena's Huntington Memorial Hospital. 

    An administrative hearing was scheduled, but has been rescheduled
    "because the judge felt she was emotionally unstable or too physically
    ill to handle it," Sandoval said. The matter is still pending. 

    Sandoval said that in 1994, Matasareanu threw a runaway patient against
    a brick wall. In 1989, he allegedly threatened to hit a patient. 

    Sandoval said state officials have no information about the woman found
    Tuesday by Los Angeles police investigating the shootout. 

    "Our victim was locked in a fairly small room," said Pasadena
    prosecutor Tracy Webb. "The window was covered with plywood, so it was
    pitch dark." 

    The woman had no food, no water, and no toilet. Police do not know how
    long she had been there. Officers found other rooms with mattresses,
    and children's toys and clothes, but no other people, Webb said. 
7.962IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1844
    AP 5-Mar-1997 22:27 EST   REF6128

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    4 Bodies, Car Found in River

    WINONA, Minn. (AP) -- Divers found a submerged vehicle with the bodies
    of four of five missing young people Wednesday after a searcher spotted
    tire tracks leading down an embankment into the Mississippi River. 

    The missing were three students and two graduates of Saint Mary's
    University in Winona, 118 miles southeast of Minneapolis. They were
    last seen early Saturday leaving Rascals bar, about seven blocks from
    the river. 

    "This is a terrible loss for our school. It's a close-knit community.
    That's one thing that draws students here," said Diane Schneider, a
    theology professor at the 1,300-student Roman Catholic university. 

    Several hundred people, including relatives of the five, gathered along
    the river where a tow truck pulled the sports-utility vehicle from the
    water. 

    Police Chief Frank Pomeroy said it jumped railroad tracks and went down
    the embankment. Divers found the vehicle about 30 feet from the bank
    after a marina owner found the tire tracks. 

    The police chief said four bodies and two dogs were found in the Nissan
    Pathfinder. He said the fifth person apparently got out through the sun
    roof and divers would resume their search Thursday. 

    University spokesman Bob Conover said authorities believe the vehicle's
    owner, Timothy Stapleton, escaped from the vehicle but died in the
    river. 

    About 150 university students and volunteers had helped authorities
    search along lakes and the river -- which divides Minnesota and
    Wisconsin -- and in the area's numerous ravines, bluffs and wooded
    areas. 

    The students are Mary Clare Karnick, 21, of Darien, Ill.; Anne Locher,
    22, of Plymouth; and Susan Wall, 21, of Chicago. The graduates are
    Jason Collins, 25, of Eden Prairie, and Timothy Stapleton, 24, of
    Waconia. 
7.963IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1842
    AP 5-Mar-1997 21:02 EST   REF6061

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh Lawyer's Request Denied

    By SANDY SHORE

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- A federal judge rejected an effort Wednesday by Oklahoma
    bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh to get access to tapes of prison
    conversations between prosecution witness Michael Fortier and his wife. 

    McVeigh's attorneys sought a subpoena for prison logs and recordings of
    the conversations. They have accused the couple of planning how they
    will testify against McVeigh during the telephone calls. 

    U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch said judicial rules prohibit
    attorneys from using subpoenas to obtain statements by prospective
    witnesses or other documents that are not admissible as evidence. 

    "The only potential relevance of Mr. Fortier's social conversations
    with his wife would be the possibility that they may include statements
    which might be used to impeach the testimony of these two prospective
    witnesses," the judge wrote. 

    McVeigh's attorney, Rob Nigh, said he was disappointed by the judge's
    decision, but had no plans to appeal. 

    McVeigh, whose trial begins March 31, is charged along with Terry
    Nichols with murder, conspiracy and weapons-related counts in the
    federal building bombing, which killed 168 people and injured more than
    500 in April 1995. 

    Fortier, a former Army buddy of both men, is expected to testify at
    both trials. He has pleaded guilty to knowing about the bombing, but
    failing to report it. He also pleaded guilty to weapons-related
    charges. 

    Fortier has not been sentenced but could face up to 23 years in prison.
    His wife, Lori, was granted immunity in exchange for her testimony. 
7.964IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1844
    AP 6-Mar-1997 0:25 EST   REF5371

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Canada Investigates Wal-Mart

    OTTAWA (AP) -- Canada is looking into the possibility that Wal-Mart may
    have violated a Canadian law intended to counter the effects of the
    U.S. embargo against Cuba. 

    The issue was raised by shoppers in Winnipeg who spotted Cuban-made
    pajamas on Wal-Mart shelves and pointed out to managers that the
    company would not be able to sell such clothing in the United States
    because of the embargo. 

    Wal-Mart spokesman Ed Gould said the company decided to remove the
    pajamas from all its 135 Canadian stores while it seeks to determine
    whether it was breaking U.S. or Canadian law, or both. 

    The Canadian law calls for fines of up to $7 million or prison terms of
    up to five years for executives of Canadian firms -- or foreign firms
    registered in Canada -- that allow themselves to be governed by foreign
    laws intended to enforce the Cuba embargo. 

    It is a direct response to a U.S. law, called Helms-Burton, adopted
    last year, that allows U.S. citizens to sue in American courts foreign
    companies whose business involves property confiscated since Fidel
    Castro took power in Cuba. Executives from such companies can also be
    denied visas to enter the United States. 

    Canada and the 15-nation European Union have rejected U.S. claims that
    the Helms-Burton law is a private matter of national security for the
    United States. They accuse Washington of violating international trade
    rules by seeking to impose its policies beyond U.S. territory. 

    Art Eggleton, Canada's trade minister, has said that Canadian companies
    and subsidiaries of U.S. firms doing business in Canada should be
    governed by Canadian law only. 

    He said that Justice Department officials were studying the Wal-Mart
    situation to determine if there was a violation of the Canadian law
    intended to deter companies from complying with Helms-Burton. Wal-Mart
    is the first company to come under investigation in connection with the
    Canadian law. 
7.965IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1818
    AP 5-Mar-1997 22:20 EST   REF6124

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Funds OK'd for Pisa Tower Work

    ROME (AP) -- The money is secure, so hopefully by 2000 the Leaning
    Tower of Pisa will be, too. 

    Parliament on Wednesday released funds to continue work to secure the
    tower. A Senate committee agreed to $7 million over two years and
    renewed the mandate of an international scientific committee studying
    how to stabilize the 12th century tower, which began leaning soon after
    it was built. 

    The tower has been closed since 1991, but the culture committee's
    action "allows the city to think of a probable reopening of the tower
    before the end of the millennium," said Pisa's mayor, Piero Floriani. 
7.966IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1899
    AP 5-Mar-1997 19:33 EST   REF5886

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rival Koreas Meet For Talks

    By TERRIL YUE JONES

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- North and South Korea met Wednesday for the first time
    in 25 years to talk about peace on the divided peninsula, with the
    United States sitting in and pressing North Korea to agree to enter
    formal negotiations. But the North Koreans said they needed more time
    to decide. 

    Exchanging smiles and pleasantries, high-level representatives of the
    rival Korea states met to discuss an end to hostilities on the Korean
    peninsula, one of the last flash points of the Cold War. In a New York
    hotel room, the Americans and South Koreans briefed the North Koreans
    on a proposal for four-power talks, including China, for a peace treaty
    formally ending the Korean War. 

    An armistice ended fighting in Korea in 1953 but created an uneasy
    truce along the heavily armed border between communist North Korea and
    capitalist South Korea. Some 37,000 U.S. troops also are stationed on
    the peninsula. A peace treaty ending the war was never signed. 

    After the daylong briefing, North Korea's chief delegate, Deputy
    Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan, said the discussions had taken place in
    a "sincere atmosphere." 

    "We are prepared to listen to any proposals considered beneficial to
    promote peace and stability," Kim said. But he added: "We need further
    study on this proposal" before deciding whether to enter four-power
    talks. 

    On Friday, the North Koreans will hold separate talks with the United
    States to address the search for remains of American soldiers missing
    in the Korean War and the opening of liaison offices. 

    Speaking before the closed-door briefings, South Korean officials said
    they would offer economic cooperation and help in coping with North
    Korea's critical food shortage as incentives to join the negotiations. 

    Despite the often-hostile atmosphere between the rivals, Wednesday's
    meeting began with handshakes and niceties. The heads of the three
    delegations -- Deputy U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Charles
    Kartman, Kim of North Korea and South Korean Assistant Foreign Minister
    Song Young-shik -- joined hands for photographers. 

    The Korean delegations chatted pleasantly, a U.S. official said. 

    In Washington, State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns described the
    atmosphere as "serious and sincere" and "very businesslike." He said
    there were no breakthroughs but expressed hope that the talks will lead
    to North Korea joining four-party talks. 

    "They asked questions about the nature of the proposal we put
    together," Burns said. "We believe the United States and South Korea
    made a sincere and fair proposal and frankly we don't see any reason
    why the North Koreans won't respond to it positively." 

    Before the talks, U.S. and South Korean sources said they did not
    expect the North Koreans to agree immediately to the four-power
    negotiations. North Korea was expected to wait until after the third
    anniversary of the death of its late leader, Kim Il Sung, which comes
    this summer. 

    The North also could be waiting until the late leader's son, Kim
    Jong-Il, is formally given the reins of power. He has been the de facto
    leader since 1994. 

    But South Korean sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they
    believe the North Koreans ultimately will agree to the talks because of
    the country's economic crisis and food shortage. 

    North Korea's participation represents a major concession by the
    Communist government. For years, the North Koreans sought direct talks
    with the United States, excluding South Korea, which the Communists
    denounce as a U.S. puppet, but the U.S. rejected that. 

    The last time high-level officials from the two Koreas met on peace
    issues was in 1972 in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, where they
    pledged to end hostilities and seek peaceful reunification. Later,
    however, relations between the two Koreas again soured and nothing
    concrete ever came of the meeting. 

    Wednesday's briefing followed an offer made in April by President
    Clinton and South Korean President Kim Young-sam for direct North-South
    negotiations to create a formal peace agreement to end the Korean War. 

    The initiative appeared to have collapsed after a North Korean
    submarine infiltrated South Korean waters last year. 

    But North Korea's economic crisis forced the Communists into reviving
    diplomatic contacts. North Korea apologized in December. It finally
    agreed to attend the session after the United States and South Korea
    pledged a total of $16 million in food relief. 
7.967IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1932
    AP 5-Mar-1997 19:17 EST   REF5868

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Russia Parliament Bans TV Station

    MOSCOW (AP) -- Parliament voted Wednesday to ban Russia's most-watched
    television channel from covering its sessions for a month because of
    unflattering coverage. 

    Lawmakers in the lower house voted 259-12 to strip accreditation from
    Russian Public Television journalists for "systematically biased
    reporting on the activity of the State Duma and discrediting it." 

    They said its coverage was so one-sided it had "raised doubts among TV
    viewers as to whether the legislative branch of power should even exist
    in Russia." 

    The lawmakers were especially angry after a report by Public
    Television, or ORT, on a Duma debate about restricting pornography.
    Lawmakers were shown quarreling over ways to advertise condoms. 

    The Duma's move was sharply criticized by ORT and other TV stations.

    "The deputies' wish to look better than they in fact are is turning
    into information terrorism," said Arina Sharapova, who anchors ORT's
    evening news program. Russian television stations regularly show
    raucous debates on the parliament floor. 

    Russian politicians often accuse journalists of biased coverage, and
    parliament has recently taken steps to set up its own television
    station. 
7.968IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:19131
    AP 5-Mar-1997 19:21 EST   REF5872

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Albania Erupts Into Armed Revolt

    By ANTHEE CARASSAVA

    Associated Press Writer

    SARANDA, Albania (AP) -- Government jets bombed a southern town
    Wednesday and anti-government militants commandeered tanks and fired
    off anti-aircraft guns as weeks of unrest erupted into an armed revolt
    in southern Albania. 

    The two sides fired at each other across a river east of Vlora, the
    city at the center of the conflict. Albania's foreign minister,
    meanwhile, acknowledged that the situation in Vlora, Saranda and
    Delvina was "out of control." 

    Wednesday's bombing near Saranda and a major security operation
    launched by the government reflected President Sali Berisha's
    determination to quickly end the growing insurrection. 

    At least five T-55 tanks and half a dozen armored personnel carriers
    manned a checkpoint Wednesday near Fieri, 35 miles south of Tirana.
    Other government checkpoints also were set up. 

    In Rome, Italian Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini said his Albanian
    counterpart, Tritan Shehu, told him the insurgents had captured three
    tanks and many other weapons and aim to seize Tirana, the capital. 

    The government is seeking to "isolate" the three southern cities
    without armed conflict, Shehu said. 

    Southerners warned the government not to provoke them. 

    "If they move into Saranda, Albania will see the worst bloodshed ever,"
    said one armed protester, Ilias Sideris. 

    Two months of protests by Albanians who lost savings in shady
    investment schemes culminated in an orgy of anti-government violence
    that led Berisha to declare a state of emergency Sunday. 

    The rebellion has exposed a deep north-south divide in this
    impoverished Balkan nation, between Berisha's supporters in the north
    and those who back the opposition Socialists in the south. Overall,
    southern Albanians are wealthier -- and therefore lost much more than
    northerners in the shady schemes. 

    Some opposition leaders accuse the government not only of negligence in
    connection with the schemes but also of profiting from them. 

    Fearing an attempt to free Fatos Nano, the Socialist leader jailed on
    corruption charges, the government moved him to a jail near Tirana, his
    wife said. 

    U.S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen said there was no need yet to
    evacuate Americans in Albania. 

    In Washington, White House spokesman Mike McCurry said President
    Clinton was concerned about the situation in Albania and "views with
    some alarm" Berisha's re-election earlier this week by parliament. 

    British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind said Berisha must respect the
    rule of law if he wants to get crucial financial aid from other
    European nations. 

    "We are not prepared to give support when he acts in an authoritarian
    and dictatorial way and that, sadly, has been an increasing feature of
    his regime," Rifkind said Wednesday. 

    The air attack came early Wednesday, when MiG-15 warplanes dropped a
    bomb next to two houses in the village of Delvina near Saranda.
    Journalists witnessed the bombing and saw smoke from two bombs dropped
    on nearby mountains. 

    About 400 families, mostly ethnic Greeks, live in Delvina. It was not
    clear if anyone was hurt. Anti-aircraft guns overlooking Saranda fired
    at the jets that flew over the port. 

    In Athens, Greek officials warned the Albanian military to avoid using
    force against Albania's ethnic Greek minority, who reside mostly in the
    south. 

    Earlier Wednesday, the Defense Ministry denied that the government had
    ordered jets to bomb protesters. 

    Four men were reported wounded in a firefight with Albanian army troops
    at Stiari, near Delvina, which began when truckloads of troops opened
    fire on a roadblock. 

    In Saranda, 100 miles south of Tirana, the mood was defiant after the
    nearby air attack. 

    "This is it! We are now at war," yelled Ardian Sinanis, as he squeezed
    off a burst from the AK-47 assault rifle strapped around his chest. "We
    will either live or die for Albania!" 

    Other militants claimed army officers had defected to their side. 

    A vintage tank looted from nearby army barracks rolled by, carrying
    militants firing into the air. Another Soviet-made tank was set up at
    the main road entrance to Saranda, its turret rotating as those inside
    monitored traffic. Nearby, about 300 armed and masked men stood guard. 

    One protester, Vasil Tsako told Greek state television that tanks and
    anti-aircraft weapons were at a roadblock outside Saranda. 

    Residents claimed to have at least 25,000 weapons in hand and said
    thousands more men were in hiding. Greek TV showed a warehouse
    controlled by the insurgents containing dozens of artillery pieces and
    hundreds of boxes with lighter weapons and ammunition. 

    Militants manning heavy machine guns fired at army troops Wednesday
    from a mountain ridge over the Vjosa river 20 miles east of Vlora. The
    soldiers returned fire, sending shepherds on both sides of the river
    diving for cover. 

    Frightened by the violence, a steady stream of people left the south
    for the north. 

    On the bridge over the Vjosa, a father and his three teen-age children
    walked to the government side carrying bedding. The man, who gave his
    name only as Enver, said their home in Vlora was looted. 

    "It was just too scary to remain," he said. 

    Dutch Foreign Minister Hans van Mierlo, the current president of the
    European Union, announced he will be in Tirana on Friday to meet with
    government officials and opposition members. 
7.969IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1954
    AP 5-Mar-1997 22:04 EST   REF6113

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Panel Warns of Data Abuses

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Patient medical records stored in computers are
    vulnerable to snooping and unauthorized use, according to a new report
    recommending that hospitals install new information security systems. 

    A committee of the National Research Council said it found only
    isolated instances where medical information stored electronically has
    been violated, but it found vulnerabilties in the ease with which the
    data is circulated. 

    "Solutions are available to make electronic records even more secure
    than paper records, including electronic audit trails that track every
    access to a medical record, backed by tough penalties for violators of
    privacy," said committee chairman Paul D. Clayton of Columbia
    Presbyterian Medical Center in New York. 

    "Today there are no strong incentives to safeghuard patient information
    because patients, industry groups and government regulators aren't
    demanding protection," he said. 

    The NRC report said the health care industry has spent millions to make
    sure records are readily available for legitimate uses, but little
    attention has been paid to securing those records against unauthorized
    use and to protect privacy. 

    To secure these systems, the NRC recommended safeguards be installed at
    hospitals, doctors' offices and insurance firms. 

    Among the recommendations: 

    --Health care workers authorized to enter patient files should have
    unique passwords that are closely guarded. There should be severe
    penalties for abuse of this system. 

    --Work-station computers should be programmed to shut down if left
    idle. 

    --Record systems should have internal roadblocks to prevent workers
    from accessing information outside their job requirements. 

    --Organizations with Internet connections should have a "firewall" to
    deny unauthorized entry. 

    --Patient records transmitted over the Internet should be encrypted or
    coded so that only the intended receiver can read them. 
7.970IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:1976
    RTos 06-Mar-97 00:11    

    B.A.T to Consider US Tobacco Claim Settlement

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Officials of B.A.T Industries Plc, parent of the
    Brown & Williamson tobacco company, said Wednesday that the company
    would consider possible settlement of tobacco-related lawsuits in the
    United States. 

    "The on-going cost in legal terms, and the impact on the share price is
    such that we think it sensible and appropriate to evaluate a
    settlement," B.A.T Chief Executive Martin Broughton said in a
    statement. 

    B.A.T Chairman Lord Cairns also said in a statement that his company,
    which has other interests, such as insurance, would consider settling
    legal claims against it related to smoking. 

    Cairns said his company would be prepared to "evaluate proposals from
    third parties to provide relief from all current and future suits,
    provided that they were in shareholders' interests." 

    He added, however, that the tobacco industry was confident of winning
    the cases and his company did not intend to offer a settlement. 

    "We continue to believe that B.A.T Industries itself has no potential
    liability in any U.S. tobacco litigation," Cairns said. 

    Some 500 lawsuits have been filed against cigarette manufacturers,
    mostly in the United States, although there have been isolated cases in
    other countries. There was a big increase in cases filed last year in
    the United States. 

    However, since the first anti-smoking case was filed in 1954, only 19
    have reached trial across the industry. 

    B.A.T said it has spent an estimated $403 million in legal costs
    fighting tobacco-related suits. 

    "I can't see the legal costs coming down, the trend is for it to
    continue upward," Broughton said. 

    He said that in his view, a sensible settlement of the U.S. lawsuits
    would be one that covered all current and future claims and was
    approved by Congress and the White House. 

    The B.A.T executives made their statements in conjunction with the
    release of the company's financial results for 1996. 

    The company said its profits grew by 5 percent last year despite a
    charge of $258.5 million for environmental claims against a U.S.
    insurance unit. 

    It said 1996 profits rose to $4 billion, despite the exceptional charge
    for claims against its Eagle Star insurance unit. Excluding the charge,
    profits rose by 7 percent. 

    Some analysts, concerned about the possible implications of the
    anti-smoking lawsuits, had hoped B.A.T would say something about a
    possible split up of its tobacco and insurance arms, but the company
    declined to reveal any concrete plans. 

    "We are not convinced that simply doing the splits helps either
    business much," Director of Public Affairs Michael Prideaux said. 

    He dismissed the idea of spinning off Brown & Williamson as a way of
    protecting the rest of B.A.T from any potential tobacco liability in
    the United States. 

    B.A.T's tobacco business turned in a 7 percent overall improvement in
    local currency terms to $2.64 billion with sales 4 percent ahead and
    world market share increasing to 12.8 percent from 12.4 percent. 

    REUTER
7.971IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:2038
    RTw  05-Mar-97 21:42    

    Some planets could have two stars, study finds

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, March 5 (Reuter) - Astronomers said on Wednesday they had found
    evidence there could be planets in outer space with two suns in their
    skies. 

    Paul Kalas of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg,
    Germany and David Jewitt of the University of Hawaii said they found a
    disc of dust circling a binary system known as BD+31x643. 

    The dust looked like the kind of place small planet-like objects known
    as planetesimals could be, they said. 

    "If the existence of this dust disc is confirmed by future
    observations, it would imply that binary stars may possess stable
    environments for planetesimal formation," they wrote in a report in the
    science journal Nature. 

    Science-fiction images of planets with two suns could come true. 

    Jack Lissauer of the NASA Ames Research Centre in Moffett Field,
    California, said studying the disc would provide "a wealth of new
    information" about how planets form. 

    "If this model is correct, it would imply that planetisimals, and quite
    possibly planets, can form around massive binary stars," Lissauer wrote
    in a commentary. 

    "But the similarity in colour between the disk and the nearby
    nebulosity suggest a simpler alternative: the small grains in the disk
    may be mixed with and held in orbit by a much larger quantity of gas
    which circles the star." 

    REUTER
7.972IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:2052
    RTw  05-Mar-97 21:16    

    Faulty UK N-power plant valve sparks food checks

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 5 (Reuter) - A minister reassured the British parliament
    on Wednesday that there had been no contamination of food supplies in
    Scotland as a result of a faulty valve at a nuclear power station. 

    But Scottish Secretary Michael Forsyth criticised Scottish Nuclear,
    operators of the Hunterston plant, for delays in revealing the
    possibility that local food and drink processing companies could be at
    risk. 

    Forsyth told parliament the carbon dioxide (CO2) supply network at
    Hunterston had become contaminated because of the fault in the valve. 

    He said tankers supplying CO2 to Hunterston had also made deliveries of
    the gas to food and drink companies. 

    Forsyth said subsequent checks had shown no contamination of food
    products. But he had asked Scottish Nuclear chairman Robin Jeffrey for
    a meeting "to explain his company's performance." 

    "No one should be using the same vehicles and equipment to make
    deliveries of carbon dioxide, or indeed any other supplies, to nuclear
    installations and also to other locations where they may in consequence
    be a risk to human health," Forsyth said. 

    He said staff at Scottish Nuclear, part of British Energy Plc, had
    realised on February 27 that "a possible route existed for contaminated
    carbon dioxide to move out of the site." 

    But they only informed Britain's Nuclear Installations Inspectorate on
    March 3. 

    "I am of course relieved that there appears to be no risk to public
    health as a result of this incident," Forsyth said. 

    "There are however a number of aspects which give rise for concern --
    notably the delays which took place in drawing this problem to the
    attention of the authorities." 

    Opposition Labour party spokesman on Scottish affairs George Robertson
    said he was particularly concerned about the use of the tankers. 

    "It seems bizarre and incomprehensible that carbon dioxide for a
    nuclear power station can be delivered in the same tankers as those
    that supply food and fizzy drink manufacturers," he said.

    REUTER
7.973IJSAPL::ANDERSONI feel all feak and weeble, docThu Mar 06 1997 10:2028
    RTw  05-Mar-97 20:56    

    German army base strikes spread to British camps

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    STUTTGART, Germany, March 5 (Reuter) - A strike by thousands of
    civilians employed at U.S. army bases in Germany widened to include
    those staffing British camps, trade union officials said on Wednesday. 

    The OeTV public sector union said the strike, which is over better
    working conditions and severance pay, on Wednesday involved 300 staff
    at British bases in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia in addition to
    those at U.S. bases around the country. 

    A total of around 3,000 staff took part in the strike, which began on
    Monday, an OeTV spokesman said. 

    U.S. Defence Secretary William Cohen, visiting Germany on Tuesday, said
    he hoped that the strike at the U.S. army bases would be resolved
    quickly. 

    There are 35,000 mostly German civilian employees working as support
    staff for the 75,000 U.S. troops in Germany. Many jobs have been
    eliminated as the size of the U.S. forces in Germany was reduced after
    the end of the Cold War. 

    REUTER
7.974IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:31104
    AP 10-Mar-1997 0:59 EST   REF5428

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, March 10, 1997
   
    FLOOD-THANKS 

    FALMOUTH, Ky. (AP) -- In a town devastated by an act of God, flood
    victims in Falmouth still found a way to seek spiritual shelter Sunday.
    They gathered on high ground in the only spared church to give thanks
    that they survived, even if their homes didn't. "We're going to get it
    back again. We're not going to give up," said Mary Hillenmeyer, 31, the
    fifth generation to work at her family's flooded funeral home. Holding
    their heads high in the face of disaster, the congregation sang "Count
    Your Blessings" and "God Will Take Care of You." When last weekend's
    flooding of the Ohio River and its tributaries filled this town of
    2,700 to its rooftops, most could only escape with the clothes on their
    backs. 
   
    WEB SITE HACKER 

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Someone hacked into the NCAA's Internet home
    page Sunday and temporarily replaced it with racial slurs, but
    officials were able to divert web surfers to the proper page. The World
    Wide Web site was abruptly changed early Sunday evening with a page
    titled "Anti-ncaa." Below it was an encircled fist accompanied by the
    words "White Power." Later, the offending page was replaced with a
    similar unofficial page without the racial slurs. The invading page
    appeared soon after the NCAA announced its pairings for its basketball
    tournament. The NCAA has apparently been able to divert Internet users
    to the proper page. 
   
    BOMBING INVESTIGATION 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- The FBI is looking for a man they believe sought a
    remote hideout in the Ozark mountains of Missouri with Oklahoma City
    bombing suspects Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, CNN and Time
    magazine report. The FBI wants to question Robert Jacques to help
    agents reconstruct McVeigh's and Nichols' activities leading up to the
    April 15, 1995, bombing. William Maloney, a Cassville, Mo., real estate
    broker, told CNN that in the fall of 1994 Jacques came to his office
    with Nichols and a man who identified himself as Tim. 
   
    PERU-HOSTAGES 

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- The leader of a rebel group holding 72 hostages in a
    Japanese ambassador's residence is again willing to resume talks to
    bring about an end to the crisis, according to a radio report. Nestor
    Cerpa, speaking by two-way radio, told Radio Programas that
    negotiations could resume tomorrow. Cerpa last week called off the
    talks, saying he was angered by a government plan to tunnel under the
    residence. President Alberto Fujimori has refused to confirm or deny
    the tunnel plan. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Palestinian leaders have rejected the amount of a
    planned Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank. But the Israeli cabinet
    opposes the principle that the Palestinians have veto power and insists
    it can set the extent of each phase of the agreed upon withdrawal.
    Palestinians had anticipated gaining control initially of more than the
    9 percent announced by Israel. A senior adviser for Israeli Prime
    Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says there will be no improvement on the
    withdrawal offer. 
   
    CAMPAIGN FINANCE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republican leaders pledged Sunday to find out what
    the White House knew about an FBI investigation into alleged Chinese
    attempts to buy influence in American politics last year. Leon Panetta,
    White House chief of staff at the time, said his office knew nothing
    about it. Panetta and his successor, Erskine Bowles, also mounted a
    defense of the Clinton administration's aggressive fund-raising
    activities before the 1996 election, saying they were forced to stop
    the Republican agenda from winning. 
   
    ZAIRE 

    WALIKALE, Zaire (AP) -- Zairian rebels, poised outside a strategic
    government-controlled city, now say they will not stop fighting until
    President Mobutu Sese Seko begins negotiations with them. Despite
    indications a day earlier that rebels had accepted a U.N. peace plan,
    rebel spokesman Nyembwe Kazadi said talks had to come before any
    cease-fire. Kazadi said rebels were still waiting for reinforcements to
    launch their attack on Kisangani, one of Zaire's largest cities. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was higher against the Japanese yen in early
    trading Monday, while Tokyo share prices fell in thin trading. The
    Nikkei shed 83.85 points to 18,114.89 points in the first 30 minutes of
    trading. The dollar was traded at 121.84 yen up 0.68 yen from Friday. 
   
    NCAA TOURNAMENT 

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Top-ranked Kansas, plus Minnesota, Kentucky
    and North Carolina were given the top seeds for the NCAA basketball
    tournament. The Jayhawks were placed No. 1 in the Southeast Region,
    while Minnesota went to the Midwest, North Carolina to the East and
    defending champion Kentucky to the West. The tournament gets under way
    Thursday. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARK KENNEDY 
7.975IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3183
    RTw  09-Mar-97 16:38    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    TIRANA - Albanian President Sali Berisha extended by a week an amnesty
    for rebels who have seized control of most of the south of the country
    to hand in their weapons. 

    GJIROKASTER, Albania - Retired Albanian general Agim Gozhita took
    charge of this rebel-held main southern town, ordering teenagers to
    surrender weapons and vowing to punish looters. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - The PLO will reject officially in talks with Israel on
    Sunday Israeli plans to hand over nine percent of the West Bank in the
    first of three redeployments in the area, a Palestinian peace
    negotiator said. 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli opposition leader Shimon Peres said his Labour
    party would not enter a unity government to protect Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu from a right-wing rebellion over peace moves. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Marxist rebels holding 72 hostages planned to meet  mediators on
    Sunday to discuss jump-starting talks with the government amid a report
    President Alberto Fujimori has offered to let most of the rebels stay
    in Peru. 

    - - - - 

    GOMA, Zaire - Aid officials flew deep into rebel-held east Zaire,
    hunting for hundreds of thousands of Hutu refugees trekking into the
    dense jungles of the interior. 

    KINSHASA - Hordes of civilians have taken to dugout canoes plying the
    vast Zaire river at night to escape an expected rebel attack on the
    eastern city of Kisangani, travellers said. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - China blamed criminal elements for a bomb that ripped through
    a rush-hour bus on a busy Beijing street, and offered a big reward for
    help in solving the case. 

    BEIJING - Police detained a Chinese man for handing out leaflets on
    Beijing's central Tiananmen Square demanding authorities apologise for
    the 1989 crackdown on a democracy campaign, a source said. 

    - - - - 

    BELGRADE - Serbian opposition supporters held a big rally in Belgrade
    to commemorate the anniversary of pro-democracy riots six years ago. 

    - - - - 

    NEW DELHI - At least 16 people were killed and 57 injured when a
    passenger train hit a bus at an open railway crossing in central India,
    officials said. 

    - - - - 

    GARISSA, Kenya - Drought in northeastern Kenya is sending livestock
    prices plunging, bringing financial ruin and sometimes death to the
    region's ethnic Somali nomadic herders, whose economy relies on
    animals. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Scientists and local residents across Siberia and the Russian
    Far East watched a solar eclipse on Sunday that offered a rare
    opportunity to see a comet passing near the sun. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Formula One, the global Grand Prix motor racing business, is
    planning a stock market flotation that will make the company's British
    founder, Bernie Ecclestone, a billionaire, newspapers reported. 

    REUTER 
7.976IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:32121
    AP 9-Mar-1997 23:00 EST   REF5026

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rapper Notorious B.I.G. Killed

    By PAULA M. STORY

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The Notorious B.I.G. made his name as a gangsta
    rapper barking hip-hop rhymes about his real-life past dealing crack on
    the tough streets of Brooklyn. On Sunday, he died in a drive-by
    shooting. 

    The rapper also known as Biggie Smalls was the second major rapper to
    die in a drive-by shooting in the last six months. Tupac Shakur was
    killed in Las Vegas last fall. 

    The 24-year-old rap star, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, was
    killed outside a party while sitting in his parked GMC Suburban, which
    was punctured by at least five bullets in the gang-style attack just
    after midnight Saturday. 

    Wallace was rushed in the same vehicle to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
    where he was pronounced dead, police said. No immediate arrests were
    made. 

    He was attending a party at the Petersen Automotive Museum in
    celebration of the 11th annual Soul Train Music Awards staged on
    Friday, according to Kevin Kim, who witnessed the shooting with
    Wallace's estranged wife, Faith Evans. 

    "Someone just rolled by and started shooting," said Kim, who was
    standing in the museum parking lot with Evans, a singer who had a child
    with Wallace. 

    Dozens of concerned friends and fans gathered in the hospital parking
    lot early Sunday, where Wallace's bullet-riddled sport utility vehicle
    could be seen. They left only when officials confirmed Wallace's death. 

    Detectives cordoned off the Suburban in the hospital parking lot and
    studied at least five bullet holes in the passenger's side front door
    before impounding the vehicle. 

    A security guard working at a high-rise across the street said the
    sound of gunfire was unmistakable. 

    "All of the sudden, I heard about five or six shots. Pow, pow, pow,
    pow, pow," Robert Payne said. 

    Payne heard people screaming and saw some passengers of a dark green
    vehicle jump out and then jump back in before speeding away. The same
    vehicle was driving erratically right before the shooting, he said. 

    Wallace built his gangsta rap persona around authenticity, making much
    of his past as an ex-crack dealer from Bedford-Stuyvesant section of
    Brooklyn, one of the city's toughest neighborhoods. 

    His debut album "Ready to Die" went platinum, selling more than 1
    million copies. His upcoming album, due out March 25, is titled "Life
    After Death ... 'Til Death Do Us Part." 

    The rapper worked with Bad Boy Entertainment run by East Coast producer
    Sean "Puffy" Combs. 

    "We are overwhelmed with grief by the death of a great artist, a family
    member and our friend, the Notorious B.I.G.," the company said in a
    statement. 

    The shooting came six months and one day after Shakur was shot in a
    drive-by attack in Las Vegas as he rode in a car with Death Row Records
    president Marion "Suge" Knight. Shakur died six days later. 

    Wallace was considered a rival of Shakur, who had accused him of
    involvement in a 1994 robbery when Shakur was shot several times and
    lost $40,000 in jewelry. 

    Wallace, who denied any involvement, was conspicuously absent from a
    high-profile "rap summit" in Harlem last fall called to ease tensions
    between West Coast and East Coast rappers after Shakur's slaying. 

    Selwyn Seyfu Hinds, editor of The Source, a hip-hop music magazine that
    discovered Wallace six years ago, also attended the party where Wallace
    was shot. 

    "The music is oftentimes a play-by-play forecast of what's happening in
    our communities," Hinds said, but said he didn't see any links between
    the deaths of Shakur and Wallace. Their rivalry, he said, was
    professional 

    Wallace most recently lived in Teaneck, N.J., in a gated community
    where most residents were reluctant to comment on his death Sunday. But
    one girl who used to live near Wallace remembered him well. 

    "He always said, 'Hi,' he was really nice," said Christine Girado, 13.
    "We would get all excited." 

    The rapper had brushes with the law in both New Jersey and New York,
    including his arrest in Teaneck last summer for alleged weapons and
    marijuana possession. Neighbors had complained about cars coming in and
    out "at all hours of the day and night," police said. 

    Also, he was arrested in June 1995 arrest for allegedly robbing a man
    and breaking his jaw in Camden, N.J. In March 1995, he was arrested in
    New York after allegedly using a baseball bat to deter would-be
    autograph seekers. 

    Wallace was honored as rap artist of the year at the Billboard Awards
    in 1995 and was cited for rap single of the year for "One More Chance." 

    He didn't win any Soul Train awards this year. Shakur posthumously won
    the best R&B-soul or rap album award for "All Eyez on Me." 

    Don Cornelius, executive producer and creator of the weekly dance
    program "Soul Train," said the show did not sponsor the party and had
    no connection to the event. 

    "I think that it's time that the authorities got serious about
    recognizing that the East Coast, West Coast thing is dangerous, and
    it's legitimate," Cornelius said. 
7.977IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:32111
    AP 9-Mar-1997 22:58 EST   REF5002

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Jury to Mull Military Theft Case

    By MICHAEL C. BUELOW

    Associated Press Writer

    MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- The fate of a Hudson man accused in the largest
    known theft of combat equipment from a U.S. military base could be
    decided by a federal court jury this week. 

    Closing arguments in the U.S. District Court trial of Leo Anthony Piatz
    were scheduled Monday before the case goes to the jury. 

    Piatz, 37, owner of Tony's Military Surplus, is charged with 11 counts,
    including one count of conspiracy, eight counts of conversion of
    government property and two counts of bribing a public official. 

    The charges carry a maximum penalty of 125 years in prison and about
    $2.75 million in fines. 

    Much of the equipment was sold to collectors. It has been returned to
    Fort McCoy, a 60,000-acre Army training base about 95 miles northwest
    of Madison. 

    Piatz is accused of masterminding the plot that involved seven men,
    including two civilian employees at the base who falsified paperwork or
    helped him obtain the equipment, testimony during the week-long trial
    showed. 

    Key prosecution witnesses during the trial included Donald Crandall,
    38, the base's range safety officer, who pleaded guilty last month to
    one of seven counts against him. The other charges were dropped in
    exchange for his cooperation. 

    Crandall, who was scheduled for sentencing next month, testified that
    he falsified the paperwork in exchange for more than $30,000 in bribes
    from Piatz. 

    The paperwork allowed Piatz to remove more than 100 pieces of equipment
    including a Sheridan tank, armored personnel carriers, TOW missile
    launchers, Jeeps, cranes, trucks and other equipment from the base to
    sell to collectors or to sell as scrap. 

    Crandall testified that Piatz also blackmailed him. "He (Piatz) would
    say, 'I wouldn't want to see you get in trouble with your boss or lose
    your job."' 

    Another witness, undercover Department of Defense agent Hal Strickland
    testified that Piatz sought his help to create paperwork to justify his
    possession of the vehicles. 

    Strickland posed as Hal Fox, a government surplus contract consultant. 

    Prosecutors played tape-recorded and videotaped conversations between
    Strickland and Piatz in which Piatz discussed selling a Howitzer and a
    tank he had gotten from the base. 

    Piatz indicated that he made $600,000 in one year dealing Fort McCoy
    equipment, Strickland testified. 

    The jury also heard tapes of wiretapped telephone conversations between
    Piatz and other defendants in the case in which they discussed selling
    a runway snowblower similar to one taken from the base for $53,900. 

    Piatz also talks about offering bribes of equipment, including a crane
    and a tractor, to Dennis Lambert, the base's range maintenance officer,
    so that they could continue to remove equipment from the base.

    "As long as we take care of him (Lambert), we get all we want," Piatz
    said in a tape identified as being of a Dec. 12, 1995, telephone
    conversation. 

    Lambert, 52, is charged with taking bribes, and is expected to go on
    trial in June with the five remaining defendants. 

    Four collectors of military equipment also testified that they
    purchased more than $200,000 worth of equipment, including a Howitzer,
    a tank and a personnel carrier, from Piatz. 

    FBI agent Jeff Hill said surveillance of Piatz's activities and records
    of items shipped to the base showed that Piatz had taken 153 vehicles,
    most of which were Jeeps. 

    No missiles or other weapons were stolen. 

    Some of those items were confiscated when agents executed a search
    warrant on Piatz's properties last June, Hill said. 

    The defense's chief witness was Piatz, who testified for about five
    hours and repeatedly told the jury that he took the items because he
    had permission to from Crandall and Lambert. 

    Piatz testified Crandall demanded a $30,000 bribe from him to remove
    Sherman tank parts. 

    Later, Crandall and Lambert let him keep dozens of other vehicles, or
    parts of vehicles, as payment for cleanup projects on the firing range. 

    "He (Crandall) told me he had to get that area cleaned up. He told me
    he was going to get some commendation," Piatz testified. 

    Piatz also testified that he lied about getting $600,000 in one year
    for selling equipment from the base. He said that to impress Strickland
    so the undercover agent would help him create the paperwork he needed. 

    "I know my first paperwork was good but it never hurts to have extra,"
    Piatz said. 
7.978IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3344
    AP 9-Mar-1997 22:00 EST   REF5546

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    M.D.s Mull Deadly Strep Illness

    ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- State health investigators are headed to a
    Rochester hospital to probe the death of a woman who died of a
    flesh-eating bacteria infection a month after giving birth. 

    The unidentified woman, who died Friday, had been ill since giving
    birth to a healthy child by Caesarean section at Strong Memorial
    Hospital. 

    Authorities did not release the cause of her death, but the woman's
    relatives told the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle she died of
    necrotizing fasciitis, the so-called flesh-eating disease caused by a
    strain of Group A streptococcus. 

    The flesh-eating disease, which killed 11 people in England in a 1994
    outbreak, responds to antibiotics if treated quickly but is fatal in
    about 30 percent of cases. 

    Hospital officials told the state Health Department that the woman died
    of an invasive form of Group A strep, department spokesman Robert
    Hinckley said. The state investigators were to begin their probe on
    Monday, Hinckley said. 

    There have been two other cases of Group A strep in the hospital's
    maternity unit, although it was unclear what type those people had, the
    newspaper said. 

    And 11 cases of invasive Group A strep were reported in Monroe County
    over the past two months, compared with 29 total cases last year. None
    of those 11 infections came from the flesh-eating strain. 

    Group A strep infection is common in young children, but usually causes
    a sore throat or skin rash. The rare, necrotizing form of Group A strep
    can occur when someone who is susceptible has a scrape or cut that
    comes into contact with strep germs. The bacteria does not actually eat
    flesh but rather poisons it rapidly, according to medical authorities. 

    The Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta estimated 500 to 1,500
    Americans are infected each year. 
7.979IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3351
    AP 9-Mar-1997 21:54 EST   REF5545

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Microsoft Offers Browser Fix

    By TIM KLASS

    Associated Press Writer

    SEATTLE (AP) -- Microsoft has posted a single patch, or program repair
    kit, to fix all three security bugs found over the past week in its
    Internet Explorer Web browser. 

    Without the patch, an unscrupulous Web site operator could take
    advantage of the flaws to wreak havoc in someone else's computer,
    sending instructions to run programs secretly, send electronic mail
    under the other operator's name, or damage software stored on a hard
    drive. 

    The patch was posted late Saturday at the Microsoft Corp. official Web
    site and can be downloaded for free. The flaw affects Internet Explorer
    versions 3.0 and 3.01 for the Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 operating
    systems. 

    Internet Explorer claims about 25 percent to 30 percent of the market
    for programs to browse the World Wide Web on the Internet. 

    The first flaw was found more than a week ago by a student at Worcester
    Polytechnic Institute in Worcester, Mass. Another one was discovered
    Thursday by a student at the University of Maryland in College Park,
    Md. 

    The third problem was reported Friday by students at the Massachusetts
    Institute of Technology. 

    Microsoft's repair efforts should avert any significant damage to the
    company's effort to catch up with Netscape, the leading Web browser,
    said Dan Kusnetzky, director of the client server environments program
    at International Data Corp. in Framingham, Mass. 

    He and David Fester, product manager for the Internet platforms
    division at Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, noted that bugs also
    have been found in Netscape browsers. 

    "Clearly, it means that the industry needs to come together to better
    address this sort of problem ... these security concerns," Fester said. 

    ------

    Microsoft's World Wide Web site with information on the security
7.980IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3382
    AP 9-Mar-1997 21:29 EST   REF5529

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Sen. Seeks FBI Answer on Funds

    By ALICE ANN LOVE

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen. Dianne Feinstein said Sunday she will call FBI
    Director Louis Freeh to get more details about an alleged plot by China
    to funnel illegal campaign contributions to her and at least five other
    members of Congress. 

    She told reporters the FBI did not give her much information last
    summer when agents warned her to be on guard for contributions from
    China. 

    "Since my name is out there, I believe I deserve to know," the
    California Democrat said at an airport news conference upon her arrival
    from a weekend at home in San Francisco. "If there is credible
    evidence, tell me what it is. Enable me to protect myself. That's the
    job of the FBI." 

    The Washington Post reported in Sunday's editions that Feinstein was
    among at least six members of Congress briefed by the FBI about the
    possibility that laundered Chinese money could be coming their way. The
    paper said it was unable to learn the names of the other five. 

    Meanwhile, ABC News reported later Sunday that China established a $1.8
    million fund to influence U.S. elections and that as many as 30 members
    of Congress were warned they might be approached to receive illicit
    contributions. 

    Feinstein said she has taken action within the last two months to avoid
    receiving illegal Asian contributions -- but not because of any details
    FBI agents gave her in a cryptic, 10-minute, classified briefing last
    June. 

    "There were no specifics about who or how or what to look for," said
    Feinstein. 

    Feinstein said that only increasingly frequent news reports about a
    Justice Department investigation into Democratic Party fund-raisers who
    may have funneled contributions from China gave her enough knowledge to
    take action. 

    The senator, who was not up for re-election in last November's
    election, said that on Friday she finished returning $12,000 in
    campaign contributions from six individuals employed by the Lippo
    Group, an Indonesian banking and real estate company that has been at
    the center of controversy. She said the contributions were received
    before her 1994 re-election campaign -- and long before the FBI came to
    her. And she said she had started returning the contributions before
    being contacted by the Post about the story it was planning for
    Sunday's papers. 

    Feinstein said within the past two months she has stopped taking
    campaign contributions from non-citizen legal aliens -- though such
    contributions are legal -- and has started giving all donors forms on
    which they must certify they are U.S. citizens and that the money they
    give is their own. 

    "Frankly, I don't know what else to do," said Feinstein. "Does this
    mean I check every Asian name? I find that repugnant." 

    Feinstein said she was told the FBI information she received was
    classified and thus did not speak to other members of Congress about
    it. She said she does not know who the other five members briefed by
    the FBI are and that she was not told the risk of illegal contributions
    might extend to the re-election campaign of President Clinton. 

    Feinstein is a former mayor of San Francisco who started a sister
    cities friendship program with the Chinese city of Shanghai and is
    well-connected with officials there and in Beijing. In the Senate, she
    has been a vocal proponent of increased American trade with China, and
    sits on the Foreign Affairs subcommittee overseeing Asian relations. 

    "I have been proud of what I've been able to do to increase friendship
    between the two countries," she said. 
7.981IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:34111
    AP 10-Mar-1997 1:38 EST   REF5469

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ecuador Leader Allegedly Stole

    By CARLOS CISTERNAS

    Associated Press Writer

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Witnesses describe a looting frenzy: As ousted
    President Abdala Bucaram and company abandoned the presidential palace
    last month, they walked out the door with 11 burlap sacks allegedly
    stuffed with $3 million. 

    It happened just as an angry crowd outside was demanding Bucaram leave
    and chanting "Thief, thief, thief." 

    "There are witnesses who saw the bags being put into vehicles with
    tinted glass and taken out of the palace at night," said Simon
    Espinosa, a member of a special commission named to investigate
    corruption in Bucaram's government. 

    That Bucaram -- known to friend and foe as "El Loco" -- and his aides
    may have rifled the national till doesn't surprise many Ecuadoreans. 

    Bucaram insists he did nothing wrong. He claims he is a victim of
    political persecution by a "civilian dictatorship" that has taken over
    Ecuador. Moreover, Bucaram says he is "the most honest president" to
    serve Ecuador in the last decade. 

    Ecuador's new government, however, says Bucaram and his top aides
    pilfered or squandered as much as $80 million during his turbulent six
    months in power, and they are still trying to unravel threads that may
    lead to even more missing loot. 

    On Friday, the Supreme Court charged Bucaram and four top aides with
    corruption, embezzlement, nepotism and influence peddling -- a case
    involving the alleged mishandling of $88 million in a government
    security fund. 

    "There was a virtual orchestra of corruption, and its conductor was the
    president," says Cesar Verduga, the new interior minister. He says that
    in the last week of the Bucaram government alone, $26 million was taken
    from the Central Bank. 

    Palace police guard Miguel Lara has told investigators that he made the
    $3 million withdrawal in 11 billion sucres, the national currency, on
    Feb. 6, the day Bucaram was ousted from office. He says he delivered
    the money in bags to Bucaram's secretary Oscar Celleri. 

    Celleri and palace minister Enrique Villon are among the presidential
    aides charged with corruption. Celleri is still on the lam. But Villon
    was arrested on Friday in a border town near Peru, carrying $3.4
    million in U.S. dollars. 

    Corruption allegations against Bucaram's government abound: 

    --Welfare Minister Gustavo Baquero claims an audit of his ministry's
    books shows $83 million unaccounted for. The minister's predecessor:
    Bucaram's brother Adolfo. 

    --Members of the leftist New Country party claim former Energy Minister
    Alfredo Adum, a close friend of Bucaram, bought land from the
    state-owned Agrarian Development Institute at the bargain price of
    $4,800 for 328 acres. 

    --The Comptroller's office is investigating a $40-million program
    designed to make good on a Bucaram campaign pledge to give every
    school-age child a free backpack. Of 400,000 backpacks ordered from
    Colombia, only 3,000 arrived. What happened to the money is a mystery. 

    The Quito daily newspaper Hoy has reported that even a historical gold
    pen is missing from the president's desk. Gone, too, is the
    ebony-and-gold staff that is Ecuador's symbol of presidential power. 

    The government of interim President Fabian Alarcon, named by Congress
    to oversee a transition to new elections in 1998, has appointed a
    special commission to investigate the allegations of rampant
    corruption. 

    The government is also looking into the possibility of seeking
    Bucaram's extradition from Panama, where he fled after being driven
    from office. 

    Calls for action against the apparent thievery have come from all over,
    from businesses to labor organizations. 

    The secretary of Ecuador's Bishops Conference of the Roman Catholic
    Church said those responsible should pay with the full weight of the
    law. "Those who have damaged the nation, a people sunken in poverty,
    should not go unpunished," Monsignor Antonio Arregui said. 

    But some fear the new government will not really take the investigation
    seriously. 

    Supreme Court Chief Justice Carlos Solorzano said justice officials had
    already been "negligent" in allowing those involved in the corruption
    to leave the country in the first place. 

    "The government did not do what it should have because it is too busy
    feeding at the trough," Solorzano said. 

    Meanwhile, Ecuadoreans, who marched 2 million strong through the
    streets only a month ago demanding Bucaram's removal, are still trying
    to recover from the shock of the reported plundering. 

    Shopkeeper Eduardo Aguirre wonders what would have happened if Bucaram
    had stayed in power for his full four years. 

    "They would have have stolen everything," he said. 
7.982IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3453
    AP 9-Mar-1997 23:37 EST   REF5203

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Church Protests Priest Arrest

    By JANET SCHWARTZ

    SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico (AP) -- The Roman Catholic Church on
    Sunday protested the arrests of two priests in connection with a land
    dispute that left two state police officers dead. 

    A statement by the Chiapas diocese said the Revs. Jeronimo Alberto
    Lopez and Gonzalo Rosas Morales had been arrested Saturday without
    apparent reason and without warrants as they were driving near a
    roadblock. 

    "The diocese strongly protests this new arbitrary action against the
    pastoral work of the Catholic Church in Chiapas," the statement said. 

    The church has been at odds with state and federal authorities since
    Mayan-descended rebels took up arms in southern Mexico on Jan. 1, 1994,
    demanding better living conditions and respect for Indian rights. 

    Government officials have repeatedly accused Bishop Samuel Ruiz of
    sympathizing with and aiding the rebels, a claim both church
    authorities and Ruiz deny. 

    A truce was called after 12 days of fighting between the Zapatista
    National Liberation Army rebels and the Mexican army. At least 145
    people were killed in the conflict. 

    Since then, peace talks have been stalled. There has been no fighting
    but Indian communities in conflict areas often have complained of being
    harassed by the military with low helicopter flights and aggressive
    land patrols. 

    On Friday, 300 state judicial police cleared out groups of Indians who
    had invaded two cattle ranches near the town of Palenque more than a
    year ago. The state government claimed the squatters, many of whom are
    believed to be Zapatista sympathizers, were escorted out peacefully. 

    The government said that later in the day the squatters attacked the
    officers, who, unarmed, had camped at a nearby spot and were having
    lunch. 

    According to a state government news release, the squatters attacked
    the officers with gunfire, killing two and wounding five. 

    Officials in the state capital of Tuxtla Gutierrez refused to comment
    on the arrests of the two Jesuit priests. But on Saturday, thousands of
    Indian-descended women gathered outside the military garrison near San
    Cristobal to protest the incident. 
7.983IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3435
    AP 9-Mar-1997 23:25 EST   REF5165

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Koreans Cross S. Korea Border

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korean troops on the eastern
    front-line briefly went on alert Monday after five North Korean
    soldiers were found inside their side of the demilitarized zone, the
    Defense Ministry said. 

    There was no exchange of fire during the one-hour encounter starting at
    5:30 a.m. along the eastern sector of the 2.5-mile wide DMZ that
    separates the two Koreas, it said. 

    After the North Koreans withdrew, South Korean troops searched the area
    but found no signs that the communist soldiers were on any special
    mission, the ministry said. 

    Ministry officials said the exact activities of the North Koreans could
    not be determined, because they were moving slowly in the dark. 

    Jim Coles, the spokesman for the U.S. military command in Seoul, said
    it was not known why the North Koreans had crossed over. 

    "It could have been an accidental crossing, or they could have been
    lost," he said. 

    He said a complaint will not be filed unless details can be found about
    "what the North Koreans were doing and why they were doing it." 

    The Korean border is the world's most heavily armed, with nearly 2
    million troops deployed on both sides. The two Koreas are still
    technically in a state of war with no peace treaty signed at the end of
    the 1950-53 Korean War. 
7.984IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3421
    AP 9-Mar-1997 22:32 EST   REF5570

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Drunken Fracas Reported on Jet

    RICHMOND, British Columbia (AP) -- Eleven drunken men whose rowdy
    behavior on a chartered Royal Airlines flight alarmed crew and
    passengers were arrested when they landed at the Vancouver
    International Airport, police said Sunday. 

    Seven men were charged, with offenses ranging from assault to
    endangering the safety of an aircraft, and released Sunday. Charges
    were pending against four others. 

    Royal Canadian Mounted Police Staff Sgt. Gary Kilgore said the men's
    disruptive actions frightened the plane's crew and fellow travelers en
    route to Vancouver from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. 

    RCMP were alerted to the fracas and awaited the plane's landing. They
    arrested the men as they entered the airport Saturday evening. 
7.985IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3546
    AP 9-Mar-1997 21:53 EST   REF5544

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tokyo AIDS Scandal Trial Begins

    TOKYO (AP) -- Opening the first trial in a widespread AIDS scandal, a
    former doctor denied charges Monday that his negligence caused the
    death of a hemophilia patient who got the AIDS virus through untreated
    blood. 

    Takeshi Abe, a professor and former vice president of Teikyo
    University, told the Tokyo District Court that he did not know at the
    time that using untreated blood products was dangerous. 

    Abe served as head of a Health and Welfare Ministry panel on AIDS in
    1983-84 and persistently opposed quick approval for safe heat-treated
    blood products being used in other nations. 

    Prosecutors suspect that Abe may have refused to agree to importing
    treated blood products because of his close relations with Japanese
    pharmaceutical companies, which were working on their own versions of
    the products. 

    The heat treatments weren't approved until 1985. About 2,000 Japanese,
    mostly hemophiliacs, contracted the AIDS virus from the untreated
    products. Some 400 have died. 

    Later this month, separate trials will begin for former Health and
    Welfare Ministry official Akihito Matsumura and three former presidents
    of Green Cross Corp., the top supplier of the blood products. 

    The scandal has appalled a nation where malpractice suits are rare and
    has led to more calls for bureaucratic reform. 

    The government and five pharmaceutical firms have reached an
    out-of-court settlement with the patients and their families who had
    sued for damages. 

    Although suspicions against Abe are wide-ranging, the formal charges
    involve only a single case in the summer of 1985 when a hemophiliac
    patient treated at Teikyo University became infected with the AIDS
    virus. He later developed AIDS and died in 1991. 

    If convicted on the charges of causing death by professional
    negligence, Abe could face up to five years in prison. 
7.986IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3555
    AP 9-Mar-1997 21:43 EST   REF5533

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    French Protest Immigration Bill

    By JEAN_MARIE GODARD

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- Chanting "French, Immigrants, Solidarity," at least
    11,000 people marched across Paris under sunny skies Sunday in the
    latest protest of an immigration bill on the verge of becoming law. 

    Dancing to rap music and reggae played by truck-carried bands, the
    protesters festively paraded from Place Denfert Rochereau on the Left
    Bank to Place de la Bastille, but in smaller numbers than the previous
    protests against the immigration bill. 

    Police put the crowd at 11,000 people, while organizers said 30,000
    turned out for the warm-weather march. 

    Due for final discussion in the French Senate this week, the bill
    toughens already restrictive immigration laws, making it harder for
    illegal immigrants to stay in France and easier for authorities to
    deport them. 

    The National Assembly passed the bill last month. With Prime Minister
    Alain Juppe's conservative coalition maintaining a strong majority in
    the Senate, the bill's passage there is considered a formality. 

    Polls show that more than two-thirds of the French favor the bill. 

    Sunday's protesters, led by immigrant-rights groups and members of the
    opposition Socialist Party, were mostly students and people in their
    20s, some on bicycles, some pushing babies in strollers. 

    Despite the immigration bill's apparent inevitability, the marchers
    seemed cheerful. 

    "This shows that nothing is lost, that a civic reaction is never lost,"
    said lawyer Henri Leclerc, president of the League of Human Rights. 

    But Jean-Francois Mancel, secretary general of Juppe's Rally for the
    Republic party, on Sunday dismissed what he called the "weak
    mobilization" of the marchers as "coming after the fact, with broken
    down ideas." 

    Many of the marchers carried pictures of far-right leader Jean-Marie Le
    Pen, claiming Juppe's government was playing to Le Pen's National Front
    party. 

    The Front last month won its fourth city hall -- in the southern town
    of Vitrolles -- by blaming France's 12.7 percent unemployment and other
    social ills on immigrants. 
7.987IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3532
    AP 9-Mar-1997 21:31 EST   REF5530

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    5 Held in Polish Money Scheme

    WARSAW, Poland (AP) -- Mindful of a string of ruinous financial scams
    in nearby Albania, Polish authorities have arrested five people for
    running an illegal get-rich-quick scheme, a newspaper has reported.

    About 610,000 Poles joined the Titan Investment Fund since it began
    operating a year ago, Rzeczpospolita reported in its weekend edition. 

    Individuals paid $7 to attend secret information sessions about the
    fund and $1,200 to enroll. They profited from new membership -- $260
    for recruiting a new member and $320 for each person recruited by that
    member, the report said. 

    The newspaper did not identify those arrested, and its report could not
    be confirmed Sunday. It did not say whether authorities shut down the
    fund. 

    Albania has been wracked by weeks of unrest triggered by the collapse
    of similar pyramid investment schemes that ate up the life savings of
    many citizens. 

    Rzeczpospolita said Titan registered as a consulting company for
    foreign firms doing business in Poland but established its headquarters
    in Switzerland under the name D.A.S. 

    The paper said Titan had sister organizations operating in Germany,
    Great Britain, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Hungary and other countries. 
7.988IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3541
    RTw  10-Mar-97 02:02    

    Britain plans to privatise care of elderly - paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 10 (Reuter) - British Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell
    plans a radical shake-up of social services, including privatising care
    for the elderly, the Daily Telegraph reported on Monday. 

    Under the proposals, which will be unveiled in a government White Paper
    this week and will feature prominently in the general election due by
    May 22, local councils will be forced to sell off their old people's
    homes and use private nursing homes. 

    Instead of being providers of care for the elderly, the councils will
    be purchasers of care. 

    "Government sources said the intention was to bring the principles of
    the NHS (National Health Service) reforms into the provision of social
    service care," said the Telegraph. 

    The plans would also avoid the need for elderly people to sell their
    homes to pay for their care, it added. 

    The proposals resulted from a survey which showed local authority homes
    for the elderly were more expensive than private care. 

    The elderly care plan is the second major overhaul announced by
    Britain's Conservative government in less than a week. 

    Prime Minister John Major proposed a revolution in the country's
    pension system on Wednesday in which individuals would build up their
    own personal pensions and savings to provide an income for retirement. 

    The Conservatives, trailing by up to 20 percentage points behind the
    opposition Labour Party in opinion polls, are rolling out what they
    hope are vote-winning plans in the hope of regaining ground before the
    election. 

    REUTER
7.989IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3635
    RTw  09-Mar-97 22:05    

    Greenpeace blocks shipment from Swiss nuke plant

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    ZURICH, March 9 (Reuter) - Greenpeace activists blocked the railroad
    tracks from a Swiss nuclear power plant on Sunday to halt a shipment of
    used nuclear fuel rods, officials said. 

    Police confirmed that Greenpeace activists had erected a 12-metre tall
    tower on the tracks on the property of the Beznau plant, in the canton
    of Aargau near Zurich, and two people had chained themselves to the top
    of it. 

    Swiss utility NOK said in a statement it planned a routine shipment of
    used fuel rods on Monday for reprocessing at a facility abroad. 

    NOK declined to name the facility but Greenpeace said only nuclear
    plants at La Hague in France or Sellafield in England provided this
    service. 

    "NOK filed charges of disturbing the peace against the activists but
    that is not the same thing as an order to clear the protesters by
    police force," a spokesman for Aargau cantonal police told Reuters. 

    Greenpeace said it was protesting against nuclear fuel transports in
    general and against fuel reprocessing, both of which it said polluted
    the environment and endangered human health. 

    NOK said its fuel was shipped in government-inspected containers and
    that it had carried out over 100 such shipments without causing any
    damage. 

    REUTER
7.990IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3657
    RTos 09-Mar-97 22:00    

    Belgian Professor Denies Human Cloning Report

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    BRUSSELS (Reuter) - A British newspaper report that a Belgian doctor
    may have accidentally created the first human "clone" was complete
    fantasy, the head of the fertility laboratory at the hospital named
    said Sunday. 

    Professor Robert Schoysman angrily rejected a Sunday Times report that
    the "clone," a four-year-old twin boy living in southern Belgium, was
    produced by a technique developed to improve the success rate of
    fertility treatment. 

    "This information is totally erroneous. It's madness. It's nothing to
    do with cloning," Schoysman told Reuters in a telephone interview. 

    "It's a fantasy triggered by Dolly," Schoysman added in a reference to
    heavy media coverage of a sheep cloned in Britain. 

    British scientists who created Dolly the sheep said last week that
    human cloning could be a reality in one or two years, adding that there
    should be international laws preventing such work. 

    They told a British parliamentary committee in testimony that work with
    human eggs would be distressing and offensive, but one said that if
    scientists somewhere were prepared to take such steps on a large scale
    -- up to 1,000 eggs -- "you might expect to make significant progress
    in one or two years." 

    Schoysman, 69,  who heads a 15-member team at the Van Helmont hospital
    in Vilvoorde, a northern suburb of Brussels, said that his laboratory
    practises in vitro fertilisation, handling 800 cases a year, and takes
    a totally different approach having nothing to do with cloning. 

    The laboratory uses a so-called hatching technique under which a frozen
    human embryo is thawed and the surrounding membrane rubbed so as to
    improve the chances of the egg escaping and becoming implanted in the
    mother's womb. 

    "It can later divide and produce identical twins," he said, insisting,
    "It's nothing to do with cloning." 

    Schoysman said details of the technique were first published in 1993 in
    the British scientific journal "Human Reproduction." 

    Cloning, which creates genetically identical individuals, can be done
    by splitting embryos or by transferring the nucleus of one cell into an
    egg -- the technique used for Dolly. 

    "We are not equipped to do that," he said, adding he doubted if the
    hospital's ethics' committee would accept cloning. 

    Asked if there was any legal ban on human cloning in Belgium, as in
    Britain, Schoysman said the issue had not yet been considered.
7.991IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Mon Mar 10 1997 10:3644
    RTw  09-Mar-97 15:56    

    Airbus close to choosing US, Korean partners-paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 9 (Reuter) - European aircraft consortium Airbus
    Industrie is close to signing U.S. Lockheed Martin and a South Korean
    company as partners to develop its 550-seat jumbo jet, a British
    newspaper said on Sunday. 

    The Observer said Airbus hoped to close a deal with Lockheed and either
    Korean Air Lines Co or Samsung Co within a month for the A3XX project,
    estimated to cost $8 billion. 

    An Airbus spokesman told Reuters it was in discussions with U.S. and
    Korean firms but said no partner has yet been chosen. 

    "There is full anticipation that firms from both those countries will
    be involved in the A3XX programme as partners," the spokesman said. 

    "I am at this stage am not able to confirm it has gone any further than
    discussions," he said. 

    He said Lockhead and Northrop Grumman Corp  had been mentioned in the
    press as possible U.S. partners, and Samsung was one of the South
    Korean firms involved in discusssions. 

    He said although Korean Air last week agreed to buy more Airbus
    passenger jets, it was unlikely to be involved with the A3XX project. 

    Last week Airbus predicted the world's major airlines would need to buy
    13,500 aircraft worth $1.1 trillion over the next 20 years to meet a
    tripling in demand for air travel and to replace older planes. 

    It said there would be demand for 1,440 aircraft bigger than the
    current 400-seat Boeing 747-400. In contrast its arch rival Boeing Co
    said the market for aircraft larger than 500 seats was only 480
    aircraft over the next 20 years. 

    The A3XX is a vital product for Airbus as it aims to break Boeing's
    monopoly of the large capacity airline market. 

    REUTER
7.992IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:11113
    AP 11-Mar-1997 1:00 EST   REF5483

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, March 11, 1997
   
    CLINTON-FREE-TV 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton, mired in controversies over
    campaign fund-raising, plans to ask the television industry Tuesday to
    provide free air time to political candidates. A White House official
    said the president would announce the creation of an advisory panel to
    study the "public interest obligations" of providing free TV time for
    political advertising. 
   
    GORE-FUND-RAISING 

    KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Former aides to Al Gore said he made
    fund-raising calls from his Senate office while running for president
    in 1988, The Knoxville News-Sentinel reported. One former aide told the
    newspaper that Gore made at least two dozen such calls in the spring of
    1987. Gore's former staffers, who spoke to the News-Sentinel on
    condition of anonymity, said they thought the fund-raising was part of
    running for president. Federal law says members of Congress cannot use
    their offices to make campaign fund-raising calls. 
   
    WHITE HOUSE-DATABASE 

    WASHINGTON -- The White House says a database it created with taxpayer
    funds was used only for official purposes. But the presidential aide
    who oversaw the project envisioned it as a key to rewarding donors with
    White House access, newly released documents show. The revelations were
    contained in passages of documents that had been censored and kept from
    congressional investigators for more than six months until Monday. It
    would be potentially illegal for the White House to use the database to
    aid the campaign. 
   
    SENATE-FUNDS-HEARING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Opening debate Monday on the breadth of the Senate's
    campaign finance investigation, a key Republican promised "a very broad
    scope" while Democrats complained the probe would be set up to bash
    them. Republicans were virtually assured of winning approval for a
    $4.35 million investigation focusing only on illegal fund-raising for
    the 1996 presidential and congressional campaigns. The vote is
    scheduled for Tuesday on the GOP proposal, which would exclude most of
    the $263 million in party-building "soft money" contributions. 
   
    U.S.-EGYPT 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Israel's decision to build new Jewish homes in
    Jerusalem was condemned by President Clinton and visiting Egyptian
    President Hosni Mubarak. But Clinton defended the U.S. veto of a U.N.
    resolution condemning Israel. Mubarak called the housing project a
    flagrant violation of Israel's commitment to defer the future of
    Jerusalem to negotiations with the Palestinians due to begin in
    mid-month. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -- Israel and the Palestinians appeared to be at
    an impasse Monday, with the Israelis refusing to increase their offer
    of West Bank land and Yasser Arafat accusing Israel of deceiving him.
    At the heart of the dispute is Israel's insistence that it alone
    determine the scope of the pullout, and the Palestinians' belief that
    Benjamin Netanyahu is doing more to satisfy his hard-line coalition
    partners than honor Israel's obligations. 
   
    TWA-CRASH 

    NEW YORK -- Red stains embedded in some seats on board TWA Flight 800
    are consistent with an adhesive and not with a missile or rocket
    propellant as suggested in a published report, a source says. The FBI
    and the National Transportation Safety Board dispute a report by the
    Press-Enterprise of Riverside, Calif., that evidence "points to a
    missile" in the July 17 crash of TWA Flight 800. The newspaper cited
    chemical stains on seat fabric that it said were consistent with
    solid-fuel propellant. 
   
    FLOODS 

    GRANDVIEW, Ind. (AP) -- The crest of the Ohio River, at its highest
    level in 33 years, headed for Evansville, Ind., the biggest city
    affected by its flooding since Louisville, Ky. Rough weather or water
    in West Virginia, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas and
    Mississippi have killed 59 people since March 1. Damage is in the
    hundreds of millions of dollars. 
   
    PRUDENTIAL 

    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- A federal judge has approved a class-action
    settlement to compensate life insurance policyholders victimized by
    deceptive sales pitches from agents of Prudential Insurance Co. of
    America. An accounting firm has said the settlement could cost the
    nation's largest life insurer as much as $2 billion. As many as 10.7
    million policyholders who bought Prudential policies from 1982 to 1995
    may qualify for compensation. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading at 121.58 yen, down 0.10 yen from
    late Monday. The Nikkei gained 126.38 points, to 18,240.27 at the end
    of the morning session. In New York, the Dow Jones closed at a record
    high of 7,079.39, up 78.50. The Nasdaq closed at 1322.72, up 10.92. 
   
    ALL-AMERICA TEAM 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Center Tim Duncan of Wake Forest was a unanimous
    repeat selection for the AP All-America college basketball team. The
    other first-team selections were Keith Van Horn of Utah, Ron Mercer of
    Kentucky, Raef LaFrentz of Kansas and Danny Fortson of Cincinnati. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARK KENNEDY 
7.993IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1235
    Updated at Monday, March 10, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.

    *Reuters World News Highlights*

    TIRANA - Albania's revolt spread through most of the south of the
    country as the army pulled back in disarray and rebels ignored a
    political deal thrashed out by President Sali Berisha and the
    opposition 

    JERUSALEM - Palestinians clashed with Israeli soldiers in the West
    Bank, deepening a crisis over an Israeli troop redeployment plan
    angrily rejected by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as a trick 

    TAIPEI - A jobless journalist doused himself with gasoline in a Taiwan
    airliner and hijacked it to China, where he complained of political
    repression by Taiwan and requested asylum, officials said 

    KINSHASA - Rebels closing in on Zaire's city of Kisangani are
    concentrating their forces on the road leading into town from the
    southeast, military sources said 

    KATHMANDU - Nepal's political crisis ended when King Birendra named
    Lokendra Bahadur Chand as the Himalayan kingdom's fifth prime minister
    in seven years

    BEIJING - China slammed the United States for what it said were
    irresponsible and wrong actions over reports that Beijing's embassy had
    made illegal political donations to the U.S. Democratic Party 

    VATICAN CITY - In a move that put it at odds with the United States and
    other countries that have tried to isolate Col. Muammar Gaddafi, the
    Vatican established full diplomatic relations with Libya 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters.
                           
7.994IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:13104
    AP 11-Mar-1997 1:12 EST   REF5552

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Abortion Lie Devalues Advocacy

    By CALVIN WOODWARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- When an abortion-rights advocate admitted lying
    recently, the surprise was less over the deceit than in his owning up
    to it. 

    This is a town where interest groups do research that invariably
    supports their cause, where polls on issues mirror the beliefs of their
    sponsors and where the notion of being persuaded by "debate" is almost
    archaic. 

    That is not lying, but neither is it completely honest examination. 

    "If I know your sect, I anticipate your argument," the 19th century
    essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson once said. People come to an issue having
    "bound their eyes with one or another handkerchief." 

    One of the unusual features of the struggle over so-called partial
    birth abortion is that it has jolted some politicians and ethicists out
    of usual patterns of thinking and actually changed some minds. 

    Enough abortion-rights members of Congress crossed that issue's great
    divide last year to give a proposed ban on the procedure a veto-proof
    majority in the House -- but not the Senate. 

    Supporters of a ban are trying again, emboldened by statements of Ron
    Fitzsimmons, executive director of the National Coalition of Abortion
    Providers, that the procedure is much more common than he had said and
    that it often is used on healthy fetuses. 

    In his mea culpa, he called on fellow abortion-rights supporters to go
    beyond "spins" and "half-truths," as he told the publication American
    Medical News. 

    "I think what he's done is a public service," says Stanley Renshon, who
    teaches political psychology at City University of New York. He means
    the admission. 

    To those tempted to write off the misstatements as predictable
    political behavior, he appeals for a less jaded attitude. 

    "In the public arena this is actually poison," said Renshon, who writes
    about "lying for justice" in an upcoming book. "A lot of people think a
    nip here and a tuck there with the truth isn't all that bad. 

    "Once they do that on a regular basis it becomes harder and harder to
    distinguish the means from the end. Deception is a slippery slope." 

    Both sides on abortion have played up polls illustrating how Americans
    want just what the groups are fighting for, even though surveys on that
    topic are exquisitely sensitive to the precise questions. People
    generally support abortion rights, with limits. 

    The proposed ban would allow the partial birth abortion to be used if
    necessary to save a woman's life. 

    President Clinton, who justified his veto last year partly on the basis
    of the procedure's supposed rarity -- "just a few hundred a year" --
    still opposes a ban unless the exemption is broadened to include a
    woman's health. 

    Various sources have put the number of such abortions each year in the
    thousands. Fitzsimmons said he "lied" about it in an 1995 ABC interview
    because he wanted to voice the "party line." 

    Emerson's attack on entrenched thinking was cited in an address a few
    years ago by Hunter R. Rawlings III, then president of the University
    of Iowa and now president at Cornell University. 

    Rawlings decried "Groupthink" in academia in general and the culture
    wars in particular, a feeling that everyone was talking and no one was
    listening. 

    "Groupthink chokes off debate, stunts intellectual development and
    stifles individual expression," he said. "Arguments are stripped of
    nuance; individuals become ciphers, their book titles, hot-buttons,"
    Rawlings said. 

    Sometimes when facts don't fit in politics, the inconvenience is simply
    brushed aside. 

    In 1995, congressional advocates of an English-only law commissioned
    and released a congressional General Accounting Office study they said
    showed an "overwhelming" number of foreign-language publications being
    produced by the government. 

    The study actually found 265 foreign-language government titles out of
    some 400,000 checked. Most dealt with health, safety and other matters
    that would be exempted from the proposed English-only law. 

    Scholars point to the tobacco industry playing down hazards and some
    homeless or property-rights advocates romanticizing the people they
    want to help as other examples of reality being misrepresented. 

    "It goes on often enough," said Loyal Rue, University of Iowa
    philosophy teacher, "so that we should keep our eyes squinted." 
7.995IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:13109
    AP 11-Mar-1997 0:50 EST   REF5474

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Senate Studies Campaign Funding

    By LARRY MARGASAK

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Opening debate Monday on the breadth of the Senate's
    campaign finance investigation, a key Republican promised "a very broad
    scope" while Democrats complained the probe would be set up to bash
    them. 

    Republicans were virtually assured of winning approval for a $4.35
    million investigation focusing only on illegal fund-raising for the
    1996 presidential and congressional campaigns. 

    The vote is scheduled for Tuesday on the GOP proposal, which would
    exclude most of the $263 million in party-building "soft money"
    contributions collected by both parties for last year's federal
    elections. 

    This is a fast-growing form of unlimited campaign money given by
    corporations, unions and wealthy individuals. But it would largely fall
    outside the Republican-proposed scope because most of these donations
    are legal. 

    Meanwhile, Democrats gave The Associated Press a copy of a 1995
    invitation by congressional Republicans to donors who would pay
    specific amounts to meet with GOP congressional leaders in government
    buildings. 

    For $15,000, donors were offered breakfast with then-Senate Majority
    Leader Bob Dole in the Senate Caucus Room. For $45,000, they could
    attend that breakfast and then lunch with House Speaker Newt Gingrich
    in the Great Hall of the Library of Congress. The $100,000 donors were
    offered those benefits, a reception with GOP presidential candidates
    and the option of requesting a congressman or senator to sit with them
    at a dinner in Washington. 

    "Delta, the official airline for the 1995 Republican Senate-House
    Dinner, is proud to offer special rates for travel to Washington, D.C.,
    to attend the dinner on May 16, 1995," the invitation said. 

    In another development, The Washington Post reported that a senior
    counsel for the House Commerce Committee called investment companies
    about making $100,000 donations to the GOP, days after Congress passed
    legislation reforming the securities and mutual fund industry. 

    David Cavicke worked closely with representatives from the investment
    industry in drafting legislation that would ease many regulatory laws
    governing the investment world, the newspaper said in Tuesday editions.
    Congress ultimately passed a watered-down format of Cavicke's proposed
    legislation. 

    In the debate of the investigation, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman
    of the Senate Rules Committee, strongly defended the Republican
    proposal to confine the investigation to illegal -- rather than merely
    improper -- activities. 

    "'Illegal' is a very broad scope," Warner argued. "It goes beyond ...
    just assertions of criminal violations." 

    Warner said he had confidence that Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., who
    will lead the investigation, would properly interpret the scope set by
    the Senate. 

    But Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, ranking Democrat of Thompson's
    Governmental Affairs Committee, accused Republicans of setting
    parameters that would focus all attention on Democrats. 

    "It is a game in which legal but improper congressional fund raising is
    kept off the table while a parade of presidential fund-raisers for the
    Democratic party and the Clinton-Gore campaign are brought before the
    cameras, in televised hearings, to give the impression that all the
    problems are with the Democratic Party and there's no need to change
    the laws," Glenn said. 

    Republican Sens. Orrin Hatch of Utah and Thad Cochran of Mississippi
    used colored charts to recite a long list of questionable Democratic
    fund raising -- especially money collected by three Asian-Americans:
    Charles Yah Lin Trie, John Huang and Johnny Chung. 

    Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., said his party also wants
    to link the Senate's approval of the investigation to a July 4 date for
    voting on campaign finance reform. 

    "But I suspect that at the end of the day the (Republican) resolution
    will pass," he told reporters. 

    Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., whose Governmental Affairs Committee will
    conduct the investigation, has yet to provide his definition of
    "illegal" actions that would meet the Republican criteria. The word is
    not easily defined in this case, because it may take a substantial
    investigation to learn whether certain activities were illegal or just
    improper. 

    Nonetheless, Thompson believes certain actions clearly would fall under
    the committee's scope, said committee spokesman Paul Clark. 

    "No matter what the definition of the scope in the official sense,
    Senator Thompson is going to address the most important and serious
    matters first: espionage, the influence of foreign money, quid pro quos
    for policy, laundering of funds. 

    "All these are clearly illegal areas that will be addressed and
    prioritized by the chairman." 
7.996IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1360
    AP 11-Mar-1997 0:18 EST   REF5319

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    NAACP: Army Rape Charges Coerced

    ABERDEEN, Md. (AP) -- Four female Army recruits contend they were
    coerced into making false rape allegations against instructors at the
    Aberdeen Proving Ground and will recant the accusations, an NAACP
    official said Monday. 

    The four women admit to having consensual sex with trainers at the
    military training facility, but deny they were raped, said Janice
    Grant, president of the Harford County chapter of the NAACP. 

    The women said they made the rape accusations to avoid prosecution for
    having consensual sex with superiors, she said. Consensual sex between
    superiors and subordinates is prohibited in the military. 

    Ms. Grant said the four women will appear along with two of the male
    trainers at a news conference Tuesday morning. 

    "All of these women were given some promises, such as immunity, and now
    the military says you don't have any immunity. They were all alone,
    they did not have any counsel, and they were badgered," Ms. Grant said.

    Post spokesman John Yaquiant denied the women were coerced into making
    false accusations. 

    "All we want is the truth. It does us no good to have allegations that
    will not hold up," he said. "It's not normal practice to offer somebody
    some kind of inducement to make a false statement or a statement of any
    kind." 

    The Harford and Baltimore county chapters of the National Association
    for the Advancement of Colored People have called for an independent
    investigation of the sexual misconduct scandal at Aberdeen.

    The civil rights group contends the Army has unfairly targeted black
    soldiers based on complaints of white female recruits. The Army denies
    the charge, saying its investigation into victims' allegations is color
    blind. 

    The four women are white, Ms. Grant said. 

    Last week, a female trainee said Army investigators coerced her into
    stating she had consensual sex with a trainer at the Aberdeen. 

    Pvt. Toni Moreland, 21, of St. Louis, said she only told military
    investigators she had sex with an instructor after they threatened to
    jail him on a rape charge if she did not admit they had consensual sex.

    Seven drill instructors at Aberdeen have been charged with sexual
    harassment, rape or consensual sex with recruits. Four of them are
    facing courts-martial, the others have been discharged or dealt with
    administratively. 

    About a dozen others were suspended as well and are either under
    investigation or have already faced administrative sanctions, Yaquiant
    said. 
7.997IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1335
    AP 10-Mar-1997 23:48 EST   REF5281

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Sultan Counters Sex Lawsuit

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The sultan of Brunei filed a motion to dismiss a
    lawsuit accusing him of forcing a former Miss USA into sexual slavery. 

    Shannon Marketic's federal lawsuit is "frivolous," sultan spokesman
    Alan Capper said in a statement Monday. 

    Marketic's lawyer could not be reached for comment after business hours
    Monday. 

    Marketic, 26, sued the sultan, claiming she was drugged, sexually
    abused and held captive for 32 days last year in his 1,788-room palace,
    the New York Post reported March 2. 

    Crowned Miss California in 1992 and Miss USA in 1993-94, Marketic
    claimed she accepted a deal to do promotional work for one of the
    sultan's businesses, the Post reported. 

    Instead, the Post said, her passport and return ticket were confiscated
    upon arrival at the palace last summer, and was told she was expected
    to engage in sexual activity at all-night parties. 

    The lawsuit claims she and other young women were "put under the
    influence of some gas" that caused them to fall asleep the first night
    at the palace, the newspaper said. When she awoke, her clothing was
    "disheveled." 

    The 50-year-old sultan is one of the richest men of the world.
    Unofficial estimates say the oil and natural gas baron is worth $37
    billion. 
7.998IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1381
    AP 10-Mar-1997 22:49 EST   REF5843

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Feds Reject TWA Missile Report

    By RICHARD PYLE

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Federal investigators on Monday disputed the latest
    report that TWA Flight 800 may have been downed by a missile, saying
    the conclusions of a newspaper account are not supported by facts. 

    A joint statement from the FBI and the National Transportation Safety
    Board came after the Press-Enterprise of Riverside, Calif., said newly
    disclosed evidence "points to a missile" in the July 17 crash into the
    Atlantic Ocean off Long Island. 

    The newspaper cited reddish stains on seat fabric that it said
    contained chemicals consistent with solid-fuel propellant. It also said
    sources "inside the investigation" provided documents from the FBI and
    NTSB indicating that a dummy-warhead missile may have smashed through
    the plane. 

    A source close to the investigation told The Associated Press on Monday
    that the newspaper report didn't mention chemicals that would be
    present in rocket fuel. The chemicals that are covered in the report
    are consistent with adhesive used to fasten plastic backs to airplane
    seats, the source said. 

    James Kallstrom, the assistant FBI director who heads the probe, said
    the investigative team "continues to look at all the theories --
    missile, bomb and mechanical -- and has refused from the very beginning
    to speculate on what caused this terrible tragedy." 

    "We do not have the critical mass of any of these theories with the
    certainty we would need to say what happened to the airplane,"
    Kallstrom said. 

    Earlier, the FBI and NTSB said in a joint statement that the
    newspaper's findings were wrong. "The articles' resulting conclusions
    are not supported by the facts," the statement said. 

    The newspaper said Monday that theories center on either a terrorist
    missile or friendly fire -- "possibly a secret Navy weapons test gone
    wrong." 

    The resurrection of the friendly-fire theory brought a new round of
    strenuous denials by government investigators. 

    Navy officials reiterated that no weapons tests were conducted off New
    York's Long Island that evening. They say there is no way the peacetime
    Navy could cover up an event that would be known in minutes by hundreds
    of people. 

    The FBI and NTSB have condemned earlier versions of the friendly-fire
    theory as bunk, but such speculation has thrived on the Internet. 

    The Press-Enterprise said its inquiry suggested a missile hit the plane
    on the right side in front of the wing and ripped through the cabin,
    leading to a massive explosion or fire in the center fuel tank. 

    The newspaper's findings relied heavily on information supplied by
    James Sanders, a retired California policeman and auto-accident
    investigator who has probed the crash on his own. 

    Sanders, whose wife works for TWA, said he became engrossed in the
    crash after sources in the investigation gave him documents and pieces
    of seat fabric. Sanders said he had the cloth analyzed. 

    The newspaper also said unexplained blips on FAA radar tapes may be the
    track of a missile racing toward the jet. The AP source said radar
    tapes show no such activity and the one in question might be bogus. 

    The newspaper said Richard Russell, a retired United Airlines pilot who
    has espoused the Navy missile theory since August, owned the tape and
    would make it public this week. In a phone interview at his home in
    Daytona, Fla., Russell said he did not plan to release the tapes, but
    that the French magazine Paris-Match would publish three frames this
    week showing a blip closing at high speed on TWA 800. 
7.999IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1345
    AP 10-Mar-1997 22:36 EST   REF5838

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Blondie' Cartoonist Drake Dies

    NORWALK, Conn. (AP) -- Stan Drake, who illustrated the comic strip
    "Blondie" and created the classic romance strip "The Heart of Juliet
    Jones," died Monday. He was 75. 

    Drake died at a Norwalk hospital following a long illness, a family
    spokeswoman said. 

    "The Heart of Juliet Jones," a collaboration between Drake and writer
    Elliott Caplin, debuted in March 1953. King Features syndicated it as
    competition for "Mary Worth," the day's leading soap opera strip. At
    the peak of its popularity, "The Heart of Juliet Jones" appeared in 600
    newspapers. 

    Drake worked from photographs to achieve his realistic effects. His
    work on the romance strip earned him the top story strip cartoonist of
    the year award from the National Cartoonists Society in 1969, 1970 and
    1972. 

    In 1989, he turned the romance strip over to Frank Bolle to devote his
    time to illustrating "Blondie," created in 1930 by Chic Young and seen
    in thousands of newspapers worldwide in 55 languages. 

    "Stan Drake was one of the masters," King Features comics editor Jay
    Kennedy said. "His craftsmanship was astounding. His control of the pen
    was so great that you could enlarge one of his 2-inch drawings to a
    poster the size of a door and every nuance would be there as if he drew
    the poster that size to begin with." 

    Drake studied at the Arts Student League in New York, where he worked
    for an advertising agency and opened his own studio in 1949. 

    Drake also created "Pop Idols," a Sunday page about rock stars. Between
    1980 and 1986 he produced "Kelly Green," a series of five books created
    with "Annie" cartoonist Leonard Starr. Drake also free-lanced for
    Marvel Comics. 

    An avid golfer, Drake contributed instruction illustrations to Golf
    Digest magazine and illustrated the book "The Touch System for Better
    Golf." 
7.1000IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1328
    AP 10-Mar-1997 21:48 EST   REF5815

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Fugitive' DNA Findings Probed

    CLEVELAND (AP) -- A judge will hear new DNA findings that defense
    lawyers say support Dr. Sam Sheppard's famous alibi that it was a
    bushy-haired intruder who beat his pregnant wife to death in 1954. 

    Cuyahoga Common Plea Judge Ron Suster scheduled a May 5 hearing on DNA
    evidence that could clear Sheppard's name in the killing and help his
    son collect money for the 10 years his father spent in prison. 

    Sam Reese Sheppard of Oakland, Calif., wants the judge to vindicate his
    father, which would allow him to file a monetary claim for $250,000
    against the state of Ohio, plus compensation for financial losses. 

    Sheppard defense lawyers say recently completed DNA tests on blood
    taken from the crime scene strengthens their claim that Marilyn
    Sheppard was killed by an intruder. 

    Sheppard steadfastly denied that he killed his wife. He said a
    bushy-haired intruder killed her, then attacked him. 

    Sheppard, an osteopathic surgeon whose story inspired "The Fugitive,"
    had his conviction overturned on appeal after serving a decade in
    prison and was acquitted in a second trial. He died in 1970. 
7.1001IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1382
    AP 11-Mar-1997 1:09 EST   REF5551

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cartoon Mutant Storms Japan

    By JOJI SAKURAI

    Associated Press Writer

    TOKYO (AP) -- Imagine the scruffy face of Popeye combined with the
    lithe figure of Barbie, then mass-marketed as a doll that quickly
    becomes a big seller. 

    Using two icons from Japan's popular comic books, a Japanese company
    has combined the face of Bakabon, a mangy drunken gardener, and the
    body of demure housewife Sazae-san. The new image, called Sazaebon, is
    appearing on key chains, towels, pencils, T-shirts and piggy banks, and
    is tickling the funnybones of children. 

    But it also has triggered a major fight over copyrights. The small
    Taisei Co. didn't get permission from the creators of the two comic
    book characters, both of whom are considering trying to block the sale
    of all Sazaebon products. 

    "If they can get away with this, what's the use of having copyright
    laws?" Fujio Akatsuka, the creator of the Bakabon series, told The
    Associated Press. 

    The Taisei Co. doesn't appear intimidated. 

    It claims it significantly altered the original characters -- including
    the number of whiskers sticking out of Sazaebon's nose -- making it
    unnecessary to get permission from the other companies. 

    Bakabon's stubby face and three protruding buck teeth are framed in the
    prim locks of Sazae-san's hair and attached to her body. 

    Taisei started selling the figures through its Osaka outlet a year ago,
    and the products quickly sold out in stores throughout the city. 

    Without spending anything on advertising, Sazaebon has ridden a wave of
    word-of-mouth endorsement and media hype. One Osaka store sells more
    than 1,000 Sazaebon-related goods a day. 

    For more than 30 years, Sazae-san has been Japan's favorite mother
    figure, a potent symbol of middle-class bliss. Bakabon, a fumbling,
    alcohol-sodden misfit, has endeared himself to the Japanese. His
    principal quality -- a boundless conviction of his own genius -- lands
    him in scrapes and misadventures that only luck saves him from. 

    The Osaka phenomenon recently moved to Tokyo, where shoppers are often
    keen on fads, and young people are snapping up every Sazaebon product
    in some toy stores, sometimes in a few hours. 

    "I got a big delivery of key chains in the morning. They were all gone
    by noon," said one toy vendor in Tokyo's popular Harajuku district. 

    The intense popularity and media interest that the Sazaebon products
    are generating can be traced to the influence of comic books in
    Japanese society. Roughly 2 billion paperback comic books and magazines
    are sold every year, 40 percent of all Japan's printed material. 

    On the surface, the legal aspects of the controversy over the new
    character appear to be clear. 

    "Show the doll to 100 people and they will all know it came from
    Sazae-san and Bakabon," said Masuo Handa, a law professor at Aoyama
    Gakuin University and a leading expert on copyright issues. "This is a
    clear case of copyright violation." 

    In practice, however, things may not be so simple. Litigation in Japan
    is a notoriously long process, and copyright suits are particularly
    time-consuming. Many copyright violators simply gamble on not getting
    punished, Handa said. 

    "The whole concept of intellectual property rights has never really
    caught on in Japan, and there is a general feeling that these issues
    aren't important," he said. 

    Many renegade companies also pirate foreign cartoon and film
    characters. 
7.1002IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1365
    AP 11-Mar-1997 0:26 EST   REF5324

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Germany Confirm U.S. Spy Attempt

    By TONY CZUCZKA

    Associated Press Writer

    BONN, Germany (AP) -- German officials confirmed Monday that a U.S.
    diplomat had tried to recruit an official in Germany's Economics
    Ministry as a spy for Washington. 

    The news magazine Der Spiegel reported Saturday that the United States
    pulled a CIA employee from its Bonn embassy after he was accused of
    spying, a first in postwar U.S.-German relations. 

    "One of our officials was approached," Economics Ministry spokeswoman
    Christine Kern said. "He informed the appropriate authorities, and they
    took over the case." 

    The report, which did not identify the diplomat, said Germany's
    counterespionage agency had demanded he leave the country. 

    But, citing U.S. intelligence sources, The Washington Post reported
    that the diplomat was not seeking information on Germany, but rather
    about a third country, probably Iran. 

    The diplomat was expelled, the paper reported in its Tuesday's
    editions, because the German government wanted to stress its desire to
    be kept abreast of U.S. intelligence activities, not because it
    believed Washington was trying to steal economic secrets from Germany,
    as was reported here initially. 

    The Der Spiegel report said the diplomat had been seeking data on
    high-technology projects. High-tech areas covered by the Economics
    Ministry include aeronautics and space as well as the monitoring of
    sensitive exports to non-Western countries. 

    Kern declined to comment on details of the case. The U.S. Embassy, a
    State Department spokesman in Washington and a German government
    spokesman also declined comment. 

    Bernd Schmidbauer, Chancellor Helmut Kohl's intelligence adviser,
    played down the affair's impact on ties with Washington. 

    "We're partners and we treat each other like partners," he said. "That
    must have priority." 

    The Bonn government has demanded the United States reduce its spy
    presence in Germany, a legacy of the Cold War, but Washington has
    refused, Der Spiegel said. 

    Unlike the United States, Germany bars its intelligence services from
    conducting economic espionage. 

    "No reasonable person will deny that friendly nations are also spying
    on us," Willfried Penner, a member of the German Parliament's
    intelligence committee, said over the weekend. "That includes tricks by
    American intelligence." 

    A similar case emerged in 1995 when the French government accused five
    Americans, four of them U.S. diplomats, of trying to recruit high-level
    government aides. 
7.1003IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1344
    AP 11-Mar-1997 0:05 EST   REF5310

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    German Miners Tie Up Traffic

    BONN, Germany (AP) -- Angry miners traveled to Germany's capital and
    blockaded a main road Monday to protest government plans to slash aid
    to the coal industry. 

    About 1,000 miners took part in the Bonn demonstration, in a
    coordinated action with some 20,000 miners in Saarland state and
    thousands more in the Ruhr, who occupied at least two city halls.
    Saarland and the Ruhr are Germany's main coal-mining areas. 

    About 200 protesters came to Bonn on flashy, high-speed motorcycles and
    others came by car. They blockaded the main street through the
    government quarter, causing a major traffic jam. 

    Those without motorcycles milled around in the street, many wearing
    hard hats and soot-covered mining overalls. 

    Detlev Lerche pitched his tent between Bonn's art museum and the
    headquarters of the Free Democrats, junior partners in the three-party
    coalition of Chancellor Helmut Kohl and a main force behind the subsidy
    cuts. 

    Like other protesters, he brought enough food to last him through what
    the miners said would be a 36-hour protest. 

    "These subsidy cuts are going to put a lot of us out of work. There are
    more than 4 million people in Germany out of work. If they can't find
    jobs, how are we supposed to?" the 37-year-old Lerche said. 

    German coal is expensive by world standards so the government
    subsidizes the industry to keep it alive. Kohl's government announced
    last week that it would cut annual coal subsidies from $4.1 billion to
    $2.2 billion by 2005. 

    The union IG Bergbau says that would wipe out two-thirds of the
    industry's 90,000 jobs. 

    The protests and road blockades began last week after Kohl's
    announcement. 
7.1004IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1342
    AP 10-Mar-1997 23:58 EST   REF5292

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Seoul Lawmakers Pass Labor Bill

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korea's National Assembly adopted new
    measures Monday to revise a labor law that sparked violent strikes in
    December, but a major union group said the changes would not be enough. 

    The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, the umbrella union group that
    led three weeks of strikes, threatened to stage another round in May.
    But with flagging support, it was uncertain whether the group would be
    successful. 

    The four bills passed Monday were a compromise worked out in weeks of
    negotiations between governing and opposition party lawmakers, after
    President Kim Young-sam ordered the law changed to end the crippling
    strikes. 

    The only opposing votes Monday in the 299-member single chamber
    National Assembly came from nine Democratic Party legislators and one
    independent. 

    The Democratic Party, the smallest of the three opposition parties,
    said it opposed the labor package because it did not meet international
    standards for labor freedom. 

    The compromise package immediately legalizes multiple union umbrella
    groups, making the previously banned union confederation legal. But it
    puts off allowing multiple unions in the workplace until 2002. 

    A provision that would allow companies to fire workers more easily was
    delayed for two years, but unions were angry that it was even included
    in the package. 

    Unions also protested a provision that would allow companies to
    increase working hours. 

    The Dec. 26 labor bill had put off union freedoms while making it
    easier for companies to fire workers starting this year. Thousands of
    workers started walking off their jobs within hours of its passage. 
7.1005IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1436
    AP 10-Mar-1997 23:47 EST   REF5279

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    China Mine Death Toll Set at 86

    BEIJING (AP) -- A gas explosion at a privately-run coal mine in central
    Henan province killed 86 people and injured 12 others, according to an
    official report seen in Beijing on Tuesday. 

    The blast occurred March 4 at the Red Dirt mine, in Nanjie Village,
    Henan province, about 470 miles south of Beijing, the newspaper
    Yangcheng Evening News reported. 

    Officials said the explosion was caused by an accumulation of gases
    inside the mine over the long Chinese New Year holiday. 

    Local mines had been ordered to conduct safety inspections before
    allowing work to resume, but the managers of the Red Dirt mine ordered
    workers back into the pits before doing so, said the report, which was
    published Monday in the southern city of Guangzhou. 

    Among the 86 people killed in the blast were two safety inspectors, it
    added. Casualties were high because miners had dug tunnels randomly
    throughout the hill, without taking any special safety precautions. 

    The owners of the mine fled after the explosion and are now being
    sought by police, the report added. 

    Each year, thousands of miners die in accidents at China's
    disaster-prone mines. 

    The government has said it plans to shut down unsafe mines and punish
    operators responsible for recent mine catastrophes. The safety drive is
    aimed at thousands of small, often unsupervised mines opened by
    individuals and township governments. 
7.1006IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1456
    AP 10-Mar-1997 22:14 EST   REF5821

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ancient Tomb Found in U.A.E.

    By FAIZA SALEH AMBAH

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Archaeologists working in the Ras
    Al Khaimah emirate have uncovered what they believe is the largest
    ancient tomb ever found on the Arabian Peninsula. 

    The circular tomb, estimated to be more than 4,300 years old, belonged
    to the Umm Al Nar civilization that lived in what is now the United
    Arab Emirates and the Gulf state of Oman, said Briton Derek Kennet,
    resident archeologist at the National Museum of Ras Al Khaimah.

    He told The Associated Press on Monday that the tomb, built of carved
    limestone blocks, is about 10 feet tall and more than 47 feet in
    diameter. While hundreds of tombs belonging to the civilization have
    been found, Kennet said the most recent discovery is the largest one
    yet. 

    Kennet compared the quality of the craftsmanship in the tomb to the
    pyramids of the ancient Egyptians. 

    "The technological ability to work stone -- and the fact that it's a
    funerary structure -- makes the tomb comparable to the pyramids," he
    said. "This is a very important discovery because it shows that the Umm
    Al Nar had the wealth and ability to build a monument like this." 

    Little is known about the Umm Al Nar, which in English is "Mother of
    Fire." They were wealthy traders who lived along the route between
    modern-day Pakistan and Iraq. 

    The Umm Al Nar civilization died out about 2000 B.C., after their
    standards in building, pottery and health declined. Archaeologists are
    still trying to determine why. 

    A quarter of the new tomb has been dug out, and the rest will be
    explored next year by a six-member team of archeologists from the
    University of Sydney in Australia and Oxford University in England. 

    The remains of 102 people have been found, and experts believe the
    tomb's 12 rooms could hold 500 bodies. 

    "Some of the bones we found were burnt -- cremated and then buried --
    which we can't explain, because we don't yet fully understand the
    religious rites of the Umm Al Nar," Kennet said. 

    Among the belongings unearthed with the dead were red beads believed to
    be from India, as well as pottery, bronze rings and spears. 

    About 1,000 tombs belonging to the Umm Al Nar have been uncovered
    during the past 40 years in the Emirates and Oman. Ras Al Khaimah is
    one of the seven emirates that comprise the United Arab Emirates. 
7.1007IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1440
    AP 10-Mar-1997 21:23 EST   REF5808

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Turk Minister Vows Torture End

    By YALMAN ONARAN

    Associated Press Writer

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- In an unusual acknowledgement from a high-level
    official, Deputy Premier Tansu Ciller conceded Monday that torture is a
    problem in Turkey and announced a campaign to get rid of the practice. 

    Ciller, who also is foreign minister, called a news conference to
    announce the effort. The move follows statements by European Christian
    Democrat leaders last week that Turkey should not be admitted to the
    European Union. The country's human rights abuses have been cited as a
    major hurdle for membership. 

    "When torture is mentioned anywhere in the world, Turkey's name is
    uttered," Ciller told reporters. "This is a shame we cannot bear. ...
    Torture will be wiped out from our nation." 

    Previously, Turkish officials have contended that torture is not
    systematic, and that those responsible for isolated incidents are
    punished. 

    Ciller said governors and police chiefs of every province would be held
    responsible for stopping torture, but listed no specific measures. She
    promised to make unannounced visits to police stations to verify
    progress. 

    The deputy premier, who fought for EU membership during her own
    premiership in 1993-96, has continued those efforts while a member of
    the current Islamic-led coalition. 

    She also promised to amend laws to allow more press freedom, and
    pledged to push for an accounting of more than 800 people who relatives
    claim were abducted by Turkish security forces. 
7.1008IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1438
    AP 10-Mar-1997 20:34 EST   REF5787

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: U.S. Youth Overweight

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Hold the french fries and turn off the television. A
    new study confirms the need for more young people to do just that. 

    The study, published in the March issue of the journal Pediatrics,
    tracked 11,654 people in a Louisiana town. The researchers found the
    rate of those overweight from ages 5 through 24 doubled over 20 years. 

    Among the youngest group -- from ages 5 to 14 -- 15 percent were
    overweight in 1973, compared with 32 percent at the end of the study in
    1994. Those examined in 1994 were an average 7.48 pounds heavier than
    their earlier counterparts. 

    The largest average weight increase -- 12.3 pounds -- was in the middle
    group, those from ages 15 to 17. Fifteen percent were overweight in
    1973, compared with 30 percent in 1994. 

    In the oldest age group -- 19 to 24 -- 15 percent were overweight at
    the start of the study and 26 percent at the finish, with the latter
    8.3 pounds heavier than the earlier subjects. 

    The findings by researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention and at Tulane University echo a CDC report in October 1995
    that found the number of overweight children had more than doubled in
    30 years. 

    Numerous other studies have documented an increase in overweight U.S.
    schoolchildren and adults, the authors note. All point to diet, lack of
    activity and increased television-viewing as probable culprits.

    Overweight children have an increased risk of being overweight adults
    and developing heart disease and respiratory ailments, among other
    conditions. 
7.1009IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1432
    AP 10-Mar-1997 18:01 EST   REF5688

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Salmonella Rises With Iguanas

    ELK GROVE VILLAGE, Ill. (AP) -- Cases of salmonella linked to iguanas
    have risen sharply along with the reptiles' popularity as pets.

    The number of iguana-linked salmonella infections in people has climbed
    from one reported case in 1989 to 67 in 1995, the Centers for Disease
    Control and Prevention reported in the March issue of the journal
    Pediatrics. 

    Salmonella can lead to meningitis and other serious complications,
    especially in infants. In October 1995, a 3-year-old Indiana boy died
    of salmonella apparently caused by his family's iguana. 

    The number of iguanas imported into the United States climbed from
    41,183 in 1982 to 569,774 in 1994. The lizards are native to South
    America. 

    The researchers studied 32 cases of iguana-linked salmonella reported
    in 1994. Twenty-six of the cases were in infants. All but one had
    diarrhea, a common symptom of salmonella, which also can cause
    abdominal cramps and fever. Eleven victims were hospitalized for an
    average of 3 1/2 days. 

    The researchers said that pediatricians, veterinarians and pet store
    owners should warn their patients and customers of the risks and teach
    them precautions such as washing their hands after touching iguanas and
    keeping the reptiles away from places where food is prepared. 
7.1010IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1428
    RTw  11-Mar-97 05:26    

    Fatal E.Coli bacteria strain surfaces in Hong Kong

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    HONG KONG, March 11 (Reuter) - A fatal strain of the E.coli bacteria
    blamed for a rash of food-poisoning deaths in Japan and Scotland has
    surfaced in Hong Kong, government officials said on Tuesday. 

    The strain, blamed for the deaths of at least 11 people in Japan and
    nearly 20 in Scotland, was found in a consignment of raw minced beef on
    sale at a Japanese-owned supermarket. 

    A health department official said the beef came from cattle imported
    from China but slaughtered in Hong Kong and the contamination was
    discovered in routine monitoring established since the deadly outbreak
    in Japan. 

    "It is believed to be an isolated incident," the official said.

    Health inspectors took samples on March 3 while the beef was on sale
    but did not get a positive reading back until March 8, by which time
    the entire 32-kg (70.4-pound) batch of contaminated beef had been sold. 

    There have been no reports of sickness, however. 

    REUTER
7.1011IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:14130
    RTw  11-Mar-97 03:33    

    FEATURE-Showbiz, humour take over weather forecasts

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Alister Doyle 

    ISSY-LES-MOULINEAUX, France, March 11 (Reuter) - Hoping to enliven
    reports of isobars and sunny spells, many of the world's weather
    forecasters are enlisting high-tech show business and a splash of
    humour. 

    Younger celebrity presenters, backed by props such as virtual reality
    clouds and satellite graphics, are replacing an older generation of
    sober meteorologists who seemed more at ease with barometers than
    cameras. 

    Presenters who use humour won many of the top awards at the weather
    forecasters' equivalent of the Oscars in a Paris suburb in late
    February, regaled by French meteorologists who came on stage to perform
    "Singing in the Rain." 

    "I wake people up and send them to work smiling and happy," said
    Canada's Patrick de Bellefeuille, 36, a morning presenter who was
    crowned best forecaster out of 97 competitors from 49 nations at the
    Seventh International Weather Festival. 

    In Israel, Channel 2 uses a computer-generated frog that gets frazzled
    by lightning, for instance, if a storm is looming. 

    In Britain, Fred Talbot of Granada TV leaps around a huge floating map
    of the British isles, sometimes accompanied by a model dressed as a
    mermaid. On one British video channel, a dwarf bounces on a trampoline
    below a weather map. 

    On another channel, one of 12 outlandish characters now introduces the
    weather report. Brellina, the woman who warns of rain, is dressed in
    black rubber and umbrellas with a shower gushing from her head. Shivra,
    who represents cold, is a large ball of blue ostrich feathers. 

    GARISH TIES AND TALK OF THE CAN-CAN 

    Olga Groznayaok, a presenter for Russia's NTV-ATV, took time in her
    videotaped entry at the five-day festival to talk about dancers in the
    can-can. 

    Almost all of the male entrants wore garish ties or jackets. 

    But forecasters at the festival, whose honorary president is G.O.P.
    Obasi, the head of the U.N.'s World Meteorological Organisation (WMO),
    agree humour and a showbiz style can backfire. 

    "A lot of people decry humour because they think it's a dilution of
    excellence," said Francis Wilson of Britain's Sky Television, who won a
    presenters' award this year and was overall winner in 1995. 

    "You risk going more away from your isobars and more into 'how short is
    the skirt going to be tonight?'," he said. Wilson said he uses a
    light-hearted approach, with a dry humour but with the focus clearly on
    the weather. 

    "The weather can be very boring. You need to give it life and
    personality," said Danny Roup of Israel's Channel 2 who won last year's
    crown. 

    He said the weather, at the end of the evening news, could be a relief
    from often grim news in Israel. But on days with bombings or setbacks
    to the Middle East peace process, he dropped jokes for fear of causing
    offence. 

    This winter, he said he had started calling depressions bringing clouds
    and rain towards Israel by unusual Hebrew names, imitating the way
    Atlantic hurricanes are named after girls and boys. 

    "People have started saying 'Oh, Hetzel is coming' rather than 'It's
    going to rain.' It gives a personalisation of the weather with slight
    humour," said Roup, 34, wearing a tie with falling cats and dogs on it. 

    Asked for an example of his humour, de Bellefeuille, who works for
    Canada's 24-hour weather channel Meteomedia, said that one chill winter
    day, he and two other colleagues decided to have a beard-growing
    competition to keep their faces warm. 

    Viewers faxed in to judge who had the best beard after five days. "I
    won," said de Bellefeuille, wearing a bright tie patterned with cartoon
    characters. He reads 42 bulletins in a rapid-fire delivery during a
    three-hour show from 6 a.m. 

    FEWER JOKES WHERE BLIZZARDS THREATEN 

    In nations where blizzards or storms can threaten life, forecasters
    often stay serious. "In Norway the weather is often too important for
    jokes, for instance for fishermen," said Kristen Gislefoss of Norway's
    NRK public television. 

    NRK has, however, adopted a more lively style. Last year it dropped a
    curious tradition of beginning forecasts in the almost uninhabited
    Arctic archipelago of Svalbard and only mentioning weather for the more
    populated south at the end. 

    A shift to younger presenters has yet to lead to a big breakthrough for
    women at the festival. "It used to be the old grey men of weather. Now
    it's the young dark men of weather," said Wilson, 45. "It's time for
    the women of weather." 

    Forecasters say satellites and radar images have allowed huge advances
    in accuracy -- and take the creation of 24-hour weather channels in
    several countries as proof of a growing appetite for weather news. 

    "The four-day forecast we make nowadays for France is as accurate as
    the 24-hour forecast we made 10 years ago," said Jean-Pierre Beysson,
    head of Meteo France state forecasting agency, wearing a red tie dotted
    with mini-umbrellas. 

    An opinion poll by the French Mediametrie group for the festival showed
    75 percent of French people rated forecasts "fairly reliable." Just six
    percent of 800 people quizzed rated them "very reliable" and 25 percent
    judged them unreliable. 

    Underpinning most forecasts is the Global Observing System allowing
    exchanges of information among WMO members -- nine satellites, 100
    moored buoys, 600 drifting buoys, 3,000 aircraft, 7,300 ships and
    almost 10,000 land-based stations. 

    And when conversation lags among meteorologists, do they talk about the
    weather? "I try to talk about other things. It's work," said Israel's
    Roup. 

    REUTER
7.1012IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1474
    RTw  11-Mar-97 00:57    

    U.N. diplomats to lose immunity from parking fines

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Anthony Goodman 

    UNITED NATIONS, March 10 (Reuter) - New York City dropped a bombshell
    on U.N. diplomats on Monday, saying they would no longer be exempt from
    paying parking fines. 

    Starting next month, diplomats who fail to clear up their tickets
    within 12 months would lose their license plates until they finally
    paid up, U.S. and city officials said. 

    "Consistent with the obligation of all to obey local laws, beginning on
    April 1 the owners of diplomatic vehicles which have parked illegally
    will be expected to either pay or otherwise adjudicate all parking
    summonses received," American U.N. envoy Bill Richardson said. 

    He was addressing the U.N. committee on relations with the host
    country, which deals with problems affecting the diplomatic community,
    after appearing with New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani at a City Hall
    news conference where the new rules were unveiled. 

    The U.S. State Department had determined that the new policy and
    programme were "consistent with international law as well as with the
    host country's obligations to the United Nations and the United Nations
    community in New York," Richardson said. 

    Alluding to longstanding resentment among many New Yorkers that
    scofflaw diplomats get off scot-free, he said the new arrangement would
    "remove a longstanding irritant that has tended to erode the respect
    and goodwill traditionally enjoyed by diplomats in New York." 

    To meet objections that diplomats are immune from appearing in court,
    he said the city had set up a special office "empowered to adjudicate
    summonses" received by members of the U.N. community. 

    Objections were immediately raised by representatives of Russia,
    France, Britain, China, Spain, Honduras, Costa Rica and other
    countries. Several said the rules were being imposed without proper
    consultation and called for the establishment of a working group to
    study the matter. 

    Britain's Elizabeth Wilmshurst said that while her mission paid all
    parking tickets, it was illegal under international law to enforce the
    regulations. She said the U.N. legal counsel should first give a
    ruling. 

    But U.S. officials insisted the rules would go into effect on April 1. 

    Giving details of the new regulations, deputy Mayor Randy Mastro told
    the committee that diplomats who failed to pay a valid parking ticket
    for a period of 12 months would be classified as scofflaws and notified
    that their vehicle could not be used until the matter had been settled. 

    Each diplomatic mission would be ensured two legal parking spaces in
    front of its building and one space outside the residence of the
    ambassador or consul-general, he said. 

    The police would set up a hot line to enable diplomats to report
    unauthorised vehicles using their parking spaces, which would then be
    towed away. 

    Several envoys said their vehicles had been deliberately ticketed, even
    if parked in a reserved spot, and that unauthorised vehicles in a
    diplomatic parking space were rarely towed or ticketed. 

    A Russian diplomat said a colleague recently paid for an hour's parking
    at a meter and 40 minutes later found a ticket on his windscreen. 

    REUTER
7.1013IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1425
    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    RENNES, France, March 10 (Reuter) - French paramilitary gendarmes
    probing the rape and murder of a British teenager last year aim to seek
    a genetic test of a suspected child abductor detained in southern
    France, judicial sources said on Monday. 

    They said the investigators planned to request tests on the DNA genetic
    material of 35-year-old Jean-Paul Barbault, detained in southwest
    France on Friday and placed under investigation on suspicion of trying
    to kidnap a 10-year-old child. 

    Investigators who have questioned Barbault say he has admitted about 10
    sexual attacks on minors in southwestern France and in Brittany in the
    northwest, the sources said. 

    Gendarmes have no direct evidence to suspect him of involvement in the
    murder of 13-year-old British schoolgirl Caroline Dickinson, who was
    raped and smothered in a youth hostel in Brittany in July 1996 while on
    a school trip. 

    Dickinson was found dead by other classmates sleeping in the same room.
    Police have so far turned up few clues in their hunt for the killer.
    One suspect who allegedly confessed to the crime later retracted and
    DNA tests showed he was not responsible.
7.1014IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 10:1539
    RTw  10-Mar-97 19:47    

    Swiss nuclear shipment eludes protesters

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    ZURICH, March 10 (Reuter) - A Swiss utility said on Monday it had sent
    out a load of radioactive fuel rods for reprocessing despite a blockade
    by Greenpeace anti-nuclear activists. 

    "The transport of used fuel elements from Nordostschweizerische
    Kraftwerk's (NOK) Beznau nuclear plant took place as scheduled today
    despite an illegal blockade by the Greenpeace organisation," it said in
    a statement. 

    "The shipment has since crossed the Swiss border toward its
    destination," it said without giving more details. 

    Greenpeace activists had blocked the railway line on Sunday by erecting
    a 12-metre tall tower on the tracks on the property of the Beznau
    plant, near Zurich, and two people had chained themselves to the top of
    it. 

    NOK filed charges of disturbing the peace against the activists, but
    police did not use force to disperse them. 

    NOK declined to say who would reprocess the fueld rods but Greenpeace
    has said only nuclear plants at La Hague in France or Sellafield in
    England provided this service. 

    Greenpeace said it was protesting against nuclear fuel transports in
    general and against fuel reprocessing, both of which it said polluted
    the environment and endangered human health. 

    NOK has said its fuel is transported in government-inspected containers
    and it has carried out over 100 such shipments without causing any
    damage. 

    REUTER
7.1015IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:14110
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Motorway carnage compared to Bosnia
    
    By Maurice Weaver 

    A DOUBLE motorway pile-up in fog which left three motorists dead and 62
    injured was blamed last night on drivers travelling too fast, being too
    close to the car in front and not concentrating.

    The crash, involving 90 vehicles, some of which caught fire, turned a
    half-mile stretch of the M42 in the West Midlands into a scene one
    motorist said was "like a battle zone in Bosnia". 

    Last night rescue services were still examining the wreckage as
    forecasters gave warning that more dense fog was expected in England
    and Wales during the morning rush-hour.

    Two of those who died were named as Lisa Dobson, 21, a student from
    Chaddesley Corbett, near Kidderminster, and Malcolm Macdonald, 53, a
    postman from Redditch.

    The carnage, described by police as "an unnecessary tragedy", came in
    two waves. The first, on the westbound carriageway, was caused by fog
    at about 6.45am. Twenty minutes later the second pile-up happened,
    almost opposite the scene of the first.

    There was still fog, possibly aggravated by smoke and dust from the
    wreckage of the first crash, but police believe that drivers suddenly
    slowing in alarm or to have a look at the scene of the accident may
    have been partly responsible. Survivors later spoke of being trapped
    but being aware that more cars and lorries were hurtling towards them
    in the dawn half-light.

    Ann Gaskell, 34, a computer consultant from Kew, south-west London,
    said that, having stopped successfully, her car was immediately rammed
    by another, which exploded. A van, having hit the debris, then reared
    up and landed on her roof. "I remember thinking 'I have got to get out
    of here or I'm going to die'," she said.

    "All I can recall is screaming in fear and tugging at the door handle.
    Suddenly I was standing in the road, with people staggering around me
    and children screaming, and watching the flames spread to my car. The
    crashes continued for what seemed like an eternity."

    Tim Birkin, 36, an engineer driving to Plymouth from his home in
    Rugeley, Staffs, said: "I had been doing about 70mph. The fog was quite
    bad, but I thought the visibility was good enough for my speed. Then
    all of a sudden I came upon a wall of stationary traffic and slammed my
    brakes on."

    Mr Birkin managed to stop safely, but then looked in his rear-view
    mirror. "I saw this lorry coming up behind me, going sideways along the
    rail of the central reservation. It hit me and crushed my car up
    against the vehicle in front. The windscreen folded in, trapping me in
    the driver's seat. But I was able to push it back and climb out."

    Supt Pat Wing, of West Midlands police, said fog at the scene was so
    thick that, when reflected back in headlights, "it would have been like
    driving into a wall".

    The failure of motorists to adjust their speed to the conditions has
    been widely blamed for the crashes. Douglas Mackay, deputy chief fire
    officer for Hereford and Worcester, said: "When I was driving to the
    scene with my blue lights flashing and at a reasonable speed, I still
    had cars overtaking me travelling in excess of 70mph. Visibility was no
    more than 50 metres. It was disgusting behaviour."

    Matthew Joint, the AA's driver behaviour specialist, said fog gave
    drivers a sense of unreality. "It reduces driving a car to something
    akin to playing space invaders," he said.

    Ambulance crews driving to the scene complained that some motorists
    were driving down the hard shoulders, trying to avoid the hold-ups.

    The victims were taken to hospitals in Selly Oak, Birmingham, Redditch
    and Sandwell. Most were suffering from burns, broken bones, whiplash
    injuries and cuts and bruises.

    Among those with more serious injuries was a middle-aged man who
    required emergency surgery for abdominal injuries and another man with
    a broken neck. Both were later in a "stable" condition.

    Seventy survivors were taken to a nearby hotel, the West Mead, in
    Hopwood, where some were treated for shock or hypothermia.

    Mark Bollery, from Tenby, south Wales, whose car was sandwiched between
    two lorries, said: "I got out of the car and you could hear this bang,
    bang, bang all up the road. It was terrifying."

    A van driver, Christopher French, 23, from Mansfield, Notts, said: "I
    lay down in my van after the crash - it seemed the safest thing to do -
    but then two or three cars hit the back of it and one of them burst
    into flames, so I had to get out. I remember looking back at the
    devastation and my disbelief at having come out of it alive."

    Jonathan Sillup, a lorry driver, said: "I saw the 30mph warning sign
    and the next thing I knew cars were piling into each other all around.
    There was nothing I could do to avoid ploughing into the electricity
    van in front and pushing him under a lorry."

    Because the fire had melted sections of road surface work was going on
    overnight to repair the damage. Hereford and Worcester Police warned
    that it may not be possible to have the road reopened in time for this
    morning's rush-hour.

    Yesterday's fog also claimed the life of a young man who died in a
    crash on a section of the A1(M) in Hertfordshire, and about 20 people
    were injured in nine pile-ups on another stretch of the same motorway
    at Redhouse, near Doncaster, South Yorks.
7.1016IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:1557
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Ripper is stabbed in both eyes
    
    By Michael Fleet and David Millward 

    THE Yorkshire Ripper, Peter Sutcliffe, was stabbed in both eyes by a
    fellow inmate at Broadmoor Hospital yesterday.

    Sutcliffe, 50, who was jailed for life in 1981 for the murder of 13
    women, was taken under guard to a nearby hospital. He underwent surgery
    and his condition last night was described as serious. He is believed
    to have been in his private quarters in Henley Ward when he was
    attacked with a fibre-tipped pen by Ian Kay.

    Kay was jailed for a minimum of 22 years in 1995 for the murder of John
    Penfold, a Woolworths shop manager in Teddington, south-west London.
    Sir John Lawrence Verney, the Recorder of London, who sentenced Kay at
    the Old Bailey, described him as an "extremely dangerous man".

    A source at Broadmoor said last night: "There was a fight in which
    Peter Sutcliffe was stabbed in both eyes. He was in severe pain and
    nurses were quickly alerted. It is thought he was stabbed with a pen
    with a fibre point. They are used in drawing classes at the hospital."

    The ward houses several of the most dangerous patients at Broadmoor and
    is where Sutcliffe was assaulted by a different patient last March.
    Then, a prisoner at the high-security hospital in Berkshire tried to
    strangle Sutcliffe with the lead from a personal stereo set. The
    attacker was pulled off by two other patients and, although police
    investigated the attack, Sutcliffe did not press charges.

    Det Insp Jamie Williamson, of Thames Valley Police, is heading the
    inquiry into the most recent attack. A spokesman confirmed that a
    patient had received serious eye injuries but did not officially name
    Sutcliffe.

    A Broadmoor spokesman said: "Staff reacted very quickly to help the
    injured patient. It is our policy for any patients who need outside
    treatment to be returned to Broadmoor as soon as they are well enough."
    Last night Sutcliffe was still under guard in a side room of the eye
    unit at Frimley Park Hospital, Surrey.

    There has been increasing concern among staff about the regime at
    Broadmoor. Last week Stephen Dorrell, the Health Secretary, announced a
    review of patient security and care. David Evans, general secretary of
    the Prison Officers' Association is to address his members at the
    hospital tonight following their complaints about lack of control. He
    said: "We believe that the patients have had far too much of a say in
    the running of Broadmoor. This event is evidence of our concern."

    David Leach, whose daughter Barbara, 20, was Sutcliffe's 11th victim,
    had little pity for him. He said at his home in Kettering, Northants:
    "I wouldn't wish anyone to go blind, but we won't shed a tear or cry
    over any harm that comes to him in view of what he's done, not just to
    my family but to all the others as well. Perhaps now he'll have some
    idea of how other people have suffered."
7.1017IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:1835
7.1018IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:1936
7.1019IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2064
7.1020IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2243
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Gummer warns on North Sea fish stocks
    
    By Charles Clover, Environment Editor 

    COD and herring stocks could be wiped out within three years unless
    radical measures to limit catches are agreed at a meeting this week of
    North Sea countries, John Gummer, the Environment Secretary, said
    yesterday.

    Mr Gummer said he wanted to "strengthen considerably" a draft
    ministerial agreement to save endangered stocks which was weakened at
    the insistence of EU fishing ministries which are worried about their
    fishing industries.

    Mr Gummer said: "If you do not take radical action urgently fish will
    disappear as a normal part of people's diet and fishermen will not have
    a job at all. I am determined to protect the fishermen and to do that I
    have to protect the fish."

    Mr Gummer said he was working closely with Germany to toughen the
    conclusions of the meeting in Bergen, Norway. He said he wanted
    "fundamental decisions" to be taken on the proportion of an endangered
    stock that can be caught each year if the overall population is to
    recover".

    He wanted agreement to end the practice of discarding small fish, which
    accounts for half the haddock which are caught, and to secure limits on
    the catches of industrial fish, such as sand eels.

    Mr Gummer gave a clear signal that the process leading up to the Bergen
    conference had not gone as he would have liked.

    The draft conclusions presently on the table are a far cry from the
    radical precautionary measures needed to improve the management of
    fisheries which were agreed by scientists in a seminar in Oslo last
    year.

    The Bergen conference continues a series of meetings by North Sea
    ministers which began in Germany in 1983. Since then, agreements on
    reducing the quantities of chemicals and waste dumped into the sea have
    been reached.
7.1021IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2356
7.1022IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2433
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Warning by Dublin over Sellafield

    THE Irish government stepped up pressure on Britain yesterday to
    abandon a proposed underground nuclear waste dump at Sellafield.

    Emmet Stagg, the Dublin energy minister, said if the Government went
    ahead with proposals for the Cumbria site on the Irish Sea coast, it
    would be a "bone of contention" between the two countries for years to
    come.

    Mr Stagg, in London to lodge Dublin's latest formal objections to the
    scheme, said Irish ministers had been examining the options for a
    potential legal challenge.

    The Irish government remains concerned that the construction of the
    facility 1,000 metres below Sellafield could lead to an "unacceptable"
    increase in pollution of the Irish Sea.

    Mr Stagg said he was "most perturbed and disturbed" by scientific
    advice that plans to test the plan with an underground rock laboratory
    would actually render the whole scheme geologically "unsound".

    He said:"I am determined to do everyting possible to prevent the
    permanent storage of nuclear waste material so close to the Irish Sea."

    Mr Stagg took the unusual step for a member of a foreign government of
    appearing at a public inquiry in Britain last year to oppose the plan.

    The latest Irish objections follow the leak of a memo by John Holmes,
    director of science at Nirex, the nuclear waste company, warning they
    may "struggle" to make a case for the development.
7.1023IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2584
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Shephard's experts sent in to help Calderdale
    
    By Paul Stokes 

    A GROUP of advisers is being sent in by the Government to help a
    Labour-controlled education authority provide support for its schools.

    Gillian Shephard, the Education Secretary, announced the move after a
    critical report by the Office for Standards in Education into the
    service provided by Calderdale council.

    The authority has been under scrutiny since it was forced to
    temporarily close The Ridings school, in Halifax, West Yorks, because
    of a breakdown in discipline.

    In findings published yesterday, Her Majesty's Inspectors said that
    Calderdale's contribution to raising standards in its secondary schools
    had been "minimal".

    Mrs Shephard sees the intervention as necessary to secure urgent
    improvements for the benefit of schools, teachers, pupils and parents
    in the district. She said she would seek further powers "in the next
    Parliament" to intervene more directly when a local education authority
    appeared to be failing in its duties.

    "The situation in Calderdale illustrates exactly how important this
    power will be. I will not tolerate LEAs which preside over low
    standards and poor quality schools," she added.

    She has written to Michael Higgins, the chairman of Calderdale
    education committee, giving him until April 18 to submit an action plan
    for remedying defects identified by Ofsted, the school inspectors.

    To assist in the plan's implementations, she has asked Chris Woodhead,
    the Ofsted chief, to appoint a group of experts in local authority
    administration, finance and education support to report to her on a
    regular basis.

    "It should not have been left to the Government to intervene in The
    Ridings school by sending in inspectors. Calderdale should have taken
    action long before," she added.

    Mr Higgins reacted angrily to her comments, claiming that there was no
    evidence in the Ofsted report to suggest the authority was failing.

    "It is a travesty and it is an insult to our schools, parents,
    governors and people who are on the education committee," he said.

    The report stated that Calderdale had carried out its statutory duties
    although it had supported its primary schools more effectively than its
    secondary schools, with standards not rising in six of them.

    Inspectors found no sign of an urgently needed strategy to drive up
    standards in three central Halifax secondary schools, which had "poor
    overall attainment and are unpopular with parents".

    In their visits to schools the inspectors found a surprising level of
    hostility and suspicion among head teachers and school governors
    towards members of the education committee.

    The education committee and the officers were found to share a measure
    of responsibility for the authority's ineffectiveness within a
    cumbersome committee structure which should have been slimmed down on
    the district auditor's advice three years ago.

    Members were said to interfere with the work of professional staff so
    much that the director and senior staff did not have the time or the
    professional autonomy needed to implement the committee's policies.

    Ian Jennings, Calderdale's director of education, said many of the
    issues raised in the report were matters about which action was already
    being taken.

    He said: "We have only one failing school [The Ridings]. So do 67 other
    LEAs. Norfolk has seven. Why pick on Calderdale? We spend more money
    per pupil and have better GCSE results than most authorities in
    Yorkshire."

    David Blunkett, Labour's education spokesman, accused Mr Shephard of
    using Calderdale as a political football. "What she seems to ignore is
    that many of the weaknesses in this authority date back to a
    Conservative administration," he said.
7.1024IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2768
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Youth jail is a jungle for inmates, says report
    
    By Philip Johnston, Home Affairs Editor 

    BULLYING and criminal corruption have been uncovered at a young
    offenders institution, described as a "jungle" by prison inspectors in
    a damning report published today.

    Inmates at the unit in Dover, Kent, had to "fight to survive, or exist
    as a vulnerable prisoner subjected to continual intimidation and
    insult". Gen Sir David Ramsbotham, HM Chief Inspector of Prisons, said
    his report represented "very serious, some would say devastating,
    criticism of the apparent ability of the Prison Service to provide a
    reasonably safe living environment for young offenders at Dover".

    He added: "It is the first duty of the authorities to ensure that those
    whom the courts have sentenced to custody are held in decent, secure
    conditions. By no stretch of the imagination could three of the five
    residential units at Dover be described as decent."

    Sir David also suggested that tough action against juvenile crime would
    be undermined if young criminals were placed in sub-standard
    institutions. There was a 20 per cent increase last year in the numbers
    entering a youth system that was in danger of merely turning out
    "tomorrow's old lags".

    The majority of the 297 prisoners, aged between 17 and 21, were held in
    six-bed "ramshackle" dormitories where the strong preyed on the weak.
    Design faults meant that there were "blind spots" where bullying could
    take place beyond the view of staff. However, cuts in running costs
    meant the governor at Dover was having to keep the prisoners locked in
    the dormitories for longer periods.

    Sir David suggested that the dormitories be demolished or converted
    into cells containing no more than two offenders. "Unless these issues
    of safety and violence are dealt with quickly, any other programme of
    help and training will be undermined and the culture of strong preying
    on the weak will be reinforced," he said.

    The report is among the most critical since Sir David - a former
    Adjutant General to the Army - took over as Chief Inspector from Judge
    Stephen Tumim two years ago. Senior prison managers tried to play down
    the criticism, emphasising the report's praise for the range of
    work-skill courses at Dover. They also said matters had improved
    markedly since the inspection was carried out last May.

    Richard Tilt, the director-general of the Prison Service, said: "I do
    not accept the suggestion that the problem of bullying has increased so
    dramatically since the time of the last inspection in April 1992. While
    bullying is a problem, it is viewed seriously and all efforts are made
    to tackle it. Dormitory accommodation is not ideal but, given the
    pressures from the rapidly-increasing prison population, replacing
    these with cells is not an option."

    Brian Pollett, governor of the Dover institution - which is housed in a
    fort dating from the Napoleonic Wars - said: "I do not agree that
    bullying dominates the lives of the young offenders here. Far from
    releasing them 'corrupted', we hope to have provided them with skills
    and education they can use constructively."

    In a report today, the Howard League, a penal reform pressure group,
    calls for an end to the use of prison for children aged under 16,
    describing it as an "ineffective, misguided and expensive option for
    the courts". The report said 89 per cent of juveniles held in custody
    were convicted again within two years of release. In 1991, there were
    102 15-year-olds in prison, a figure that rose to 224 last year.
7.1025IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2730
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Driver crashed ambulance after drinking
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    AN ambulance driver failed a breath test after crashing into a car
    while taking a heart attack victim to hospital, a court was told
    yesterday.

    Bernard Edwards, 51, was told by magistrates in Denbigh, north Wales,
    that he faced being sent to prison. Karen Mullin, prosecuting, said the
    ambulance had its blue light flashing when it went through traffic
    lights at Trefnant crossroads, near Denbigh, at midnight on Jan 24. The
    vehicle struck a car that was turning right, inflicting minor injuries
    to its driver. Edwards' patient was not hurt.

    The ambulanceman was breathalysed and taken to Rhyl police station
    where he gave a reading of 57 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 ml of
    breath, 27 microgrammes over the legal limit. Edwards, of Northern
    Terrace, Corwen, Denbighshire, pleaded guilty to driving with excess
    alcohol. 

    Rachel Silverbeck, defending, said Edwards had been an ambulance driver
    for 26 years and held a clean licence. Last November he was awarded a
    Queen's Medal in recognition of 20 years' emergency ambulance duty. She
    said it had been isolated incident by Edwards who was suffering from
    stress. Edwards had voluntarily retired from the North Wales Ambulance
    Trust since the accident, Miss Silverbeck said. Edwards was remanded on
    unconditional bail until sentencing on April 1.
7.1026IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2835
7.1027IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:2933
7.1028IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:3230
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Gang targets girl, 13, who aided police
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 

    A GIRL of 13 and her family have been terrorised by vandals after she
    spoke to police about an air rifle attack on her school.

    During the past six months Kimberley Blackband's home has been attacked
    so many times that police have set up a surveillance camera overlooking
    their rear garden. Vandals have smashed dozens of windows, daubed
    curtains and carpets with paint, smashed ornaments, and damaged the
    family's car parked in the garage.

    The Blackbands have also received numerous anonymous telephone calls at
    their home in Rochdale, Greater Manchester. In the most recent attack,
    a week ago, a stone the size of a cricket ball was thrown through
    Kimberley's bedroom window.

    Kimberley's mother Donna Blackband, a former legal secretary, said: "It
    is a living hell. No one should have to put up with this, but although
    Kimberley is scared out of her life she will not give in. She is a
    brave girl." Kimberley said: "It's been awful. I didn't think it would
    end up like this."

    Two boys have been cautioned after admitting being involved in the air
    rifle incident. A third is due appear before Middleton youth court,
    Manchester, charged with criminal damage. A police spokesman said: "We
    are taking a number of measures to try to identify those responsible."
7.1029IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:3336
7.1030IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:3453
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    Italians broker Vlore truce as rebels extend their gains
    
    By Robert Fox in Tirana 

    REBEL leaders in the Albanian port of Vlore were flown to an Italian
    warship in the Adriatic yesterday to sign an agreement they said could
    lead to a local ceasefire. 

    The agreement was also signed by Italy's ambassador to Tirana, Paolo
    Foresti. It was the latest in a series of dramatic gestures by the
    Italian government during the uprising in Albanian cities that began
    over a week ago.

    Representatives of the "Committee of Salvation" of Vlore were flown by
    helicopter to the Italian commando carrier San Giorgio. They agreed to
    work for a ceasefire and to surrender their weapons in return for
    Italian guarantees of protection.

    Vlore is one of the main Albanian ports for Italy, the departure point
    for thousands of legal and illegal migrants each year. More than 500
    Italians live in the port and the authorities say they fear it is used
    by the Sicilian Mafia and its equivalent in Naples. Italian diplomats
    in Tirana have emphasised the need to restore law and order in Vlore.
    When insurgents took over the town last week, they seized the Liman
    Pasha naval base and broke open army bunkers containing ammunition in
    surrounding hills.

    The town is now awash with weaponry of all kinds, including mortars,
    hand grenades and anti-tank and anti-personnel mines. These would be
    lucrative commodities for the Mafia to trade on the international
    market.

    Last week an Italian diplomat in Tirana emphasised "the need to get on
    top of the criminals in Vallona [Vlore] as quickly as possible. It is a
    priority for Italy."

    Last night the rebels said they had captured Albania's biggest air
    base, near the southern town of Gjirokaster. In Ktissimata, several
    police were wounded when it was seized on Sunday night.

    A huge ammunition dump exploded near Berat and local reports say at
    least 20 people were killed or seriously injured. After the optimism
    that had swept the capital, Tirana, on Sunday after President Berisha
    announced he was forming an all-party national government to pave the
    way for new elections, few believed yesterday that he had found a peace
    formula.

    Support for the president is visibly crumbling. The Albanian army has
    virtually melted away. Two generals and a cadre of senior officers
    sacked by Mr Berisha when he came to power in 1992 are leading the
    rebels in the south.
7.1031IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:3638
7.1032IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Tue Mar 11 1997 14:3728
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 March 1997 Issue 655

    US ambassador angers Ireland's police chief
    
    By Toby Harnden 

    JEAN Kennedy Smith, the American ambassador in Dublin, has angered the
    Irish police commissioner by complaining to him about the way his force
    investigated an alleged sex attack on the daughter of an American
    politician.

    Mrs Kennedy Smith called personally on Pat Byrne, the Garda
    Commissioner, to express her concern about the "inadequate" police
    response to an incident last June.

    The 20-year-old daughter of Ed Burke, a Democrat from Chicago, has
    alleged she and a friend were attacked by an Irish police officer
    following a drinking spree in Dublin. The officer resigned from the
    force after being arrested.

    He was released and was due to be re-arrested after the Irish Director
    of Public Prosecutions recommended charges of indecent assault, assault
    and criminal damage. When police arranged to meet the former officer,
    however, he failed to turn up.

    Detectives later found he had gone to South Africa. Mr Burke then
    issued a statement alleging that "the 'disappearance' of the accused
    has spared the Garda an embarrassing court trial".
7.1033IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:51114
    AP 11-Mar-1997 23:59 EST   REF5203

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, March 11, 1997
   
    JAPAN-NUCLEAR 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Two fires broke out within 10 hours at a nuclear waste
    handling facility on Tuesday, breaking windows and sending out clouds
    of smoke in a further embarrassment for Japan's nuclear power program.
    No one was reported injured, but officials said the first fire exposed
    10 workers to tiny amounts of radioactivity -- one-2,000th of the dose
    considered safe for a year. No warnings were issued for the area around
    the plant, and officials said radioactivity levels were well within
    safe limits. The accidents came as Japan was trying to rebuild trust in
    its nuclear program 
   
    LAKE-CIA 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton's choice to head the CIA says he
    wasn't informed about suspicions that China might try to influence U.S.
    congressional elections. Anthony Lake spoke to senators at the opening
    of his long-delayed confirmation hearings. As Clinton's national
    security adviser, he testified he was never told by subordinates about
    the FBI suspicions involving China. And Lake told lawmakers he and the
    president should have been informed on what he called "a matter of
    extraordinary importance such as that." Lake testified vigorously on
    his own behalf after months of Republican criticism. 
   
    TWA-WITNESS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A military pilot who witnessed the explosion of TWA
    Flight 800 repeatedly told investigators he thought a missile struck
    the plane, a source says. The pilot, Capt. Chris Baur, who works for
    U.S. Customs, "saw a track of light and saw a hard explosion, then
    another explosion," the source said. Goverment officials have denounced
    the missile theory's resurgence. The Air National Guard pilot has not
    been allowed to speak publicly because of an FBI ban on federal
    employees speaking about the investigation. The July 17 crash killed
    230 people. 
   
    CONGRESS-FUNDS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate Republicans, facing defection from their own
    party, have agreed to a broader investigation of campaign financing. It
    would include huge "soft money" donations that aren't necessarily
    illegal. The two major parties collected $263 million in "soft money"
    in 1996. The probe will also look into White House coffees and
    sleepovers for big donors. Senators appropriated $4.35 million to pay
    for the probe. 
   
    TRIBES-MONEY 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Democratic National Committee has offered to
    return $107,000 in donations made by the Cheyenne-Arapaho Tribes of
    Oklahoma in hopes of regaining tribal land taken by the U.S.
    government. But tribe leaders said "they want their land, not their
    money." The tribe depleted its rainy day fund last year to make the
    contribution, which its leaders saw as a sort of entry fee into the
    unfamiliar arena of national politics. 
   
    DETROIT SHOOTING 

    DETROIT (AP) -- A man wearing gray-and-white camouflage killed three
    people at a bank, and ordered everyone else inside to sing the Lord's
    Prayer with him before he was killed in a barrage of police gunfire. He
    first killed two employees inside the Comerica bank branch, and then
    took an elderly man hostage outside, shoving him to the ground and
    fatally shooting him in the head. Officers then opened fire. 
   
    ARMY SEX 

    ABERDEEN, Md. (AP) -- The Army is denying claims by five female
    recruits that its investigators tried to pressure them into making
    false charges that they had been raped by superiors at the Aberdeen
    Proving Ground. A news conference by the women was organized by the
    NAACP, whose leader, Kweisi Mfume, called for an independent
    investigation of how the military has handled the sex scandal. The
    NAACP claims the Army has unfairly targeted black soldiers based on
    complaints of white female recruits. 
   
    RUSSIA-SHAKEUP 

    MOSCOW (AP) -- President Boris Yeltsin ordered his Cabinet overhauled,
    following through on promises to shake up a government that has been
    unable to pull Russia's fledging market economy out of its rut. Yeltsin
    guaranteed the jobs of just two Cabinet members -- Prime Minister
    Viktor Chernomyrdin and his new top deputy, Anatoly Chubais. Yeltsin
    gave Chernomyrdin a week to reorganize the government. He wants a
    smaller Cabinet and fewer ministries. 
   
    SOFTWARE PACT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- IBM, Sun Microsystems, Oracle and Netscape plan common
    technical standards for developing software that would work across any
    computer operating system. They are trying to keep Microsoft from
    extending its dominance in the industry. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was higher against the yen in early trading
    Wednesday, while Tokyo stock prices continued to rise moderately. The
    Nikkei gained 23.66 points to 18,291.38. In New York, the Dow gained
    5.77 Tuesday to end at 7,085.16, its second straight record close. 
   
    ABL-CHAMPIONSHIP 

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Tonya Edwards scored 23 points as the Columbus
    Quest beat the Richmond Rage 77-64 Tuesday night and won the inaugural
    American Basketball League championship in five games. Columbus trailed
    2-1 in the best-of-5 series before winning the final three games. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARK KENNEDY 
7.1034IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5292
    RTw  11-Mar-97 21:20    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin, stamping his authority on Russia
    after months of illness, ordered a far-reaching cabinet reshuffle which
    opened the way for a new burst of radical economic reform. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albanian President Sali Berisha appointed a new prime minister
    as armed unrest continued. The rebellion spread to the north of the
    country for the first time when a military barracks was looted of arms,
    government sources said. 

    KUCOVE, Albania - The capture of a key airbase by armed insurgents in
    southern Albania has left about one fifth of the country's warplanes in
    rebel hands. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat sought to draw the
    United States deeper into salvaging Middle East peace talks that have
    foundered on Israeli settlement plans in the West Bank. 

    AMMAN - King Hussein of Jordan has warned Israeli Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu that his policies were destroying the Middle East
    peace process, Petra news agency said. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - A small fire at a Japanese nuclear fuel processing plant
    exposed 10 workers to small amounts of radiation in a new blow to the
    country's ambitious nuclear power programme. 

    - - - - 

    GOMA, Zaire - Zairean rebels said they had seized a port in the
    southern mining region of Shaba and would soon capture the northeastern
    city of Kisangani, a government stronghold on the Zaire river. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States rejected for the moment a U.N. proposal
    for a multi-national force for Zaire. 

    - - - - 

    THE HAGUE - A Bosnian Croat accused of atrocities against Serbs at the
    Celebici prison camp in 1992 protected detainees from beatings by
    guards and helped others to get out, his lawyer told a U.N. warcrimes
    tribunal. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - China denied allegations it gave money to the U.S. Democratic
    Party, saying it lacked funds for foreign political donations. 

    - - - - 

    GENEVA - The head of China's delegation to the U.N. Human Rights
    Commission defended his country's record and accused the United States
    and Europe of targeting only developing states for scrutiny in the
    forum. 

    - - - - 

    ANKARA - Turkey is planning to implement a series of measures aimed at
    improving its human rights record, a long-term target of criticism from
    its European partners, the foreign ministry said. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Thousands of European car workers demonstrated at the
    headquarters of Renault to protest against its decision to close an
    assembly plant in Belgium and cut nearly 3,000 jobs in France this
    year. 

    - - - - 

    BRUSSELS - The driver of an articulated truck had a miracle escape as a
    high-speed Eurostar passenger train from Brussels to London carved his
    vehicle in half as he crossed a level crossing in western Belgium. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Paul McCartney, the Beatle who joked 30 years ago about
    smoking marijuana in the Buckingham Palace toilets, went back to see
    Queen Elizabeth to collect a knighthood for helping to revolutionise
    pop music. 

    REUTER 
7.1035IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5271
    RTw  12-Mar-97 06:08    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Polish police seek lost Russian boxing kangaroos 

    WARSAW - Police in the central Poland town of Nowy Dwor told people to
    avoid contact with two kangaroos missing from a circus, saying both
    were skilled boxers and could turn violent. 

    "The animals can be dangerous because they are not friendly to people
    and have been taught to box," PAP news agency quoted a police duty
    officer as saying. "Anyone meeting them should not try to come close." 

    The Russian-trained male kangaroos named Gin and Tonic either fled or
    were stolen from a travelling circus when it stopped in Nowy Dwor. They
    belong to the Russian state circus and were brought by their trainers
    to Poland. 

    - - - - 

    No water, no electricity, no phone - $400 weekly 

    PROVINCETOWN, Massachusetts - Looking for a place to get away from it
    all? Always wanted a shack on the beach? 

    The Provincetown Community Compact, a nonprofit group in this Cape Cod
    community, is offering a 600-square-foot wooden shack -- without
    running water, electricity, telephone or convenient location -- for up
    to $400 a week. 

    "The primitive nature of the structure and its physical isolation allow
    for uninterrupted solitude and refuge," said Jay Critchley, an artist
    who founded the Compact to support the arts and environment, said. 

    It is the only one of 17 such shacks in a remote area of the National
    Seashore available to the public and was once home to playwright Eugene
    O'Neill, he said. The group has a five-year lease on the shack from the
    U.S. National Park Service. 

    "It's not totally primitive. There's a wood stove so you can use it
    year round and there's a composting toilet." 

    - - - - 

    Labour promises British beer drinkers a full pint 

    LONDON - The opposition Labour Party took its campaign for votes in an
    upcoming election into the pub when it promised legislation to ensure
    beer drinkers get a full pint. 

    Industry spokesman Nigel Griffiths pledged that if the party came into
    government it would reinstate a 1985 law making oversized lined glasses
    compulsory in pubs. 

    "This move will...guarantee a full pint for the consumer," Griffiths,
    whose party is widely tipped to win an election expected on May 1,
    said. 

    The pledge came as the Campaign for Real Ale, a consumer group
    promoting traditional British beer, said a survey showed 80 percent of
    the "pints" served in pubs were short measures. 

    REUTER
7.1036IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5290
    AP 12-Mar-1997 0:11 EST   REF5363

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Source: TWA Flight Missile Seen

    By PAT MILTON

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A military helicopter pilot who witnessed the
    explosion of TWA Flight 800 repeatedly told investigators he thought a
    missile struck the plane, a source said Tuesday. 

    The Air National Guard pilot has not been allowed to speak publicly
    because of an FBI ban on federal employees speaking about the
    investigation. The pilot, Capt. Chris Baur, is a civilian pilot for
    U.S. Customs. 

    Baur's eyewitness report comes to light as critics of the investigation
    claim to have evidence suggesting that Flight 800 was shot down by an
    errant U.S. Navy missile. A Pentagon spokesman said investigators had
    thoroughly probed the issue, even inventorying the Navy's missile
    arsenal. 

    "Personnel have been interviewed, records have been checked. There is
    absolutely no evidence to support this theory," said Kenneth Bacon. 

    "There was not evidence two months ago, there is not evidence now. A
    new set of allegations rehashing old theories does not make for new
    evidence." 

    One of the reasons why a missile remains under consideration was the
    number of eyewitness accounts from people who said they saw something
    in the sky the night of the crash. Baur's clear view from the
    helicopter and his military training would make his account one of the
    most credible. 

    Mechanical failure or a bomb also haven't been ruled out as possible
    causes of the crash. 

    Baur spoke with the FBI, the NTSB and investigators from the Joint
    Terrorism Task Force after the disaster, said the source, speaking on
    condition of anonymity. Upon returning to the base after searching for
    survivors, Baur "told officials immediately he thought he saw a
    missile." 

    Baur "saw a track of light and saw a hard explosion, then another
    explosion," the source said. 

    Reached at his home Tuesday, Baur had no comment. 

    Baur's account -- and that of another military pilot on the helicopter
    who reported seeing lights in the sky but said he did not know what the
    object was -- was first reported by Aviation Week and Space Technology
    magazine in its March 10 issue. 

    A third man aboard the helicopter wasn't facing the front of the
    helicopter and didn't see anything before the explosion. 

    An NTSB investigator who interviewed Baur said that what the pilot saw
    could be explained by mechanical malfunction that might have created "a
    tongue of flame coming from the aircraft," said the source. 

    Early Tuesday, the FBI seized a videotape from the Florida home of
    retired United Airlines pilot Richard Russell, who has long supported
    the theory that a Navy missile brought down the plane. He wrote the
    memo, widely circulated on the Internet, that claims to have proof of
    the missile theory. 

    Russell, who has yet to make this proof public, contends the tape is a
    copy of FAA radar and that it shows an object speeding toward the
    jetliner. 

    The tape is to be reviewed by a federal grand jury, according to a
    second source, confirming a report published Tuesday in The
    Press-Enterprise of Riverside, Calif. A grand jury has been considering
    possible criminal elements of the crash, but the exact nature of that
    probe isn't known. 

    "They took my property away, but that's the way they operate. I knew
    that they would be doing this. It's a cover-up," Russell, who is
    conducting his own investigation of the crash, said in a telephone
    interview from his home in Daytona Beach, Fla. "I'm offended by it." 

    The National Transportation Safety Board and FBI continue to say they
    can't yet determine whether the jumbo jet was brought down by a bomb, a
    missile or a mechanical malfunction. The July 17 crash into the
    Atlantic Ocean off New York's Long Island killed all 230 people
    aboard.
7.1037IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5328
    AP 12-Mar-1997 0:18 EST   REF5380

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: New Yorkers Happier

    NEW YORK (AP) -- New Yorkers are happier about their city than they
    have been in years, although blacks and Hispanics are not as satisfied
    as whites, according to a poll by The New York Times. 

    The poll's results were published in Wednesday's editions. While they
    show blacks and Hispanics generally less satisfied about the state of
    the city than whites, those groups also were more optimistic than in
    previous years, the Times said. 

    Overall, 34 percent of those surveyed said life in the city has
    improved in the last four years, up from 10 percent in a May 1993
    survey. Forty-one percent of whites surveyed said life in New York has
    gotten better, compared to 23 percent of blacks and 27 percent of
    Hispanics. 

    Half of the people surveyed said that even if they had the option to
    move out of the city they would not, the most positive response to that
    question in more than a decade, the newspaper said. 

    The telephone poll of 1,397 adults living in the city's five boroughs
    was conducted March 1-6 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3
    percentage points. 
7.1038IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5358
    AP 11-Mar-1997 23:56 EST   REF5167

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    2 Held in Theater Owner Slaying

    By MICHELLE DeARMOND

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The owner of the nation's only silent film theater
    was killed in a murder-for-hire plot concocted by his live-in
    companion, the sole beneficiary of an estate valued at more than $1
    million, police said Tuesday. 

    Laurence Austin, 74, was shot to death at his Silent Movie Showcase on
    Jan. 17 before the start of that night's main feature. 

    The gunman, Christian Rodriguez, was hired by James Van Sickle, who had
    a seven-year personal and business relationship with the victim, said
    Lt. Ron Sanchez. 

    Rodriguez agreed to kill Austin for $25,000, Sanchez said. 

    Van Sickle was at the theater when Rodriguez shot Austin in the face
    and a woman employee in the chest, Sanchez said. 

    The woman has since been released from the hospital and assisted police
    in the investigation. 

    Frightened moviegoers told detectives that the killer escaped out the
    back exit. The theater was closed after Austin's death, and film fans
    put up an impromptu shrine of flowers and candles outside. 

    Van Sickle was a business partner of Austin and frequently worked at
    the theater as the projectionist. 

    Rodriguez, 19, and Van Sickle, 34, were arrested during the weekend and
    charged Tuesday with murder, attempted murder, attempted robbery and
    commercial burglary. Both men were held without bail. 

    Calls from two citizens led police to the suspects. Police began
    monitoring the two March 5 after Van Sickle held an event which
    prosecutors described as a fund-raiser to reopen the theater. 

    Austin had renovated the Silent Movie Showcase, and reopened it in 1991
    as the nation's only theater devoted solely to silent films, delighting
    legions of pre-talkie fans. 

    Austin, whose father and uncle were silent film actors, was highly
    visible at the 250-seat theater where old-time stars like Buster
    Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, Marion Davies, Mary Pickford and Douglas
    Fairbanks reclaimed their place on the screen. 

    He would stand before audiences to introduce long-lost films he helped
    preserve, then wait by the door to shake hands with patrons afterward
    on their way out. Aging silent film stars sometimes attended
    screenings. 
7.1039IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5326
    AP 11-Mar-1997 23:30 EST   REF5074

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Experimental Aircraft Crashes

    BUNNELL, Fla. (AP) -- An experimental helicopter-like aircraft known as
    a gyroplane lost power and clipped several trees before it crashed and
    burst into flames on Tuesday, killing two men on board. 

    Bill Parsons, 69, a pilot and innovator in the field of gyroplanes, was
    killed instantly when the craft went down about 5:45 p.m. at Flagler
    County Airport. 

    His passenger, Robert Lynn Scott, 72, of Flagler Beach, died a short
    while later. 

    Flagler County Airport Manager Brian Cooper said they had been flying
    most of the afternoon around the airport. The gyro appeared to have
    engine trouble just before the crash, he said. 

    "They had a new design of rotor blade, and they may have been testing
    it out," Cooper said. 

    Called the "Guru of Gyros," Parsons has built hundreds of the
    gyroplanes. 
7.1040IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:54122
    AP 11-Mar-1997 23:04 EST   REF5053

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    White House, FBI Spar Over China

    By TERENCE HUNT

    AP White House Correspondent

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The awkward spat between the White House and FBI
    over China is the latest strain in relations between President Clinton
    and his own Justice Department. Whitewater. FBI files. Campaign
    fund-raising irregularities. And now, foreign policy. 

    The history of the relationship is dotted with "painful past
    experiences," leading to the establishment of formal procedures for
    contacts, presidential spokesman Mike McCurry said. "We don't just pick
    up the phone and call the FBI and say, 'What's going on?"' 

    Tensions were still raw Tuesday from the unusual quarrel between the
    White House and FBI after Clinton complained he was not told about the
    agency's suspicions that China was trying to influence U.S.
    congressional elections. 

    "It is an unusual public spat," said Joseph diGenova, a former
    independent counsel. "I think it is a regrettable indication of the
    relationship between the White House and the FBI." 

    He said Attorney General Janet Reno -- who survived an attempt by some
    White House aides to purge her after the election -- "ought to be
    refereeing this and getting it settled. But it sure doesn't look like
    anything's going on." 

    Reno's job apparently is secure, but FBI Director Louis J. Freeh seems
    to be losing some support both in the administration and in Congress. 

    Neither side backed down publicly but there were signs they were trying
    to soften the dispute that arose from supposed restrictions on two
    National Security Council officials who were briefed on the China issue
    last June. 

    Even so, McCurry said the president was "mystified" by an FBI statement
    late Monday asserting there were no prohibitions on passing the
    information up the chain of command. 

    A senior Justice official said there was a misunderstanding about the
    ground rules. "A caution was issued during the briefing," and the NSC
    people interpreted it to mean they should tell no one about the
    information, said the official, who spoke only on condition of
    anonymity. "The FBI briefers didn't mean that," the official said. 

    The Justice official said "no one remembers the exact language of the
    caution. Clearly, it was a sloppy conversation." 

    McCurry retreated from Monday's declaration that both NSC officials had
    specific recollections of being told not to disseminate the information
    outside the briefing room. 

    Instead, he said only one of the officials recalls the restrictions and
    made a note at the time reflecting the bureau's preference for no wider
    dissemination. That was Edward J. Appel, an FBI official on loan to the
    White House, several sources said. The other official has no
    recollection of that request but accepts the accuracy of his
    colleague's recollection and note, McCurry said in a statement. 

    The press secretary also seemed to fault the two NSC officials, Appel
    and Rand Beers, for following the supposed restrictions. "They have
    some discretion and they could have exercised that discretion in this
    case," he said. 

    McCurry said that then-White House counsel Jack Quinn was told about
    the FBI briefing in January, months after it occurred, and checked with
    the Justice Department but didn't get any information. Quinn, however,
    said McCurry erred and that he didn't learn of the June briefing until
    Feb. 18, after he left government, when he was contacted by the new
    White House counsel, Charles F.C. Ruff. 

    In another development, Anthony Lake, Clinton's national security
    adviser who has been nominated to head the CIA, said that both he and
    the president should have been informed about the FBI briefing. But he
    declined to criticize the two NSC staffers, who continue to work at the
    White House, saying he did not know why they failed to relay the
    information up the chain of command. 

    Clinton's spokesman chided the FBI for issuing its statement Tuesday
    contradicting the White House version of restrictions on the June
    briefing. McCurry said it would have been "probably not a bad idea to
    try to work things out." 

    The spat comes at an awkward time for Reno as a task force of Justice
    investigators and FBI agents investigate allegations of campaign
    finance irregularities. The attorney general says if the task force
    finds evidence of federal felonies by Clinton or other high officials,
    as specified in the independent counsel law, she will quickly seek
    appointment of such a counsel to take over the probe. 

    Reno irritated some White House aides during Clinton's first term with
    her independence and her appointment of four independent counsels.
    There was an attempt to oust her in November but she eventually
    survived and appears to remain on solid ground. 

    In contrast, though, Freeh has rapidly been losing support at both ends
    of Pennsylvania Avenue and even among former supporters at the Justice
    Department. 

    He was grilled so hard by a House subcommittee last week that he
    declared: "If you lose confidence in my integrity, then I should not be
    FBI director." 

    The next day Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman of an FBI oversight
    subcommittee, denounced Freeh on the Senate floor for what Grassley
    called Freeh's whitewash in 1994 of the allegations about misconduct
    and mismanagement in the FBI crime laboratory. Many of those
    allegations have since been supported in a secret report by the Justice
    Department inspector general. 

    This week, senior Justice officials who often defend Freeh said that
    Congress has made him shy of talking to the White House. Freeh and the
    FBI were blasted by GOP congressmen for talking with Clinton aides
    about the travel office firings and later for sending the personnel
    summaries that then-White House aide Craig Livingstone requested. 
7.1041IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5583
    AP 11-Mar-1997 22:58 EST   REF5030

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Playboy' Says McVeigh Confessed

    By SANDY SHORE

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh told his attorneys that the force of the
    Oklahoma City bomb threw him against the wall of a YMCA building as he
    made his getaway, according to a story on Playboy's Internet site
    Tuesday. 

    The magazine said its story was based on "lawfully obtained documents"
    prepared for the defense that were obtained last spring. The story did
    not explain the delay in reporting on the documents. Calls to the
    magazine were not immediately returned. 

    Playboy's story gives a narrative of McVeigh's actions the day of the
    bombing, with the disclaimer that its version "contains discrepancies
    with other published accounts of the bombing." 

    "In cases where there was insufficient, inconclusive or contradictory
    information, we have relied on the documents," the magazine said. 

    The Playboy story is the second to move on the Internet in the last two
    weeks that says McVeigh confessed to his lawyers. The Dallas Morning
    News reported on its Web site on Feb. 28 that McVeigh told his defense
    team that he attacked during the day to ensure a "body count." 

    His attorneys, in a statement released Tuesday night, said: "These
    escalating reports of alleged statements by Mr. McVeigh are corrupting
    the heart of the jury system. The American ideals of justice are being
    held hostage to sensationalism." 

    Prosecutors declined comment. 

    According to Playboy, McVeigh told his defense team that after leaving
    the bomb in a rental truck in front of the federal building, he walked
    to an alley behind the YMCA to the parking lot where he had stashed his
    getaway car. 

    "McVeigh says he was about 20 feet behind the YMCA on Robinson, almost
    to the parking lot, when the bomb went off at 9:02 a.m. The explosion
    threw him against the wall of the building. 

    "He stepped over a fallen power line and continued down the alley,
    pulling out his ear plugs as he did so. He was still wearing his
    baseball cap," the magazine said. 

    McVeigh encountered a mailman, who "looked at him and said, 'Man, for a
    second, I thought that was us who blew up,"' Playboy said. 

    "'Yeah, so did I,' McVeigh said," according to the magazine. 

    Playboy also said McVeigh claimed he had no accomplice, but failed
    portions of a defense lie detector test that dealt with John Doe No. 2.

    McVeigh's attorney, Stephen Jones, believed someone was bugging their
    sessions at the El Reno Federal Correctional Institution, about 30
    miles west of Oklahoma City, because the FBI always seemed to be 15
    minutes ahead of the defense on verifying information provided by
    McVeigh, Playboy said. 

    Initially, Jones claimed the Dallas Morning News' story was a hoax, but
    four days later said the statement had been faked by the defense team
    to persuade someone else suspected of being involved in the bombing to
    talk to defense investigators. 

    He also accused the newspaper of stealing the false confession and
    hundreds of other files from his computer. 

    The newspaper denied the allegation, and said it used lawful techniques
    to obtain the documents that were the basis for its story. 

    McVeigh's trial is scheduled to begin March 31. 

    He and co-defendant Terry Nichols face a possible death penalty if
    convicted of murder, conspiracy and weapons-related counts in the April
    19, 1995, bombing that killed 168 and injured more than 500 others.
    Nichols will be tried after McVeigh. 
7.1042IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5544
    AP 11-Mar-1997 22:51 EST   REF6111

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Judge Outlines Bomb Trial TV

    By SANDY SHORE

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Oklahoma City bombing victims will be admitted to a
    closed-circuit telecast of Timothy McVeigh's trial on a first-come,
    first-served basis, a federal judge ruled Tuesday. 

    Reservations will be handled through a telephone voice-mail system
    operated by the U.S. attorney's victims' assistance unit in Oklahoma
    City. 

    More than 2,200 people are listed in an official database of bombing
    victims and their family members. There are only 315 available seats. 

    Ten of those seats will be set aside for elderly people, handicapped
    people or those who live outside Oklahoma, said U.S. District Judge
    Richard Matsch. 

    The system, which does not limit the number of times an individual may
    reserve a seat, will be tested within one week of the March 31 start of
    McVeigh's trial. 

    Also on Tuesday, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused to
    reconsider its decision to allow Matsch to ban from the courtroom
    victims who plan to testify at the trials of McVeigh or co-defendant
    Terry Nichols. 

    McVeigh and Nichols are charged with murder, conspiracy and
    weapons-related counts in the April 19, 1995 bombing that killed 168
    people. Nichols will be tried later. 

    The closed-circuit telecast was authorized by a federal law enacted
    after Matsch moved the trial to Denver. 

    Under the law, eligible spectators are crime victims who have a
    compelling interest to view a telecast because they are unable to
    attend a relocated trial because of expense or inconvenience. 
7.1043IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5578
    AP 11-Mar-1997 22:45 EST   REF6109

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FCC Clears New Wireless Service

    By JEANNINE AVERSA

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal regulators cleared the way Tuesday for
    telephone, television and data services, including Internet access, to
    be delivered via a fledgling wireless technology. 

    The Federal Communications Commission's action is a boost for the
    technology called local multipoint distribution service, or LMDS. Only
    one company, CellularVision of New York, is now offering it through a
    special license. 

    The wireless service is delivered in a way that closely resembles
    cellular phone service. But to receive phone, television or data
    services, customers need a small receiver dish in or near a window. 

    The FCC hopes the service will spur competition among
    telecommunications providers, which in theory should boost consumer
    choices and reduce prices. 

    "The commission has defined this service as broadly as possible,
    opening the door to potential new sources of competition for cable
    television, local telephony and data services," said FCC Chairman Reed
    Hundt. 

    To provide the service, companies will have to bid on a 10-year license
    at a government auction likely to be held this summer. 

    The FCC will auction 985 licenses. That's two licenses for each of 493
    markets, except New York, where only one license will be available.
    CellularVision already holds the other. Each market is roughly the size
    of a metropolitan area. 

    One license will be for a mammoth slice of the airwaves, 1,150
    megahertz, and the other for a smaller, but still considerable band of
    150 megahertz. 

    Companies that acquire lots of spectrum can offer a broader range of
    service and serve more customers. 

    To encourage newcomers, cable and local phone companies won't be
    allowed to bid on the bigger airwaves licenses in markets where they
    already provide service. 

    FCC Commissioner Rachelle Chong objected to that restriction, saying it
    would stifle competition. 

    The FCC's action means a local phone company will not be able to use
    the wireless technology to provide cable TV service to its own
    customers. And a local cable company will not be allowed to provide
    mobile phone service to its customers. 

    After three years, however, the companies can buy licenses from other
    parties. 

    For CellularVision, the FCC's action means that applications to build
    additional transmission towers in New York can now move forward at the
    FCC. 

    CellularVision currently provides 49 cable channels to a couple of
    thousand customers in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The
    company holds a license to serve 3.5 million people in the city's five
    boroughs and three nearby counties, he said. 

    Once it expands its network, CellularVision also plans to offer
    high-speed data links, local phone service and other telecommunications
    services including video conferencing. 

    The FCC also said that license holders will have to comply with
    requirements to serve the public. Those obligations will be determined
    at a later date. 
7.1044IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5657
    AP 11-Mar-1997 22:09 EST   REF6079

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    EPA Overstepped Cleaner Car Law

    By H. JOSEF HEBERT

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that the
    Environmental Protection Agency can't make one state go along with a
    group of other states that want to require less polluting automobiles,
    similar to the state mandate in California. 

    While the EPA may require states to develop pollution control plans
    that achieve federal air quality standards, it may not direct a state
    to adopt specific pollution control measures, a three-judge panel
    ruled. 

    The decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
    involved a case in which Virginia objected to a requirement by the
    Ozone Transport Commission, comprised of 12 states from Virginia to
    Maine. 

    The commission was created by the 1990 Clean Air Act to jointly address
    air pollution problems in the Northeast. It had asked and was given
    permission by the EPA to require that new cars within the region meet
    more stringent pollution standards such as those already required in
    California. 

    Virginia argued the EPA had no authority to endorse such a mandate,
    which would require the state to ban the sale of new cars that do not
    meet the tougher California emissions tests. 

    In its 35-page ruling, the three-judge panel agreed. 

    "The EPA may not ... condition approval of a state's (pollution
    control) plan on the state's adoption of a particular control measure,"
    the judges concluded. They said the agency had overstepped its
    authority in sanctioning the regional commission's plan. 

    A majority of the OTC states plus the District of Columbia voted for
    the California auto pollution control program, although only three
    states -- New York, Massachusetts and Connecticut -- have adopted it so
    far. Other OTC members are Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island,
    New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland. 

    The EPA characterized the ruling as involving a "narrow technical
    issue" but acknowledged that "the use of cleaner cars to achieve air
    standards within the OTC ... can't be mandated for the OTC as a whole."

    Nonetheless, EPA spokesman David Cohen said it was not expected to
    affect the broader negotiations that have been under way for more than
    a year between automakers and Northeastern states over future auto
    emission requirements, or whether any state wants to require sale of an
    electric car. 
7.1045IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5635
    AP 12-Mar-1997 0:38 EST   REF5406

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Peru Moves To Change Rape Law

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Peru's Congress moved Tuesday toward striking a law
    that lets rapists go free if they marry their victims -- a law that
    women's groups called offensive and degrading. 

    Congress' Justice Committee voted unanimously to eliminate that article
    from the penal code, setting the stage for what's expected to be final
    approval Thursday from the full Congress. 

    "It was an important victory not only for women, but for all of
    Peruvian society," Gina Yang of the Manuela Ramos women's rights group
    told TV Frecuencia Latina after the committee vote. 

    "A norm that for decades has offended the dignity of all women has been
    eliminated," Congresswoman Beatriz Merino, who introduced the repeal
    measure, was quoted as saying in the government's Andina news agency. 

    Besides allowing a rapist to escape punishment if he offered to marry
    his victim and she agreed, the law allowed co-defendants in a gang rape
    to go free if one of them married the woman. 

    Peruvian women interviewed by TV Frequencia agreed that Peru's law on
    rape should be changed. 

    "Of course it should. No woman should be submitted to such humiliation.
    If she marries her rapist, then that woman will continue being
    victimized," one woman told the TV station. 

    "It's about time. Rapists can't be allowed to go free. They must be
    sent to jail," another woman said. 
7.1046IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5679
    AP 11-Mar-1997 22:30 EST   REF6094

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fire Strikes Japan Nuclear Plant

    By PHIL BROWN

    Associated Press Writer

    TOKYO (AP) -- Two fires broke out within 10 hours at a nuclear waste
    handling facility on Tuesday, breaking windows and sending out clouds
    of smoke in a further embarrassment for Japan's nuclear power program. 

    No one was reported injured, but officials said the first fire exposed
    10 workers to tiny amounts of radioactivity -- one-2,000th of the dose
    considered safe for a year. 

    No warnings were issued for the area around the plant, and officials
    said radioactivity levels were well within safe limits. 

    The accidents came as Japan was trying to rebuild trust in its nuclear
    program, set back by an accident in December 1995 in a prototype
    fast-breeder reactor, which produces additional plutonium for fuel
    while generating electricity. 

    Tuesday's fires broke out at Tokaimura, an 11-million-square-foot
    complex that includes a nuclear fuel reprocessing plant and
    laboratories, 70 miles northeast of Tokyo. 

    The first fire was quickly put out, said Masato Sukegawa, a spokesman
    for the state-run Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel Development Corp. 

    No one was in the waste-handling facility when the second fire broke
    out at 8:14 p.m., making an explosive sound and blowing out a shutter
    and several windows. However, about 200 of the plant's 2,000 employees
    were at work elsewhere in the complex. 

    Investigators on Wednesday said they had not discovered the cause of
    the fires. The second blaze may have been set off by volatile gas that
    leaked from a duct after the first blaze, said Kenji Koyama, deputy
    chief of the Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel Development Corp. 

    Koyama said the possibility of another explosion at the plant was "low"
    because of reduced temperatures inside the facility. 

    Four hours after the second blaze broke out, smoke no longer was
    visible in the waste-handling facility, but it was not known whether
    the fire was completely under control, said Kenji Kimura of the Science
    and Technology Agency's nuclear fuel division. 

    Sprinklers could have extinguished the fire, or asphalt in the area
    might have completely burned out, he said. The asphalt is used to pack
    nuclear waste in drums. 

    At one of 12 radioactivity monitoring stations in the nuclear complex,
    a small abnormality was observed 36 minutes after the second fire broke
    out, but it returned to normal within 10 minutes, Kimura said. 

    In the 1995 accident, a sodium leak in a secondary cooling system
    forced an emergency shutdown at the fast-breeder reactor in Tsuruga,
    220 miles west of Tokyo. The reactor's operator tried to cover up the
    extent of that accident, which later tests showed could have resulted
    in an explosion. One official investigating the case committed suicide.

    Critics oppose use of plutonium because it is highly toxic and can be
    used to build nuclear weapons. 

    In an annual report in December, the government rejected calls for a
    change in energy policy, saying Japan's nuclear policy was based on
    reprocessing spent nuclear fuel into plutonium and burning it in
    fast-breeder reactors. 

    The report said the government had to work harder to gain people's
    trust because nuclear power is necessary to reduce Japan's dependence
    on foreign oil. 

    Japan has 51 nuclear power plants in operation, producing 33.8 percent
    of the country's total energy needs, the report said. 
7.1047IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5729
    AP 11-Mar-1997 22:11 EST   REF6080

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mir Craft Parts To Fall in Ocean

    MOSCOW (AP) -- Parts of a cargo vessel no longer needed at the Mir
    space station will fall into a remote part of the South Pacific on
    Wednesday, Russian space officials told the ITAR-Tass news agency. 

    Remnants of the Progress M-33 cargo ferry will plummet into the Pacific
    Ocean about 2,000 miles east of Wellington, New Zealand, the officials
    said. 

    Russian Mission Control said the area is far from air and sea routes,
    and the vessel's re-entry poses no danger. 

    The Progress M-33 brought supplies and fuel to cosmonauts aboard the
    space station in November. It was detached in February to make room for
    the arrival of a Soyuz craft carrying a new crew to the orbiting
    station. 

    Attempts to reattach the Progress failed, and space officials decided
    to maneuver it into a position where it would fall back to Earth. 

    The officials said most of the 7-ton cargo ship will burn up in the
    atmosphere. However, about 450 pounds of heat-resistant parts, such as
    engine combustion chambers, are expected to reach the Earth's surface,
    according to ITAR-Tass. 
7.1048IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5742
    AP 11-Mar-1997 20:51 EST   REF6042

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Divers Find Spanish Treasure

    OSLO, Norway (AP) -- A Spanish galleon that sank more than 340 years
    ago with a treasure of plundered gold has been discovered off the coast
    of Ecuador, the project's Norwegian financiers said Tuesday. 

    The Spanish naval flagship La Capitana Jesus Maria went down in the
    mid-1600s with a cargo of gold, silver and jewels stolen from Indians
    in what is now Peru. 

    The treasure is believed to be worth between $3.7 billion and $7.5
    billion, according to Norwegian news reports. 

    "I can hardly believe that I found the ship. I have hardly been to bed
    the past few days," Norwegian diver Anton Smith told his hometown
    newspaper Telemarksavisen about Sunday's discovery. 

    An international consortium has been searching for the ship for three
    years. The finders can keep half the treasure, with the rest going to
    the government of Ecuador. 

    "It is like walking right into a fairy tale," said Egil
    Nagell-Erichsen, who formed the Norwegian consortium La Capitana Invest
    to help pay for the search. "People have been searching for this ship
    for 300 years without success." 

    La Capitana Jesus Maria was sailing from Peru to Panama when it sank in
    shallow waters. Even though the captain survived and was able to note
    the ship's approximate position, it was never located. 

    Morten Moe, another Norwegian investor, said the waters where the ship
    was found were not deep -- only about 50 feet -- but that the seas were
    turbulent and silty. 

    He said recently developed seismic technology made it possible to
    discern three-dimensional objects buried under sand. Using the system,
    the team found three cannonballs and a vase, which led them to the
    ship. 
7.1049IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5752
    AP 11-Mar-1997 18:39 EST   REF5530

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Britain Bars HIV-Positive Doc

    LONDON (AP) -- Britain barred a Zambian gynecologist from practicing
    medicine Tuesday for his refusal to take an AIDS test for 8 1/2 months
    after a lover told him she was HIV-positive. 

    The case of Patrick Mubanga Ngosa, who tested HIV-positive in January,
    has sparked a health scare among thousands of women in southern
    England, where he practiced since 1991. 

    He resigned from the Gloucestershire health authority in January and
    reportedly left for Zambia just before newspapers identified him last
    week. 

    On Tuesday, a disciplinary hearing by the General Medical Council found
    Ngosa guilty of abusing his patients' trust. 

    He is the first doctor barred from practicing in Britain for refusing
    an AIDS test when he knew he was at risk. 

    Ngosa's lawyer, Nicola Davies, said her client lied about the 19-month
    affair with a woman identified only as Mrs. A and tried to avoid
    testing because he was terrified of losing his job and his wife, and of
    being ostracized in Zambia if he tested positive. Ngosa also has three
    children. 

    Since the story broke, about 7,000 women have called help lines in the
    two counties where he worked -- Gloucestershire and Essex in southern
    England. Clerks have combed the records of 50,000 patients and
    identified 1,700 who had surgery, such as Caesarean births or
    hysterectomies, in which Ngosa assisted. 

    British health authorities stressed the risk of infection was remote. 

    The medical council, which licenses doctors in Britain, opposes
    compulsory testing. But it stipulates that doctors who know they are at
    risk must be tested, must tell their superiors if they are HIV-positive
    and must avoid invasive procedures. 

    "His (Ngosa's) behavior was a betrayal of his patients' trust and
    undermines the trust placed by the public in the profession," said the
    chairman of the council's disciplinary committee, Sir Herbert Duthie. 

    In January, a French orthopedic surgeon who unknowingly passed the
    virus to a patient urged all surgeons to be tested. French authorities
    said the surgeon was only the second known case in which a health
    professional infected a patient. The other was a dentist from Florida.

7.1050IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5754
    RTw  12-Mar-97 06:27    

    Hong Kong police explode fake bomb near legislature

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    HONG KONG, March 12 (Reuter) - Police bomb disposal experts exploded a
    parcel apparently planted by a resident furious at spiraling property
    prices outside Hong Kong's legislature on Wednesday. 

    The bomb scare, six hours before Financial Secretary Donald Tsang was
    to present his budget in the Legislative Council (Legco) chamber, was
    aimed at officials for failing to propose curbs on home prices, up 30
    percent over the past year. 

    Police Superintendent Chan Wan-lung told reporters the parcel was an
    empty carton with writing on it attacking Housing Secretary Dominic
    Wong and Hong Kong's future post-colonial leader Tung Chee-hwa for not
    offering solutions to rising home prices. 

    Tung will govern Hong Kong when China takes the colony back from
    Britain on July 1 this year. 

    Chan gave no details on the identity of the disgruntled resident. 

    "It was an empty carton of size four inches times six inches times
    seven inches, the size of a shoebox," Chan said. 

    He said police sent in a robot to destroy the package. Bomb experts
    examined the remains and found no evidence of a bomb, he said. 

    "The package was outside the building," a guard working at the Legco
    building said. 

    It was found during a routine patrol by Legco security guards, who
    called in the police. 

    Police blocked off roads around the Legco building in the busy Central
    district and cordoned off entrances to the nearby subway train station
    during the morning rush hour. 

    "The robot just moved to the back of the building. There was an
    explosion. There was no smoke, just a bang," a witness said. 

    Tsang was about to present his budget to Legco, the last before the
    sovereignty change. Public opinion strongly favours tax cuts and other
    breaks for the middle class and so-called "sandwich class" who can't
    afford to buy a home. 

    A recent survey showed 81 percent of households earned too little to
    afford to buy their own home. The average wage in industrial, clerical
    and secretarial jobs is HK$10,329 a month.

    REUTER
7.1051IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:58118
    RTw  12-Mar-97 03:44    

    FEATURE - British chocolate makers gear up for ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - British chocolate makers gear up for Easter season 

    By Helen Jones 

    LONDON, March 12 (Reuter) - British chocolate manufacturers are gearing
    up for what is expected to be their best Easter ever. 

    But they're also trying to snare new consumers by branching out from
    the usual edible bunnies with items such as macho Easter eggs and
    chocolate beer. 

    "We expect the Easter chocolate market be worth a total of 300 million
    pounds ($483.8 million) this year compared with 260 million pounds last
    year," Tony Bilsborough, a spokesman for Cadbury, told Reuters. 

    The Easter season, which begins as soon as Valentine's Day is over, is
    the most important period for the industry and sees supermarket shelves
    laden with traditional chocolate eggs, as well as novelty shapes such
    as ducks and rabbits. 

    "The chocolate market is very seasonal and revolves around Christmas,
    Valentine's Day and Easter. Manufacturers are aggressively marketing
    their products to get as much out of these peak periods as possible to
    balance lower sales in the summer," said Yvette Murphy, features editor
    of the trade publication The Grocer. 

    London department store Selfridges stocks around 120 different types of
    eggs and novelties to satisfy British chocoholics. 

    Britons consume an average of eight kg (17.6 lbs) of chocolate a year,
    according to Cadbury, which launched Britain's first milk chocolate 100
    years ago. 

    Cadbury's most popular Easter line is the Cadbury Creme Egg -- a
    confection of milk chocolate and fondant filling. Although it is only
    available for a three-month period, last year sales were worth almost
    60 million pounds. 

    The company says that if all the Creme Eggs it makes in one year were
    stacked on top of each other, the pile would be 900 times higher than
    Mount Everest. 

    Confectionery retailer Thornton's has launched a "Diamond Easter Egg"
    promotion to increase public interest in the market. It will hide
    25,000 pounds worth of diamonds in 11 eggs across its nation-wide chain
    of stores. The biggest -- a 23 carat diamond worth 15,000 pounds --
    will be made into an item of jewellery for the winner. 

    Thornton's is also selling chocolate eggs onto which a name or message
    can be iced. 

    "We iced 1.5 million of them last year and it kept the shop staff very
    busy," said a spokeswoman. 

    MOVES TO BROADEN THE MARKET 

    All British chocolate manufacturers are attempting to broaden the
    Easter market beyond gifts for children. Thornton's said its iced eggs
    are very popular with adults and that some requests for messages can be
    quite risqu. 

    Other manufacturers have launched Easter eggs with plain packaging and
    not a fluffy duck in sight which are aimed directly at men and teenage
    boys. 

    "We have launched one-kilogram bars of chocolate attached to Easter
    eggs. They are very chunky and macho and there is no way that a man
    could feel embarrassed about receiving one," said Cadbury's
    Bilsborough. 

    At the other end of the market, luxury store Harrods is selling a
    two-and-a-half-foot(76 cm)-high rabbit made of finest Belgian chocolate
    -- yours for a mere 295 pounds. 

    "High-quality chocolate has a sophisticated taste and is nothing like
    the mass-produced product," said Alan Porter of French chocolate firm
    Valrhona. 

    Chocolatier Hans Tschirren, whose family has been hand-making chocolate
    in Switzerland since 1919, said, "It melts like butter in your mouth.
    It neither clings stickily to the palate, feels gritty on the tongue
    nor leaves any after-taste." 

    The finest chocolate -- which is made from a higher percentage of cocoa
    than cheaper chocolate brands -- even has its own fan club. The
    Chocolate Society was set up seven years ago by a group of chocolate
    lovers to promote high quality products. 

    "We now have five-and-a-half thousand members who come to regular
    tastings and spread the word about the wonders of chocolate. We are not
    chocoholics but are passionate about good chocolate," said Nicola
    Porter, one of the Society's directors. 

    But luxury chocolate comes at a price -- Harrods sells hand-made Swiss
    chocolates for 6.50 pounds per half lb. 

    Consumers in Harrods are snapping them up to give to friends and
    relatives as Easter gifts. 

    Michael King, on holiday in London from New York said: "I have bought
    six boxes as gifts. I guess they are pretty expensive, but the
    chocolate is very good and they are decorated with the Harrods logo so
    it makes them kind of extra special." 

    And for dedicated chocoholics for whom Easter Eggs are just not enough,
    London-based brewery Young's is launching a chocolate beer made from
    malt and chocolate essence in time for Easter. 

    "It really tastes of chocolate and has done very well in consumer
    tests," said brewery spokesman Michael Hardman. 

    REUTER
7.1052IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Wed Mar 12 1997 09:5829
    RTw  11-Mar-97 22:37    

    Loose jacket caused N. Ireland helicopter crash

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BELFAST, March 11 (Reuter) - A helicopter crashed in Northern Ireland
    last October because a jacket flew out of the unlocked baggage
    compartment and became tangled in the tail rotors, investigators said
    on Tuesday. 

    The pilot of the helicopter and two journalists on board received back
    injuries when the Agusta Bell aircraft hit the ground near the town of
    Enniskillen. The Northern Irish manager of drinks group Guinness
    escaped unhurt. 

    The helicopter, one of three carrying company executives and media on a
    promotional flight for Guinness, was originally thought to have hit a
    large bird. 

    But Irish crash investigators said in a report on Tuesday that they had
    found black thread from a promotional jacket wrapped round the tail
    rotors. The jacket had been put in the external baggage compartment
    before take-off. 

    It was clear from dents in the fuselage that the unlocked baggage door
    had somehow flown open in flight, they added. 

    REUTER
7.1053IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:57115
    AP 13-Mar-1997 0:02 EST   REF5099

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, March 12, 1997
   
    ARMY-SEX 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Judicial proceedings on charges of sexual misconduct
    at an Army training center in Maryland will go forward, Army Secretary
    Togo West said today after meeting with NAACP head Kweisi Mfume. West
    rejected the group's call for an outside probe into how the Army
    investigation has been handled. Some of the allegations were made by
    five women soldiers who now say military investigators tried to coerce
    them into falsely accusing superiors of rape. 
   
    BOMBING TRIAL 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's lawyers are dismissing a Playboy
    magazine report. They say it's "even more sensationalist" than a
    previous report that McVeigh confessed. Playboy says McVeigh told his
    lawyers he felt the the force of a bomb he set off in Oklahoma City in
    1995. McVeigh and co-defendant Terry Nichols are charged with murder
    and other crimes in the April 1995 bombing. 
   
    ISRAEL-UNITED NATIONS 

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The world at large is condemning Israel's
    decision to go ahead with Jewish housing construction in historically
    Arab east Jerusalem. United Nations speakers from all over the world
    joined Arab states in branding the plan to build the 6,500-unit Har
    Homa housing area as a threat to Middle East peace. Israel has refused
    to reverse its plans, but has hinted at other concessions. 
   
    NETANYAHU-YELTSIN 

    MOSCOW (AP) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wrapped up a
    visit to Moscow by declaring Russia a "new-found friend" but
    acknowledged they still have differences over such issues as Russian
    nuclear cooperation with Iran. The "enmity and adversity" between the
    Soviet Union and Israel has been replaced by surging trade, travel and
    cultural contacts with post-Soviet Russia, Netanyahu said. 
   
    CLINTON-CAMPAIGN FINANCE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton is enlisting two prominent retired
    politicians to raise awareness on the issue of campaign finance reform,
    administration sources said. The project will be led by former Vice
    President Walter Mondale, a Democrat, and former Kansas Republican Sen.
    Nancy Kassebaum Baker, according to White House sources who spoke to
    The Associated Press. 
   
    INTERNET SURVEY 

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Internet use in the United States and Canada
    doubled over the past 18 months, a Nielsen survey reports. Twenty-three
    percent of people over age 16 in the United States and Canada use the
    Internet, up from 10 percent in the fall of 1995, the survey found.
    That works out to 50.6 million Internet users. 
   
    CLINTON-HIGHWAYS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton's $175 billion program for new
    highway projects could hit drivers in the pocketbook: The plan would
    allow states to charge tolls on interstate highways. Mortimer Downey,
    the country's No. 2 transportation official, said the change was made
    in response to requests for another source of revenue for
    transportation projects. 
   
    NIGERIA-SOYINKA 

    LONDON (AP) -- Nigeria has charged exiled writer Wole Soyinka with
    treason, the 1986 Nobel literature laureate said Wednesday as he
    declared the accusations unfounded. Soyinka and others were charged in
    connection with a wave of recent bombings in Lagos, the report said.
    The charge, which carries a death penalty, comes only days after
    Soyinka said he would sue Nigerian military leader Sani Abacha for
    calling him a terrorist. 
   
    STRESS INJURIES 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Repetitive strain injuries in the workplace have
    dropped for the first time in 15 years, but government officials say
    curing the workers who still suffer is a "significant challenge." The
    number of stress trauma cases such as carpal tunnel syndrome and back
    strains dropped 7 percent from 1994 to 1995. Experts in ergonomics
    credit the decline to heightened awareness of both employees and
    employers and the heavy financial toll such injuries can have on the
    workplace. 
   
    GUMBEL-CBS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Bryant Gumbel has decided to join CBS News, ending
    weeks of speculation about where he would work after leaving NBC's
    "Today" show, The Associated Press learned today. CBS is expected to
    announce the multi-year deal Thursday, said a well-placed source, who
    spoke on condition of anonymity. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar traded at 122.20 yen, down 0.42 yen. The
    Nikkei shed 120.38 points to 18,062.89 points. In New York, the Dow
    fell 45.79 to close at 7,039.37. Also, in an effort to diversify the
    30-stock Dow industrial average, Westinghouse, Texaco, Bethlehem Steel
    and Woolworth are being replaced Monday by Travelers, Hewlett-Packard,
    Johnson & Johnson and Wal-Mart. 
   
    FLORIDA STATE-SYRACUSE 

    SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -- Florida State has beaten Syracuse 82-67 in the
    first round of the NIT. The loss capped a disappointing season for
    Syracuse (19-13), which made it to the national title game a year ago
    and entered this season ranked 12th. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by LISA M. COLLINS 
7.1054IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5796
    AP 13-Mar-1997 0:51 EST   REF5373

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Dems. Haven't Returned Checks

    By CONNIE CASS

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Democratic Party made a big to-do over its plans
    to return another $1.5 million in tainted contributions. But the checks
    aren't in the mail -- and probably won't be for months because the
    indebted party says it can't afford them. 

    "We hope to do it within the next several months," Democratic National
    Committee spokeswoman Amy Weiss Tobe said. "We've decided the right
    thing to do is to raise the money and return it when we can." 

    President Clinton has helped the committee raise more than $1 million
    in the past month alone. But the party reports more than $10 million in
    debts from the past election and doesn't want to take out more loans. 

    And it's going to be getting less help from the White House in the near
    future. A temporary freeze had been put on all sleepovers in the
    Lincoln Bedroom, coffees and fund-raising receptions and dinners in the
    White House, a senior official said, speaking on the condition of
    anonymity. 

    "The president wants to make sure his future fund-raising activities
    comport with the guidelines laid down by the White House and the DNC,"
    White House spokesman Mike McCurry said Wednesday. "We're examining the
    schedule accordingly." 

    DNC leaders announced on Feb. 28 that they were returning 77 donors'
    contributions, believing them illegal or improper. 

    One of the donations came from a women dead for years. Most were raised
    by three Asian-American businessman at the center of the current
    investigation into Democratic fund raising. 

    At the news conference last month, party officials made no mention of
    how long it might take to give the money back. 

    The latest batch of refund announcements came as a result of an audit
    begun by the party last November. At that time, the DNC already was in
    the process of returning some $1.5 million in suspect contributions,
    mostly from foreigners or foreign companies, which aren't allowed to
    contribute. 

    Tobe said the first batch of contributions has been returned. 

    But the individuals and companies whose names were released by DNC
    leaders last month haven't even been notified yet -- though they might
    have gotten the word from a reporter or read their names in the news
    media. 

    Lisa Tucker, an attorney representing Taiwanese-American businessman
    Johnny Chung, said "it was hurtful" when the party announced it could
    not verify the legality of Chung's $366,000 in donations. 

    "We don't think the contribution was improper," Tucker said. "But if
    they think it's improper, than they should be consistent and return the
    money right away." 

    Republicans were quick to seize on the latest news. 

    "After they told the American people they were doing it and acted so
    self-righteous about it, and now we find out they haven't even done it,
    it is shocking," Jim Nicholson, chairman of the Republican National
    Committee, said Wednesday. 

    "They should have done whatever was legally possible to give this money
    back when they said they were, whether that would have required going
    to the bank and borrowing it or not," Nicholson said. 

    The RNC had a post-election shortfall almost as large as the
    Democrats'. But the controversy over fund raising from foreign sources
    has posed no financial burden for the GOP because it identified only
    $15,050 that it needed to return. That money has already been sent
    back, officials said. 

    The Democrats said the $1.5 million includes almost $250,000 that
    auditors determined was probably illegally donated. Most of that money
    is from foreign sources. 

    The rest is either from sources "deemed inappropriate" -- such as
    unsavory characters or companies that owe substantial back taxes -- or
    from donors the party could not find out enough about to verify their
    contributions were legal. 

    In cases where the DNC is unable to locate the donor, the funds will be
    turned over to the U.S. Treasury, Tobe said. 

    "There's going to be a surprise in the mail for some of these people,
    if we can find them," Tobe said. 
7.1055IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5786
    AP 13-Mar-1997 0:28 EST   REF5322

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Salinger Tries TWA Crash Theory

    By RICHARD PYLE

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Pierre Salinger, who fueled the TWA Flight 800
    friendly fire debate with a "secret" document that turned out to have
    come from the Internet, now has an expanded theory that a Navy missile
    downed the jetliner. 

    This time, the former ABC newsman and press secretary to President
    Kennedy is co-leader of a team that claims the jet was shot down during
    a Navy training exercise when a missile "lost its lock on its original
    target." 

    The 62-page report was to be released at a Paris news conference
    Thursday, coinciding with Paris-Match magazine's publication of radar
    images purporting to show a mystery blip racing toward the TWA plane. 

    Early Tuesday, the FBI seized a videotape, supposedly showing the radar
    images, from the Florida home of retired United Airlines pilot Richard
    Russell, who wrote the Internet memo and is listed in Salinger's report
    as a member of his investigative team. 

    The videotape was examined closely and found to have no indications of
    any missile, The New York Times reported in Thursday editions. 

    "It has the blip of the plane," a federal law enforcement official told
    the Times. "It has the blip of other planes. It has no missile. It
    never did. It never will." 

    The Paris-bound 747 exploded and crashed minutes after leaving Kennedy
    Airport on July 17, killing all 230 people aboard. 

    Investigators say three possible crash theories remain -- a bomb, a
    missile or mechanical failure -- but they insist that investigation has
    ruled out an errant missile strike by the U.S. military. 

    Navy officials say no missile tests were underway at the time of the
    crash, and an inventory of the Navy arsenal turned up no evidence of
    friendly fire. 

    But a draft version of Salinger's report, obtained by The Associated
    Press, says witnesses monitoring secret Navy anti-terrorism exercises
    reportedly heard a male voice say "'Oh, my God, I just hit that plane,'
    and another sailor reportedly confessed to his father, 'Dad, we shot it
    down."' 

    Federal investigators also received an advance copy of the report,
    dated March 6 and authored by Salinger, Mike Sommer and Ian Goddard. It
    contains few documented facts and is full of unattributed quotes,
    technical jargon and rambling speculation about missiles, aircraft,
    ships and secret Navy activities. 

    In a phone interview from Paris, Salinger said the final version of his
    report was nine pages longer than the draft but contained the same
    material, including: 

    -- A claim that after the crash "a Navy ship involved in the disaster
    was sent out to sea via the Middle East and its crew dispersed around
    the world, the investigation reveals." 

    -- The missile "probably" carried a type of warhead "reportedly banned"
    by a former U.S.-Soviet arms treaty, SALT I. 

    -- "A computer error between the USS Normandy and other participating
    Navy and U.S. Coast Guard vessels, may also have led to the tragic
    shootdown." 

    The report repeatedly refers to a "Tomahawk cruise missile" serving as
    a target drone. The $1 million weapon is never used for that purpose,
    said a Navy source. 

    The Navy says there was a P-3 Orion, a submarine hunter, on a routine
    training mission 55 miles away, and the USS Normandy, an Aegis-type
    missile cruiser, was 180 miles to the south and not conducting missile
    drills. 

    But the Navy insists it would be impossible to cover up such an
    incident, given the hundreds of people who would know about it within
    minutes. 
7.1056IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5724
    AP 13-Mar-1997 0:25 EST   REF5263

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Police: Abductor Shot Himself

    PHILOMATH, Ore. (AP) -- A millworker abducted the 8-year-old
    stepdaughter of a longtime friend and then shot himself after
    detectives arrived at his home Wednesday to question him, Benton County
    sheriff's officials said. 

    The man had been drinking with the girl's stepfather at her home late
    Tuesday night. The parents called authorities after discovering her
    missing after 7 a.m. 

    When Detective Sgt. Bernie Altishin went to the man's trailer home
    outside Corvallis to ask questions, the man pushed the girl outside and
    shut his door. Moments later, he shot himself to death inside the
    trailer. 

    The girl appeared to be in good condition but was taken to a hospital
    to check for sexual abuse, sheriff's Lt. John Chilcote said. 

    The man's name was being withheld pending notification of relatives.
7.1057IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5741
    AP 12-Mar-1997 23:24 EST   REF5070

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    NY Passes Public Manners Bill

    By JOEL STASHENKO

    Associated Press Writer

    ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- It would be a crime to beg aggressively, to
    relieve oneself in public and to lie down in doorways or on sidewalks
    in commercial districts under a bill passed Wednesday by the state
    Senate. 

    Its sponsor, Republican Sen. Guy Velella said the bill was aimed at
    many New Yorkers' "quality of life" concerns, and was not aimed at poor
    or homeless minorities. 

    "The group I am targeting is pigs, whether they are white, black, green
    or yellow," he said. "All I am asking is that people who are homeless
    or down on their luck exercise the same discretion that rich people and
    middle-class people do." 

    Velella said Republican New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, seeking
    re-election this year, already has instituted aspects of his bill, such
    as a ban on aggressive panhandling, where beggar intimidates the
    alms-giver. 

    Colleen Roche, Giuliani's spokeswoman, said the mayor supports the
    bill. "This legislation, like local laws in New York City, can and have
    had a dramatic impact and are improving the quality of life," she said.

    The measure, which passed the Senate 44-14, is opposed by the New York
    Civil Liberties Union for curtailing begging and use of public
    sidewalks, which the group argues are protected under state and federal
    constitutions. 

    "To try and address the symptoms of a major social problem by
    establishing criminality just does not work," said Sen. Velmanette
    Montgomery, a Democrat from Brooklyn. 
7.1058IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5735
    AP 12-Mar-1997 23:18 EST   REF5046

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Woman Hit by Doctor Wins Suit

    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- An airport parking attendant won a $1 million
    verdict against a doctor who hit her with his Mercedes-Benz when she
    tried to give him a parking ticket. 

    June Grittman, who was paid $11 an hour to enforce parking regulations
    at the Portland airport, testified that Dr. Darrell Brett said he could
    "buy and sell" people like her after she asked him in 1995 to move from
    a no-parking zone. 

    As she stood in front of the neurosurgeon's car writing a $25 ticket,
    Brett bumped her across the knees, backed up and hit her again, sending
    her sprawling onto the hood. 

    Witnesses testified that Brett bragged of making $3 million a year and
    told Grittman that if she didn't get out of the way, he would run her
    over. 

    A jury Tuesday awarded her $200,000 for physical and emotional injuries
    and $800,000 in punitive damages. Under Oregon law, half the punitive
    damages go to a crime victims' assistance fund. 

    "Some people have too much money in this world," her lawyer, Gregory
    Kafoury, said after jurors found Brett had committed civil battery. "He
    needed to be brought down to earth." 

    Brett had no comment. 

    Brett is accused in a separate, $300,000 lawsuit of making ethnic slurs
    against a pharmacist who called for confirmation of a prescription. 
7.1059IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5836
    AP 12-Mar-1997 23:16 EST   REF5039

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Levi Pays $25,000 for Old Jeans

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A pair of 100-year-old jeans were hand-delivered
    to the Levis Strauss museum on Wednesday after the company paid $25,000
    for the rare find. 

    The company plans to clean the newly bought pair -- apparently once
    owned by a coal miner in Colorado -- and display it near one almost the
    same age, but in poorer condition. 

    The acquisition is important because the company lost most of its
    inventory in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire, company
    historian Lynn Downey said. 

    'When we acquire something from the 19th century it's like finding a
    first folio of Shakespeare or the first pressing of an Elvis record,"
    Downey said. "I'm just thrilled." 

    The pair dates from 1886 to 1902, when the jeans cost about $1.25,
    Downey said. It and the other pair will be displayed in glass and
    placed under 24-hour security at Levi's headquarters in San Francisco. 

    The jeans, which have a single back pocket and a leather patch on the
    waistband, were found in remarkably good shape in November by someone
    combing an old mine. That person sold them for $10,000. Another
    investor paid $15,000, and the owners of What Comes Around Goes Around,
    a vintage apparel store in Manhattan, paid $20,000. 

    "The biggest market for vintage jeans is Japan, but I wanted to keep
    them in the country," said Seth Weisser, co-owner of the store. "I
    called Levi's and overnighted them pictures. They seemed overwhelmed
    with happiness." 
7.1060IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5833
    AP 12-Mar-1997 22:32 EST   REF6161

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Woman Swapped at Birth Pregnant

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Kimberly Mays-Weeks, who was switched at birth
    and became embroiled in a custody battle between her two sets of
    parents, says she is pregnant. 

    Mays-Weeks, 18, who was married last month in Orlando, said in an
    interview on the syndicated talk show "Rolonda" show that she is due in
    September. The interview is scheduled to air Friday. 

    Kimberly was switched at birth with Arlena Twigg at a Wauchula hospital
    where they were born in 1978. The swap became public in 1988 when
    Arlena, who had been raised by Regina and Ernest Twigg, died of heart
    disease. Tests showed Arlena was not their biological child. 

    Robert Mays, who had raised Kimberly, battled for five years with the
    Twiggs over visitation rights before a judge eventually ruled that the
    Twiggs had no legal rights to act as her parents or even to visit her. 

    But Kimberly later ran away from Mays and wound up moving in with the
    Twiggs, although she also ran away from them several times. She has
    since reconciled with both sets of parents, and Robert Mays gave
    Kimberly away when she wed 19-year-old Jeremy Weeks last month. 

    She said she would tell her child about her experience when the child
    is old enough to understand. Meanwhile, she won't be taking any chances
    that the same mistake will happen with her child. 

    "The baby will remain on my chest at all times," she said. 
7.1061IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5860
    AP 12-Mar-1997 22:06 EST   REF6143

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    US Airways Settles Suit for $1M

    By JESSE J. HOLLAND

    Associated Press Writer

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- Relatives of a woman killed in the crash of
    USAir Flight 1016 settled for at least $1 million Wednesday before the
    first scheduled hearing into what the airline should pay relatives and
    survivors. 

    The July 1994 crash of the DC-9 jet during a thunderstorm near
    Charlotte, N.C., killed 37 of the 57 people aboard. 

    A federal jury on Friday found the airline, now known as US Airways,
    negligent, but not so reckless that it would be liable for potentially
    costly punitive damages. As a result, US Airways is liable for only
    actual damages. 

    Friday's victory extends to all the plaintiffs suing over the crash.
    Damages are to be determined at individual hearings. The first of
    these, for the survivors of Freddie Sue Sturkie of Lexington, was to be
    held Wednesday. 

    Just before the hearing, however, US Airways agreed on a settlement in
    which the airline admitted it was at fault, according to David
    Rapoport, an attorney for the Sturkie family. 

    "Without an admission of fault, I don't think my clients would have
    settled," Rapoport said. "We've accomplished our major goal." 

    Rapoport would not disclose the settlement amount, but said it was at
    least $1 million. He also said he had settled four other cases, though
    he would not discuss when or for how much, and said he expected many
    other lawyers to settle their cases as well. 

    "This is just the litmus test," said James Orr, another lawyer who
    represents a number of families and survivors. "It's sort of an example
    of what juries in South Carolina will pay to these families." 

    Mrs. Sturkie was on Flight 1016 with her son Jason, then 20, who
    survived, and her 5-year-old grandson, Christopher Boyles, who died.
    They were on the way to visit relatives in Memphis, Tenn. 

    Flight 1016 crashed in a violent thunderstorm as it was trying to land
    at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport en route from Columbia. The
    National Transportation Safety Board said a strong downward gust,
    called a microburst, slammed the plane into the ground. 

    However, survivors and relatives of those killed contended USAir did
    not properly train its pilots and improperly allowed them to fly into
    thunderstorms. USAir said air traffic controllers did not give the
    flight crew proper weather information. 

    The federal government admitted some liability in a settlement with the
    airline, but its terms have been kept secret. 
7.1062IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5823
    AP 12-Mar-1997 23:19 EST   REF5051

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Iran Calls for U.S. Boycott

    TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Iran called for an economic embargo on Israel and
    a boycott of U.S. goods Wednesday to protest Israeli policies and what
    it described as Washington's support for them. 

    "The Zionist regime is continuing its aggressive policies, trampling
    underfoot the rights of Muslims and Palestinians and defying the will
    of international organizations," Iranian Radio said in a commentary. 

    It urged international and Islamic organizations to carry out the
    boycott. 

    It said a boycott of U.S. goods would pressure Washington into reducing
    its support for Israel. 

    Iran's statements followed the U.S. veto Friday of a European-sponsored
    U.N. resolution critical of Israel's plan to build Jewish housing in
    historically Arab east Jerusalem. 
7.1063IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5817
    AP 12-Mar-1997 21:14 EST   REF6115

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    20 Foreigners Seized in Nigeria

    PARIS (AP) -- Tribesmen in Nigeria have seized 20 foreigners, 16 of
    them French citizens, from an oil-drilling platform in the remote and
    marshy Warri region, sources at the Foreign Ministry in Paris said
    Wednesday. 

    French diplomats have been in contact with oil industry officials and
    with local authorities to try to get them released, said the ministry
    sources, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

    The nationalities of the other hostages were not immediately known and
    no other details of the incident were available. 
7.1064IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5836
    AP 12-Mar-1997 18:54 EST   REF5804

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Helms Sees End to Castro's Rule

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- In a broadcast to the Cuban people Wednesday, Sen.
    Jesse Helms predicted a prosperous future for the island because the
    "murderous" regime of President Fidel Castro is on its way out. 

    Helms, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the
    credit partly belongs to the Cuba sanctions legislation he co-authored
    and which took effect a year ago. 

    The legislation seeks to punish foreign investors who do business on
    property confiscated from Americans at the start of the Cuban
    revolution in the early 1960s. 

    "One by one, the foreign investors who line Castro's pockets with money
    and keep his brutal regime afloat, are fleeing," said Helms, R-N.C. "As
    each one leaves, the pressure builds on Fidel to loosen his
    stranglehold on Cuban society -- to get out of your way and to let you
    work, start businesses, earn a decent living and feed your families." 

    Helms' brief remarks were delivered on Radio Marti, the U.S. government
    station that broadcasts to Cuba. 

    He said Castro has never been so isolated as he is today. 

    Predicting a better life for all Cubans once Castro leaves, Helms said
    the country's leaders will be chosen in free elections and the United
    States will stand with Cuba as friends, neighbors and allies. 

    "My friends, soon Castro's tyranny will end. I look forward to the day
    when I can visit with you in a free prosperous and democratic Cuba. I
    am confident that day is not far off," he said.
7.1065IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:58171
    RTw  13-Mar-97 03:28    

    FEATURE - UK education divide deepens under ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - UK education divide deepens under Conservatives 

    By Helen Smith 

    CROYDON, England, March 13 (Reuter) - To government inspectors, the
    pupils appeared to be in charge at Ashburton High School. Their
    teachers cowered in fear. 

    The school has twice "failed" inspections by the Officer for Standards
    in Education (OFSTED). It seemed that staff spent more time trying to
    control their charges than giving lessons. Truancy and bullying were
    rife. 

    "Disruptive behaviour is severely limiting the progress of many
    pupils," said OFSTED's latest report. 

    None of this was particularly surprising, said George Varnava, the
    headmaster brought in to sort out the problems at the school in
    Croydon, south of London. 

    Ashburton is the only school in the area that cannot choose pupils
    under the Conservative government's education reforms. 

    Consequently, it has become a so-called "sink school" where the pupils
    other schools don't want end up. Pupils and teachers are keenly aware
    of this and so morale is low, says Varnava. Many of Ashburton's pupils
    are the children of refugees or asylum-seekers, a large proportion
    barely speak English and dozens have been expelled by other schools. 

    EDUCATION WILL SWAY VOTERS IN COMING ELECTION 

    Polls show that more than half the adult population considers education
    one of the most important issues affecting the way they will vote in
    Britain's coming election. The opposition Labour Party is seen as
    having the best education policies. 

    Labour leader Tony Blair has declared that his priorities in government
    would be "education, education and education." He could start in
    Croydon. 

    Ashburton occupies a 1950s hospital building with long, echoing
    corridors that exaggerate the sound of vocal pupils. Varnava plans to
    lay carpets and has installed a tall, wire fence around the perimeter
    of the school to prevent pupils from escaping. 

    Other problems cannot be addressed as easily. Varnava's biggest
    challenge will be to raise morale while being forced to cut the number
    of teachers. 

    Ashburton has 900 pupils, although it could take 1,200. A neighbouring,
    more desirable, school had 900 applications for just 180 places last
    year. 

    Ashburton is short of money because it is not filled to capacity.
    Schools get paid a fixed amount for each pupil. The fewer pupils it
    has, the less money it gets, the less desirable it becomes to visiting
    parents. 

    CONTRAST BETWEEN 'SINK' AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS 

    Every lunchtime, Varnava stands at the school gate to ensure only
    pupils in the senior year or those with passes leave the premises. 

    A stream of teenagers amble by. They wear approximations of the black
    school uniform. 

    Others can be seen escaping across the school field despite the new
    fence. In the playground, an ashphalted area in front of the canteen, a
    handful of boys are kicking a deflated football between the puddles. 

    Just a few miles away in affluent Surrey, the 650 pupils at Epsom
    College are beginning their recreational period. 

    Theirs is a fee-paying school in a swathe of grand red brick buildings
    set among nearly 90 acres (36.5 hectares) of land. 

    It has sports field after sports field fading into the distance, tennis
    courts, an athletics track, a handsome cricket pavilion -- even an
    assault course and shooting range. 

    There is a new sports centre with an indoor swimming pool, half a dozen
    squash courts, indoor sports courts, a weights room, a gymnasium and a
    rock climbing wall. 

    For the less sporty, there are 18 music rooms, each with its own piano,
    a room full of computers, an arts and pottery studio and several types
    of workshop. 

    Parents pay around 2,000 pounds ($3,220) a term, about 80 percent of
    the average wage, to send their children here. 

    Class sizes are much smaller than in the state system and pupils are
    closely supervised, working six days a week well into the evening with
    sport and study periods. 

    There has been a huge increase in the number of children sent to
    Britain's private schools since the government introduced selection
    into the state sector. 

    Many parents who couldn't get their children into their chosen state
    school, put them into private education rather than sending them to a
    less desirable school. 

    But many found they simply could not bear the expense. Some 25,000
    students were forced to drop out of private schools last year because
    their parents ran out of money. 

    Shadow cabinet member Harriet Harman has been labelled a hypocrite by
    the Conservatives for sending her son to a school that operates
    selection. 

    While Blair and all his shadow cabinet have sent their children to
    state schools, the majority of Prime Minister John Major's cabinet send
    their offspring to private schools. Major himself left a state school
    at 15. 

    Major plans to increase the ability of schools to select their pupils,
    insisting the policy offers greater choice and forces schools to be
    more competitive. 

    But parents complain this choice is often an illusion. Everyone wants
    their child to go to the best school in the area, thus reducing their
    chance of getting them in and increasing the likelihood they will end
    up in a sink school. 

    The Conservatives have introduced repeated testing of pupils, a
    national curriculum and publication of league tables. These show
    schools' examination results, graded to help parents choose the best
    school and to inspire improved standards. 

    TEACHERS, LABOUR PARTY CRITICISE POLICY CHANGES 

    But the repeated changes introduced by the Conservatives have caused
    confusion and low morale, teachers say, rather than leading to better
    education. Labour has pledged to end selection, although it has decided
    not to abolish the grant-maintained schools, which the Conservatives
    allowed to opt out of local education authorities and to get their
    funding straight from central government. 

    Blair would make homework compulsory, send failing children to summer
    literacy camps, and encourage parents to read to their children every
    night before bed. 

    He would abolish the "assisted places scheme," under which the
    government pays for bright pupils at state schools to go to private
    schools if their parents cannot pay the fees, and would spend the money
    saved on cutting class sizes in the state sector. 

    Studies suggest that Britain's educational standards have fallen behind
    those in other industrialised countries in recent years. In one
    international survey, Britons came last in a basic mathematics test,
    with 16 to 24 year olds performing worst. Historically a Briton won one
    Nobel Prize each year until 1985, but there has been only one British
    Nobel winner since then. 

    Varnava believes selection is largely to blame for any failures in
    Britain's education system. 

    "The trouble in England is that we still have a very deep-rooted social
    class divide...what the government has done in the past few years has
    made that much worse," he said. He is hoping, though, that he can bring
    modest improvements to Ashburton. "We have a target for Easter, for all
    of us staff to have a genuine feeling of being in control." 

    REUTER
7.1066IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5864
    RTw  13-Mar-97 01:18    

    Sheep brain disease not inherited, experts say

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, March 12 (Reuter) - The sheep disease scrapie, believed to be
    the basis for the epidemic of mad cow disease, is not strictly genetic
    and may be partly caused by an infectious agent, British experts said
    on Wednesday. 

    Tests on sheep in Australia and New Zealand, where there is no scrapie,
    show many do carry the genetic weakness linked with scrapie but, unlike
    sheep in Europe, don't get it. 

    "Here we present evidence that scrapie is not solely a genetic disease,
    as scrapie-associated prion protein (genes) are present in sheep from
    Australia and New Zealand, both countries that are entirely free of
    scrapie," Dr Nora Hunter and colleagues at the Institute for Animal
    Health wrote in a letter to the science journal Nature. 

    "Scrapie is, therefore, not a spontaneous genetic disease." 

    Scientists know there is a genetic predisposition to brain diseases
    like scrapie, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or mad cow disease)
    and Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease (CJD) in humans. 

    There is no evidence people can get sick from eating scrapie-infected
    sheep, but finding out where scrapie comes from is now a big priority. 

    It has been around for at least 200 years, but does not exist in
    Australia and New Zealand despite huge herds. 

    CJD, for example, can just pop up in about one in a million people, and
    a certain gene configuration has been identified in victims. 

    But there can also be an infectious component. British government
    scientists say BSE arose in the 1980s from the practice of feeding
    rendered sheep remains to cattle. 

    Although this had been done for decades, in the 1970s and 1980s the
    rendering process was changed from a chemical to a heat technique. 

    BSE, CJD and scrapie are associated with an abnormal version of a brain
    protein known as a prion, which seems to be able to propagate itself.
    Prions are not destroyed by conventional cooking nor even
    heat-rendering techniques. 

    Last year, scientists said a new type of CJD probably came from eating
    BSE-infected beef products. Sixteen cases of the new variant have been
    identified in Britain and one in France. 

    "The measures taken by the Australian and New Zealand authorities to
    protect sheep from scrapie are lengthy and expensive," Hunter's group
    wrote. 

    "These efforts are worthwhile, as our studies indicate that there are
    susceptible animals that would succumb to scrapie if the infection was
    accidentally imported," they added. 

    The scientists were not immediately available for comment on what that
    agent might 
7.1067IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5873
    RTw  13-Mar-97 00:19    

    Election fever mounts in Britain as cabinet meets

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Gerrard Raven 

    LONDON, March 13 (Reuter) - Political tension mounted in Britain on
    Thursday ahead of a cabinet meeting at which Prime Minister John Major
    could name the day for an election that may spell the end of 18 years
    of Conservative rule. 

    With most politicians already expecting voting to take place on May 1,
    aides to Major dodged questions about whether the meeting, starting at
    1030 GMT, would discuss overtly political issues, such as election
    tactics and timing. 

    Political observers see strong reasons for Major to make the polling
    date public this week, as this would enable him to use a speech he is
    due to deliver on Saturday to the annual meeting of his party's Central
    Council to launch his campaign. 

    Major, his Conservatives some 20 points behind the opposition Labour
    Party in the polls, must hold an election by May 22, but has said he
    regards May 1 as the latest realistic alternative. 

    If he does tell his cabinet colleagues the date, he could go
    immediately after the meeting to Buckingham Palace to ask Queen
    Elizabeth to approve arrangements for polling. Only after this would a
    public announcement be made. 

    On Wednesday night, opposition leader Tony Blair warned his Labour
    Party against complacently assuming that its huge opinion poll lead
    means that it is certain to return to power for the first time since
    1979. 

    He told party members at a London dinner: "Though many people may write
    off the Tories, and take the voters' verdict for granted, I for one do
    not. I remain the eternal warrior against complacency."

    It is Blair's modernisation of his party, forcing it to cast off
    traditional socialist policies, that has combined with disunity among
    Conservatives, particularly over Europe, to give Labour its best chance
    of power for almost two decades. 

    In recent days, the Conservatives have unveiled a raft of policies
    designed to convince voters that they have not run out of steam and
    deserve a fifth successive election victory. 

    Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell on Wednesday annnounced plans to
    virtually end the role of local authorities in running homes for the
    elderly. 

    He said if the Conservatives retained power, they would bring in a law
    reserving the role for commercial organisations and voluntary bodies
    except where they could not provide services. 

    Other recent Conservative initiatives have included a plan to reduce
    the state's role in pension provision by letting workers use tax breaks
    to purchase provision for their old age. 

    However, Conservative efforts have been hit by a spate of
    controversies, notably over allegations that a failure to enforce
    inspection standards at abattoirs is putting meat-eating Britons at
    risk of exposure to lethal bacteria. 

    Agriculture Minister Douglas Hogg was forced to make a statement to
    parliament on Wednesday to defend the actions of his ministry. He
    accused Labour of scaremongering and unveiled an eight-point plan to
    improve abattoir hygiene. 

    REUTER
7.1068IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5853
    RTos 13-Mar-97 00:18    

    Toys R Us Profits Up on Record Sales

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    PARAMUS, N.J. (Reuter) - Toys R Us Inc., the world's largest marketer
    of toys and other products for children, said Wednesday that record
    sales helped its profits surge in its just-ended fiscal year,
    especially in the final quarter. 

    The toy retailing chain said its net income for the 13 weeks ended Feb.
    1 more than quadrupled to $382.9 million, or $1.37 a share, from $93
    million, or 34 cents a share, as its sales edged up to a record $4.7
    billion from $4.6 billion. 

    For the full year the company reported that net income rose by 189
    percent to $427.4 million, or $1.54 a share, from $148.1 million, or 53
    cents a share, as sales increased by 5 percent to $9.9 billion from
    $9.4 billion. 

    The company said its fiscal 1996 results included a $38 million
    after-tax charge for an arbitration award against it related to a
    disputed 1982 franchise agreement for toy store operations in the
    Middle East. 

    It also noted that its year-earlier results were hurt by a $269 million
    after-tax charge related to restructuring. 

    Toys R Us, which is based in Paramus, N.J., said that sales at its U.S.
    stores opened at least one year improved by 2 percent for the year. It
    added that sales in Canada, Japan and Britain also increased while
    sales in Germany, France, Spain and Australia slipped. 

    The company, which has a total of 1,372 stores worldwide, said that it
    opened 13 newly designed "Concept 2000" stores last year and would
    remodel 57 existing stores with the new format this year. 

    "We are quite pleased with the results, both in terms of sales and
    customer satisfaction," Chief Executive Michael Goldstein said in a
    statement, referring to the Concept 2000 stores. 

    The company also said it opened 30 toy stores and two "KidsWorld"
    stores in the United States last year while adding 32 stores
    internationally -- in Australia, Austria, Britain, Canada, France,
    Germany, Japan, and Spain. 

    It also added 27 franchised Toys R Us stores, including five in new
    countries -- Indonesia, Italy, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Turkey. 

    Toys R Us stock fell by 12.5 cents to $28.375 in consolidated midday
    trading on the New York Stock Exchange, where it was one of the most
    actively traded issues with almost 1.9 million shares changing hands. 
7.1069IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5825
    RTw  12-Mar-97 23:39    

    Yorkshire Ripper partly blinded in British jail

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 11 (Reuter) - Britain's most feared serial killer, Peter
    Sutcliffe dubbed the Yorkshire Ripper, has been blinded in one eye
    after being stabbed by a fellow prisoner, media reports said on
    Wednesday. 

    Sutcliffe, 50, was attacked at his top-security prison hospital on
    Monday by another convicted murderer who repeatedly stabbed him in both
    eyes with a felt-tipped pen. 

    He had been jailed for life in 1981 for the murders of 13 women in the
    county of Yorkshire in northern England and the attempted murder of
    another seven. 

    Sutcliffe preyed on lone women, some of them prostitutes, in the cities
    of Bradford and Leeds in a five-year reign of terror. He gained the
    name Yorkshire Ripper because of the vicious way in which he maimed his
    victims after murdering them. 

    REUTER
7.1070IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5850
    RTw  12-Mar-97 23:48    

    Greenhouse sceptics use bad data, scientists say

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 12 (Reuter) - Global warming sceptics who argue that the
    "greenhouse effect" is not really happening are using unreliable data,
    U.S. climate scientists reported on Wednesday. 

    They said measurements that appeared to contradict data showing the
    earth has been steadily warming came from one instrument aboard one
    satellite, and it was subject to several kinds of variation. 

    "A lot of people have used this data set to offer as proof that global
    warming is not occurring," said Jim Hurrell, an atmospheric scientist
    at the National center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. 

    But, he added: "It's not reliable for analysis of trends." 

    Records show 1995 was the warmest year since the late 19th century.
    Measurements on the surface indicate a rise of just over one-tenth of a
    degree centigrade (about two-tenths of a degree F) per decade. 

    But some satellite measurements show the lower part of the atmosphere
    has actually been steadily cooling -- by 0.05 of a degree C (nearly
    one-tenth of a degree F). 

    "Accordingly, the satellite record has been widely cited by sceptics as
    evidence against global warming," Hurrell and colleague Kevin Trenberth
    wrote in a report in the science journal Nature. 

    But the measurements, from the Microwave Sounder Unit (MSU) of the
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) polar orbiting
    satellite, designated MSU-2R, were full of "noise," Hurrell said. 

    Much of the radiation measured by MSU-2R by satellites came from the
    Earth's surface, causing interference. 

    "Soil wetness can reduce a dry land microwave surface emissivity by 20
    to 50 percent locally, making the land appear colder," they wrote. "It
    points to the need for examining both the surface and satellite and
    radio sound record and being very careful," Hurrell said in a telephone
    interview. 

    He said he did not want to enter in the argument over global warming.
    But most atmospheric and climate experts say the evidence of the effect
    is irrefutable.

    REUTER
7.1071IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5876
    RTw  12-Mar-97 21:40    

    Irish do not want more IRA violence-Spring

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Martin Cowley 

    DUBLIN, March 12 (Reuter) - Ireland challenged the outlawed IRA to cast
    aside arms for a voice in peace negotiations on Wednesday, warning the
    guerrillas would not be allowed to hold Northern Ireland's struggling
    talks process to ransom. 

    "They must surely realise that the people of this island do not want
    any further violence," said Foreign Minister Dick Spring. "They will
    have seen the reaction to recent violent incidents and deaths. The
    conditions (for talks) are very clear." 

    In their final full-scale talks before a crucial British general
    election due by May 22, Spring and British Northern Ireland Secretary
    Sir Patrick Mayhew again called for an Irish Republican Army truce as
    the condition for entry to talks by the guerrillas' Sinn Fein political
    arm. 

    They said in a joint communiqu that all-party talks by groups committed
    to democracy was the best hope of achieving a political settlement in
    conflict-riven Northern Ireland. 

    Sinn Fein, with 15.5 percent voter support in an election last year,
    demands automatic entry to multi-party talks that ground to a halt last
    week. 

    The talks were adjourned to let parties prepare for the general
    election covering Britain and Northern Ireland. 

    The IRA says a truce is unlikely before a new government is elected in
    Britain. 

    But Britain and Ireland are adamant that the IRA must abandon a 28-year
    armed struggle to end London's sovereignty over Northern Ireland before
    Sinn Fein can join the talks. 

    Spring made clear that he wanted to see Sinn Fein in full talks but he
    added that the IRA "do not have a veto." 

    "We will work with the constitutional parties who are legitimately at
    that table to make progress. The ideal thing is to have all the parties
    who are electorally mandated in Northern Ireland at that table," he
    told a press conference. 

    The ministers hoped that multi-party talks chaired by former
    U.S.senator George Mitchell would resume with "renewed vigour and
    commitment" in June and appealed for cool heads during an annually
    turbulent season of Protestant marches which will be under way by then. 

    But Britain resisted Irish demands to speed up a plan for the setting
    up of a "parades commission" with powers to ban controversial marches,
    saying that it was nearing the end of consultations with groups in the
    province about the idea. 

    The talks were held in a climate of growing IRA violence, an unstable
    truce by banned pro-British "Loyalist" extremists and a political
    deadlock between the province's majority Protestants who support rule
    from Britain and Catholics who want an all-Ireland state ruled from
    Dublin. 

    Mayhew tried to assuage Irish concerns about the treatment of an Irish
    Catholic, Roisin McAliskey, who is seven months pregnant and in custody
    in a London jail awaiting extradition moves by Germany in connection
    with an IRA bomb attack on a British military base. 

    He said that it had already been announced that "when the time for
    birth arises, she is not going to manacled or physically restrained in
    that way..."

    REUTER
7.1072IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5862
    RTw  12-Mar-97 20:21    

    How the brain thinks it knows what you want to do

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, March 12 (Reuter) - It may take only a moment to first look at
    something and then reach out and touch it, but the process involves
    more steps in the brain than anyone thought, U.S. researchers said on
    Wednesday. 

    Richard Andersen and colleagues at the California Institute of
    Technology in Pasadena found there is an intermediate step where the
    brain decides what to do. 

    They said their research could have implications for treating stroke
    victims and other people who have brain damage -- and eventually for
    helping the paralysed. 

    The area of the brain concerned is the posterior parietal cortex, which
    lies between the part of the brain that processes vision and the part
    controlling actual movement. 

    "If you get a lesion there in humans, they have difficulty in
    processing spatial information," Andersen, a neurobiologist, said in a
    telephone interview. 

    "If they are in a hospital they get lost in the ward. If they are
    brought a plate of dinner they eat only half the plate. If the orderly
    turns the plate around they say oh, more food' and eat the other half." 

    Andersen's group ran tests on monkeys using tiny electrodes planted in
    their brains, so they could see what the brains were doing. The monkeys
    were trained to first look at and then reach for a button. 

    As expected, the visual and motor areas of the brain lit up when the
    monkeys reached. But there was a third area involved, and, after a
    battery of tests, Andersen's group determined it indicated the
    intention to move. 

    "I think that it will turn out to be the same in humans," Andersen
    said. His group is planning tests on human volunteers using magnetic
    resonance imaging (MRI) to watch the brains work. 

    The research, published in the science journal Nature, adds to a slowly
    growing understanding of how the brain works. 

    "It's not just a black box. It's not just a mysterious thing now. We
    can actually look in the black box and see that it's anatomically
    organised," Andersen said. 

    "From a philosophical perspective this is interesting because it
    implies there is a special part of the brain where we make decisions
    and in a sense "will" things to happen." 

    The knowledge could be used to help stroke victims, who very commonly
    get brain damage in this area. Or, in the future, electrodes could be
    inserted into this part of the brain to help paralysed people to move. 

    REUTER
7.1073IJSAPL::ANDERSONSpring has sprung!Thu Mar 13 1997 09:5823
    RTw  12-Mar-97 19:00    

    Electronic prompts banned in British parliament

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 12 (Reuter) - The electronic pager was barred on
    Wednesday from Britain's 19th-century House of Commons. 

    British MPs, banned by tradition from reading speeches in the House of
    Commons using prepared texts, were told by speaker Betty Boothroyd that
    receiving suggestions via pagers was also against the rules. 

    "I strongly deprecate such practice," she said. "I am not prepared to
    accept the use of such instruments as an aide-memoire by a member who
    is addressing this house." 

    Boothroyd's statement followed an incident on Tuesday when a Labour
    member, Brian Wilson, raised a point of order while looking intently at
    his pager. Conservatives claimed Wilson was getting instructions on
    what to say from Labour headquarters. 

    REUTER
7.1074IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 11:339
    AP 13-Mar-1997 2:10 EST   REF5551

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Arrested in Cosby Death

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Police arrested one man and are questioning two
    others in the roadside slaying of Bill Cosby's son, Ennis Cosby, police
    Chief Willie Williams said late Wednesday. 
7.1075IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 12:5878
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Combat 18 members jailed over race hate magazine
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 

    THREE members of Combat 18, the extreme Right-wing organisation which
    regards Hitler as a hero, were jailed at the Old Bailey yesterday for
    possessing material designed to stir up racial hatred.

    This included a magazine which called for a "white revolution" and
    contained detailed descriptions of how to make bombs and the names and
    addresses of prominent figures who were regarded as "opponents."

    Passing sentences of 17 months on two of the men and 12 months on the
    third, Judge Henry Pownall said: "Nobody, least of all this court,
    would deny your right to freedom of speech. We pride ourselves on it in
    this country, but as with all freedoms, responsibilities go with them."

    The judge ordered that the men, in their 20s and 30s from Essex and
    South London should not be identified for legal reasons. All three had
    admitted two charges of possessing a CD and copies of Combat 18 issue
    number 3 which contained abusive, threatening or insulting material
    likely to stir up racial hatred with intent to distribute. Orlando
    Pownall, prosecuting, told the court: "Combat 18 is the chosen name of
    an extreme Right-wing group.

    "The number 18 derives from the numerical position in the alphabet of
    the initials of their hero, Adolf Hitler. It claims to be a hard-line
    splinter group from the British National Party."

    Mr Pownall said: "Not every article can be described as racist. Strong
    criticism is made of the police, the government, homosexuals and the
    IRA."

    It also contained instructions on how to make bombs and detonators and
    told readers: "It's all very well us giving you loads of addresses but
    what you really want is to blow the f***ers up. Not just the scum at
    Redwatch but there are thousands of mosques, synagogues, communist
    headquarters, nigger estates, TV companies and newspapers all waiting
    to be blown to bits."

    There were also articles which were "intended and likely to stir up
    racial hatred against black people, Muslims, Asians and Jews", Mr
    Pownall said. He read an extract from one article which described the
    Holocaust as "a load of b******s."

    Another contained the words "we won't rest until the synagogues burn to
    the ground. We must destroy the evil in our midst."

    An article on what Combat 18 stands for described their aim as "to ship
    all non-whites back to Africa, Asia, Arabia alive or in body bags - the
    choice is theirs."

    The CDs contained various racist tracks. Mr Pownall read the lyrics of
    several. One read: "Gonna put you on a train, gonna take you to a camp,
    gonna shave your head, gonna give you a tattoo, Jew . . . Hitler was
    right." Mr Pownall said the three accused were arrested after a police
    surveillance operation and incriminating material was found at two of
    their homes. The fingerprints of the third were found on the material.

    In January, Combat 18 was said to be behind a letter bomb campaign
    aimed at white sports personalities in mixed race marriages. Sharron
    Davies, the television presenter and her husband Derek Redmond, an
    Olympic athlete, were believed to be among the targets.

    Several people were arrested in Scandanavia and two devices posted
    there  were intercepted after a tip-off from Scotland Yard. Police also
    alerted Frank Bruno, Kriss Akabusi and Paul Ince.

    Earlier this month it was revealed that Vanessa Redgrave and Anna Ford
    were among a number of personalities who had received threats from a
    Right-wing group believed to be Combat 18. Both women were given advice
    on personal security and Miss Redgrave, known for her Left-wing
    beliefs, has had a panic button linked to a police station installed in
    her home. Police also gave security advice to Alan Sugar, the chairman
    of Tottenham Hotspur, the television presenter Denis Norden and Bernard
    Levin.
7.1076IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 12:5988
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Carey condemns Runcie over royal revelations
    
    By Victoria Combe, Churches Correspondent 

    DR George Carey has launched an attack on Lord Runcie, his predecessor
    as Archbishop of Canterbury, accusing him of "undercutting" the post by
    disclosing details of his dealings with the Royal Family.

    Lord Runcie's disclosures, published in his biography, were a breach of
    trust which had thrown into question whether people can "trust anybody,
    or any priest, again", Dr Carey claimed. It is the first time he has
    spoken of his anger over Lord Runcie's biography, published last
    summer. His comments will be broadcast in the documentary Archbishop,
    to be shown in some ITV areas on Sunday.

    Dr Carey admits he was "very cross" that he had not been informed about
    the book, which contains transcripts of taped interviews with Lord
    Runcie conducted by the book's author, Humphrey Carpenter. "I only knew
    that it was coming out by accident," he says. "I felt very cross at the
    time that I hadn't been informed by anybody. In consultation with my
    team, it seemed best to keep well out of it, not to be thrown into it. 

    "But I have to say that my immediate reaction was one of great dismay
    because there is a sense in which revelations like that undercut my
    ministry. Remarks that we might call rather indiscreet may suggest that
    people might now ask whether they can trust anybody, any priest, ever
    again," says Dr Carey in the second of the five-part series on his life
    and work.

    "My whole ministry is based on the fact that if you want to talk to me
    privately you can be absolutely sure that whatever you say is safe and
    it goes to my grave, with no indiscretion. Of course, archbishops are
    public property. Of course, biographies are written. But there should
    be ways in which we make sure that things that are said to us are
    preserved in confidentiality, for ever.

    "If you are administering to a member of the Royal Family you are doing
    so not as George Carey, but as the Archbishop of Canterbury and you
    must ensure that, however tempting it might be to publish, you have a
    responsibility to the office you hold." 

    When Dr Carey is asked whether he thinks there was any truth in Lord
    Runcie's description of the Princess of Wales as an "actress" and a
    "schemer", he says: "I cannot possibly get close to that question, I
    have the highest regard for Robert but also the highest regard for the
    Royal Family. In short, I find myself disagreeing with the description
    and I am surprised and puzzled that Robert wanted to describe it in
    that way."

    He says his priority after the book came out last summer was to
    reassure the Royal Family that the relationship he had established with
    them would continue.

    In The Reluctant Archbishop, published by Hodder last September, Lord
    Runcie is quoted as saying he regarded the marriage of the Prince and
    Princess of Wales as doomed because he thought the couple "ill-matched"
    for a marriage" arranged" by the Royal Family. He also said that the
    Prince had asked him to talk to the Princess when their marriage was in
    trouble.

    "He thought I should see her from time to time," he explained. "Then I
    gave her what amounted to two or three not very successful confirmation
    talks. That's what Charles thought she needed - a bit of instruction."

    He added: "What I quickly saw was that she needed some encouragement
    and some 'are you all right girl?' When you began on abstract ideas,
    you could see her eyes clouding over, her eyelids became heavy."

    Lord Runcie, 75, who was Archbishop from 1980-1991, had asked Mr
    Carpenter to be his official biographer but changed his mind about the
    book when he saw the final draft which contained verbatim accounts of
    interviews. He was so horrified by the first draft of the book that he
    asked Mr Carpenter not to publish it until after his death. He objected
    to the extensive use of taped conversations, which he described as
    "burblings" intended for background.

    At the time, several senior churchmen claimed that Mr Carpenter had
    exploited Lord Runcie's nature. Mr Carpenter however insisted he acted
    "honourably".

    Dr Carey was away in Israel yesterday. He has seen the programme and,
    according to the producer, Peter Williams, did not ask for any cuts to
    be made.

    A spokesman for Lord Runcie said yesterday that the former archbishop
    had "said all he had wanted to say" about the book.
7.1077IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0057
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    'Miracle' air stowaway to fight deportation
    
    By David Graves 

    A STOWAWAY who survived a 10-hour flight from Delhi in the
    undercarriage of a British Airways jumbo jet during which temperatures
    dropped to minus 40C is to appeal against the Home Office's decision to
    deport him back to India.

    Pardeep Saini, 22, was found suffering from hypothermia by baggage
    handlers at Heathrow Airport last October after hiding in the Boeing
    747's wheel-housing wearing a flimsy cotton top. His younger brother
    Vijay, 19, froze to death fell 2,000ft to his death as the
    undercarriage was lowered on the aircraft's approach to Heathrow. His
    body was discovered in a disused gas works in Richmond, south-west
    London.

    Mr Saini, whose relatives believe he suffered brain damage because of
    the extreme cold, applied for political asylum to stay in Britain,
    claiming he had been accused of having links with Sikh separatists in
    India. His application was refused and he is due to appeal against the
    decision at a hearing in London tomorrow.

    British Airways said it was not aware of anyone who had stowed away for
    so long at heights of up to 39,000ft ever surviving before. Capt
    Michael Post, the Boeing's captain, later wrote to Mr Siani to
    congratulate him on his "near miraculous survival".

    Mr Saini, who worked as a car mechanic, claimed he had been told by an
    agent in Delhi that they could have a safe passage on an aircraft bound
    for Britain. He said they were told to climb inside the wheel-housing
    of an aircraft preparing to take off and that there was a passageway
    into the baggage hold, but there was not. Mr Saini later told doctors
    that he became unconscious and could not remember how he got out of the
    aircraft. 

    An inquest on his brother last month recorded a verdict of unlawful
    killing.

    Mr Saini is staying with Tarsem Singh Bola, his uncle, in Southall,
    west London. Mr Bola said last night: "He is in a terrible state. His
    memory has gone and he spends most of the day sitting and crying.
    Although he is a very lucky man, he is haunted by what happened to his
    brother. He feels he might as well have died too. 

    "He has no one to care for him in India. In his state it would be an
    absolute tragedy if he was sent back. We are the only people who can
    care for him."

    Mr Saini's case has been taken up by Piara Khabra, Labour MP for Ealing
    Southall. He said he planned to urge Michael Howard, the Home
    Secretary, to use his discretionary powers to allow Mr Saini to remain
    in Britain. "In pursuing his dream to come to Britain he lost his
    brother and nearly died himself. I feel the Home Secretary should show
    him compassion and recognise his miracle for what it is."
7.1078IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0177
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Embattled Hogg wins latest round in food crisis
    
    By George Jones, Political Editor 

    DOUGLAS Hogg, the embattled Agriculture Minister, last night survived
    the latest crisis over food safety after delivering a robust defence of
    the Government's efforts to improve health standards in
    slaughterhouses.

    For the second time in a week he was forced to make an emergency
    Commons statement responding to Labour claims that he had ignored
    warnings over poor hygiene in abattoirs. As the minister rose to make
    his statement, Labour MPs called on him to resign and some shouted out
    that they were about to witness a "pig roast".

    But Mr Hogg took on his critics and accused Labour of indulging in
    "irresponsible scaremongering" for party political purposes in the
    general election campaign. He said Labour's "hysterical and
    ill-informed" attacks over hygiene in abattoirs could damage the
    Government's efforts to secure an early lifting of the European ban on
    exports of British beef.

    His performance appeared to have brought the Government a badly-needed
    breathing space and Mr Hogg seems certain to stay as Agriculture
    Minister for the remaining weeks to a May 1 general election. The
    indications are that John Major will now make a formal announcement
    about election timing next week - foreshadowing a six-week campaign
    that will take in the Easter holiday.

    Labour had sought to maintain the pressure on Mr Hogg, widely regarded
    as the most accident-prone minister in the Government, by making public
    letters from trading standards officers at Northumberland county
    council which warned that they lacked the resources to police anti-BSE
    controls. The letters claimed that meat was being sold falsely labelled
    as BSE-free in as many as one in 10 cases and that there were not
    enough health staff to combat the problem. 

    It was also alleged by Labour that the Government had not responded to
    the letters. Mr Hogg said he was not aware of having received the
    correspondence and Tory officials claimed Labour had been handed the
    trading standards officers' letters in December but had chosen to hold
    them back till now - just before an election.

    Earlier this week, Labour also leaked letters from a leading official
    in the Association of Meat Inspectors warning that abattoir standards
    were declining and that contaminated meat was a "potential timebomb".

    In an attempt to restore public confidence, Downing Street announced
    that the Prime Minister had instructed the agriculture ministry to draw
    up a full chronological report of the measures taken to improve hygiene
    standards in abattoirs which will be published by the end of this week.

    But Downing Street insisted that Mr Hogg retained Mr Major's full
    confidence. Mr Hogg told MPs that while he did not pretend there was
    not scope for further improvement, the Government had already embarked
    on a detailed programme to "drive standards upwards" in
    slaughterhouses.

    He said no red meat carcase was allowed to enter the food chain until
    it had been individually stamped by Meat Hygiene Service inspectors as
    fit for human consumption. "This is a critical safeguard, the existence
    of which is being ignored in the welter of comment appearing over the
    last few days," said Mr Hogg.

    He also assured the Commons that action was being taken to exclude
    "dirty livestock" from abattoirs following the disclosure that meat
    could be contaminated with the E coli organism through contact with
    animal faeces. Mr Hogg said rules would be "ever more strictly enforced
    by the Meat Hygiene Service" and plants infringing the regulations
    would face prosecution and losing their licences.

    Gavin Strang, Labour's agriculture spokesman, claimed that for Mr Hogg
    BSE stood for "blame someone else'. "There is no confidence in Mr Hogg,
    nor in the Government, as far as food safety standards are concerned,"
    he said. 
7.1079IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0249
7.1080IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0325
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Paper faces trial over jail article
    
    By Kathy Marks 

    SIR Nicholas Lyell, the Attorney General, began legal proceedings
    against the Evening Standard yesterday over an article that led to the
    abandonment of the trial of five IRA prisoners.

    The five went on trial in January, charged with offences relating to a
    break-out from Whitemoor jail in September 1994. The judge, Mr Justice
    Kay, halted the hearing after deciding that the article - which
    revealed the IRA connections of three defendants - was prejudicial to a
    fair trial.

    He summoned Max Hastings, editor of the Evening Standard, and Mark
    Honigsbaum, the reporter, for an explanation. Despite receiving an
    unreserved apology, the judge ruled that Sir Nicholas should decide
    whether the article constituted contempt of court.

    Mr Hastings said that the newspaper was consulting its lawyers about
    the Attorney General's move. If contempt were proved, the editor,
    publisher and reporter could theoretically face a prison sentence.
    However, a fine would be far more likely.
7.1081IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0542
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Judge orders anorexic to be detained
    
    By Will Bennett 

    AN anorexic teenager who could starve herself to death was ordered by a
    High Court judge yesterday to be detained by force if necessary to have
    treatment.

    The ruling sets a precedent for the power of the courts to override the
    wishes of those such as the teenager who opposed the order. The
    decision by Mr Justice Wall followed a private hearing in the Family
    Division.

    The judge gave permission for the ruling to be reported because of the
    principles involved. The girl, aged 16, who cannot be identified, is
    one of five children and began worrying about her weight when she was
    12, said the judge. By the time she was 14 she was suffering from
    anorexia. She had also been a victim of sexual abuse by a brother. Her
    history of eating problems included vomiting, laxative taking, and
    absconding from clinics. She had threatened to commit suicide.

    In November she was admitted to hospital after it was discovered that
    she had eaten only a few slices of cucumber in 10 days. Doctors said
    she could stop eating and drinking very suddenly and risk death within
    three to seven days.

    The judge said that if she remains at a clinic it is hoped that she
    will gain weight and ultimately be discharged. The application for the
    order was made by the local authority in the area where the girl lives,
    although she is not in its care.

    The girl had said she was prepared to stay in the clinic but did not
    want to be ordered to do so by the courts. But doctors said they were
    not prepared for her to remain at the clinic without a court order.

    The judge said the key question was whether the court had the power to
    order a 16-year-old to be detained for medical treatment. "I have no
    doubt that I have the power not only to direct that she reside in the
    clinic, but also to authorise the use of reasonable force, if
    necessary, to detain her in the clinic," he said.
7.1082IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0649
7.1083IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0840
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Labour plan for offenders to meet victims
    
    By Joy Copley, Political Staff 

    YOUNG offenders would be given "substitute parents" to help steer them
    away from crime in a scheme unveiled by Labour yesterday.

    Jack Straw, the shadow home secretary, also proposed that they should
    be made to write to their victims apologising for their behaviour.
    Young offenders may also be forced to meet the victims face-to-face to
    say sorry. The initiative is the latest in a series of announcements by
    Mr Straw, who is involved in a pre-election battle with Michael Howard,
    the Home Secretary, to be the toughest party on crime.

    The proposals follow Mr Straw's six-point plan last week to allow
    courts to take swifter action against young people, including a pledge
    to scrap a law which maintains that youngsters aged between 10 and 13
    are incapable of evil acts.

    The "mentoring system" - which has been used in America - would involve
    responsible adults being nominated to help children from problem
    backgrounds. The adult would be expected to spend time with the
    youngster and act as a role model, substituting for absent or
    inadequate parents.

    Mr Straw told a Misspent Youth conference in London: "Typically,
    youngsters drift into crime because of bad role models - ineffective or
    often absent parents, and the 'peer pressure' of older offenders. That
    is why I want to see offenders, and other youngsters potentially at
    risk, linked into a positive, long-term relationship with an adult
    mentor."

    He said an experiment in Hackney, east London, had proved that young
    people can be helped to improve their educational attainment, keep away
    from drugs and cope with adverse peer pressures. Mr Straw said the
    proposals would force offenders to address the effect that their
    behaviour had on others. "He or she has to see and feel the extent to
    which their crimes have affected their victims," he said.
7.1084IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:0938
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Judge apologises after 'nigger' remark in court
    
    By David Millward 

    A JUDGE last night issued a public apology after he was overheard
    referring to "niggers" during a court hearing.

    Judge William Crawford's remarks, at Newcastle Crown Court last Friday,
    will be studied by the Lord Chancellor's department, which has asked
    for a transcript. The move follows a complaint by Mohan Singh, 43, a
    social worker who was sitting in the public gallery as the judge
    discussed options for sentencing a woman who had pleaded guilty to five
    fraud charges, including one of false accounting.

    The judge, who was reprimanded in 1992 for kissing a woman usher, was
    discussing the use of sick notes to defraud the Department of Social
    Security. He was overheard saying: "I know many people with duodenal
    ulcers who work like niggers."

    His remarks stunned the court, in which about 45 people were present,
    Mr Mohan said last night. "There was a pregnant pause and then
    everybody looked at me as I was the only black face. I felt
    embarrassed. I wanted to challenge him."

    Mr Mohan made a formal complaint to court officials who in turn
    referred the matter to the Lord Chancellor's department. It issued a
    statement by the 60-year-old judge. He said: "I wish to apologise for
    my use of these words in court.

    "I intended no slur against anyone as the context makes clear. I much
    regret if my inadvertent use of this expression has caused offence."

    His apology failed to satisfy Mr Mohan. "I think he should be removed
    from the bench. He is not fit to be a judge. There is a large Asian and
    black population in Newcastle who could come before a man who has made
    a blatantly racist remark."
7.1085IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1025
7.1086IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1146
7.1087IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1224
7.1088IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1321
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Sheep sent to slow death in sacrifices
    
    By A J McIlroy 

    ANIMAL welfare campaigners protested yesterday against the export of
    sheep for ritual sacrifice at a Muslim festival in France.

    More than 100 people demonstrated outside the headquarters of the
    National Farmers' Union in London, branding the trade "utterly
    barbaric". They said farmers across the country were selling the ageing
    ewes in hundreds without knowing that the animals were being sent to "a
    horrific" death.

    Almost 2,000 sheep will be exported through Dover, to be killed next
    month in a ritual that is part of the festival of Eid-el-Kabir,
    observed by France's large Muslim population. The campaigners said the
    animals were not stunned and were allowed to bleed to death. The
    National Farmers' Unuion said it was up to individual farmers to decide
    whether they exported their sheep to an unknown fate.
7.1089IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1335
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 657

    Paedophile lodged with family
    
    By Kathy Marks 

    AN investigation was launched yesterday after it emerged that a
    convicted paedophile was allowed to lodge with a woman and her
    seven-year-old son while under supervision by the probation service.

    The man, who has not been named, allegedly exposed himself to the boy
    while he was living in the house in Bracknell, Berks. Seven weeks
    before he moved in, he had been convicted of assaulting a girl aged 13.
    The 40-year-old woman, a divorcee, knew nothing of the man's background
    until after the alleged indecent exposure.

    Berkshire Probation Service said that the officer who dealt with the
    case could face disciplinary action. The man was convicted last July of
    six charges of indecency and placed on three years' probation. His
    probation officer advised him to rent a room in Bracknell while he was
    under supervision.

    Malcolm Bryant, chief probation officer in Berkshire, said that child
    protection was paramount and took priority over the rehabilitation of
    offenders. "Disciplinary action could be taken if it is shown that an
    offender with previous convictions for sex offences was placed in a
    family home under these circumstances," he said. Mr Bryant yesterday
    wrote to all members of staff, reminding them of the importance of
    complying with the service's rigorous child protection procedures.

    The boy's mother said: "I cannot believe that the probation service
    thought it was safe for this man to be living in my house when they
    knew I have a young son."

    The man has since been arrested.
7.1090IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1429
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Mother tells libel jury why she spoke out
    
    By Caroline Davies 

    THE mother of a solicitor who left his wife after going to a "psychic
    healer" told a court yesterday that she had given evidence against her
    son for the sake of her two grandchildren.

    Mrs Anne Kirby, 70, said: "It has all been absolutely dreadful. But I
    did it for the love of my grandchildren." She denied that she and her
    daughter-in-law, Clare Kirby, had "deliberately" omitted facts from a
    report sent to a psychiatrist about her son Stephen, 41, to make his
    behaviour look more strange.

    Mrs Kirby was the last witness in the case brought by Richard
    Wilmot-Smith, QC, and his wife Jenny, 48, a psychic and medium, against
    The Daily Telegraph and Clare Kirby, 41. They claim an article alleged
    they had "brainwashed" Mr Kirby into believing he had to end his
    marriage.

    Mr Kirby is suing The Daily Telegraph over the article. The defendants
    all deny libel.

    Mrs Kirby agreed that she had declined an invitation to visit Mr and
    Mrs Wilmot-Smith to discuss concerns for her son. 
    
    The case continues.
7.1091IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1525
7.1092IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1722
7.1093IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1819
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Chiefs ignored advice on patients who died
    
    David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    HEALTH chiefs were severely criticised yesterday after a disclosure
    that, to save money, three elderly patients were discharged from a
    hospital against medical advice and died within 22 days. 

    They were moved from Park Prewett hospital in Basingstoke to a private
    nursing home in 1994 because the ward was closing, according to a
    Parliamentary select committee report on the NHS ombudsman.

    The committee criticised the way the management made the decision and
    said the patients' interests were ignored. The decision to move the
    patients was approved by Winchester Health Authority, now part of the
    North and Mid Hants authority. A spokesman said: "The board feels the
    issues have been properly investigated."
7.1094IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:1944
7.1095IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:2146
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue 567

    Cabbies have a tip for their fares: Get a mobile
    
    By Sandra Barwick 

    THE patter of London's cabbies could become more of a sales pitch after
    a mobile phone company recruited drivers to promote their products.

    "See West Ham last night? I was there, frozen solid, brass monkeys, and
    they was thrashed. Lucky I had me mobile with me. I phoned the wife, I
    said, I'm leaving, get me dinner in. It's a Siemens. Reliable. If
    Jerry's good at anything, me old Dad used to say, it's invasions and
    machinery. Efficient, eh? Very light, hardly ever needs new batteries,
    and you can upgrade it. You got a mobile? You should have a look at
    Siemens. Anyway, mate, did you watch the lottery last night?"

    Siemens is paying 100 of the capital's taxi drivers to talk about their
    product to passengers. Between the usual chat about the Royal Family,
    lack of customers and low standard of driving on London's streets will
    be adverts for Siemens disguised as friendly cabbie banter.

    The drivers have been trained by Impact FCA, Siemens's agency, so they
    can plug the mobile phones to customers over a four-week period. They
    have been taught how to include all the important details about the
    product into what sounds like a normal conversation.

    Drivers are paid an undisclosed sum for the four weeks, plus a free
    mobile phone, in return for the chat-up campaign. They will not
    initiate a conversation, but if a passenger starts talking, they will
    bring the chat round to mobile phones.

    A spokesman for Impact FCA said: "If people object, then cabbies have
    been told to back off. It's no different from watching an ad on TV and
    being able to switch off." There would be no commission, and cabs would
    not be stopping outside Dixons and encouraging customers to pop in and
    buy one, he said. "It will all be very low key and light."

    However, a regulation by the Public Carriage Office, which controls
    London's licensed black cab drivers, forbids them from acting as
    agents. The rule seems likely to cover chat advertising. Impact FCA
    said it was talking to the Carriage Office.

    If approved the cab sales idea could, in theory, lead to drivers mixing
    praise for anything from double glazing to hamburgers with their views
    on hanging and politics.
7.1096IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:2263
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue
    567

    Army accused of racism in rape inquiry
    
    By Hugh Davies in Washington 

    FOUR young white women, recruited to the United States Army, have
    accused over-zealous Pentagon interrogators of wrongly trying to
    implicate their black drill instructors in a rape scandal.

    They claimed that they were "badgered" to tell lies, but after seeing a
    military chaplain, they decided to tell the truth. The two instructors
    with whom they are alleged to have slept are among 13 black soldiers
    implicated in the affair at the army's Aberdeen Proving Ground at
    Chesapeake Bay.

    The women insisted that they consented to the sex acts with their
    superiors. The details - especially suggestions that black officers
    used their rank to have sex with young white women - have rocked what
    was already an explosive inquiry into racism and misconduct, with
    Aberdeen being portrayed as a libidinous playground for a captain and
    at least 20 sergeants. 

    The women were paraded before television cameras by the National
    Association for the Advancement of Coloured People, which is seizing on
    their statements as new evidence of racism and a violation of the civil
    rights of the soldiers. Kweisi Mfume, the association's president,
    said: "We think it borders on illegality."

    The association's involvement in pushing the details in the media is
    significant, as Mr Mfume is desperate to clean up the organisation's
    image after its executive director, Benjamin Chavis, was fired amid
    charges of sexual harassment and discrimination.

    Mr Mfume, a former chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus in
    Washington, is one of America's most respected and adept black leaders,
    and he seems determined to put the NAACP, founded by black activists
    and white liberals after a lynching in 1909, back on the political map.

    The women, holding hands at a press conference, claimed that the
    investigators tried to twist their testimony through veiled threats
    during long interviews without lawyers.

    Kathryn Leming, 22, said her interrogator "pushed and pushed me to make
    me say that I was raped, but I would not". However, she eventually
    caved in. "I told them what they wanted to hear so they would leave me
    alone."

    A company commander charged with rape has already claimed the
    allegations were ridiculous. He acknowledged an improper relationship
    with a recruit that lasted a month. "It began with her telling me how
    much she admired me, how compassionate I was and how she wanted to be
    with me. I engaged in an improper relationship forbidden by regulations
    with her and that was it." Of the rape claim, he said: "It's a lie.
    She's made up a story out of anger."

    The army's Criminal Investigation Command at Fort Belvoir, Virginia,
    has assigned more than 500 agents to question nearly 1,000 women who
    trained at Aberdeen since January 1995 and moved to US bases around the
    world. When the scandal first surfaced, the CIC opened a hotline for
    complaints. In 12 weeks, there were almost 7,000 calls, including 1,074
    of sexual abuse considered legitimate enough to pursue.
7.1097IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:2666
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue
    567

    'Lost Gospel' shows evidence of rivalry in the early Church
    
    By Charles Laurence in New York 

    AMERICAN academics claim to have found a "lost Gospel" from the early
    days of Christianity.

    The 15 pages of text are part of a gospel written in Egypt in the first
    or second centuries AD, Dr Paul Mirecki, professor of religious studies
    at the University of Kansas and Dr Charles Hedrick, professor at the
    University of Missouri, said yesterday. They expect criticism from the
    religious Right, who have objected to their claim to be able to expand
    on "the word of God" as recorded in the gospels of the New Testament,
    and because they believe that their discovery reinforces evidence of
    the early rivalry of the Gnostic movement and the Orthodox Church.

    Dr Mirecki said he found the pages while studying documents held in the
    Egyptian Museum in Berlin. After translating numerous pages of the
    records of early monasteries, including letters between monks and
    housekeeping documents, he discovered pages "that really stood out".

    The Gospel was on expensive vellum and written in the finest hand. The
    pages now preserved are believed to be a fourth-century copy of an
    original first or second-century gospel. They are written in Coptic,
    the ancient Egyptian language using the Greek alphabet. The Coptic
    Church of Egypt is among the oldest in Christianity.

    The pages are believed to be fragments of the original full gospel.
    "They probably survived a book-burning at the time when the Gnostics
    were being persecuted by the newly-established church of Constantine,"
    Dr Mirecki said.

    He said the pages, now translated, offer clear differences from the
    gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. The theory that they were
    recorded by followers of the Gnostic movement was reinforced by
    similarities to the earlier Lost Gospel of Thomas, discovered in Egypt
    in 1945, which offered evidence of the early Gnostic Christians.

    Much of the material is taken up with questions to Jesus by the
    Disciples, and his answers. These, said Dr Mirecki, were probably
    conversations held after the Resurrection, rather than during Christ's
    life, which conforms to the faith of the Gnostics, or "knowers".

    In one passage, Jesus is recorded as saying: "Whoever is near me, is
    near the fire. Whoever is far from me, is far from life." This saying
    appears nowhere in the New Testament, but is recorded in almost
    identical form in the Lost Gospel of Thomas. In that, Jesus says:
    "Whoever is near me, is near the fire. Whoever is far from me, is far
    from the Kingdom."

    "This lost gospel presents us with more primary evidence that the
    origins of early Christianity were far more diverse than medieval
    church historians would tell us. Early orthodox histories denigrated
    and then banished from political memory the existence of these peaceful
    people and their sacred texts, of which this gospel is one," Dr Mirecki
    said.

    The first task after discovering the documents, he said, had been to
    translate them, and then to preserve them. They are now kept behind
    glass. The two professors discovered that they had both found the
    documents in Berlin at an academic conference, and decided to
    collaborate. They have written a book on the latest Lost Gospel, to be
    published this summer.
7.1098IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:2774
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue
    657

    Senna made complaint about his 'nervous' car
    
    By Bruce Johnston in Rome 

    THE bend where Ayrton Senna died at Imola in 1994 could cause problems
    "only for a car that had problems," a fellow Formula One driver told a
    court near the race circuit yesterday.

    Pierluigi Martini, who raced in the same San Marino Gran Prix in which
    Senna crashed, was speaking as a prosecution witness in the trial in
    Imola of six racing figures, including Frank Williams, over Senna's
    alleged "manslaughter". Williams, head of the British racing team
    bearing his name, his technical director Patrick Head, and Adrian
    Newey, his chief mechanic, are accused of manslaughter, on account of
    allegedly poor modifications to the steering column of Senna's
    Williams-Renault car. A report says the column partly gave way as a
    result of a bump, thus causing Senna to fail to take the bend on the
    seventh lap.

    Federico Bendinelli, the Imola track executive, his manager Giorgio
    Poggi, and Belgian race director Roland Bruynseraede are also accused
    of manslaughter, for alleged breaches of safety norms which impeded
    Senna's ability to brake and save his life.

    Counsel for Williams and Head argued that not enough had been done to
    investigate the true conditions of the track. But yesterday Martini
    told the court that although he and Senna had both complained of a dip
    in the track before the bend of the crash, this had been remedied in
    such a way that made it no worse than other circuits, in the way the
    under-chassis of cars could be scraped.

    Martini said: "The Tamburello (the name of the bend, which in Italian
    means Tambourine) could cause problems only to a car which had
    problems. A driver like Ayrton Senna would have never gone off at that
    point unless there had been a problem. In a race lots of things can
    happen, but in this case I don't know what it might have been."

    He said the bend was usually taken at 185mph. In the middle there was a
    slight depression that caused the cars to shake. "Senna, others and I
    reported this a fortnight before the Grand Prix. The race circuit
    people were very efficient. But although they had the asphalt
    smoothened, which was the only thing thing they could do, it only
    improved the situation slightly. The bottom of the cars touched the
    ground and they shuddered, but all you had to do was to keep on
    course."

    He said it was completely normal for the bottom of a Formula One
    car-bottom to bump the ground in depressions like this, and something
    that happened on every race track in the world. The driver said he had
    heard that Senna had gone off the track in order to avoid the
    depression. Martini said however that that there was no way of avoiding
    it.

    Senna complained to Martini three weeks before the race that his car
    was "nervous" and the driver's cockpit cramped.

    Stefano Stefanini, head of the Bologna highway police's road accidents
    section, said Senna had reached the third fastest time in the race,
    reaching 1 min 24.887 seconds, although he had a full tank of petrol.
    The best times, only a hair's breath faster, were achieved only towards
    the very end of the race.

    The eight race stewards working at Imola on the day of the accident
    gave evidence. They agreed that there had been no objects on the track
    which might have caused Senna to swerve, and said they had the
    impression that Senna's trajectory when he went off the track was one
    of a straight line - implying that his steering had failed. The
    Williams team claim that the steering column broke as a result of the
    crash, and not before it.

    The case continues.
7.1099IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:2844
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue
    657

    Yeltsin's son-in-law to head Aeroflot
    
    By Alan Philps in Moscow 

    PRESIDENT Yeltsin's son-in-law has been appointed director-general of
    Aeroflot, the state-controlled airline, confirming a trend for the
    ageing President to concentrate more power in the hands of his family
    and close associates.

    Valery Okulov, a navigator who is married to Mr Yeltsin's elder
    daughter, Elena, replaces Marshal Yevgeny Shaposhnikov, who has been
    elevated to become the President's aviation adviser. Mr Okulov, 45, was
    previously deputy head of the airline, in charge of operations.

    Yesterday's appointment follows Mr Yeltsin's naming of Valentin
    Yumashev, 39, the ghost writer of his memoirs, as his chief of staff.
    This is considered one of the most powerful positions in the land and
    the appointment of a journalist with no administrative experience
    caused widespread surprise.

    But Mr Yumashev is a close friend of the Yeltsins, and his prowess on
    the tennis court and ability to navigate among high-level Kremlin
    intrigues have stood him in good stead.

    His daughter, Polina, attends Millfield public school in Somerset with
    Boris Yeltsin Jr, the President's grandson through Tatyana Dyachenko,
    his younger daughter. Tatyana herself is considered a power behind the
    throne, having played a key role as image-maker during her father's
    re-election campaign last year.

    The Yeltsin family, with the exception of its patriarch, is modest and
    shy. Their official residence is a four-room flat of 167 square metres,
    spacious but by no means palatial. Mr Yumashev lives in the same
    building.

    Mr Yeltsin, 66, who has been betrayed or let down by many of his
    earlier associates, seems now to place his trust in his family. But
    giving jobs to the family is still politically sensitive in Russia, and
    both Russia's main news agencies, Itar-Tass and Interfax, thought it
    best not to mention the presidential connections of the new boss of
    Aeroflot.
7.1100IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:2950
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue
    657

    Volcanic blast gives birth to new sport - scaling the iceberg
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 

    ICEBERGS the size of houses have changed the landscape in part of
    south-east Iceland, scene of a volcanic eruption last autumn.

    The Bardabunga volcano sent plumes of steam and ash soaring up to
    33,000ft and molten rock spewed from a five-mile fissure. The heat was
    enough to melt part of a glacier, causing the build-up of a giant lake
    that burst from its basin, and flooded the area, which is largely
    uninhabited. Bridges were destroyed.

    The floods flowed into the ocean along the island's south coast, about
    140 miles east of Reykjavik. Relics of the floods, in the form of the
    huge icebergs, cover 12 square miles of black sand plains.

    Dr Keith Ball, a vulcanologist formerly with the British Geological
    Survey, said: "The area is in a state of flux. In many ways it is a
    sort of living geology. It was an enormous flood. It really was
    catastrophic."

    The icebergs have proved fascinating to climbers, including Einar
    Sigurdsson, who use pickaxes, pitons and climbing boots to scale them.
    Dr Gordon Riddler, head of the minerals group at the British Geological
    Survey, said: "Eventually the ice will melt on the plain and the only
    change will be that the plain is a little more boulder-strewn."

    The glacier that partially melted last autumn was Europe's biggest, the
    Vatnajokul, which covers 3,200 square miles and reaches a depth of
    3,000ft. The water poured into the Grimsvotn caldera, a basin
    underneath the glacier. Once it was full, the floods began. The glacier
    lies 120 miles east of Reykjavik and about the same distance below the
    Arctic Circle. 

    Iceland is one of the most active volcanic countries in the world. It
    has about 200 volcanoes of which 30 are active, producing an eruption
    every five years. Vulcanologists fly to the country to study them.

    The worst volcanic eruption happened in 1783 and produced the biggest
    known lava flow in the world, covering 220 square miles.

    It ruined large areas of the south-west corner of the island,
    destroying much agriculture. The resulting famine caused thousands of
    deaths. Last year's volcano damaged an uninhabited area of the island.
    Most volcanoes on Iceland do not kill people. This is because much of
    the island is a barren waste of rock, ash and sands. 
7.1101IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 13 1997 13:3058
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 13 March 1997 Issue
    567

    Kinnock bowled out by Brussels cricket club
    
    By Toby Helm, EU Correspondent in Brussels 

    NEIL Kinnock has resigned as honorary president of the Royal Brussels
    Cricket Club after some members complained that he was proving to be an
    inappropriate figurehead.

    The former Labour leader had failed to attend a single match or social
    function at the club since he agreed to take on the post two years ago.
    The RBCC is a pillar of expatriate society in Brussels, claiming roots
    back to 1815 when two British regiments are said to have staged a match
    on the eve of the Battle of Waterloo. The club plays in the Belgian
    League at a ground near the site of the battlefield.

    Mr Kinnock's decision to step down has come as relief to several club
    stalwarts. Some members had objected last year to having a politician -
    particularly a socialist one - serving as president.

    Sources within the club have told The Telegraph that a message was
    "gently conveyed" to Mr Kinnock some weeks ago by one of the club's
    star players that he might like to stand aside as he was too busy in
    his role as Transport Commissioner to give the post the attention it
    deserved.

    Mr Kinnock, who prefers rugby and is not known for his prowess with
    either bat or ball, sent a letter to the club chairman, Ted Vorzanger,
    saying he no longer felt it appropriate to continue as honorary
    president.

    It read: "I have always been very reluctant to continue to occupy
    positions to which I cannot give a reasonable amount of time. My
    position as honorary president has consequently been on my mind for a
    while since I do not think that my obligations give me the opportunity
    to fulfil even the most nominal duties."

    Mr Kinnock expressed great regret "that I have not been able to take an
    active role in the club's activities over the past two years due to an
    extremely busy schedule".

    Members had noted that the other British commissioner in Brussels, Sir
    Leon Brittan, who has an honorary title at a rival Brussels club - the
    Twelve Stars Cricket Club at the British School - had attended several
    events there.

    Mr Vorzanger said yesterday: "I think the professional commitments of
    Neil Kinnock prevented him from participating as fully as we had hoped.
    It therefore seemed that it would be better if we could try to find
    somebody else."

    Mr Kinnock will not be breaking all links with the club. It has been
    decided "by mutual consent" that he will remain as a "patron".

    He will still receive the annual fixture list, the club newsletter and
    invitations to social events.
7.1102IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:18116
    AP 14-Mar-1997 1:03 EST   REF5430

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, March 14, 1997
   
    U.N.-ALBANIA 

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- U.S. and Italian helicopters have flown hundreds
    of people from the chaotic Albanian capital as a revolt against
    President Sali Berisha swept the nation. European embassies are
    considering organizing an escape convoy. The U.N. Security Council
    called on the international community to provide humanitarian
    assistance. The Council endorsed European efforts to resolve the
    crisis. 
   
    CLINTON-ISRAEL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton says the killing of seven Israeli
    schoolgirls by a Jordanian soldier should not be assumed to be related
    to new tension in the region. He condemned the shooting and urged
    Middle East leaders to increase their peace efforts. Earlier this week,
    King Hussein of Jordan sent Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu a
    letter harshly criticizing Israeli policies. 
   
    U.N.-ISRAEL 

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The U.N. General Assembly has overwhelmingly
    approved a resolution calling on Israel to refrain from building a
    Jewish housing area in east Jerusalem and other actions that "have
    negative implications" for Middle East peace. The non-binding
    resolution was submitted after the United States vetoed a European move
    to urge Israel to reverse its decision. The U.S. and Israel were the
    only two dissenters in the 130-2 vote. 
   
    TWA-EXPLOSION 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The FBI agent in charge of the TWA Flight 800
    investigation says that the plane could have been brought down by a
    shoulder-fired terrorist missile. James Kallstrom said that so far,
    there is no evidence to prove that theory. He condemned as ridiculous
    claims that the July 17 disaster that killed all 230 people aboard was
    caused accidentally by the U.S. military. 
   
    MOTHER TERESA 

    CALCUTTA, India (AP) -- An ailing Mother Teresa has handed over her
    global mission to an Indian-born nun who converted to Roman Catholicism
    after being inspired by the works of the Nobel laureate. Sister Nirmala
    was elected by a conclave of 120 nuns. She will head the Missionaries
    of Charity, which runs 517 orphanages, homes for the poor, AIDS
    hospices and other worldwide charity centers. 
   
    COSBY SON 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A Russian-born teen gunned down Bill Cosby's son in
    a random robbery attempt, police said. The LAPD confirmed his arrest
    came after a tipster went to the National Enquirer in hopes of claiming
    a $100,000 reward. Mikail Markhasez, 18, who came to the United States
    eight years ago, acted alone, police said. 
   
    TEXACO-INDICTMENT 

    WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -- The former executive who came forward with
    secret tape recordings that embarrassed Texaco into a landmark
    race-discrimination settlement was indicted on a charge of obstruction
    of justice. Richard Lundwall, 55, admitted taking part, "together with
    other officials, in an effort to corruptly destroy, conceal and
    withhold" case evidence. 
   
    MARS LIFE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A theory that microbes once lived on Mars is boosted
    by two new studies of a rock that was blasted away from the red planet
    and eventually landed on Earth. Researchers say the new studies do not
    prove that Martian microbes once lived in the rock. But they remove one
    challenge that would have made life impossible, said John W. Valley of
    the University of Wisconsin. 
   
    AMERICAN AIRLINES 

    FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- As of July 1, American Airlines is
    eliminating smoking from the rest of its flights. Smoking is not
    allowed on any airline on domestic flights, while many airlines have
    banned smoking on select flights overseas. American started banning
    smoking on international flights in 1994. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar is up 1.29 yen at 123.55 yen. The Nikkei ended
    the morning session down 57.20 points at 17,843.28 points. In New York,
    the Dow fell 160.48 points to 6,878.89, its fifth largest point drop.
    The Nasdaq fell 10.86 to 1,293.27. 
   
    FAIRFIELD-NORTH CAROLINA 

    WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) -- Dean Smith matched Adolph Rupp as the
    winningest coach in NCAA history as North Carolina beat Fairfield 82-74
    in the East Regional. Smith now has 876 career victories and will go
    for the record Saturday against Colorado. 
   
    MARYLAND-COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON 

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- Stacy Harris scored 22 points as the College of
    Charleston upset Maryland 75-66 in the NCAA Southeast Regional. It's
    the ninth straight year a No. 12 seed has beaten a fifth-seeded team. 
   
    COLORADO-INDIANA 

    WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) -- Chauncey Billups scored 24 points as
    Colorado routed Indiana 80-62 in the opening round of the NCAA East
    Regional. The Buffaloes (22-9), making their first NCAA appearance in
    28 years, handed Indiana (22-11) an opening-round defeat for the third
    straight year. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1103IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1983
    RTw  14-Mar-97 03:01    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the killing of seven
    Israeli school girls by a Jordanian soldier only reaffirmed Israel's
    commitment to tighten its hold on all of Jerusalem despite Arab
    warnings of violence. 

    AMMAN - Jordan's King Hussein said he had told Israeli Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu he hoped to visit the families of Israeli victims
    shot by a Jordanian soldier. 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton condemned the shooting as
    "inexcusable and tragic" but said there was no evidence the killings
    were politically motivated and appealed for calm in the region. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Tanks moved on to the streets of Tirana in an attempt to stem
    virtual anarchy gripping Albania. Their arrival coincided with mounting
    lawlessness in Albania, where rebels have raided army barracks and
    looted weapons, usually while demoralised soldiers have looked on
    without attempting to stop them. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - A looting scare caused panic in a district of Zaire's
    jittery capital Kinshasa when soldiers seized 16 vehicles from a
    Belgian car company, reviving memories of nationwide army pillaging in
    1991 and 1993. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Mediators met the leader of Marxist rebels holding 72 hostages
    at the Japanese ambassador's home in Lima to explore ways of ending the
    12-week-old standoff. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Republicans on the House and Senate judiciary committees
    urged Attorney General Janet Reno to take action that could lead to an
    independent counsel to investigate campaign funding abuses. 

    - - - - 

    LOS ANGELES - An 18-year-old Russian emigre has been charged with
    murdering the only son of entertainer Bill Cosby, Los Angeles police
    chief Willie Williams said. 

    - - - - 

    MEXICO CITY - Mexico blasted a U.S. Congress vote that censured its
    anti-drug efforts, calling the vote unacceptable, harmful to
    U.S.-Mexican relations and helpful only to drug traffickers. 

    - - - - 

    ASSIUT, Egypt - Gunmen killed 13 people in the southern Egyptian
    province of Qena, an Interior Ministry statement said. Security sources
    said they suspected Moslem militants in both attacks. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The war of words escalated over the outlook for a budget
    deal as the chairman of the Senate Budget Committee said he felt
    chances of negotiating an agreement with the White House were finished. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - The hostage crisis aboard  an oil barge in Nigeria appeared to
    have ended and a spokeswoman for the French oil contracting firm ETPM
    said there were no longer any unauthorised people on board. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - Northern Irish police reported an explosion in a Catholic
    area of east Belfast late on Thursday and a local BBC reporter said at
    least one British soldier had been injured in the blast. 

    REUTER 
7.1104IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1993
    AP 14-Mar-1997 0:37 EST   REF5326

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ky. Station 'On Top' of Floods

    By STACY MORFORD

    Associated Press Writer

    PADUCAH, Ky. (AP) -- As the Ohio River crested in western Kentucky on
    Thursday, WDXR radio was on top of the story -- five stories above it,
    to be precise. 

    From their station inside a riverfront hotel, WDXR staffers had a
    unique perspective of the high water rushing along Paducah's floodwall.

    Because the 435-room Executive Inn is outside the floodwall and
    unprotected from the river, it was built over a parking garage -- a
    stilt effect that is keeping it high and dry. 

    With the hotel surrounded by water on three sides and blocked by the
    closed floodgates on the fourth, a skeleton crew of hotel and radio
    station employees have an adventurous route into work. They must cross
    a narrow, 20-foot catwalk that takes them from atop the 15-foot
    floodwall into the second story of the hotel. 

    "We've had a lot of fun with this. The very first day we had a
    name-the-bridge contest, so that catwalk is now the Cool Cats Walk,"
    said Brenda Hawes, the radio station's general manager. 

    Still dealing with the worst flooding in more than 30 years, the Ohio
    River Valley was hit Thursday with a new storm that could bring up to 3
    more inches of rain. All of western Kentucky was under a flash flood
    watch or warning. 

    Also Thursday, a coal-carrying barge rammed a bridge spanning the
    flood-swollen Ohio River and sank. The accident forced authorities to
    close the bridge and shut down river traffic for nearly four hours. 

    "The bridge was inspected and it's OK," said Old Shawneetown police
    dispatcher Richard Twitchell. "Flooding is partially blamed for the
    accident. The river's current is swifter because of the high water." 

    At least 59 deaths have been blamed on flooding and tornadoes from
    Arkansas to West Virginia. Two people were still missing in Kentucky
    and one was being sought in southern Ohio. 

    Added rain was likely to prolong the flooding and its misery, but
    forecasters predicted the Ohio and the mighty Mississippi, which it
    joins, would rise only slightly. 

    For a second day, the Mississippi River was nearly 9 feet above flood
    stage as its crest neared New Madrid, Mo., opposite the westernmost tip
    of Kentucky. 

    River gauge readings along the Ohio ranged from 5 feet to 20 feet above
    flood stage Thursday. The river should fall slowly for several days
    from Owensboro to Shawneetown, Ill. 

    In Paducah, hotel general manager Jean Ellis said she and her
    co-workers heard Wednesday night that the river was receding after
    cresting earlier Thursday more than 12 1/2 feet above flood stage. 

    "We were excited, but we didn't want to count our chickens before they
    hatched," she said. "Tonight, we're celebrating. We're bringing out the
    steaks." 

    The curious felt comfortable enough to check out the downtown flood
    wall that has kept Paducah streets and businesses dry. Built 45 years
    ago, and long maligned for its plain brown ugliness, the wall is
    suddenly appreciated. 

    "That wall hasn't served any purpose at all ... until now," Dan
    Hatfield said. 

    At Smithland, 12 miles upstream, residents who had frantically built a
    two-mile earthen and sandbag levee to hold the Ohio and Cumberland
    rivers at bay greeted the new rain grimly. 

    Water lapped dangerously close to the top -- 8 feet above the street in
    places -- and dirt was eroding under the pounding rain. 

    "As soon as it crests and the water starts down, we'll be OK," resident
    Frances Shekell said. "Until then, I think we're all holding our
    breath." 

    Hawes said WDXR, an oldies station, could have filled the airways with
    songs about rain and flooding but took a different tack. 

    "I wanted my DJs to lift the spirits of the people who have been
    flooded out," she said. "I wanted to keep things light. They don't need
    it rubbed in." 
7.1105IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1945
    AP 14-Mar-1997 0:19 EST   REF5101

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Father Killed Kids Over Religion

    By DAVID WILKISON

    Associated Press Writer

    HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) -- A Jewish man angrily asked for the death
    penalty Thursday after he was denied more time to explain how he was
    driven to kill his two children because his ex-wife wanted to raise
    them as Christians. 

    "They were my children. Mine!" said Avi Kostner, his voice filled with
    emotion. "I had a right to make that decision for them. My children
    cannot be Christians. I don't know if you can understand that." 

    Kostner, 52, testified for about four hours about his abusive
    childhood, his custody battle with his ex-wife and his reasons for
    drugging and killing his children, Geri Beth, 12, and Ryan, 10. He
    pleaded guilty last month and wanted the jury to recommend a sentence
    of life in prison rather than the death penalty. 

    But when his attorney attempted to turn the questioning over to
    prosecutors, Kostner objected and tried to fire him. Kostner said he
    wanted more time to explain how he was driven to kill. 

    "There were seven and a half years that led to this," Kostner told the
    judge while the jury was out of the courtroom. 

    When Superior Court Judge Jonathan Harris allowed cross-examination to
    begin, Kostner asked for a death penalty and refused to answer any
    questions. 

    Court was recessed until Friday after the judge warned Kostner that
    representing himself at this stage of his death penalty case would be
    "inappropriate, unfair, counterproductive and potentially suicidal." 

    Kostner killed the children in 1994, a few days before they were
    supposed to move to Florida with their mother and her new husband.
    Kostner and his ex-wife, Lynn Mison, had been embroiled in a bitter
    custody dispute since they separated in 1986 after seven years of
    marriage. She had converted back to Christianity after their divorce. 
7.1106IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1942
    AP 14-Mar-1997 0:17 EST   REF5095

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Principal in Scandal To Leave

    By DENISE LAVOIE

    Associated Press Writer

    FAIRFIELD, Conn. (AP) -- A popular principal suspended in a
    test-tampering scandal at the prestigious Stratfield School has agreed
    to leave his job under a proposed settlement, sources told The
    Associated Press on Thursday. 

    The agreement, reached between Roger Previs and the Board of Education,
    still needs to be approved by a majority of the nine-member panel, the
    sources told the AP on condition of anonymity. They said approval is
    expected. 

    Previs, who has worked in the Fairfield school system for 34 years, has
    been staunchly defended by parents since the Board of Education voted
    Feb. 19 to suspend him and begin termination hearings. 

    According to two sources close to the board, Previs agreed to leave his
    job and avoid the termination process in exchange for an undisclosed
    sum from the school board. 

    Two long investigations confirmed that test results for the Iowa Test
    of Basic Skills and Connecticut Mastery Tests had been tampered with at
    Stratfield, an award-winning public elementary school ranked among the
    best in the nation. 

    The board said the investigation showed that Previs was the "party
    responsible" for the tampering. Previs has denied wrongdoing. 

    Board members would not confirm the settlement but called a special
    meeting Friday to discuss the case against Previs. Previs plans to make
    an "an important public statement" afterward, his lawyer said. 

    Previs did not return a telephone message and no one answered the door
    at his home late Thursday. 
7.1107IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1935
    AP 13-Mar-1997 23:57 EST   REF5054

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Court Orders Equity at Retailer

    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- Electronics retailer Circuit City, found by a
    jury last year to have discriminated against black employees, was
    ordered Thursday to hire an outsider to oversee a diversity program. 

    U.S. District Judge James Spencer also ordered the company to develop a
    program for promotions and said he would retain jurisdiction over the
    case for five years. 

    In December, a jury found Circuit City showed a pattern of racial
    discrimination in failing to promote blacks at its Richmond
    headquarters. About 3,500 people work there, 800 of them black. 

    The jury found in favor of one current and one former employee, while
    rejecting a third claim. It awarded $290,000 in damages. 

    Morgan Stewart, a spokesman for Circuit City, said the company intends
    to appeal the verdict and Spencer's order. 

    The judge said the company must hire an outside director of diversity
    management who must select a consultant to develop and conduct a
    diversity training program. 

    Spencer said he will require reports every six months for the first two
    years and annually thereafter. 

    The order "looks very much like what we requested," said Joseph M.
    Sellers, director of the equal employment project of the Washington
    Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. The group had
    backed the lawsuit against Circuit City. 
7.1108IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:19123
    AP 13-Mar-1997 22:37 EST   REF6219

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    House Passes Mexico Threat

    By DAVID BRISCOE

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Frustrated with losses in the war on drugs, the
    House voted Thursday to give Mexico 90 days to improve its anti-drug
    efforts or face possible sanctions. But support for the slap at both
    Mexico and President Clinton was fading in the Senate. 

    The 90-day provision, passed as a compromise to immediate rejection of
    Clinton's certification of Mexico as "fully cooperative" in the war
    against drugs, brought several key Democrats back into Clinton's camp.
    They objected to the new version's strong criticism of administration
    drug policies. 

    Even if the Senate adopts the House resolution, Thursday's 251-175 vote
    fell far short of the two-thirds needed to override a presidential
    veto. 

    In Florida for a golfing weekend, Clinton issued a statement saying the
    vote was "the wrong way" to guarantee cooperation from Mexico. He said
    the Zedillo government has increased drug seizures, arrests, crop
    eradication and the destruction of drug labs. 

    "President (Ernesto) Zedillo recognizes the enormity of the problem
    Mexico faces and he has been courageous in carrying this battle
    forward," the statement said. "He deserves our support -- not a vote of
    'no confidence' that will only make it more difficult for him to work
    with us and defeat the scourge of drugs." 

    The resolution's litany of demands offered little chance of an improved
    response from Mexico. 

    Under the legislation, Mexico would lose certification unless within 90
    days it: 

    --Allows more U.S. narcotics agents into the country. 

    --Allows American law officers to carry weapons in Mexico. 

    --Extradites Mexicans sought by U.S. officials on drug charges. 

    --Improves air security over the border. 

    --Allows drug traffickers to be chased into Mexican waters by the U.S.
    Coast Guard. 

    The bill retains Clinton's right to waive sanctions against Mexico if
    he determines that is in the national interest -- an option he has
    under current law. Decertification normally means a cutoff of aid and a
    U.S. vote against loans to errant countries in the World Bank. 

    In Mexico City, the Foreign Ministry said the vote sent "the wrong
    signal to Mexico and the world" and would benefit drug traffickers. 

    "The resolution is an attack on international cooperation in the fight
    against drugs and benefits our common enemy, drug trafficking," the
    ministry said in a statement. 

    "This decision also erodes the constructive spirit which has allowed
    the United States and Mexico to achieve unprecedented levels of
    cooperation in the fight against drug trafficking." 

    The Foreign Ministry thanked Clinton "for the respect which he has
    repeatedly demonstrated towards our country," but repeated an earlier
    pledge "to act with all necessary energy" if sanctions are imposed
    against Mexico. 

    Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., a leading Democratic foreign policy expert
    who strongly opposed Clinton's certification of Mexico, voted against
    the final bill partly because he said it would put Mexico's president
    "in a box." 

    "We can be sure that no one in Mexico, especially not the president,
    will be able to advance this critical initiative without being accused"
    of giving up Mexican sovereignty, Hamilton said, noting that Mexico
    faces a midterm election July 6. 

    House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., also voted against the
    bill, although he had called for Clinton's decision to be overturned,
    saying "none of us can be satisfied with what Mexico is doing, what we
    are doing, what we are all doing to fight this evil." 

    After the vote, Clinton was relying on the Senate to endorse his seal
    of approval for a troubled neighbor. 

    Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, was gathering support for a measure
    that would retain Mexico's status while calling for a redoubling of
    anti-drug efforts. Another bill proposed in the Senate would overturn
    Clinton, but at least one of its sponsors, Sen. Paul Coverdell, R-Ga.,
    said he was looking for another option. 

    Much of the debate Thursday focused on the need to do something about
    growing drug abuse in the United States. 

    The key issue, said Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, is whether
    Congress "is going to demonstrate a resolve to save not only our
    children but the children of Mexico as well from what can only be
    described as the horrors of drug trafficking." 

    House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., in an unusual appeal prior to
    debate, said, "This is an effort on our part to help the people of
    Mexico, to help the people of Colombia and to help the American
    people." Clinton decertified Colombia but certified Mexico as "fully
    cooperative" in fighting drugs. 

    Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., called the bill an insult to Mexico and to
    Clinton. 

    "Passing this ill-conceived legislation will make the Mexican
    government less likely to cooperate with us and it will make the
    Mexican people justifiably outraged," Lantos said. 

    The law, which requires the president to pass or fail countries
    critical to the anti-drug effort, also came under sharp attack. Several
    lawmakers said it should be repealed as ineffective in gaining
    increased cooperation. 
7.1109IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1996
    AP 13-Mar-1997 21:36 EST   REF6133

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Police: Teen Killed Cosby's Son

    By JEFF WILSON

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A Russian teen gunned down Bill Cosby's son in a
    random robbery attempt, police said Thursday, confirming his arrest
    came after a tipster called the National Enquirer in hopes of claiming
    a $100,000 reward. 

    Mikail Markhasev, 18, who came to the United States eight years ago,
    acted alone and "there was no indication that there is any Russian gang
    or Russian mob ties at all," police Chief Willie Williams told a news
    conference. 

    "It appears that robbery was the motive. It was happenstance," Williams
    said. "This was a random stop as far as we know now. ... It happened to
    be a man in a car and the defendant who is now under arrest happened to
    come by." 

    Williams also said investigators seized a knit, woolen cap believed
    worn by the suspect and the gun used in the Jan. 16 slaying of Ennis
    Cosby, who was shot along a roadside as he changed a tire on his
    $130,000 Mercedes convertible. 

    Ballistic tests confirmed the gun was used in the killing, Williams
    said. He said the gun, which he did not describe, and the cap were
    found last Friday after a thorough search of the area with help from
    recruits from the Los Angeles police academy. 

    The chief noted that nothing appeared to have been taken during the
    robbery attempt and that Markhasev drove to and from the crime scene.
    Williams also said race wasn't a factor. 

    Markhasev, who was arrested Wednesday night at his suburban North
    Hollywood home, will be charged with one count of murder. He has "some
    criminal history," Williams said, declining to elaborate. 

    Two other people brought in for questioning Wednesday night -- a man
    and a woman -- were released. 

    Markhasev came to this country legally as a Russian refugee in 1989 and
    is not a U.S. citizen, a federal official, speaking on condition of
    anonymity, told The Associated Press. 

    The primary witness was a woman Ennis Cosby apparently was going to
    visit the night of the slaying. After Cosby had the flat tire, she went
    to the scene in her car and came face to face with the suspect.
    Williams said her description of Markhasev was remarkably accurate. 

    As the chief spoke, Markhasev's mug shot and an artist's sketch made
    from a description provided by the witness were displayed side by side.

    Williams confirmed the tip came first to the National Enquirer's reward
    tip line, and was passed on to the police department's press relations
    office. 

    "This tip along with many other hundreds was methodically reviewed and
    followed up on," the chief said. "The investigation of this tip
    included the issuance of at least three search and seizure warrants and
    the results of those warrants led to other information that ultimately
    identified the suspect and led to his arrest yesterday. 

    Enquirer editor Steve Coz said the tipster called within days of the
    killing and provided a reporter with a pager number. The number and
    name were relayed to police. 

    The tipster told the tabloid there was a Russian crime syndicate
    connection, and the Los Angeles Times reported the same link on
    Thursday, but Williams emphasized Markhasev apparently wasn't part of a
    gang. 

    Coz said the tabloid's tipster helped police find the gun by pointing
    out the area a few miles from the crime scene where it had been dumped. 

    Cosby family spokesman David Brokaw talked to Bill and Camille Cosby
    and said, "I sense a real sense of triumph, exuberance and something
    along the lines of some sort of closure." 

    In a statement, the couple thanked police and said they "felt certain
    and had every hope that they would find the suspect and that the
    process of jurisprudence would unfold." 

    The younger Cosby was a doctoral candidate in special education at
    Columbia University. The slaying came as a particular shock to many
    because of the elder Cosby's role as America's favorite TV father. 

    The state of California and two tabloids offered rewards totaling
    nearly $400,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of
    the killer. The state later withdrew its $50,000 offer at the request
    of the Cosby family. Los Angeles County also dropped a reward. 
7.1110IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1952
    AP 13-Mar-1997 21:05 EST   REF6102

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tobacco Tax Plan To Fund Kids

    By CASSANDRA BURRELL

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The federal cigarette tax would nearly triple under
    a plan to provide health insurance to children proposed Thursday by
    Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. 

    The tax would increase from 24 cents to 67 cents per pack and raise $30
    billion over five years, the senators said. 

    The federal government would award grants to states, which would
    contract with private insurers to provide "child-only" coverage and
    help parents either buy it or participate in employment-based health
    plans. States that chose to take part would pay 10 percent and 20
    percent of the cost of their program. 

    Under the program, $20 billion of the total raised from the higher tax
    would be used to extend coverage to children -- at least 5 million a
    year when the program is fully phased in, the sponsors said. 

    The remaining $10 billion would be used to reduce the federal budget
    deficit, Hatch and Kennedy said. 

    "Health insurance is the ticket to quality health care, and every child
    deserves that ticket," Kennedy said. 

    The two lawmakers announced the plan a day after the Census Bureau
    reported that nearly 10 million children -- or one out of seven -- had
    no health insurance in 1995. 

    States would set eligibility levels, with priority going to lower
    income families that don't qualify for Medicaid, the government health
    care program for the poor. Hatch and Kennedy said they expected the
    program would prompt private insurance companies to offer more
    child-only policies for families not eligible for subsidies. 

    Hatch said that an added benefit of raising the cigarette taxes would
    be reduced smoking among teen-agers. 

    "I don't like tax increases, but really there is an added advantage
    here," he said. "We think it's the right thing to do." 

    Fourteen states already have similar programs for children, Kennedy
    said. And in 17 other states, Blue Cross-Blue Shield offers child-only
    coverage and subsidies for low-income families. 
7.1111IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1946
    AP 13-Mar-1997 23:15 EST   REF5003

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Germany Quell Coal Mine Layoffs

    BONN, Germany (AP) -- Under pressure from tens of thousands of miners
    who protested for five days, the government said Thursday it has
    negotiated ways to soften the impact of eliminating half of Germany's
    coal-mining jobs by 2005. 

    The deal fails to save Germany's coal-mining industry, which was once a
    pillar of the economy but is dying because German coal is nearly three
    times the world market price. 

    But at least there will be no massive layoffs, as Germany's 88,600 coal
    miners have feared. 

    On a field in nearby Cologne, 8,000 miners who had paralyzed Bonn's
    government quarter with demonstrations during the week applauded when
    the agreement was announced to them by a union official. 

    The miners camped out in Cologne Wednesday night to await the outcome
    of Thursday talks between Chancellor Helmut Kohl, leaders of their
    union, of the energy industry and of North Rhine-Westphalia and
    Saarland, Germany's two coal-producing states. 

    A ton of German coal costs $155 to produce, compared to a world market
    price of $60 a ton or less, so the federal government props up the
    industry to save jobs. 

    Kohl's government announced last week it wants wants to cut coal
    subsidies from about $4.1 billion to $3.2 billion by the year 2005. 

    On Friday, tens of thousands of coal miners walked away from the pits
    and started daily demonstrations to demand that ways be found to avoid
    massive layoffs. 

    Government officials said that under Thursday's agreement subsidies
    would still be cut by the originally foreseen amount. 

    Economics Minister Guenter Rexrodt said the effect of that will be the
    elimination of about half of the country's coal-mining jobs. 

    Only four of Germany's 18 coal mines will be forced to close by 2000,
    Rexrodt said. 
7.1112IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1951
    AP 13-Mar-1997 23:02 EST   REF6233

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. Probe Blames Cuba

    GENEVA (AP) -- Cuba's downing of two civilian aircraft last year was a
    premeditated act, done in a manner that indicated it may have been
    ordered by higher-ups, a U.N. special investigator said Thursday. 

    The shooting was a "violation of the right to life," Swedish diplomat
    Carl-Johan Groth said in a report to the U.N. Human Rights Commission
    currently meeting in Geneva. 

    Groth was appointed to investigate alleged human rights violation in
    Cuba, including the Feb. 24, 1996, downing of two planes flown by a
    Cuban exile group. All four men aboard the planes died. 

    He cited an investigation by the International Civil Aviation
    Organization that said the civilian planes apparently had been outside
    Cuban airspace. 

    "Means other than interception, such as radio communication, had been
    available to Cuba but had not been used," his report said. 

    "The manner in which the events took place, particularly the fact that
    approximately six minutes elapsed between the shooting down of one
    aircraft and that of the other, irrefutably indicates that the act did
    not represent the reflex of some confused pilots, but that there had
    been enough time for them to receive precise orders to act as they
    did," Groth said. 

    The downing led to a tightening of the U.S. economic sanctions against
    Cuba. 

    Groth also said the Cuban government has continued harassment of
    dissidents within the country, with authorities paying intimidating
    visits to the homes of political activists and imposing penalties for
    alleged economic crimes. 

    "To be a dissident in Cuba is as difficult and risky today as it has
    been at any time in recent years," Groth said. 

    He documented the cases of 23 opposition members arrested or harassed
    by the Cuban authorities in July and August. Other dissidents allegedly
    were pressured to leave the country under threats of prison sentences,
    he said. 

    One positive development, however, was that the number of trials of
    dissidents and the length of sentences in 1996 was smaller than in
    previous years, he said. 
7.1113IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:19137
    AP 13-Mar-1997 22:21 EST   REF6207

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Albania Erupts Into Anarchy

    By JUDITH INGRAM

    Associated Press Writer

    TIRANA, Albania (AP) -- U.S. troops flew into Tirana to evacuate
    Americans trapped in chaos as, one by one, Albania's few remaining
    tranquil towns descended into anarchy Thursday. Gangs ransacked
    armories, civilians navigated tanks and children played with assault
    rifles. 

    Helpless army commanders asked for Western military involvement after
    the unrest that has engulfed southern Albania for days spread north,
    east and west, destroying the last semblance of order and leaving at
    least 12 people dead and 50 others injured. 

    The president's son and daughter and five other family members were
    among the masses to flee Albania, arriving in the port of Bari, Italy,
    aboard an Italian ferry, an Italian coast guard officer said. 

    Late Thursday night, a tank was seen moving slowly along main boulevard
    in the capital. It stopped near the Defense Ministry. 

    Responding to the increasing threat, earlier in the day four U.S.
    military helicopters based on warships in the Ionian Sea began
    evacuating Americans. Up to 2,000 U.S. citizens are in the country, and
    State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns said the flights could
    continue for days. 

    Burns told reporters in Washington that U.S. Ambassador Marina Lino and
    17 core embassy staff would remain in the capital for the time being.
    Italian helicopters also airlifted 400 people from Tirana, and Britain
    and other embassies hurried with plans to get their nationals out. 

    The unrest threatens to swamp neighboring countries, particularly Italy
    and Greece, with another flood of refugees. Because there are sizable
    ethnic Albanian populations in Serbia's Kosovo province and in
    Macedonia, those chronically unstable areas also are at risk. 

    Macedonian border guards said they fired on seven armed Albanians
    trying to cross the mountainous frontier on Thursday, repulsing the
    group and causing it to flee. 

    In Tirana, guards deserted the central prison, allowing 600 inmates,
    including ex-President Ramiz Alia and another prominent leader of the
    former Communists to get away. Then, the guards returned to loot the
    prison. 

    Pressure was building on current President Sali Berisha to leave office
    -- the one move that might help restore order. 

    "Berisha accepted that he has no institutional control," Skender
    Gjinushi of the opposition Social Democrats reported after meeting with
    the president. "He has no army, no police, Tirana is in total anarchy."

    The new eruption of violence left virtually no community of any size
    untouched. The weeks-long uprising was sparked by the collapse of
    high-risk investment schemes, draining the savings of thousands of
    Albanians, and has grown into anti-government protests. 

    At least 12 people were reported killed throughout the country, many of
    them by random gunfire. Citizens increasingly have been taking arms
    from looted armories, more for protection than out of political
    protest. 

    "We don't know who is armed and who is not," Gjinushi said. "Do they
    want to fight, or fire in the air? Or what are their demands?" 

    His Social Democrats and the Forum for Democracy, a loose umbrella
    organization of opposition groups, have called on Berisha to quit. 

    NATO's top policy board met in emergency session in Brussels, Belgium,
    later issuing a statement expressing its "deep concern." 

    In New York, the U.N. Security Council issued a statement urging the
    international community to provide humanitarian assistance and for all
    sides in Albania to work together to ease tensions. 

    "The Security Council ... offers its full support for the diplomatic
    efforts of the international community ... to find a peaceful solution
    to the crisis." 

    But council diplomats said privately there was little they could do
    now, given the chaos in the country. 

    The problem in Albania appeared increasingly to be a total collapse of
    order rather than one in which opposing forces could be separated. 

    In Tirana, shopkeepers were boarding up store fronts. State TV cut into
    children's programing for a special newscast, leading with the ominous
    announcement that 200 "citizens" had volunteered to help police restore
    order in Tirana. It said they warned Tirana residents to obey the law,
    or they would open fire. 

    State radio said Berisha and opposition political parties appealed to
    the Western European Union, the political arm of NATO, for military
    help. 

    Western European Union spokesman Myriam Sochaki said if a request had
    been made, it had not yet been received by Thursday evening. 

    Security Council approval of any such force would be required under
    international law. 

    It was not clear what kind of assistance Albania's leaders were seeking
    but the insurgents overran armories in Shkodra, northern Albania's
    biggest town and a Berisha stronghold, leaving four dead and 22
    wounded, hospital officials said. 

    Trouble also was reported for the first time in Durres, the Adriatic
    port and second-most populous city. Three people died in Elbasan, two
    each in Korca and Cerrik, and one in Puka. 

    In Italy, officials there said much of the Albanian navy and at least
    three military helicopters with people sought refuge in the country --
    bringing family members with them. Some asked for political asylum. 

    A Honduran vessel commandeered in Durres was headed toward Brindisi,
    Italy, with about 100 Albanians, officials in the Italian port said. 

    Appointing Bashkim Fino as the new premier had been a key part of
    Berisha's attempt to prevent the revolt from pushing up from southern
    Albania. He also agreed to elections by June and a multiparty
    government. 

    But Shkodra hospital officials reached by telephone from Tirana
    reported that one garrison close to the hospital was attacked and
    burned by protesters, and at least three other armories in outlying
    areas also were ransacked and stripped of weapons. 

    Korca residents said people were firing in the air and driving tanks in
    the streets. 
7.1114IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1973
    AP 13-Mar-1997 22:02 EST   REF6195

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. OKs Anti-Israel Resolution

    By ROBERT H. REID

    Associated Press Writer

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly
    approved a resolution Thursday calling on Israel to refrain from
    building a Jewish housing area in east Jerusalem and other actions that
    "have negative implications" for Middle East peace. 

    The non-binding resolution was submitted after the United States last
    Friday vetoed a European move to urge Israel to reverse its decision to
    build the 6,500-unit in east Jerusalem, part of which the Palestinians
    want as a future capital. 

    The vote was 130-2 with two abstentions -- the Marshall islands and
    Micronesia. The United States and Israel voted against the resolution,
    which was sponsored by 43 countries from Europe, Asia, Africa and the
    Arab world. 

    Palestinian U.N. observer Nasser al-Kidwa said the overwhelming vote
    "sends a clear, unmistakable message" that Israel should cease further
    settlement activity. 

    Although the resolution is non-binding, the lopsided vote reflects
    strong international opposition to the policies of Israeli Prime
    Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 

    The vote followed a day-long debate Wednesday in which speakers from
    throughout the world, including Australia, Japan, China, the European
    Union and Latin America, branded the decision to build the Har Homa
    project a violation of international law and a threat to peace. 

    Canadian Ambassador Robert Fowler said he supported the resolution,
    although his government would have preferred the document make
    reference to obligations of both the Palestinians and the Israelis. 

    The vote came hours after a Jordanian soldier killed seven Israeli
    schoolgirls during their field trip to the border area. 

    Israel's acting U.N. ambassador, David Peleg, said the "terrible crime"
    showed that the only way to promote peace in the Middle East is through
    direct talks between the parties and not multinational forums such as
    the United Nations. 

    "Needless debates, far removed from the realities of the region, have
    never contributed to settling the contentious issues between Israel and
    its Arab neighbors," Peleg said. 

    Addressing the General Assembly after the vote, U.S. Ambassador Bill
    Richardson repeated the Clinton Administration opposition to the Har
    Homa decision. He said it "runs counter to the progress and
    achievements of the parties to date." 

    "The record of the last few months proves that the parties themselves,
    working together, can resolve the many outstanding issues before them,"
    Richardson said. "The General Assembly ought not to interject itself
    into this process, which can only build mistrust and harden the
    positions on both sides." 

    The resolution calls on Israel to "refrain from all actions or
    measures, including settlement activities, which alter the facts on the
    ground and pre-empting the final status negotiations (on Jerusalem) and
    have negative implications for the Middle East peace process." 

    It also calls on Israel to abide by international agreements on the
    treatment of civilians on occupied lands and urges all parties to
    continue the peace process. 
7.1115IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1932
    AP 13-Mar-1997 19:44 EST   REF6049

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bomb Explodes in Paris Store

    PARIS (AP) -- A grenade hidden inside a package exploded Thursday in a
    store on the Left Bank, a popular tourist area in central Paris,
    slightly injuring a story employee and causing minor damage. 

    A police official said someone threw a package through the window of
    the home decoration store about 2 p.m. and the grenade exploded after
    the owner picked it up to throw it out. 

    The employee's eyes and face were injured, but his condition was not
    serious, the official said, speaking on customary condition of
    anonymity. 

    The suspect fled the scene in a car that was later found abandoned in a
    nearby neighborhood. 

    Investigators believed the attack may have been an act of revenge and
    did not call in anti-terrorism experts, the official said. 

    Last December, a bomb blew apart a crowded rush-hour subway train in
    Paris, killing four people and wounding 86 others. Algerian Muslim
    militants angry at France's tacit support of its former colony are the
    prime suspects in that attack. 

    In 1995, Algeria's Armed Islamic Group claimed responsibility for most
    of eight bombings or attempts that killed eight people and wounded 160.

7.1116IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:1936
    AP 14-Mar-1997 0:48 EST   REF5379

    Study: Sex Identity Not Pliable

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Sexual identity is not pliable after all, according to
    a follow-up study that debunks the classic case of a boy mutilated as a
    child and brought up to accept life as a girl, The New York Times
    reported Friday. 

    The study appearing in the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent
    Medicine found that the boy had indeed rejected his female identity at
    age 14, chose to live as a man and even had extensive surgery to
    attempt to restore his penis, which was cut off accidentally when he
    was a young boy. The unidentified patient is now in his 30s and
    married. 

    The study, by researchers Dr. Milton Diamond of Honolulu and Dr. H.
    Keith Sigmundson of Victoria, British Columbia, suggests that a sense
    of being male or female is innate, immune to the intervention of
    doctors, therapists and parents. 

    The new study challenged the 1973 account by Johns Hopkins University
    sexologist Dr. John Money that the patient adjusted well after being
    raised a girl. It was used to back the idea that infants are more or
    less sexually neutral at birth. 

    Money said through his secretary that he could not discuss the case
    because he did not have permission from the patient. 

    Diamond and Sigmundson plan to use their follow-up study to call for
    changes in the treatment of babies born with ambiguous genitalia, about
    one in every 1,000 births. Treatment usually consists of designating
    them female because it is more difficult to turn ambiguous genitals
    into a penis than a vagina. 
7.1117IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:19107
    AP 13-Mar-1997 16:17 EST   REF5870

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mars Life Theory Gets a Boost

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A theory that microbes once lived on Mars is boosted
    by two new studies of a rock that was blasted away from the red planet
    and eventually landed on Earth. 

    Researchers at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and at the
    California Institute of Technology said the new studies do not prove
    that Martian microbes once lived in the rock. But they remove one
    challenge based on the temperature history of the potato-size chunk of
    Mars. 

    "We have ruled out the high temperature hypothesis" that would have
    made life impossible, said John W. Valley of the University of
    Wisconsin. "I still don't have final answers. There should still be
    skepticism." 

    Wisconsin scientists determined the range of temperatures the rock was
    exposed to by analyzing the ratios of carbon and oxygen isotopes. At
    Cal Tech, researchers traced the temperature history by measuring
    magnetic fields within the rock. Both studies will be published Friday
    in the journal Science. 

    NASA scientists last summer claimed that small globules of carbonate
    found inside a Martian meteorite were the fossilized remains of
    microbes or bacteria that lived on the red planet more than 15 million
    years ago. 

    Based on a microscopic and chemical analysis of the globules, the NASA
    team theorized that the microbes lived and died in the rock, leaving
    behind organic chemicals and fossilized remains. The rock was then
    blasted from the Mars surface by a meteorite impact, spent thousands of
    years wandering in space and then fell to Earth in the Antarctic. The
    rock was recovered from an ice field and identified by chemical
    composition as coming from Mars. 

    A major challenge to the theory has been that the carbonate globules
    actually formed by inorganic processes at temperatures of more than
    1,200 degrees, far too hot for life. 

    But the new studies show that temperatures of the globules never
    exceeded 212 degrees -- scalding, but still within the living range of
    known life forms. 

    "Our work shows that there are no show stopper lines of evidence in the
    temperature," said Valley. There are other reasons to be skeptical,
    however, he said, "and it will be difficult to convince the world one
    way or the other." 

    "Our results don't prove there was life," said Joseph L. Kirschvink,
    head of the Cal Tech team. But the finding proves that the possibility
    of life cannot be eliminated because of temperature, he said. 

    The Cal Tech team determined the temperature history of the rock by
    measuring the magnetic field direction of tiny parts of the samples.
    The magnetic field direction in a rock will change slightly each time
    it is heated and cooled. 

    "To make the measurement, we had to saw apart a specimen the size of a
    grain of sand," said Altair T. Maine, a member of the Cal Tech team. 

    Kirschvink said his team found that after the rock cooled from a melt
    some 4 billion years ago, it was never again heated to a temperature
    lethal to all life. 

    The Cal Tech study also showed that early in the history of Mars, the
    planet had a magnetic field similar to that of Earth. Kirschvink said
    this means the planet probably had an atmosphere. A strong magnetic
    field allows a planet to retain an atmosphere. 

    Over billions years, however, Mars has lost its magnetic field and most
    of its atmosphere, he said. 

    Kirschvink said the magnetic studies also show that the sampled part of
    the Mars meteorite never heated up as it entered the Earth's atmosphere
    and smashed into the Antarctic. This suggests that microorganisms could
    survive a trip from Mars to Earth. 

    "An implication of our study is that you could get life from Mars to
    Earth periodically," he said. "In fact, every major impact could do
    it." 

    Earlier studies had suggested a Mars origin of life and Kirschvink said
    his studies do not rule out this possibility. 

    Kurt Marti, an expert on the chemistry of the solar system at the
    University of California, San Diego, said the two new studies may lay
    to rest temperature challenges to the Mars life theory, but he said
    there are other objections. 

    "These all have to be addressed one by one," he said. "Until that is
    done, we have to be careful about accepting or rejecting this theory." 

    Among the theory's other problems: the need for chemical evidence of
    life based on carbon isotope ratios, and better physical evidence that
    the carbonate globules are, in fact, fossils. 

    Valley said he hopes to start soon an analysis of the carbon isotopes.

7.1118IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2058
    AP 13-Mar-1997 16:04 EST   REF5853

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bill Would Disclose HIV Status

    By DARLENE SUPERVILLE

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- States would be required to alert people to possible
    contacts with HIV-infected individuals under a bill being advanced by a
    Republican congressman. 

    The measure also would create a national reporting system for the
    virus, require testing of anyone accused of a sex crime, require
    insurers to disclose HIV test results to applicants and allow
    disclosure of HIV status of children up for adoption. 

    Rep. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., said the provisions will protect those who
    aren't infected and help those who are learn their status as soon as
    possible so they can take advantage of new, life-prolonging treatments.

    The proposal "will return sound medical practices to our nation's
    public health policy and curtail the spread of the deadly HIV
    epidemic," added Coburn, who also is a physician. 

    The American Medical Association, which represents doctors, supports
    the measure, as it has many of the bill's provisions. 

    But the Human Rights Campaign, a gay political group, said the bill
    would intrude on the authority of local public health officials and do
    nothing to help at-risk individuals change their behavior. 

    The bill would: 

    --Require confidential, national reporting of new HIV cases to the
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. States currently report new
    AIDS cases, and 26 states report new cases of the virus. 

    --Require states to notify people that they may have been exposed to
    HIV by a current or past partner. The CDC currently requires states to
    establish procedures for partner notification for AIDS cases. 

    --Require HIV testing for accused sexual offenders. 

    --Encourage states and medical associations to create policies for
    HIV-infected medical professionals who perform invasive procedures. It
    also allows them to test patients for HIV before the doing procedures. 

    --Require insurers to reveal HIV test results to applicants, and permit
    people to learn the HIV status of children they may adopt. 

    The Human Rights Campaign said evidence has shown that notifying
    partners is a costly and ineffective way of controlling the disease. It
    also questioned mandatory testing of accused sex offenders, noting that
    it takes at least six months after exposure for the virus to show up in
    the blood. 
7.1119IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2029
    RTw  14-Mar-97 07:13    

    Fertility treatment does cause multiple births

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, March 14 (Reuter) - Danish doctors confirmed on Friday what
    many had suspected -- that a noticeable rise in the number of twins,
    triplets and other multiple births is due to new fertility treatments. 

    Mads Melbye and colleagues at the Danish Epidemiology Science Centre in
    Copenhagen studied nearly 500,000 women between 1980 and 1994 and found
    the national incidence of multiple pregnancies increased 1.7 times,
    mostly in women over the age of 30 having their first child. 

    The rate of twin births went up 2.7 times and the rate of triplets more
    than nine times. 

    "A relatively small group of women has drastically changed the overall
    national rates of multiple pregnancies," the doctors wrote in a report
    in the British Medical Journal. 

    "The introduction of new treatments to enhance fertility has probably
    caused these changes and has also affected the otherwise decreasing
    trend in infant mortality." 

    Fertility treatment causes multiple births in about a quarter of cases. 

    REUTER
7.1120IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2079
    RTw  14-Mar-97 06:29    

    Australian scientist sees commercial cattle clone

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Michael Byrnes 

    SYDNEY, March 14 (Reuter) - Australian researchers who have achieved
    the first large-scale cloning of cattle embryos said on Friday they
    hoped to launch commercial cloning within three or four years. 

    Their success was announced at a time of worldwide debate on the ethics
    of cloning -- especially the idea of human cloning. 

    The debate was provoked by news last month that scientists in Scotland
    had produced a sheep clone called Dolly. 

    But researcher Bernie Harford said the cloning process refined by a
    team in Melbourne was created solely for use in agriculture. 

    "Our commercial focus is to produce genetically identical embryos in
    large numbers, at low cost," Harford, chief executive of the Genetics
    Australia co-operative, told Reuters. 

    "Our hope would be that we would move into pilot commercial processes
    in the next three or four years." 

    Britain's New Scientist magazine reported on Thursday that Harford and
    a team at Melbourne's Monash University led by Alan Trounson had
    managed to create more than 400 identical embryos from a single cattle
    embryo. 

    In a telephone interview, Harford would not comment on the possibility
    of using cloning techniques on humans. 

    "Our interest is purely agricultural applications," he said. 

    Harford has worked for five years with Monash University's Institute of
    Reproduction and Development to create a large number of cloned
    embryos. 

    The researchers produce calf embryos using standard test-tube
    technology and let them grow into a ball of cells known as a
    blastocyst. They then separate cells out and fuse them with eggs that
    have had their nucleus removed to create new embryos, which are grown
    and separated again and again. 

    At the last count, the team had managed to produce a line of 470 cloned
    embryos, although none has been implanted into a cow and allowed to
    grow. 

    Harford said he considered the Melbourne success to be less spectacular
    than the work in Scotland which produced Dolly from the cell of an
    adult sheep. 

    He said the Melbourne cloning was "steady and very encouraging rather
    than spectacular." 

    The next step would be to produce large numbers of embryos consistently
    and to produce healthy cows from the embryos. 

    Genetics Australia's immediate aim was to produce 50 to 60 cattle with
    the same genetics and test them in the field. The best performers would
    be chosen for further reproduction. 

    Annual production of cloned animals would then depend on the cost of
    producing embryos, which was not yet known. 

    "Essentially, we're competing with elite semen which sells for
    something less than A$30 (US$24) a straw," he said. 

    While the present cost of cloning embryos was expensive, it was
    feasible to produce large numbers of embryos quite cheaply. 

    "To make it cost-effective, we'd need to produce in large numbers,"
    Harford said. 

    REUTER
7.1121IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2056
    RTw  14-Mar-97 04:35    

    Killer caterpillars claim one life in Brazil

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By John Miller 

    SAO PAULO, March 13 (Reuter) - Deadly caterpillars whose sting rivals a
    cobra's bite have killed one man and injured 16 other people in
    southern Brazil, officials said on Thursday. 

    "Over the past week one farmer has died and there have been 16 people
    hospitalized, two in very serious condition," said Roseli Simione, a
    spokeswoman at Santa Terezinha Hospital in Cruz Machado, a rural
    community in the southern state of Parana. 

    The dark green insects, known as "fire caterpillars," grow to about 2
    inches (5 cm) and are covered with hundreds of tiny hair-like spines
    that act like hypodermic needles to secrete lethal venom. 

    Contact with the insects causes serious burning and, if left untreated,
    can lead to high fever, internal bleeding, bleeding from the nose and
    ears, kidney failure and death. 

    "Most people can be treated with anti-haemorrhagic medicine but the
    farmer waited for two days before seeking treatment and he went into a
    coma," Simione said. 

    The lethal pests, whose scientific name is Lonomia Obliqua, have killed
    at least 10 people and injured dozens more over the past several years
    in the southern states of Parana, Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina. 

    A Brazilian study published in a London medical journal in October
    found that the caterpillars were three-to-six times as deadly as
    poisonous snakes in the region. 

    The caterpillars appear in southern Brazil between December and March
    each year and become harmless after they turn into butterflies. 

    The caterpillars like to rest on tree trunks and walls and are often
    not spotted until after they have injected their stinging venom.
    Authorities, worried that children may be attracted to the
    furry-looking creatures and want to touch them, have warned people
    about the insects. 

    "Be on the alert! Avoid contact with these caterpillars," blared one
    radio broadcast in Cruz Machado, which until recently had been free of
    the insects. 

    Once restricted to rural areas, the caterpillars have increasingly
    migrated to urban centres. Biologists do not know why they have spread
    so quickly but speculate that toxic fertilisers and deforestation have
    killed off many of the caterpillar's natural predators. 

    REUTER
7.1122IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2067
    RTw  14-Mar-97 02:33    

    British soldier, policeman hurt in Belfast blast

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Martin Cowley 

    BELFAST, March 13 (Reuter) - A British soldier and a policeman were
    injured late on Thursday when suspected Irish Republican Army
    guerrillas lobbed an explosive device at an armed patrol in Belfast,
    security sources said. 

    The incident occurred hours after a British soldier was slightly
    injured when a suspected unit of the IRA -- fighting to end British
    rule in Northern Ireland -- ambushed a patrol vehicle in north Belfast. 

    The security sources said the latest ambush took place when a patrol
    was walking through the Short Strand district, a Catholic enclave in
    the largely pro-British Protestant east of Belfast. 

    "Some kind of explosive device was thrown at the patrol. The two men
    are being examined. We do not know how badly they are injured," said
    one source. 

    Earlier on Thursday unidentified guerrillas threw a grenade at an
    armoured vehicle in north Belfast. 

    No group claimed responsibility for the attacks, which came at a time
    of growing hostility by the IRA, which has killed two British soldiers
    in gun and bomb attacks in the province since October. 

    The IRA, which shattered a fragile peace process by abandoning a
    17-month truce a year ago, said recently that it was unlikely to
    consider another ceasefire until after a British election due by May
    22. 

    A spate of IRA attacks in the province since December has shaken an
    already edgy truce by pro-British Loyalists that has been in force
    since October 1994. The groups say they will not allow the IRA to bomb
    them into a new all-Ireland state. 

    Loyalists were blamed two weeks ago for a failed bomb attack on the
    offices of the IRA's Sinn Fein political wing in Monaghan town in the
    Irish Republic. 

    Irish media said it was a retaliatory attack for the death of British
    soldier Stephen Restorick, who was killed by a sniper bullet at a
    vehicle checkpoint last month. 

    British and Irish ministers, at their final round of full-scale talks
    before the British election, urged the IRA on Wednesday to cast aside
    their weapons to win a seat for Sinn Fein in peace talks.

    Britain's Northern Ireland Secretary, Sir Patrick Mayhew, said a string
    of successes by security forces on both sides of the Irish border had
    foiled guerrilla attacks and saved lives recently. 

    Irish Foreign Minister Dick Spring said the Irish people did not want
    more IRA violence, and the guerrillas would not be allowed to ruin the
    multi-party peace talks that began last year. 

    The talks, chaired by former U.S.senator George Mitchell, were
    adjourned last week with the province's bitterly divided pro-British
    Protestant and pro-Irish Catholics still split on the way forward.

    REUTER
7.1123IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2028
    RTw  14-Mar-97 01:50    

    UK poll gives Labour opposition 25-point lead

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 13 (Reuter) - Britain's opposition Labour Party is
    maintaining its big lead over the ruling Conservatives in the run-up to
    the general election, and is now 25 points ahead, according to an
    opinion poll in Friday's Independent newspaper. 

    The Harris poll showed support for Labour had dropped one point to 52
    percent from its most recent poll, carried out last week. The
    Conservatives were down three points to 27 percent while the minority
    Liberal Democrats rose four points to 14 percent. 

    A poll released by polling group Opinion Research Business on Thursday
    showed Labour had widened its lead to 24 percentage points from 19 in
    the firm's previous poll two months ago. 

    Support for Labour, in opposition since 1979, rose to 53 percent from
    51, while backing for the Conservatives slipped to 29 percent from 32. 

    Prime Minister John Major earlier dampened speculation that he was
    about to announce the date of the next election, which must be held by
    May 22. Most politicians expect voting to take place on May 1. 

    REUTER
7.1124IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2020
    RTw  14-Mar-97 01:07    

    London police recover stolen Picasso painting

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, March 13 (Reuter) - British police on Thursday recovered a
    Picasso painting worth 650,000 pounds ($1 million) which was stolen a
    week ago from an exclusive central London art gallery. 

    A police spokeswoman, speaking by telephone, said officers had
    retrieved "Tete d'une Femme" and arrested two men in central London.
    She declined to give further details. 

    The painting was stolen from the Lefevre Gallery in London's Mayfair
    district last Thursday by a man armed with a shotgun. He then ran out
    of the gallery and hijacked a passing taxi, which he abandoned in south
    London. ($ - 0.626 British Pounds) 

    REUTER
7.1125IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 14 1997 10:2089
    RTw  13-Mar-97 23:31    

    CNN opens bureau in Havana

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Frances Kerry 

    HAVANA, March 13 (Reuter) - The U.S. television network CNN has opened
    its bureau in Havana, becoming the first U.S. news organisation in 28
    years to have a reporting office on the communist-ruled island, Cuban
    officials said on Thursday. 

    "CNN have now opened their bureau, they have fulfilled all the
    (paperwork) requirements," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Marianela
    Ferriol said during a weekly news briefing. 

    Cable News Network's Cuba correspondent, Lucia Newman, said she had
    received formal press accreditation on Tuesday and was organising the
    office, in the Habana Libre hotel. 

    Newman said she planned to make the first live broadcasts in English
    and Spanish from Havana next Monday, coinciding with the launch of a
    24-hour Spanish-language service by CNN, an Atlanta-based division of
    Time Warner Inc.  

    The first story would be "something that's in the news and current and
    relevant to what's happening in Cuba," she said. 

    President Fidel Castro's government granted CNN permission to set up a
    bureau last November. 

    In February, President Bill Clinton gave the go-ahead to CNN and to
    nine other U.S. news organisations to open reporting offices in Cuba. 

    But the Cuban government said while CNN was now free to come, Havana
    alone would decide when and if the other organisations would be granted
    permission. There is no indication if it is preparing to let anyone
    else in. 

    The Foreign Ministry also said at the time it would not consider giving
    such permission to organisations it views as hostile to Cuba. 

    Cuban officials have said one reason CNN was the first to be given
    permission was because of what authorities view as its "objective"
    reporting of Cuba in the past. CNN's Ted Turner has met Castro on
    several occasions in recent years. 

    Newman, 45, was last posted in Mexico City and has worked for CNN since
    1986 in Latin America. She described the Cuba posting as
    "professionally the most exciting of my career." 

    Her reporting is likely to be sccrutinized by Castro's critics in the
    Cuba exile community in the United States. 

    Asked on Thursday how she felt about pressure either from Cuban
    authorities or from the exile community, Newman replied: "It will be a
    little bit of what I've known, although the scrutiny will be more
    intense. But I will try not to let this get in the way of normal
    professional coverage." 

    Newman, who has visited Cuba frequently over the last 11 years, added
    she had no particular instructions from CNN on Cuba coverage. "Their
    view is that our criteria must be the same in all countries," she said,
    adding "you must try to do as much as you can journalistically." 

    The CNN office in Cuba will be staffed by Newman and two other
    expatriates, and two local employees. 

    U.S. news organisations such as UPI, AP and the New York Times were
    closed in Cuba in the 1960s after the two countries broke diplomatic
    relations and the United States imposed an economic embargo on Cuba.
    The last one to go was in 1969. 

    But Cuban authorities permit some journalists from U.S. news
    organisations to pay visits to the island. 

    Cuban authorities are generally fairly welcoming to those U.S.
    journalists who do come -- reflecting Cuba's interest in projecting its
    message in the United States. Castro rarely gives interviews to foreign
    media, but those he has granted in recent years have generally been
    with U.S. media. 

    Non-U.S. news agencies such as Reuters, AFP, EFE, ANSA, DPA, Itar-Tass
    and Notimex have bureaux on the island. There are also accredited
    correspondents for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and for
    newspapers such as the Financial Times of London and El Pais of Spain. 

    REUTER
7.1126IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:10109
    AP 17-Mar-1997 1:03 EST   REF5465

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, March 17, 1997
   
    AIR BAG POLL 

    BOSTON (AP) -- While passenger-side air bags have killed at least 38
    children, a majority of Americans believe that the safety devices help
    more children than they hurt, a new survey shows. Nearly 60 percent of
    adults polled by the Center for Risk Analysis at the Harvard School of
    Public Health mistakenly believe that air bags are saving more
    children's lives than not, the researchers say. Although participants
    recognized that air bags can save lives, they were unclear about the
    range of injuries air bags can cause. 
   
    SALVADOR 

    SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -- The leftist rebels who laid down
    their arms five years ago to end El Salvador's civil war won Sunday's
    election for mayor of San Salvador, although they reportedly trailed in
    congressional races and outside the capital. While official results had
    yet to be released, the president of El Salvador's governing party,
    Gloria Salguero Gross, conceded that candidate Hector Silva had won the
    mayorship in the capital. Silva, a member of the small Democratic
    Convergence Party, ran on a coalition led by the Farabundo Marti
    National Liberation Front. 
   
    McVEIGH-NEWSWEEK 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Newsweek reports in this week's edition Timothy
    McVeigh allegedly admitted a role in the Oklahoma City bombing during a
    lie detector test given by his lawyers. Similar reports have also been
    printed by The Dallas Morning News and Playboy. The Newsweek article
    also says McVeigh failed a lie detector question about whether all of
    his alleged co-conspirators were known to investigators. 
   
    CANADA-SAUDI DETAINED 

    TORONTO (AP) -- A man detained in Canada because of alleged links to a
    Saudi Arabian bomb blast claims he wasn't even in that country when the
    bomb went off last June. The blast in the eastern part of Saudi Arabia
    near Dharan, killed 19 U.S. soldiers and injured 400 people. Fahad
    Shehri told the Toronto Star he is not a terrorist and only performed
    such tasks as sending out faxes advocating democracy while with the
    Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights, which opposes the
    ruling regime. Canadian officials say Sheri admitted selling guns for
    the group. 
   
    MEXICO MONEY 

    HOUSTON (AP) -- Government lawyers may have won their case to seize
    $7.9 million from an ex-Mexican prosecutor's U.S. bank account, but a
    federal judge says they used weak proof. U.S. District Judge Nancy
    Atlas, who oversaw the civil forfeiture proceeding, ruled late
    yesterday the government's evidence at the time of its original
    complaint June 15, 1995 "barely gets over the line." An eight-member
    jury earlier yesterday decided much of Mario Ruiz Massieu's $9 million
    Houston bank account was, as one U.S. lawyer put it, "dirty money"
    derived from drug proceeds. 
   
    WRITERS AWARDS 

    BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) -- The filmmaking team of brothers Ethan and
    Joel Coen were honored Sunday with a top award from the Writers Guild
    of America for their darkly comic suspense film "Fargo." It is the
    second writing award for "Fargo," which received the best screenplay
    award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. Writer-actor Billy
    Bob Thornton won the award for best adapted screenplay for "Sling
    Blade." 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIAN 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu emerged
    from a conference with Jordan's King Hussein to say Israel will go
    ahead with plans to begin construction of a Jewish housing project in
    East Jerusalem. The two men spoke by phone with Palestinian leader
    Yasser Arafat. Official contacts between Israel and the Palestinians
    have been on hold because of Palestinian anger over plans for the
    6,500-unit housing project. 
   
    JAPAN MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was mixed against the Japanese yen in early
    trading Monday, while Tokyo stock prices edged higher. The dollar was
    traded at 123.62 yen, down 0.02 yen from its late level in Tokyo Friday
    but above its late New York level of 123.38 yen on Friday. 
   
    BIG WINS-LITTLE TEAMS 

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- Tennessee-Chattanooga upset Illinois and
    advanced to the round of 16 for the first time in school history with a
    75-63 victory. UTC, the 14th-seeded team in the NCAA Southeast
    Regional, held No. 6 Illinois to one basket in the final ten minutes.
    The Texas Longhorns withstood Coppin State's scrambling guards and held
    on for an 82-81 win. The Eagles were bidding to become the first No. 15
    seed to move into the Sweet Sixteen. 
   
    ACC LOSSES 

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- No. 6 Stanford silenced Wake Forest in the
    first half and stopped Tim Duncan in the second half to beat the No. 3
    Demon Deacons 72-66. Stanford takes a six-game winning streak into the
    West Regional Semifinals against Utah. Tenth-seeded Providence (23-11)
    advanced to the round of 16 for the first time since 1987, beating
    second-seed Duke 98-87. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1127IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:10104
    RTw  17-Mar-97 06:49    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Rugby Union-Woman's world record bet pays off 

    LONDON - England clinched the Triple Crown with their 34-13 Five
    Nations victory over Wales, but it was one of their supporters, an
    anonymous woman, who scooped the big prize with a world record bet. 

    The woman staked a total of 154,780 pounds ($247,000) in separate bets
    on England beating Scotland, Ireland and Wales. They were odds-on
    favourites to win each game but still came away with a profit of over
    31,000 pounds. 

    "It might seem foolhardy to risk 150,000 pounds to win 30,000 pounds
    but that represents a 20 percent tax-free profit over the space of a
    few weeks -- a rate that any financial institution would find hard to
    match," said Graham Sharpe, spokesman for the betting chain that took
    the bet. 

    "I just hope she gives us the chance to win the money back." 

    - - - - 

    Mobutu aides keep Sunday as day of rest 

    PARIS - The fact that rebels have overrun their country's third largest
    city and appear closer than ever to toppling President Mobutu Sese Seko
    doesn't seem to alarm the president's aides -- or disturb their rest
    habits. 

    "Don't you know that it's Sunday," said an aide who answered the
    telephone at Mobutu's luxurious villa at Roquebrune-Cap Martin on the
    French Riviera. "We don't work on Sundays. 

    "If you journalists want to work on Sundays, we can't prevent you. But
    in Zaire we don't work on Sundays and we don't intend to work here.
    Call back tomorrow," he said. 

    Mobutu has spent most of his time in Europe since being operated on for
    prostate cancer in August. There was no indication if he was planning
    to return home now to rally his crumbling forces.

    The Zairean embassy in Paris did not answer its telephones. 

    - - - - 

    Russian doctors market "medicinal" vodka 

    MOSCOW - Russian doctors in the southern city of Krasnodar have
    answered their countrymen's prayers and invented a vodka that they say
    that is truly good for health. 

    "Made with water containing silver ions and passed through a magnetic
    field, it possesses antibiotic properties and a curative effect,"
    Itar-Tass news agency quoted the doctors saying of "Silver Spring"
    vodka, which went on sale on Sunday. 

    Millions of Russians swear by the medicinal effects of their national
    drink. But doctors blame heavy vodka drinking for a male life
    expectancy of just 58, far below the level in other industrialised
    countries. 

    - - - - 

    African millionaire spreads wealth in Miami 

    MIAMI - West African millionaire Babani Sissoko may have been convicted
    of bribing a U.S. Customs agent, but that hasn't stopped him from
    spreading his wealth around in Miami. 

    Sissoko, who pleaded guilty to paying a $30,000-bribe to a Customs
    agent in a bid to ship two military helicopters to Gambia and was
    scheduled to report in April to do his prison time, has been spending
    money like there's no tomorrow, the Miami Herald reported. 

    Sissoko's three lawyers, all of whom were given $60,000 Mercedes cars
    last week, say he hands large bills to the homeless and others as he
    travels through the city each day. 

    He gave $300,000 to the Miami Central High School marching band so it
    could travel to New York to play in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. 

    Among other acts of largesse noted by the Herald: 

    A masseuse who went to Sissoko's condo but wasn't allowed to touch him
    because he's Moslem and can't be touched by any woman but his four
    wives was given a gold watch and $10,000 cash. 

    Sissoko met a woman at a car dealership while she was negotiating the
    price of a Range Rover and told the dealer to put the vehicle on his
    tab. "I was sent by God," he reportedly told the woman. 

    The valet at his condo gets tips of as much as $400. 

    REUTER
7.1128IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1021
    AP 17-Mar-1997 0:37 EST   REF5442

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    10 Hurt in California Crash

    CAMPO, Calif. (AP) -- A small car packed with suspected illegal
    immigrants lost control when it spotted a Border Patrol vehicle and
    crashed into a boulder Sunday, injuring all ten people inside,
    authorities said. 

    The extent of the injuries was not immediately known, although nobody
    died at the scene, U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Ron Henley said.

    The red Hyundai Excel was traveling eastbound on state Highway 94 at
    about 4:30 p.m. when it spotted the Border Patrol car and made a
    U-turn, Henley said. The car failed to negotiate a turn and crashed. 

    Agents were not pursuing the vehicle at the time, Henley said.  The
    crash occurred 20 miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border and about 40
    miles southeast of downtown San Diego. 
7.1129IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1085
    AP 17-Mar-1997 0:02 EST   REF5397

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Survey: Air Bags Misunderstood

    By ROBIN ESTRIN

    Associated Press Writer

    BOSTON (AP) -- While passenger-side air bags have killed at least 38
    children, a majority of Americans believe that the safety devices help
    more children than they hurt, a new survey shows. 

    Nearly 60 percent of adults polled by the Center for Risk Analysis at
    the Harvard School of Public Health mistakenly believe that air bags
    are saving more children's lives than not, the researchers say. There
    are no documented cases of a child being saved by an air bag, said John
    Graham, director of the center and the study's lead author. 

    Although survey participants recognized that air bags can save lives,
    they were unclear about the range of injuries air bags can cause. 

    "The public has a perhaps excessively optimistic and favorable view of
    what air bags are doing for them," Graham said. 

    Of the 38 children killed to date by air bags, all were sitting in the
    front passenger seat and most were decapitated, Graham said. 

    Nine of those were infants. Of the 29 older children, 25 were not
    wearing seat belts and two were wearing lap belts without shoulder
    belts, according to Brian O'Neill, president of the Insurance Institute
    for Highway Safety in Arlington, Va. 

    Air bags, which deploy at up to 200 mph, are credited with saving more
    than 1,600 lives. 

    However, Graham said he hadn't found any documented cases of children's
    lives being saved by the inflatable safety devices. Industry
    representatives could not be reached for comment Sunday. 

    And at least 20 adults, most of them smaller women, have been killed by
    air bags. 

    "The public has missed the point that most of the (air bag) deaths and
    serious injuries involve people who were unbelted or had placed
    children or infants improperly in seats in front of passenger air
    bags," said O'Neill, whose institute is financed by the insurance
    industry. 

    Automakers, the government and safety groups say children 12 and under
    should sit in the back seat, yet fewer than 25 percent of the survey
    respondents with children in their homes knew the correct answer.
    Children are 30 to 50 percent safer in the back seat, Graham said. 

    Most respondents, however, knew it was dangerous to put an infant in a
    rear-facing restraint in front of a passenger-side air bag. Rear-facing
    seats put a child's head close to the air bag, making him susceptible
    to severe or fatal brain injuries. 

    Parents often argue it's more convenient to have a child -- especially
    a fussy infant or toddler -- sitting in the front. 

    Massachusetts, California and New York are considering legislation
    requiring children to sit in the back. More than 70 percent of survey
    respondents said they would favor a law in their state requiring
    children under 10 to be buckled in the rear seat. 

    Nearly 78 percent of those surveyed by Harvard believe that using a
    seat belt eliminates the risk of air bag injury. Yet a significant
    number of air bag-induced injuries to the hands, wrists, arms and faces
    of seat-belted drivers have been reported, Graham said. Most of those
    injuries were minor. 

    Twenty to 40 percent of all air bag deployments result in at least one
    injury to an occupant, Graham said. 

    The random poll of 1,000 Americans in 48 states was taken by telephone
    Feb. 28-March 2 by Market Facts Inc. of Chicago. The potential margin
    for error was plus or minus 4 percentage points. 

    An Associated Press poll in December found that 88 percent of adults
    believe it is important to put small children in the back seat in cars
    with a passenger-side air bag. But only 10 percent said it was not
    important to put a child under age 12 in the back seat all the time. 
7.1130IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1032
    AP 16-Mar-1997 20:42 EST   REF5627

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Simpson Detective Signs Book

    SANDPOINT, Idaho (AP) -- Mark Fuhrman, the ex-detective branded a
    racist at O.J. Simpson's murder trial, was a hit in his new hometown,
    where hundreds lined up for a signed copy of his book. 

    "I think he's just super," one woman said. "He could be my neighbor
    anytime." 

    Organizers said they sold about 1,000 copies of the book "Murder in
    Brentwood" on Saturday. 

    "This is what America's all about," Fuhrman said, praising those
    gathered. "It's not politicians and attorneys and celebrity athletes
    who murder people. 

    "These are the people who make the world go around and we ignore them." 

    Fuhrman moved to the Sandpoint area after leaving the Los Angeles
    Police Department in disgrace. At Simpson's criminal trial, the defense
    introduced evidence showing that Fuhrman had lied on the witness stand
    about his use of racial epithets. 

    Critics have attacked his book, which blames police colleagues and
    prosecutors for Simpson's October 1995 acquittal on murder charges.
    Recently, a civil trial jury found Simpson liable for the June 1994
    killings of his ex-wife and her friend, and ordered Simpson to pay
    $33.5 million in damages. 
7.1131IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1055
    AP 16-Mar-1997 20:40 EST   REF5625

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: McVeigh Admitted Role

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh admitted his involvement in the
    Oklahoma City bombing during a lie detector test given by his lawyers,
    Newsweek reports in this week's edition. 

    But McVeigh failed a question about whether all his co-conspirators are
    known to investigators, and that may suggest that others were involved
    in the bombing plot, the magazine said. 

    The report of the test is attributed to anonymous sources close to the
    investigation. 

    "McVeigh confirmed his role in blowing up the Murrah building," the
    magazine said. " ... There is even fresh confusion about whether the
    FBI has tracked down all the members of the conspiracy." 

    It said some federal investigators think the lie detector story may be
    just a ploy by McVeigh's lawyer, Stephen Jones, to sow confusion before
    the trial begins. 

    The defense did not respond to the report of a lie detector test but
    said the Newsweek report offers insight into the prosecution's case. 

    "This detailed outline of the prosecution's theory proffered to the
    press far surpasses anything we have received from the prosecution
    through the legal process," the defense said in a statement. "We
    welcome any and all such assistance, both now and in the future." 

    Newsweek reported on investigators' probe into the blast, from how
    agents located McVeigh, collected evidence like the axle from the Ryder
    truck used in the bombing, and got witnesses to talk to them. 

    FBI spokesman Paul Bresson in Washington declined to comment on the
    report Sunday. 

    Two other purported McVeigh confessions have upset defense attorneys.
    They contend the confessions reported by The Dallas Morning News and
    Playboy magazine in the past two weeks have jeopardized the jury pool. 

    Last week, they asked U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch to throw the
    case out of court, delay McVeigh's March 31 trial for a year, or move
    it out of Colorado. There was no indication when the judge would rule. 

    Jones said he was not optimistic the judge would grant any of his
    requests. 

    "We felt in order to protect Mr. McVeigh's rights we needed to file
    these motions," he told The Denver Post for Sunday's editions. "We'd
    love to have one of three granted, but we're preparing for trial March
    31." 
7.1132IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1098
    AP 16-Mar-1997 19:53 EST   REF5602

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Gore Amuses at Washington Roast

    By TERENCE HUNT

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The "stiff Al Gore" jokes are finished. Literally
    standing up for his hobbled boss, the vice president wowed Washington's
    elite at the annual Gridiron Club dinner. 

    Filling in for the president, who had to cancel his appearance Saturday
    night because he was hospitalized after knee surgery, Gore poked some
    fun at Clinton's injury. 

    He said that when he asked the president if he were looking forward to
    the dinner, Clinton responded: "Al, I'd rather fall down a flight of
    stairs." 

    "Ironic, isn't it," Gore deadpanned. 

    The vice president hastily stepped in to handle Clinton's appearance at
    the Gridiron Club, prompting a last minute scurry for material.
    Comedian Al Franken was said to have been recruited to extend Gore's
    introduction to a full-fledged comedy routine. 

    The 60 members of the exclusive Gridiron Club include Washington
    journalists. The club's sole purpose is to lampoon the high and mighty
    at its annual dinner, which has been held for 112 years. 

    Guests at the dinners are diplomats, members of Congress, ranking
    government officials, normally the president -- people who are the
    brunt of much of the sending-up. 

    Clinton made his apologies on video tape. Sitting up despite the
    hurting -- apparently substantial, judging by Sunday's announcement
    that his meeting with Russian President Boris Yeltsin was postponed to
    give an extra day for recovery -- the president said: "Obviously I'm in
    no condition to do a standup routine. ... I feel my pain." 

    Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson, chairman of the Senate committee that's
    going to investigate campaign finance irregularities, spoke for the
    Republicans. Clinton is always "one step ahead of me," the Tennessee
    Republican joked, but "I never dreamed he'd cut himself off at the
    knees." 

    Though Gore insisted, "My counsel advised me there's no controlling
    legal interest that says I have to do this," his impromptu performance
    was the hit of the evening, especially his footwork in dodging jokes
    about a recent news conference where he defended making fund-raising
    telephone calls from the White House. 

    "I'm proud of that news conference, and as a matter of policy I promise
    never to do it again," Gore said -- basically quoting what he said
    about the phone calls. 

    The vice president noted that the Democrats have had to return millions
    of dollars in campaign donations from questionable sources. From now
    on, he quipped, they're going to require donors to enclose
    self-addressed stamped envelopes. 

    Gore also suggested the Democrats may try a fund-raising letter from
    Publishers Clearinghouse Sweepstakes spokesman Ed McMahon, telling
    contributors, "You may already be an ambassador." 

    "We have upped our standards," Gore said, forcefully offering this
    suggestion to Republicans: "Up yours." 

    Skits before the 650 guests by Gridiron Club members spoofed Democrats
    and Republicans alike, but they held true to the Gridiron motto to
    singe, not burn. 

    Washington Post political commentator David Broder played Gore in a
    skit where Buddhist monks did the Macarena in satire of a fund-raising
    event Democrats held at a California monastery. 

    "Quick, pass the hat and we'll try to find a pigeon. After that, we can
    chat, and help you get religion," a monk sang. 

    At the end of each verse, Broder-as-Gore sang out "SHOWWW me the
    money!" 

    In another skit, ersatz Democratic donors in silk pajamas sang: 

    "We woke at noon to find ourselves in Lincoln's fabled suite. Our Egg
    McMuffin breakfast was an extra special treat. It was worth the half a
    million that we paid for Dole's defeat. We dig that Clinton style." 

    And there was a lampoon of Rep. Nancy Johnson, R-Conn., chairwoman of
    the congressional committee that handled the ethics case against
    Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga, sung to the tune of"My Guy:" 

    "Nothing Newt could do could make me untrue, he's my guy," sang Jessica
    Lee, a USA Today political writer playing Johnson. "Yes, I'm
    bootlickin', I won't be a-kickin', my guy." 
7.1133IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1027
    AP 16-Mar-1997 19:27 EST   REF5576

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Time: Crips Probed in Rap Deaths

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Crips, a violent street gang with roots in Los
    Angeles, is under investigation in the deaths of rappers Tupac Shakur
    and The Notorious B.I.G., Time magazine reported. 

    Police in Las Vegas believe a member of the Crips was responsible for
    the Sept. 7 drive-by shooting of Shakur, 25, near the Las Vegas Strip,
    Time said in its March 24th edition, due out this week. 

    Crips hired as bodyguards are under investigation in the March 9
    drive-by killing in Los Angeles of The Notorious B.I.G., whose real
    name was Christopher Wallace, Time said, citing unidentified sources. 

    Wallace, 24, was affiliated with New York-based Bad Boy Entertainment,
    which hired Crips bodyguards on his Los Angeles visit; Shakur recorded
    on Los Angeles-based Death Row Records, which reportedly has ties to
    the Bloods, bitter Crips foes. 

    Last week, Las Vegas police said there was no evidence to link the
    slayings or to substantiate rumors that an East Coast-West Coast
    rivalry may be behind the killings. Los Angeles and Las Vegas police
    had no comment Sunday. 
7.1134IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1059
    AP 16-Mar-1997 18:10 EST   REF5193

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Hospitals Go For-Profit

    By LAURA MECKLER

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Many communities saw their hospitals become
    for-profit companies in the last decade, but a new study indicates that
    a growing number of those businesses have converted back to non-profit
    status. 

    During the 1980s, 183 nonprofit and publicly owned hospitals were
    bought by or converted to for-profit institutions. Another 44 converted
    between 1990 and 1993, according to an article in the journal, Health
    Affairs. 

    But many of those hospitals have returned to nonprofit status, said
    Jack Needleman, an assistant professor of economics and health policy
    at Harvard University's School of Public Health who co-wrote the study.

    In 1990-93, 56 for-profit hospitals became nonprofit or community
    institutions, compared with the 61 during the entire 1980s. 

    For-profit hospital chains bought up a substantial number of community
    hospitals during the 1980s, Needleman explained. By the early '90s,
    they had determined some were not profitable and threatened to close
    them. Communities rallied to save some. 

    "It may well be from an efficiency perspective the chains are making
    the right decisions," he said. "But to the extent communities feel
    strongly about what health services should be available to them,
    they're answering the question somewhat differently than the market
    does." 

    The study reached no conclusions about the effect of for-profit
    hospital conversions on communities. 

    "Passions run deep, yet information is scant about the effects of
    hospital conversion on access to care for charity patients, provision
    of less-profitable services and continuity of services to the
    community," it said. 

    A study published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine
    concluded that for-profit hospitals are less efficient than nonprofit
    and public counterparts because they spend more of their money on
    administration. 

    Needleman predicted that the trend of conversions will begin to slow,
    for better or worse. 

    "The scrutiny these conversions are taking is getting more intense," he
    said. "There was very weak supervision in the late '80s and even early
    '90s and some very good deals were cut for for-profit chains. As good
    deals become harder to come by, as supervision tightens, that may
    reduce the rate of conversions." 
7.1135IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1075
    AP 16-Mar-1997 17:56 EST   REF5137

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Doctor House Calls May Catch On

    By LINDA A. JOHNSON

    Associated Press Writer

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- With the new trend in drive-through hospitals and
    portable machines, the house call could make a comeback in the
    high-tech, cost-conscious world of medicine. 

    "Increasingly there's a need for home care services for the elderly,
    the chronically ill" and patients preparing for or returning home from
    ever-shorter hospital stays, said Dr. R. Knight Steel, director of the
    Home Care Institute at Hackensack University Medical Center. 

    Steel and his aides at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
    Jersey-New Jersey Medical School in Newark are working to design a
    model home care curriculum that the Association of American Medical
    Colleges can recommend to members. Steel and other leaders in home care
    will choose six U.S. medical schools -- each to receive $70,000
    stipends -- to integrate home care training into their current
    curricula, hopefully by the fall. 

    A 1992 study found 6.5 times as many Medicare patients were
    hospitalized as visited a doctor's office that year. That's because
    transportation for the homebound is inconvenient, and sometimes limited
    to a costly ambulance ride. 

    Besides sparing the patient that hassle, home visitation "has an
    extremely humanizing impact on physicians" and helps them work better
    with other care givers, said Steel, a professor of geriatrics at the
    University of Medicine and Dentistry. 

    Ronald Kolanowski, a vice president of the National Association for
    Home Care, which represents visiting nurse associations and other home
    care providers, is "absolutely delighted" with the effort to teach new
    doctors how and why they should make house calls. 

    "They must understand that home environment because that's where the
    majority of care is given as hospitals increasingly move patients" out
    quickly, Kolanowski said. 

    "When they see the patient in the home, the physician has an instant
    understanding of what the patient's dealing with -- looking at all that
    is critical so people don't get readmitted to hospitals," he said. 

    That includes everything from a patient's support system and family
    problems to difficulties getting around the home or eating. 

    House calls became less common after World War II as medicine's
    cutting-edge diagnostic and treatment technology could only be accessed
    in hospitals. 

    But as better medicine and treatments enabled people to live much
    longer with chronic illnesses, many homebound patients became isolated.

    Today, miniaturization of everything from X-ray and electrocardiogram
    machines to heart monitors and laboratory test kits allows access to
    most technology at home. 

    Still, the biggest obstacles to getting more doctors to make house
    calls are training and money. 

    While a physician can see four or five patients in the office in the
    time it takes to complete one house call, Medicare and other insurers
    don't reimburse doctors for travel or even the visit's full cost, said
    Joanne Schwartzberg, director of the Department of Geriatric Health at
    the American Medical Association. 

    "If you can just get the financing straight," she said, many more
    physicians would make house calls. 
7.1136IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1025
    AP 17-Mar-1997 1:04 EST   REF5466

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    35 Die as Burma Ferry Sinks

    RANGOON, Burma (AP) -- At least 35 people drowned in the Irrawaddy
    River in northern Burma when a ferry sank, the state-owned New Light of
    Myanmar reported Monday. 

    Another 502 people were rescued from the state-owned triple-decker
    Pyi-gyi-mon, which sank Saturday night near Thabeikkyin, 415 miles
    north of Rangoon, the newspaper reported. Rescue efforts were
    continuing, it said. 

    The bodies of 35 victims had been recovered, it said. 

    The ferry was sailing up river from Mandalay about 150 miles north to
    Katha when it sank in a dust storm, the newspaper said. 

    The cause and other details were not available. 

    Transport Minister Lt. Gen. Thein Win, Deputy Health Minister Col. Than
    Zin and other officials went to the scene to comfort survivors, the
    newspaper said. 
7.1137IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1062
    AP 17-Mar-1997 0:35 EST   REF5437

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    European Workers: Protect Jobs

    By PAUL AMES

    Associated Press Writer

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- Tens of thousands of workers from Belgium and
    at least five other countries marched on downtown Brussels on Sunday to
    demand European authorities do more to protect their jobs. 

    Belgian labor unions are angered by French automaker Renault's decision
    to close a factory near Brussels, putting 3,100 people out of work. 

    Police estimated 40,000 people took part in the protest. The organizers
    said the figure was much higher. 

    "This could be the beginning of a workers' Europe," said Erik
    Vermeersch, a union activist from the doomed Renault factory at
    Vilvoorde. 

    "The workers have realized that this could happen anywhere if the
    workers of Europe don't stick together." 

    A fleet of buses arrived in Brussels carrying French protesters,
    including Renault workers, and opposition leaders Lionel Jospin of the
    Socialist Party and Robert Hue of the Communists. 

    "We've got a Europe that kills jobs," Hue told Belgium's RTBF radio.
    "We need a different Europe, that's why I'm here today." 

    Other delegations came from Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands. 

    Riot police threw up barbed wire barricades around European Union
    headquarters, which was not on the route of the march. There were no
    reports of violence. 

    The unions claim the EU's successful campaign to remove trade barriers
    between its 15 member nations has reduced job security by allowing
    companies to shift production out of high-cost nations to those where
    wages and taxes are lower or government subsidies higher. 

    Union leaders want more European regulations to prevent such
    cross-border shutdowns, and other measures to protect jobs and improve
    working conditions. They hailed the march as the start of a movement to
    create a "social Europe." 

    However, many EU governments likely will resist calls for labor
    regulations, which business leaders say discourage investment and
    strangle job creation at a time when 18 million EU citizens are
    unemployed. 

    Renault announced last month it was closing its Vilvoorde plant north
    of Brussels in June to shift production to factories in Spain and
    France where it said costs were up to 30 percent lower. 

    Renault contends it will save $149 million a year by closing the plant.
    The automaker is expected to post big losses for 1996 -- perhaps as
    much as $700 million, according to French media reports. 
7.1138IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1050
    AP 16-Mar-1997 22:16 EST   REF5697

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S. Korea Bribery Trial Opens

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Ten people, including four close confidants
    of President Kim Young-sam, went on trial Monday, charged with bribery
    in the collapse of the nation's second largest steel mill.

    The trial opened as the government was trying to contain a growing
    controversy over whether one of the president's sons peddled his
    influence in the largest loans-for-bribes scandal in South Korean
    history. 

    Hanbo Steel Industry Co. collapsed in January under the weight of $6
    billion in mostly government-controlled bank loans, more than 20 times
    the value of the company's collateral. 

    A former Cabinet minister, four legislators, three bank heads and two
    Hanbo executives have been indicted on charges of giving or receiving
    millions of dollars in bribes in exchange for helping to arrange the
    loans to Hanbo. 

    Among them are former ambassador to China Hwang Byung-tae and Hong
    In-kil, a lifelong personal aide to Kim. Hong was charged with taking $
    1.1 million in bribes. 

    Hong's involvement particularly embarrassed the Kim government, which
    has made anti-corruption the centerpiece of its rule. Hong reportedly
    gave part of the money to Kim's son, Hyun-chul. 

    Prosecutors questioned and cleared the 37-year-old Hyun-chul of
    wrongdoing in the scandal, but critics called the probe a whitewash.
    Prosecutors reopened the investigation last week. 

    The junior Kim holds no government posts but he is accused of widely
    intervening in state affairs. Critics claim he has planted supporters
    in many key government posts. 

    President Kim himself was not directly involved, but has apologized to
    the nation, taking "moral responsibility." As a follow-up, he
    reorganized his secretarial staff, Cabinet and ruling party leadership.

    The allegations about his son have been a growing problem for President
    Kim as his ruling party faces elections. 

    Kim cannot run for reelection in December, but the scandals are
    expected to influence his ability to pick a successor and his party's
    performance at the polls. 
7.1139IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1042
    AP 16-Mar-1997 21:21 EST   REF5650

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N.Z. Navy Women Claim Harassment

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- Several women among the first group of
    female sailors placed aboard a New Zealand warship claim they were
    sexually harassed by fellow crewmen. 

    In an incident that recalls scandals in the U.S. military, Larissa
    Turner, 21, said in a television program broadcast Sunday that she was
    verbally and physically harassed during her six months as naval gunner
    on the frigate Wellington. 

    She told Television New Zealand's "60 Minutes" program that male
    sailors grabbed her breasts and buttocks, demanded sex and used
    degrading language. She has laid formal complaints against a dozen
    officers and sailors. 

    Another sailor on the Wellington, Jerildine Stephenson, alleged on the
    same program that she was offered easier duties by a superior in return
    for oral sex. At least one other woman also has spoken out. 

    The mission aboard the Wellington in the Persian Gulf in 1995 was the
    first time women were deployed on a New Zealand warship. Twenty-five
    women and 225 men were aboard. 

    Late last week, Defense Minister Paul East ordered an inquiry into
    allegations of sexual harassment aboard the frigate after photos of
    bare-breasted women in the ship's wardroom and in the cockpit of the
    ship's helicopter were sent to him anonymously. 

    Commodore David Palmer told "60 Minutes" that the Navy had changed its
    procedures to deal with harassment, including having trained
    anti-harassment advisors on board all ships and ashore. 

    In the United States, seven instructors at Aberdeen Proving Ground in
    Maryland have been charged with sexual crimes since the scandal become
    public in November. The scandal has spread to other bases in the United
    States and overseas, and the Army set up a hot line to field
    complaints. 
7.1140IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1063
    AP 16-Mar-1997 20:20 EST   REF5615

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Notorious Venezuela Prison Razed

    By JORGE RUEDA

    Associated Press Writer

    CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- The notorious Catia prison, where hundreds
    of inmates were stabbed, shot and beaten to death over three decades,
    was blasted into rubble Sunday to the cheers of thousands of
    spectators. 

    President Rafael Caldera pushed a button to detonate 400 pounds of
    dynamite, sending a huge mushroom cloud into the sky and a boom through
    the western Caracas slum of Catia. The five-story building collapsed
    within four seconds. 

    Catia's 1,700 inmates were transferred last month under heavy guard to
    new, more humane facilities. 

    "We're starting a new era," Justice Minister Henrique Meier said in a
    ceremony before the demolition. 

    The 30-year-old jail had become a symbol of a prison system labeled
    among the most violent, overcrowded and chaotic in Latin America. 

    Built to hold 800 inmates, Catia housed up to 3,500. Prisoners slept on
    floors, under stairwells, two or three to a bed, and in makeshift tents
    made of plastic sheets and built on outdoor patios. 

    Some ate, slept, bathed and relieved themselves in cramped cells they
    rarely left for fear of being killed. 

    New inmates often were gang-raped, and those too weak to defend
    themselves sometimes became sexual slaves to gang leaders who protected
    them, according to human rights workers. 

    During a failed coup attempt in 1992, guards allegedly opened the
    jail's gates and told inmates they could flee. Then they opened fire,
    killing at least 65 prisoners, human rights groups charge. 

    The Washington-based group Human Rights Watch/Americas issued a
    blistering report last week on Venezuela's jails that describes a
    system in which inmates kill each other for pocket change and sleep in
    shifts for lack of space. 

    An average of four inmates a week were killed, and 20 injured, last
    year in the nation's 33 jails, according to the report. Three-quarters
    of prisoners have never been to court because of a backlog in the
    judicial system. 

    Meier, who acknowledged that the demolition is just a start in
    Venezuela's effort to clean up its prisons, says authorities have
    reduced violence, eased overcrowding, confiscated thousands of weapons
    and built two new jails in the last year. 

    Critics contend the government is merely transferring the troubles of
    Catia to other locations. Poorly paid guards, they say, sell inmates
    guns, drugs, food and favors including trips to court and the
    hospital.
7.1141IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1043
    AP 16-Mar-1997 22:10 EST   REF5694

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    3D X-Ray Program Developed

    DENVER (AP) -- A computer software program that converts
    two-dimensional X-rays of the heart's arteries into three-dimensional
    graphics has been developed by a University of Colorado heart surgeon
    and computer scientist. 

    "Simply put, it's helping surgeons see better. We use this as our road
    map," said heart surgeon Dr. John Carroll. the 3D X-ray imaging took
    him and computer scientist Dr. Shiuh Yung James Chen four years to
    develop. 

    "We've been using the same X-rays for three decades. But the image
    we've had to deal with for all these years is the same -- it's always
    two dimensional," until now, Carroll said. "We've succeeded where
    several groups in the world have not." 

    "When you're dealing with two-dimensional X-ray images we lose a lot of
    important information about the anatomy -- including how long the
    lesions (in the heart arteries) are or how many lesions," Carroll said.
    "That's information we must have, especially when we're using stents." 

    Stents are tiny pieces of stainless steel which act like permanent
    spreaders inside clogged or narrow arteries. the New England Journal of
    Medicine expects stent implantation procedures to exceed balloon heart
    angioplasties within three years. 

    The 3-D imagery not only provides a clearer picture of the branching
    pattern of the patient's coronary artery system, but it also reduces
    the number of X-rays that need to be taken, he said. 

    Once the computer reconstructs the X-rays into 3-D images, surgeons can
    call up an unlimited number of views and angles pinpointing problem
    areas to help guide the operations and to speed the surgery. They can
    also rotate the branching pattern on the computer screen to simulate
    what additional X-ray projections would look like. 

    "What this does is to give me the very best view of that diseased
    artery. We get better results in less time,"Carroll said. 
7.1142IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1121
    AP 16-Mar-1997 12:02 EST   REF5226

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Quitting Tobacco May Help Heart

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Smokers who have just had their heart arteries
    unclogged may live longer if they kick the habit, a study finds. 

    Researchers at the Mayo Clinic tracked smokers who had had balloon
    angioplasty or some other artery-clearing procedure between 1979 and
    1995. 

    Results suggested that 10 years after the procedure, 86 percent of
    patients who had quit smoking permanently right after the procedure
    would still be alive, versus only 80 percent of patients who continued
    to smoke. 

    Kicking the habit is already strongly recommended after an
    artery-clearing procedure, the researchers noted in the March 13 issue
    of the New England Journal of Medicine. 
7.1143IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1187
    AP 15-Mar-1997 16:00 EST   REF5378

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    4 Killer Diseases Can Be Halted

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- For as little as $1 per patient per year, the world
    could eliminate four tropical diseases by 2007, including the age-old
    scourge leprosy, the World Health Organization says. 

    New therapies, like a one-dose leprosy treatment that could be
    available later this year, and creative disease-fighting strategies in
    developing countries provide what WHO tropical disease chief Dr. Tore
    Godal calls an unprecedented window to curb the illnesses. 

    "There is a real historic opportunity now to eliminate these diseases
    so they will not haunt us in the future," Godal said. "If we don't do
    it, we may see drug resistance and (elimination) will be more difficult
    in the future." 

    As laid out in a WHO report, the diseases are: 

    --Chagas disease, which has infected about 18 million people in Latin
    America and kills 45,000 annually. Spread by "kissing bugs" that bite
    people sleeping at night and drop parasite-ridden feces, the worms
    invade the body's organs, eventually causing heart failure. 

    --River blindness, a parasite spread by blackflies that has infected
    about 18 million people, mostly in Africa and Latin America. The adult
    worms live in the body for 10 years, annually releasing larvae that
    travel to the eye and, if not treated quickly, can blind. 

    --Leprosy, the disfiguring infection spread by close contact with
    victims. It strikes about 1 million every year. 

    --Lymphatic filariasis, spread by mosquitos to about 120 million people
    in a tropical belt between India and islands in the Pacific. The
    parasites live in lymph nodes, disabling their victims by causing gross
    swelling of the limbs. 

    Godal said in an interview that recent discoveries in insect control
    and therapy make these diseases ripe for elimination as public health
    threats within 10 years. Elimination means few people would be at risk
    from the diseases; parasitic infections cannot be eradicated completely
    because they live in animals. 

    Some tropical disease experts warn it will be a tough fight. 

    Chagas, for instance, has no vaccine and no good treatment, so
    eliminating it will depend on entire villages being repeatedly treated
    for kissing bug infestations, said Ben Beard, an entomologist at the
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

    "If everyone doesn't treat at the same time, you can't eradicate it,"
    Beard said. "I'm a little skeptical." 

    He recently genetically engineered bacteria that one day may prevent
    kissing bugs from spreading Chagas, if the treatment proves safe. 

    But Godal said recent developments give new promise. WHO scientists,
    for example, will consider in June whether to recommend treating newly
    diagnosed leprosy victims with a new one-dose therapy instead of six
    months of pills patients typically take today. Japan's Nippon
    Foundation has pledged free leprosy drugs to WHO until 2000. 

    Godal said Latin America is mobilizing to fight Chagas by giving
    residents control over insecticide instead of having governments spray
    entire villages. Insecticide-laced paint, for instance, can prevent a
    home's infestation for two years. Argentina is testing new insecticide
    canisters that people would spray at first sight of bugs. 

    Merck Inc. is donating a powerful drug called ivermectin to fight river
    blindness, Godal said. One tablet a year suppresses newly hatching
    worms. After 10 years of treatment, the adult worm that infected the
    victim dies, leaving no offspring, he said. 

    A once-a-year dose of ivermectin together with another drug called DEC
    can reduce by 99 percent the filariasis parasite concentration in
    victims' blood, he said. 

    The cost? Godal has no firm budget yet, but it's more than $160 million
    a year. "If you add the cases," he said, "that's less than $1 per
    patient per year." 
7.1144IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1173
    RTw  17-Mar-97 05:18    

    PNG army turns against PM, detains mercenaries

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    PORT MORESBY, March 17 (Reuter) - Papua New Guinea's army chief turned
    against the government on Monday over its plans to use foreign soldiers
    to quash a revolt on Bougainville island and ordered the detention of
    40 African mercenaries. 

    But the commander said there was no coup in the South Pacific nation
    and appealed to troops to remain calm. 

    "Let me assure you that we do not intend to have any coup, I can
    guarantee you that," Brigadier General Jerry Singirok, PNG defence
    force commander, said on Kalang FM radio. 

    "There is no civil disobedience. Civil disobedience is when the people
    of Papua New Guinea take the law into their own hands and cause riots
    and destruction to property," he added. 

    Australian radio reported that the army and police had revolted and
    called on the South Pacific nation's governor-general to sack the
    government. 

    Contacted by Reuters, defence force chief of staff Jack Tuat could not
    confirm the call for governor-general Sir Wiwa Korowi to sack Prime
    Minister Sir Julius Chan. 

    But Tuat confirmed that the 40 mercenaries now in the country training
    troops for a mission to Bougainville had been detained and could be
    expelled. 

    "They have been detained, not arrested, under special security laws.
    They are being safeguarded for their own safety," Tuat said. 

    "Whatever comes of this now, they will be either released or told to
    leave the country -- it is up to the government and the commander," he
    said. 

    Most of the 40 mercenaries have been detained in Wewak at a military
    training ground in northern Papua New Guinea, while a small group has
    been detained in their Port Moresby hotel. 

    Tuat said Singirok had visited the governor-general but was unable to
    say what had been discussed. 

    He said Singirok had addressed 300 to 400 troops at the Murray Barracks
    defence headquarters in Port Moresby before visiting the
    governor-general. 

    "He was against the government employment of Sandline
    (mercenaries)...," Tuat said. "He said to leave everything to him and
    to remain calm. All troops are at work doing their mormal duties." 

    Papua New Guinea has hired African mercenaries to train troops in a bid
    to end a nine-year uprising by the Bougainville Revolutionary Army. 

    The mercenary contract is with the British-based firm Sandline
    International, which has in turn hired soldiers from the South African
    private army Executive Outcomes. 

    The soldiers are an unlikely alliance of former soldiers from the South
    African Defence Force and Nelson Mandela's African National Congress. 

    "I cannot go to Bougainville with the arsenal of arms and blow up
    Bougainville and come and tell the people what I have done," Singirok
    said on Kalang FM. 

    Australia, backed by the United States and New Zealand, has vigorously
    opposed Chan's plans to use mercenaries to end the Bougainville war,
    which has killed thousands of people
7.1145IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 10:1182
    RTos 17-Mar-97 02:51    

    EU Team Due in Albania to Help Restore Order

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    TIRANA (Reuter) - A European Union delegation was due in Albania Monday
    to help to restore order in the country, where U.S. marines had to beat
    off would-be refugees trying to push onto helicopters meant to evacuate
    foreigners. 

    The delegation would raise "civil reconstruction issues and police and
    military matters" with the new broad-based government, British Foreign
    Secretary Malcolm Rifkind said. 

    EU foreign ministers approving the mission headed by Dutch diplomat Jan
    de Marchant et d'Ansembourg ruled out Albania's request for military
    intervention but said they were committed "to helping Albania restore
    civilian structures and law and order." 

    They did not mention President Sali Berisha, who has defied demands to
    quit from rebels holding southern towns but be bowed last week to
    pressure for the creation of an all-party government. 

    The capital Tirana was generally peaceful Sunday three days after armed
    looters raided food depots and pilfered building sites while police all
    but abandoned their posts. Many shops were trading, most bread supplies
    were restored and bursts of gunfire were rare. 

    Tirana residents largely confined to their homes for two days last week
    welcomed armed high-profile security patrols aboard armoured vehicles
    and vans. 

    Prime Minister Bashkim Fino issued a directive ordering government
    offices to resume work Monday. But a 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. curfew remained
    in force and helicopters evacuating foreigners buzzed overhead
    throughout the weekend. 

    On a beach south of the Adriatic port of Durres, U.S. marines struck
    desperate Albanians with rifle butts to keep them away from helicopters
    ferrying Americans, Turks and Italians to Italy after weeks of turmoil. 

    "I tried to get on the helicopter but a soldier hit me in the face with
    his gun," said Ymer Motroku. At least 250 evacuated Turks later docked
    in the Italian port of Bari. 

    Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi told reporters in the port of
    Brindisi that Europe would help Albania to rebuild and he urged
    would-be migrants to stay home. 

    About 1,600 Albanians sailed across the Adriatic at the weekend in an
    array of craft but Italy said it would be taking a tougher line and one
    fishing boat arriving late Sunday with 142 Albanians on board was
    arrested. 

    "The crisis will not be resolved by fleeing but by rebuilding Albania,"
    Prodi said. "This is an emergency situation and the objective is (to
    persuade Albanians) to stay in their homeland." 

    Berisha made no public appearances Sunday, a day of mourning for more
    than 100 people who have died in violence sparked by the collapse of
    pyramid investment schemes and the loss of the savings of hundreds of
    thousands of Albanians. 

    But he said he had pardoned opposition leader Fatos Nano, who was
    jailed in 1993 on corruption charges contested by many politicians.
    Nano has been mentioned as a possible new leader to unite Albania. 

    About 3,000 people chanting "Peace, peace" held hands and marched
    through Tirana's central Skanderbeg Square in an official ceremony
    honouring the dead. 

    State television showed marches in at least two other towns plus
    footage of hundreds of looted weapons turned in at police stations. 

    It also said that parliamentary chairman Pjeter Arbnori had asked the
    Western European Union, comprising NATO countries within the European
    Union, to provide a force "not to enter into combat" but to make safe
    ports, airports and the capital. 

    Tirana's Rinas airport remained closed for a fourth consecutive day,
    but police said it had not been damaged by the rebels.
7.1146IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:0645
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    I shall not go, Berisha tells rebels
    
    By Robert Fox in Tirana 

    AFTER nearly a fortnight of rebellion in Albania, President Berisha
    yesterday repeated his steadfast refusal to step down, contradicting
    earlier  rumours that he intended to flee the country.

    But, in his robust style, he also made a gesture towards the opposition
    by pardoning a former communist. In an important concession to his
    leading opponents, the former communists of the Socialist party, he
    pardoned Fatos Nano, its charismatic leader. He was among more than 300
    inmates of the main jail in Tirana who were released when rioters
    stormed it last week.

    Mr Nano is now expected to be the leader of the constitutional
    opposition to President Berisha, who is accused of running a virtual
    one-party regime. Mr Nano has indicated he does not want to take office
    in the new all-party reconciliation government, headed by Bashkim Fino,
    37, also a Socialist.

    On Saturday, a brief statement was read on state television, saying
    that President Berisha had refused the demands of armed rebels in the
    south and opposition parties to quit before elections this summer.

    Mr Berisha said he was "part of the process of the new government of
    reconciliation". He would resign the presidency only if the ruling
    Democratic Party "lost the forthcoming elections".

    As the statement was being broadcast, tanks, armoured personnel
    carriers and police vehicles sped through central Tirana, skidding into
    side streets near ministry buildings. The biggest display of martial
    rally driving was outside the presidential palace. Coincidentally, this
    is also close to the Austrian-owned Rogner Hotel, the lodging place of
    visiting diplomats, politicians and newspaper journalists. 

    On Saturday night, journalists at the hotel were told to get out of
    their rooms as "an attack is imminent" in the words of one of the
    managers, who also said he believed that the president had fled the
    country.

    "Deliberate disinformation, designed to show the foreign journalists
    and diplomats who's boss," said one Albanian journalist.
7.1147IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:0995
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Major names the day
    
    By George Jones, Rachel Sylvester and Alison Boshoff 

    JOHN Major will end weeks of uncertainty today by calling the general
    election for May 1 - triggering one of the longest campaigns this
    century.

    After the announcement, he will break with tradition and immediately
    join the campaign trail, heading for a marginal constituency near
    London, where he will meet voters as "the man in the middle of the
    crowd" - just as he did with his soapbox in the 1992 campaign. After
    informing the Queen and the Cabinet, the Prime Minister will make
    public the election date from the steps of 10 Downing Street this
    morning - heralding a marathon six-and-a-half week campaign straddling
    the Easter break.

    The Tories confirmed yesterday that they are planning a
    presidential-stye campaign by challenging Tony Blair - but not Paddy
    Ashdown, the Liberal Democrat leader - to a series of live television
    debates with Mr Major. Mr Major's rejection of a three-sided debate
    involving Mr Ashdown brought a threat of legal action from the Liberal
    Democrats.

    The possibility of a legal wrangle grew when the Scottish Nationalists
    said they, too, would go to court unless their leader, Alex Salmond,
    was included in any debate shown in Scotland.

    But Brian Mawhinney, the Conservative Party chairman, insisted that it
    should be a debate between two potential occupants of 10 Downing
    Street. He acknowledged the Liberal Democrat leader's "legitimate"
    demands to get his views across, but said he was "confident" that
    broadcasters would be able to find a mechanism for the Major-Blair
    debate to go ahead. "The British people have a choice of two futures,
    not a choice of three futures, and a choice of two possible prime
    ministers, not a choice of three possible prime ministers," he told BBC
    Television's On the Record.

    Michael Howard, the Home Secretary, while seeking to justify the
    exclusion of Mr Ashdown from a debate, confirmed that the election
    would be on May 1. "On May 2 it is perfectly clear one of two men could
    be prime minister of this country," he told BBC Radio 4's The World
    this Weekend.

    Mr Howard said the aim of such a debate - which Lady Thatcher always
    refused to contemplate and Mr Major rejected in 1992 - was to clarify
    the issues and to force Mr Blair to answer questions about Labour
    policies. "The British electorate is in danger of being taken in by the
    biggest confidence trick that has ever been played on it," Mr Howard
    said. "The Labour Party is pretending to be the Conservative Party but,
    in truth, it is still committed to a whole range of policies that would
    undo our achievements."

    Mr Blair said he was delighted that Mr Major had agreed to such a
    debate, which Labour had been seeking for months. If it dealt with
    issues such as failing schools, the National Health Service, crime and
    the economy, it would be "doing a service to the people".

    Although welcoming the idea of a debate, Labour was suspicious of the
    Tories' timing, which appeared to have wrong-footed them. Mr Blair's
    aides said they feared Mr Major's decision to attach conditions -
    including the refusal to debate with Mr Ashdown - was an attempt to
    ensure that the project did not go ahead but others got the blame.

    However, Tory strategists emphasised that the televised debates - at
    least two are envisaged - were an integral part of their strategy to
    project Mr Major as the more experienced and trusted of the two men. Dr
    Mawhinney claimed Mr Blair had been reluctant to take part in extended
    interviews with "rigorous" cross-examination, a charge later denied by
    Labour.

    The Liberal Democrat MP Charles Kennedy confirmed that his party would
    challenge any attempt to exclude Mr Ashdown from a televised debate.
    "We will take legal action. We have already been taking legal advice on
    this," he said.

    ITV emerged as the front-runner to stage the debate last night, after
    privately indicating that it was ready to exclude Mr Ashdown. The BBC
    said it would not be able to screen a head-to-head debate that did not
    include some kind of contribution from Mr Ashdown. A BBC source said:
    "We are obliged by our charter to be fair and unbiased and as far as we
    can see that means we would have to include Paddy Ashdown."

    Conservative unity was threatened once again on the eve of the election
    launch when West Midlands Tories said they intended to make immigration
    an issue in defiance of the wishes of the party leadership. Backbench
    MPs from the area will meet this week to discuss issuing a common
    "manifesto" calling on the Government to rule out a single currency and
    opposing liberalisation of the immigration laws. 

    Labour accused them of "nakedly playing the race card" and Michael
    Portillo, the Defence Secretary, speaking on GMTV, urged the MPs not to
    distract attention from the Tory campaign.
7.1148IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1332
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Newbury road protesters were right, says Norris
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 

    STEVEN Norris, a transport minister when work on the Newbury bypass was
    started, admits today that protesters were right to oppose the road.

    Mr Norris, who is standing down at the election, criticises the
    Government's transport policy and says in the BBC TV Panorama programme
    tonight that the bypass should never have been built on the chosen
    route. He also says that protesters, who were forced from tree homes on
    the route when Mr Norris was at the Department of Transport, "were
    right".

    At the time the Department of Transport insisted that the road was
    essential. But Mr Norris, who was transport minister between April 1992
    and July 1996, now says he was sympathetic to the protesters at the
    time but did not speak out. He blames the Government's transport policy
    which led to the bypass being approved.

    "I think it's fair to say that the formula was more motorist-based than
    it should have been and that it didn't apply the same kind of cash
    values to environmental considerations which it did to motorists'
    inconvenience," he says.

    Tony Juniper, campaigns director of Friends of the Earth, said
    yesterday that Mr Norris's comments were "astonishing" and "fully
    vindicate the fight to stop that unnecessary and highly destructive
    road". But he said he was angry that politicians, including Mr Norris,
    had refused to condemn the route publicly at the time of the protest.
7.1149IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1452
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Family defies Elgar by finishing Third Symphony
    
    By Nigel Reynolds, Arts Correspondent 

    ELGAR'S unfinished Third Symphony, probably the most significant
    incomplete British work of the century, is being finished against his
    dying wishes by a composer hired by his family.

    Plans have been discussed, but not yet agreed, for the 50-minute piece
    to be given its first performance at the BBC Proms next year. A
    recording is also being considered and royalty earnings are likely to
    be substantial. However, the decision last September to commission the
    composer Anthony Payne to finish the symphony has divided Elgar
    scholars.

    Elgar's descendants have been accused of greed and of betraying his
    last wishes. The composer asked for his work on the piece to be
    destroyed, saying on his sick bed in 1933: "Don't let them tinker with
    it . . . No one could understand."

    The family has refused many requests to complete the symphony but
    relented because the sketches would be out of copyright in 2004, when
    anyone would be free to finish them. Paul Grafton, one of Elgar's
    great-nephews, said the family would insist that the work's title
    should include reference to it being arranged by Mr Payne from original
    sketches. He promised that the beneficiaries of Elgar's will would not
    make a penny. The family intended to devise a scheme for royalties to
    fund a scholarship for composers. 

    Elgar had orchestrated no more than 30 bars of the symphony. The
    remainder of the 141 jumbled pages of music consist of sketches for the
    piano. With a few exceptions, it is unclear in which order Elgar
    intended them.

    Mr Payne admits that he is not only dealing "with a jigsaw puzzle" but
    that he is having to write a considerable amount of fresh music himself
    "to cement the pieces together". He insists, however, that every new
    note "will be pure Elgar". He said yesterday: "It is the symphony that
    Elgar was going to write to be his Third Symphony. It would be silly to
    think of it as anything else."

    One distinguished scholar, who refused to be named, said it was an
    "obscenity" to "feast off the corpse" of Elgar. Completing the work
    satisfactorily was "impossible" and the composer's reputation would
    suffer.

    The Elgar Society admitted it was "concerned" and said the issue was
    likely to divide its 1,400 members. Andrew Neill, its chairman, said he
    wanted urgent talks with the family because ignoring Elgar's dying
    wishes was "a moral issue".
7.1150IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1458
7.1151IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1636
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Illegal migrants 'work in Civil Service'
    
    By David Millward 

    SEVERAL thousand illegal immigrants are working in the Civil Service
    and local authorities, according to a confidential Home Office report.

    Government fears that some could be exploiting their public sector jobs
    are contained in an investigation into the enforcement of immigration
    laws. The Home Office asked the Cabinet Office to find out the extent
    to which racketeers have penetrated the civil service and how many
    illegal immigrants hold public sector jobs. "It has to be remembered
    that we rely on the support of hundreds of honest people from the
    ethnic minorities," said John Tincey, spokesman for the Immigration
    Service Union, which represents 2,000 immigration staff at ports,
    airports and administrative offices. Among other things they act as our
    interpreters and without them we would not be able to function."

    There is concern at a number of high-profile court cases where
    immigration racketeers - including some who have settled in the country
    lawfully - have used their civil service contacts to help others to
    side-step controls.

    This month five junior Home Office employees working at the immigration
    headquarters in Croydon, south London, were among eight people arrested
    after a six-month investigation into a passport and visa racket. The
    issue is particularly sensitive since the Government has passed
    legislation to fine employers who hire illegal immigrants.

    The numbers involved are impossible to estimate. They are known to be
    drawn from the 25,000 people who were given two-year visas as "working
    holidaymakers" in the early 1990s. "They have sat on this report for
    some time," Mr Tincey said. "They will not release it because of the
    embarrassment it has caused."
7.1152IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1727
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Murder of father was 'mistake'
    
    By Toby Harnden, Ireland Correspondent 

    THE murder of a Roman Catholic father of seven on Friday is believed to
    have been the work of Ulster Volunteer Force terrorists in response to
    the conviction earlier this month of Billy Wright, the dissident
    loyalist leader known as King Rat.

    Security sources said John Slane, 44 was probably a victim of mistaken
    identity. He was described as an ordinary family man who earned a
    living as a joiner. 

    It is believed that the killing was timed to coincide with leaders of
    the Progressive Unionist Party, the political wing of the UVF, leaving
    to attend St Patrick's Day celebrations in America. The PUP has been
    severely embarrassed by the murder.

    Wright, jailed for eight years for threatening to kill the relative of
    a witness to a UVF "punishment beating", is opposed to the PUP
    leadership. His supporters had protested that his conviction was
    "political" and the killing could also have been a response to this.

    David Ervine, the PUP leader, said a "maverick loyalist gunman" could
    have been responsible for the murder of Mr Slane. 
7.1153IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1864
7.1154IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1822
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    ITC attacks TV debate on monarchy
    
    By Alison Boshoff. Media Correspondent 

    ITV's television debate on the monarchy is criticised by a broadcasting
    watchdog today.

    The Independent Television Commission says that Carlton's Monarchy -
    The Nation Decides "could not be regarded as a programme of high
    quality". It upheld the complaints of some viewers that it was out of
    control and poorly executed.

    But the ITC said it was not wrong to debate the monarchy on television
    and that the programme had met standards of impartiality.

    There were 85 complaints to the ITC after the broadcast in January this
    year. Among the concerns raised were that there were too many
    panellists, the arguments were not considered in any depth, the
    programme was biased against the monarchy, and viewers had been given
    the wrong numbers to call on-air.
7.1155IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:1925
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Wreck of missing ship is found in Channel
    
    By Simon Midgley 

    A CARGO ship that went missing in the English Channel a month ago has
    been found wrecked on the seabed. Its 25 Greek Cypriot crew members are
    all missing, believed drowned.

    The 25,000-ton Albion II sailed for Jamaica from Antwerp last month
    with a cargo of steel products. The Cypriot-registered ship radioed its
    last position - 70 miles from the coast of Cornwall - to French
    coastguards on Feb 17. The vessel then disappeared.

    The ship's owners contacted coastguards in Falmouth, Cornwall, who have
    been co-ordinating an international search. The crew of a Danish
    trawler then picked up an unidentified wreck on radar in the English
    Channel and a French naval diving vessel identified it on Saturday. 

    The ship was lying 430ft down, 65 miles west of Ushant, with its hull
    broken in several pieces. No bodies have been found. A Coastguard
    spokesman, Mike Collier, said yesterday that nobody knew why the vessel
    had sunk. "Whatever happened must have been very sudden and
    catastrophic," he added.
7.1156IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2098
7.1157IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2140
7.1158IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2131
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Girl, 8, to sue school over lost lessons
    
    By Paul Stokes 

    A GIRL of eight is to sue a council because she claims that she is not
    being given a proper education.

    Penny Houghton has been told to stay at home once a week because there
    are not enough teachers to go round.

    The court action is the latest problem for Calderdale education
    authority which has been under the spotlight since it was forced
    temporarily to close The Ridings School in Halifax because of a
    breakdown in discipline.

    Thirty children are being denied classes daily at Ferney Lee Junior and
    Infant School, Todmorden, West Yorks. Sue Ellis, head teacher, decided
    to send the children home once a week because members of the National
    Union of Teachers are refusing to take classes they feel are too large.

    "I am sick of Penny suffering for politics," said her father, Darren
    Houghton. On her day at home Penny has to be looked after by her
    grandmother because Mr Houghton, 32, and his wife Hazel, 31, are at
    work.

    Mr Houghton is to issue a writ against the LEA for failing in its
    statutory duty to provide Penny with an education. Clem Rushworth,
    Calderdale council's assistant education director, said he hoped the
    dispute would soon be resolved.
7.1159IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2225
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Survey of babies seeks the cause of cleft lip
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    THE mothers of more than 300 babies born with a cleft lip over the next
    three years are to be examined to see whether vitamin deficiency can
    help to explain the condition.

    Each baby will be matched with two healthy children, born on the same
    day, to compare details of the mothers' diets, lifestyles and vitamin
    intakes. The study is by Dr Peter Mossey, of Dundee University Dental
    School, who said that cleft lip and cleft palate were disorders which
    tended to run in families.

    He said: "Other influences such as a mother's diet, smoking and alcohol
    intake just before conception and in the early stages of pregnancy may
    increase their likelihood. With this study we aim to find out whether
    vitamin supplements, particularly folic acid, reduce the risk of
    clefting and whether those with a family history of cleft lips and
    palates can be helped in this way."

    About one in 700 babies is born with cleft lip or palate and many go
    through several operations over a number of years.
7.1160IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2239
7.1161IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2344
7.1162IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Mar 17 1997 16:2473
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 17 March 1997 Issue 661

    Last men of the lighthouse warn of microchip take-over
    
    By Toby Harnden in Howth, Co Dublin 

    LEAVING the light on as he locks the door is the only task left for the
    principal keeper of the last manned lighthouse in Ireland. After nearly
    a lifetime of guarding one of the world's most dangerous coastlines,
    the microchip will take over.

    Anthony Burke, 58, began his training at the Baily lighthouse some 37
    years ago. Perched on a cliff at the tip of the Nose of Howth
    overlooking Doldrum Bay and the port of Dublin, the first lighthouse
    there was commissioned by Charles II in 1665.

    The current Baily, built in 1814, was one of the last sights of home
    for emigrants escaping the Irish famine. Today, it is one of the first
    landmarks for those flying in as the planes bank to land at Dublin
    airport. Although the Baily's 1500-watt light, which flashes once every
    15 seconds and can be seen 26 miles away, will continue to burn, Mr
    Burke will be the last keeper when he leaves in a week's time.

    Over the past 10 years the Commissioners of Irish Lights have been
    automating the 80 lighthouses around the coast of Northern Ireland and
    the Irish Republic. The keepers will be made redundant and all the
    lights will be controlled centrally via a telemetry link. A handful of
    manned lighthouses remain around the British coast but these too will
    be automated by the end of the century.

    Mr Burke and his fellow keepers Aidan Polly, 56, and Gerry McCurdy, 53,
    believe the policy is one of folly. "The larger vessels may have
    sophisticated navigational equipment but the fishing boats and pleasure
    craft will miss us," said Mr Burke. "When all else fails, it is the
    naked eye that can save a life. I was virtually born in a boat and have
    grown used to the mysterious ways of the sea. It can be a beautiful
    calm one moment and then the wind freshens and all you can do is head
    for home. We would listen out for Maydays and warn the lifeboats but
    now we won't be there."

    There are also concerns that the keeper's primary function - keeping
    his light burning constantly from sunset to sunrise - will not be
    fulfilled all the time. During gales last February, the Fastnet Rock
    light off the south-west tip of Ireland went out and was not restored
    for 12 hours. The Fastnet had already been de-manned.

    "The Fastnet was the most dangerous station," said Mr Burke. "Sometimes
    you couldn't put your nose outside for days without a solid mountain of
    sea hitting you. The closest I've come to death was when I was caught
    by a wave there. My legs went from under me and I grabbed an eye bolt
    and just held on."

    Until recently, keepers worked four hours on and eight hours off for
    six-week periods with only a fortnight's leave to look forward to. "It
    was a hard, solitary life," said Mr Burke. "And lonely sometimes. The
    pace was very different. You had a lot of time to think. But there was
    also great comradeship. All the keepers used to have hobbies, making
    shillelaghs, putting ships in bottles or doing shell work. It brought
    in a few extra shillings. Unfortunately, television destroyed all that.
    People got lazy and the hobbies went. But some of the comforts were
    very welcome. When we were unable to get out of the lighthouse because
    of the weather I remember scraping the mould off the bread before
    toasting it."

    Mr Polly, whose great-great grandfather was a lighthouse keeper from
    around 1800, said he could foresee lighthouses being manned again. "We
    hear the French and the Germans are thinking again. The Republic
    doesn't have a coastguard service so our look-out role is even more
    vital here."

    Looking out across the Irish Sea, Mr Burke shook his head in
    resignation. "Six eyes combing the coast day and night," he said.
    "Those eyes are gone now."
7.1163IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:14114
    AP 19-Mar-1997 1:05 EST   REF5972

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, March 19, 1997
   
    LOUISIANA FLOODS 

    BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- Hundreds of people have been evacuated after a
    chemical spill from a grounded barge on the Mississippi River put the
    city on alert. The stranded barge was one of a string of 25 that struck
    the U.S. 190 bridge over the Mississippi and broke free Monday. It was
    carrying 400,000 gallons of the chemicals toluene and benzene, both
    flammable and toxic. The barge overturned near the west bank and began
    leaking below the water line. Some 2,600 students at Southern
    University were evacuated. 
   
    CIA DIRECTOR 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Clinton administration needs a new nominee to
    head the CIA, but is wrestling with fears that any candidate to head
    the spy agency will meet stiff resistance. The White House, still
    reeling from Anthony Lake's sudden withdrawal, considered moving
    quickly to name acting CIA Director George Tenet as a substitute
    nominee. Senior White House officials, Republican senators and even
    Lake himself advanced Tenet's name as a less controversial substitute. 
   
    BURTON-DONATION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A former lobbyist for the Pakistani government says
    the Republican chairman of the House committee investigating Democratic
    fund raising solicited him for a $5,000 campaign donation and
    threatened to cut off access to GOP "friends or colleagues" when he
    didn't contribute. Mark Siegel, a lobbyist for the government of ousted
    Prime Minister Benazier Bhutto, said he was first approached by Rep.
    Dan Burton, R-Indiana, in November 1995. Burton solicited the donation
    for his re-election campaign. 
   
    DNC-FUND RAISING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The former chairman of the Democratic National
    Committee denies that he or party aides asked the CIA to vouch for a
    donor who was seeking meetings with White House officials. Don Fowler
    also disputed reports that he pressured a National Security Council
    aide to persuade her not to oppose future White House meetings with oil
    financier Roger Tamraz. The CIA says it was investigating reports that
    a DNC official asked the agency to provide information about Tamraz to
    the NSC. 
   
    TEXACO-DISCRIMINATION 

    WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -- A federal judge asked if there were any
    last-minute objections to a proposed $176 million settlement of a
    racial discrimination suit against Texaco. No one raised a voice -- not
    the dozens of black Texaco workers in the courtroom, not Texaco, and
    not the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Judge Charles Brieant
    then reserved decision on final approval. Plaintiffs, many expecting
    lump-sum payments of tens of thousands of dollars, embraced and shook
    hands. 
   
    U.S.-ISRAEL-PALESTINIAN 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The State Department says it has no evidence to
    support Israeli accusations that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat gave
    the go-ahead for violent attacks to protest Israel's decision to build
    homes for Jews in disputed east Jerusalem. In Jerusalem, hundreds of
    troops in riot gear sealed off the hill where construction of the 6,500
    Jewish apartments began on land claimed by the Palestinians as part of
    a future capital. 
   
    GULF WAR-CHEMICALS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Investigators have uncovered more details about the
    chemical weapons U.S. troops were exposed to during the Persian Gulf
    War. The CIA believes hundreds of Iraqi rockets containing chemical
    agents were destroyed over two days, March 10 and 12, rather than on
    March 10 alone as previously believed. This raises the possibility that
    the explosions were smaller and possibly less dangerous, a CIA
    spokeswoman said. 
   
    ZAIRE 

    KISANGANI, Zaire (AP) -- Zaire's rebels are silencing their guns for a
    week to let thousands who fled fighting return to this city. Laurent
    Kabila proclaimed the seven-day cease-fire Tuesday to cheering
    supporters in the border town of Goma, headquarters of the rebel
    movement that has swept through much of eastern Zaire in a seven-month
    insurgency. 
   
    NORTH KOREA-WARNING 

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- North Korean leader Kim Jong Il warned party
    officials during a recent secret meeting that worsening food shortages
    could set off rioting in the tightly controlled country, a South Korean
    newspaper reports. The paper did not explain how it got the speech, and
    the authenticity of the newspaper's report could not be independently
    verified. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar is sinking sharply in Japan, buying 122.58 yen
    in late morning trading, down 0.44. The Nikkei lost 3.10 points to
    18,442.10 in early trading. In New York, the Dow closed at 6,898.56,
    down 58.92. 
   
    SUPERSONICS-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Michael Jordan capped a 32-point, 18-rebound
    performance by hitting two free throws with three seconds left in
    overtime Tuesday night, giving the Chicago Bulls an 89-87 victory over
    the Seattle SuperSonics. The Bulls escaped with their 25th straight
    home victory in a game between last year's NBA finalists. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1164IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:14116
    RTw  19-Mar-97 03:10    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON - Taking a hard line ahead of the U.S.-Russia summit in
    Helsinki this week, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said NATO
    expansion would proceed despite Russian objections and the United
    States would not "bargain away" Central Europe. President Bill Clinton
    sre due to meet Russian President Boris Yeltsin on Thursday and Friday
    in Finland. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israel rejected international criticism and said it was
    preparing for Palestinian violence after starting construction of a new
    settlement in Arab East Jerusalem. The United States, Israel's closest
    ally, said bulldozers that tore up a hillside on Tuesday where 6,500
    homes will be built for Jews, could crush the peace. Officials in
    Washington urged the two sides to resume talks. 

    - - - - 

    PORT MORESBY - Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Sir Julius Chan faced a
    second wave of army opposition to his planned use of foreign
    mercenaries to end the secessionist conflict on Bougainville. A senior
    army officer told a protest march in the PNG capital that the defence
    force was opposed to the mercenary plan and the foreign soldiers,
    confined to barracks since a political crisis erupted on Monday, would
    soon leave the country. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albanian Prime Minister Bashkim Fino is expected to travel to
    the south of the country on Wednesday to talk to rebels who have seized
    control of the area and are demanding the resignation of President Sali
    Berisha. It would be Fino's first visit to the rebel-held south since
    he was appointed last week to head an all-party interim government
    charged with restoring order in the troubled Balkan country and
    organising new elections by June. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain's ruling Conservatives, seeking to ward off a surging
    Labour challenge ahead of elections, may look to falling unemployment
    on Wednesday to boost their flagging fortunes. Economists questioned by
    Reuters said official figures were expected to show a fall of some
    40,000 in unemployment between January and February. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - President Clinton, hoping to avoid another clash with the
    Senate, expects to nominate intelligence veteran George Tenet as
    director of the CIA, senior administration officials said. Clinton, who
    denounced the cycle of "political destruction" that forced Anthony Lake
    to ask that he be withdrawn from consideration to run the CIA, has
    asked for a routine background check on Tenet, officials said. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - A top envoy from Tokyo urged Peru's President Alberto Fujimori
    to move faster on talks to free 72 hostages held by Marxist guerrillas
    in the Japanese ambassador's residence. Amid signs Japan was worried
    about hawkish voices in the Peruvian military urging a violent foray
    into the besieged house, Vice Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura met for
    two hours with Fujimori in the presidential palace. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - First Deputy Prime Minister Anatoly Chubais has promised more
    surprise appointments in the course of Russia's most radical government
    reshuffle in five years. The new-look cabinet, shaped by President
    Boris Yeltsin this week, meanwhile won its first prize on Tuesday-- a
    promise from combative trade unions not to demand its resignation
    during nationwide protest actions planned for March 27. 

    - - - - 

    MANILA - The whereabouts of the highest North Korean official to flee
    the Stalinist state remained a mystery on Wednesday. Hwang Jang-yop,
    Pyongyang's top ideologue, flew into the Philippines from China on
    Tuesday and was quickly whisked away to an undisclosed hideaway. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean Labour Minister Jin Nyum has offered to resign in
    connection with a revision of a controversial labour law, a ministry
    spokesman said. "The minister offered his resignation to Prime Minister
    Koh Kun on Tuesday but the offer has not been accepted yet," he said. 

    - - - - 

    KUALA LUMPUR - Two Malaysian Air Force helicopters went missing after a
    mission in the eastern Sabah state, the Royal Malaysian Air Force
    (RMAF) said on Wednesday. There was no immediate word how many people
    were aboard. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Opposition militants in Zaire's capital Kinshasa plan to
    demonstrate on Wednesday in support of a vote in parliament demanding
    the sacking of Prime Minister Kengo wa Dondo. But supporters of Kengo
    and ailing President Mobutu Sese Seko, who like Kengo is out of the
    country, say that the vote was flawed as too few members of the
    transitional parliament took part. 

    - - - - 

    SANTA MARIA, California - A jury ruled in favour of Michael Jackson in
    a suit by five former employees alleging wrongful dismissal after they
    testified in a child molestation case against the reculsive pop star.
    The jury also ordered two of the plaintiffs to pay Jackson $60,000 in
    damages. 

    REUTER
7.1165IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:14109
    RTw  19-Mar-97 06:26    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - -  Fewer Singaporeans caught urinating in lifts 

    SINGAPORE - The number of Singaporeans convicted for urinating in lifts
    dropped dramatically last year, to 14 from 40, and a new detector may
    cut incidents further, the Straits Times newspaper reported. 

    It said urine detectors installed in some Singapore lifts -- they shut
    the doors automatically when they detect a puddle of liquid --
    sometimes gave false alarms. 

    But a new urine detection kit should prove more reliable and therefore
    act as a deterrent, the paper said. It is a strip of paper impregnated
    with an enzyme which reacts only to urine and turns red when it comes
    into contact. 

    It quoted the Ministry of the Environment as saying 14 people were
    convicted of urinating in lifts in 1996, down from 40 in the previous
    year. Offenders can be fined up to Singapore $2,000 (US$1,400). 

    - - - - 

    British homeless to be helped by toilet advertising 

    LONDON - Homeless Britons will benefit from a novel form of advertising
    -- posters strategically placed at eye level in public toilets. 

    The Big Issue, a weekly magazine sold on British streets in aid of the
    homeless, has linked up with advertisers CPA to promote a new CD of
    electronic music in London's pubs and nightclubs, a CPA statement said. 

    Posters promoting the CD will be put in toilets for an "exciting, funny
    and vibrant" form of advertising. 

    "Careful and thorough research has indicated that most people spend
    between 30 seconds and three minutes at this activity," a CPA statement
    said. 

    "With over 700 million toilet visits each year this form of advertising
    cannot fail to be a success." 

    - - - - 

    Minnesotan proposes flogging drunk drivers 

    ST. PAUL, Minnesota - A Minnesota state legislator proposed that drunk
    drivers should be flogged or humiliated in public. 

    Judges should be empowered to punish habitual drunk drivers with a
    public whipping or by forcing them to stand on a street corner with a
    sign saying, "I am a drunk driver," Republican state representative Tom
    Workman proposed. 

    "I'm not looking to split the skin on your back, though I think people
    would want you to feel some pain," he said. 

    His proposal, at present informal, looked unlikely to get far. The
    chairman of a state legislative committee, Wes Skoglund, called the
    plan "frivolous and unconstitutional" and a step backward to the Dark
    Ages. 

    - - - - 

    Japan man hid father's body in pension fraud TOKYO - A man who hid his
    dead father's body in their apartment for 2 1/2 years so he could
    collect his pension checks has been charged with fraud, a police
    spokesman said on Wednesday. 

    Masao Yanagisawa, 38, who police said admitted hiding the body of his
    father Masakatsu after he died from an illness at the age of 60 in July
    1994, also hid the death from his sister and brother who had been
    supporting the two men. 

    Yanagisawa collected 3.5 million yen ($28,600) in pension checks, a
    police spokesman in western Tokyo told Reuters. 

    "We found out about it when Yanagisawa came to a local police station
    and confessed after his sister became suspicious about why their father
    was never home when she called," the spokesman said. 

    - - - - 

    Thai go-go dancers fined for duckling sex show 

    BANGKOK - Four go-go dancers in Thailand's popular tourist resort of
    Pattaya were fined a total of 2,000 baht ($80) for performing a
    "hatching" sex show with ducklings, police said on Wednesday. 

    Police in Pattaya, about 160 km (97 miles) east of Bangkok, said they
    raided two bars on Monday night and rescued several ducklings that were
    used to perform "hatching" sex shows. 

    The ducklings were put inside plastic eggs and then inserted inside the
    dancers' bodies. They then released the eggs from their bodies at the
    end of a song to the cheers of customers. 

    The eggs had small holes for the ducklings to breathe, but when the
    dancers "hatched" the eggs, the ducklings would rush out gasping for
    air. 

    REUTER
7.1166IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1553
    AP 19-Mar-1997 0:54 EST   REF5969

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FAA: Check Boeing Rudder Part

    By GEORGE TIBBITS

    Associated Press Writer

    SEATTLE (AP) -- The Federal Aviation Administration is ordering Boeing
    737 operators to inspect some main rudder power control units for a
    possible crack in a bearing that could result in the rudder moving
    without the pilot's command. 

    The FAA's airworthiness directive, which officially takes effect
    Wednesday, comes after United Airlines reported it had installed what
    the FAA called an "incorrect bolt" in hundreds of units for the past 26
    years. 

    The directive is aimed primarily at United and at 737 operators that
    might have received rudder power control units from United over the
    years. 

    United spokeswoman Connie Huff said Tuesday that the airline received
    authorization from the FAA in 1970 to use the different bolt, which is
    easier to install, and she said no rudder problems have occurred as a
    result. 

    "We've never had a PCU fail because of a cracked bearing," Ms. Huff
    said. 

    United maintenance workers overhauling a rudder power control unit last
    fall found some cracks in a bearing, the first time in the 26 years
    that had been seen, Ms. Huff said. 

    United notified the FAA and Boeing, and the FAA order stemmed from
    that, she said. United immediately began replacing the bolts, which
    connect with the bearing, with the part specified by Boeing, she said. 

    The power control unit transfers signals from the pilot's rudder pedals
    to the hydraulic system that actually moves the tail rudder, which
    helps steer the aircraft. 

    Both United and Boeing noted that the problem was unrelated to the 1994
    crash of USAir Flight 427 at Pittsburgh and the 1991 crash of United
    Flight 585 at Colorado Springs, Colo. Some investigators have theorized
    that rudder malfunctions could have triggered both crashes, but the
    bolts in question weren't used on either plane, Boeing said. 

    The 737s are the most widely used jetliner in the world with 2,705
    flying, including 1,115 in the United States. Boeing said it believes
    only 365 of the planes have the bolts in question. 
7.1167IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1547
    AP 19-Mar-1997 0:54 EST   REF5968

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bomb Prober Denies Faking Talk

    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- An investigator working for Oklahoma City bombing
    attorney Stephen Jones says he did not write any false confessions for
    Timothy McVeigh. 

    Richard Reyna would not say if McVeigh confessed during interviews with
    him. But the Texas-based investigator told The Daily Oklahoman in
    Wednesday's editions that he did not create any false confessions for
    the bombing suspect. 

    "You don't do those things," Reyna told the newspaper. "Maybe the
    government does. Or maybe other people do.... your neo-Nazis, your Klan
    people, your white supremacists." 

    The investigator's name surfaced after The Dallas Morning News reported
    last month that McVeigh admitted during defense interviews that he
    bombed the Oklahoma City federal building. 

    The newspaper said its article was based on confidential defense
    reports. 

    Defense attorneys at first claimed the newspaper had been fooled, but
    later said the document was a faked confession they created in an
    attempt to get a possible suspect to agree to an interview. 

    The defense did not publicly identify the defense investigator involved
    in the purported ploy. But J.D. Cash, who writes for the McCurtain
    County Daily Gazette, said it was his friend Reyna. 

    Reyna said he was speaking publicly because he wanted to clear his
    name. 

    "This is uncalled for. This not nice," he said. 

    Cash, meanwhile, stood by his comments. 

    "I know what he told me," he said. 

    McVeigh and Terry Nichols are charged with murder, conspiracy and
    weapons-related counts in the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P.
    Murrah Federal Building. The blast killed 168 and injured more than
    500. 
7.1168IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1528
    AP 19-Mar-1997 0:30 EST   REF5964

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Police Officer Kills Another

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- An undercover police officer fatally shot an
    off-duty officer after they argued with each other while driving in
    separate cars, police Chief Willie Williams said Tuesday night. 

    The off-duty officer apparently waved a gun at the undercover narcotics
    officer, who responded by firing two shots, fatally wounding the other,
    Williams said. 

    The off-duty officer was out of uniform as well, and apparently neither
    knew the other was a policeman. 

    The off-duty officer's car came to rest at an intersection a few blocks
    from the Universal City theme park where other undercover officers were
    working a sting operation. He was pronounced dead at St. Joseph Medical
    Center. 

    There was no evidence of any history of conflict between the officers,
    both of whom had at least 10 years experience in the department, said
    Officer Jason Lee, an LAPD spokesman. 

    "They just kind of drove alongside and the conflict occurred" Lee said.

7.1169IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1529
    AP 19-Mar-1997 0:20 EST   REF5959

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Boy Arrested in Corpse Looting

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Two suspected looters, including an 11-year-old
    boy, were arrested on charges of scavenging the corpse of a suspected
    drug dealer seconds after his death in a search for money and
    marijuana. 

    In a macabre scene even for this crime-weary city, about a dozen
    looters stepped through a puddle of blood and stripped Mike Still, 23,
    of his gun, bullets and money moments after he collapsed on the front
    porch of a known drug house, Police Deputy Chief Joe Constance said
    Tuesday. 

    While Still lay dying from chest wounds and Wilner Natilus, the man
    accused of shooting him, writhed in pain upstairs with three gunshot
    wounds, the thieves cased the house, taking handguns and marijuana and
    destroying key crime scene evidence, Constance said. 

    Natilus, 42, was on drug paraphernalia and weapons possessions after he
    was treated and released Monday from the hospital. Other possible
    charges were pending. 

    Constance said five to 10 minutes had passed between Still's death and
    when police chased the "jackals" away from the house. Two looters,
    including the boy, were arrested. 
7.1170IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1540
    AP 18-Mar-1997 23:49 EST   REF5946

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cave Teen Finds a Home

    OCALA, Fla. (AP) -- A 17-year-old who was forced to live in a cave
    after his father lost his job and his mother kicked him out has found a
    home and a family willing to take care of him until he's able to live
    on his own. 

    Cliff Welty had been surviving on handouts and whatever food he could
    find until his story attracted national attention. 

    The couple who took Welty in over the weekend wants to remain
    anonymous, but say they offered their help because it was the right
    thing to do. 

    "I felt if my kids were in the same position I'd hope someone would do
    this for them," the woman said. 

    "We have gotten a little older and financially secure and felt we could
    help him out," her husband said. 

    Welty will be staying in a one-bedroom apartment connected to the main
    house -- an arrangement he's quite happy with. "They are cool people.
    They are really class act people," he said. 

    Welty was whisked away to New York last week to tape an appearance on
    the Montel Williams show. He's also been offered movie deals and book
    contracts. 

    Welty lived with his father for most of his life, but they both ended
    up living out of a car after the man lost his job just before
    Thanksgiving. The father sent him to live with his mother, but the teen
    said he was kicked out after two weeks. 

    Welty returned to Ocala in January, but his father had left town and
    the only place he could think of going was a cave he played in years
    earlier. 
7.1171IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1572
    AP 18-Mar-1997 23:35 EST   REF5657

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Barge Spills Chemicals in La.

    By GUY COATES

    Associated Press Writer

    BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- A chemical spill from a grounded barge on the
    swollen Mississippi River put this city on alert Tuesday and forced the
    evacuation of hundreds of people on both sides of the river. 

    The stranded barge was one of a string of 25 that struck the U.S. 190
    bridge over the Mississippi and broke free Monday. It was carrying
    400,000 gallons of the chemicals toluene and benzene, both flammable
    and toxic. 

    The barge overturned near the west bank and began leaking below the
    water line. More than a dozen families were evacuated in Port Allen,
    and on the east side in Baton Rouge, Southern University was evacuated
    as well. 

    State police spokesman Capt. Ronnie Jones said instruments showed
    benzene in the air. "You can clearly smell the chemical," he said. 

    The concentration of fumes was in the safe range although shifting
    winds made the measurements difficult. 

    Automobile traffic on the U.S. 190 bridge and the nearby Interstate 10
    bridge was closed after the accident. 

    "Right smack dab in the middle of rush hour, we shut down both
    bridges," Jones said. 

    Southern University, about two miles away, closed down as a precaution.
    Half of the 2,600 students who live on campus went across town to spend
    the night at Louisiana State University's cavernous fieldhouse. Most of
    the others moved in with off-campus friends, local students and their
    families. 

    Many students were annoyed that the school waited hours to announce the
    evacuation, especially since spring break starts Friday. 

    "This is just ridiculous. I was hoping to go home before Friday anyway.
    I wish I could have left this morning," said Sabiaa Alexander, a
    freshman from Seattle, Wash. 

    "All I brought to this place was a change of clothes," she said. "I
    don't have a blanket or a pillow. Nobody told me to bring anything like
    that." 

    Baton Rouge's business section, including the Capitol, was under alert.
    The gambling boat Casino Rouge shut down voluntarily at dusk and The
    Advocate newspaper pushed up its deadline in case the evacuation zone
    was expanded. 

    The Mississippi is swollen with floodwaters from the Ohio River and the
    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began diverting some of the water Monday. 

    A 2 1/2-mile stretch of the river was closed and a swift current played
    havoc with barges on the river. 

    As teams worked on the leaking barge, another batch of 12 broke free
    about six miles downstream, but they were quickly brought under
    control. 

    Divers went into the fast-moving river during the night in an attempt
    to stabilize the barge and a crane was being shipped from New Orleans
    to lift the barge from the river and remove its toxic cargo, Jones
    said. 
7.1172IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1571
    AP 19-Mar-1997 0:55 EST   REF5970

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Unrest on Papua New Guinea

    By GEOFF SPENCER

    Associated Press Writer

    PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea (AP) -- The army defied the prime
    minister's orders Wednesday to free about 40 foreign mercenaries under
    detention, prolonging a three-day mutiny. 

    More than 2,000 people rallied outside the army barracks against the
    government's plan to pay the mercenaries millions of dollars to crush a
    separatist rebellion on the island of Bougainville. The protesters
    demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Julius Chan and his finance
    minister. 

    The government has fired Brig.-Gen. Jerry Singirok as Defense Force
    commander after he ordered soldiers to detain the foreign mercenaries
    and stop cooperating with the government. 

    The protest Wednesday was the first sign of major public support for
    the popular Singirok, who led the mutiny on Monday. 

    Chan said Singirok was "guilty of gross insubordination bordering on
    treason" and could face arrest. 

    Throughout the political crisis, soldiers have remained in their
    barracks and have not moved to occupy government buildings or block off
    streets. 

    A spokesman for the protesters, who called themselves the "Melanesian
    Solidarity Group," said the group planned to march on Parliament House,
    about two miles away on the outskirts of the capital.

    "If Chan doesn't resign, they must reinstate Singirok. That's the only
    fair thing to do," said one protester, Michael Tatkai. "The ordinary
    people of Papua New Guinea are opposed to the government paying
    mercenaries to kill people on Bougainville." 

    The government had signed a $27 million contract with Sandline
    International, a private British company that supplies mercenaries,
    while Singirok said his soldiers went without food, pay and supplies. 

    Confident that he had quashed a potential military revolt, Chan
    directed the army to free the mercenaries. 

    "The government is in absolute, complete control of the situation. ...
    The institution of democracy is alive and well in Papua New Guinea,"
    Chan told reporters Tuesday, insisting that he had the support of the
    army and police. 

    Singirok had said he would leave the job without a fight. In his last
    official duty, he told a parade of 300 soldiers at Port Moresby's main
    army base to stay calm and obey the nation's constitution. 

    Singirok, 40, had announced on local radio Monday that the army would
    not work with the mercenaries hired to end a nine-year-old secessionist
    war on Bougainville, a copper-rich island about 800 miles northeast of
    the capital of Port Moresby. 

    Executive Outcomes, a South African company that provides
    fighters-for-hire, says Sandline hired it to aid the Papua New Guinea
    government. 

    The rebellion on Bougainville began in 1988 as an environmental protest
    over a copper mine, but escalated into a guerrilla war to secede from
    Papua New Guinea. More than 1,000 people have been killed. 
7.1173IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1555
    AP 18-Mar-1997 22:41 EST   REF5595

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    France Has Nuclear Contingency

    By FLORENCE SEBAOUN

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- The French government will hand out iodine pills next
    month to about 600,000 people living near nuclear power plants, to be
    taken in case of a Chernobyl-like accident. 

    Health Minister Herve Gaymard spoke of the move Tuesday, along with a
    variety of other health policies, at a routine news conference. 

    France launched a similar pill-dispensing operation in April 1996, 10
    years to the day after the Chernobyl accident spewed a deadly cloud of
    radiation across the Soviet Union and much of Europe. 

    Iodine is the only substance known to shield the body at least
    partially against cancer-causing radiation poisoning. 

    The pills are designed to be taken orally within an hour of a nuclear
    accident to saturate the thyroid gland, which is especially vulnerable
    to cancer after exposure to radiation. 

    The French government has been widely ridiculed for insisting that the
    radiation unleashed at Chernobyl didn't reach France, though
    neighboring countries all said it passed through their skies. 

    France's 25 nuclear power plants are generally considered safe and,
    according to the French power company EDF, provide 77 percent of
    France's electricity. 

    Health Ministry spokeswoman Florence Lepany-Duval, asked why the
    government decided to hand out the pills last year and now, said
    Gaymard chose the Chernobyl anniversary to enact recommendations that
    scientists made when he took office in October 1995. 

    She said French nuclear reactors posed no new threat. 

    The country has never suffered a life-threatening nuclear accident, but
    its nuclear plants have not been accident-free. One in Grenoble, which
    is the world's largest fast-breeder reactor, was shut down for two
    months in 1995 after a leak developed in a steam generator. 

    And there have been recent reports that people living near France's
    nuclear waste treatment facility at La Hague, in Normandy, were exposed
    to dangerous levels of radiation. 

    Last week, a research group said people walking on a beach near the
    plant were exposed to radioactivity up to 3,000 times higher than usual
    because a waste-filled pipe had been uncovered by low tides. 
7.1174IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1542
    AP 18-Mar-1997 22:28 EST   REF5562

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Food-Shortage Concerns NKorea

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- North Korean leader Kim Jong Il warned party
    officials during a recent secret meeting that worsening food shortages
    could set off rioting in the tightly controlled country, a South Korean
    newspaper reported Wednesday. 

    The Chosun Ilbo, a major national daily published in Seoul, said it had
    obtained a full text of the speech delivered by the North Korean leader
    in Pyongyang on Dec. 7. 

    The paper did not explain how it got the speech, and the authenticity
    of the newspaper's report could not be independently verified. 

    The speech, as reported by the newspaper, focused on the communist
    country's near-famine conditions. Kim was quoted as saying that even
    the North's military, the fulcrum of the country's political and social
    stability, is not getting enough food. 

    "I don't know what our party workers are doing when an anachronistic
    situation is being created because of food problems," Kim said in the
    speech. "If the U.S. imperialists knew that our military doesn't have
    food, they would launch an invasion." 

    Kim warned that if the food shortage is not alleviated, North Koreans
    may rise up against their leadership as they did in 1945. 

    After Korea was liberated from Japan on Aug. 15, 1945, a Soviet-backed
    communist government was installed in the northern part of the
    peninsula and a U.S.-backed capitalist government in the southern half. 

    Three months later, thousands of North Korean students and citizens in
    the northern city of Shinuiju rebelled against their leadership.
    Hundreds of students were killed in armed clashes with troops. 

    Devastating floods over the past two years have aggravated North
    Korea's problems, forcing it to appeal for outside food aid for the
    first time. 
7.1175IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1569
    AP 18-Mar-1997 19:59 EST   REF5023

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Dealer Defeats Presley Estate

    By DIRK BEVERIDGE

    AP Business Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- Go, cat, go, a judge told an elated Elvis memorabilia
    dealer Tuesday as he stripped the late singer's estate of its trademark
    on the use of Presley's name in Britain. 

    "Elvis is up there, somewhere, smiling down," said Sid Shaw, who sells
    Elvis trinkets in an east London shop called Elvisly Yours. "How can
    you own the image of someone who's dead?" 

    It was a rare win for Shaw, who has been fighting Elvis Presley
    Enterprises Inc. for more than a decade in U.S. and British courts. 

    About a year ago, the Presley estate was given British trademarks for
    Presley's signature, as well as the names Elvis and Elvis A. Presley,
    for use on soaps, toothpaste, deodorant and cosmetics. 

    Shaw struck back with a lawsuit in the High Court, saying the estate
    should not have received the trademarks it first sought in 1989 -- 12
    years after Presley died at his Graceland mansion in Memphis, Tenn. 

    Judge Hugh Laddie sided Tuesday with Shaw, who predicted his foes would
    be all shook up by the ruling. 

    Jack Soden, chief executive officer of Elvis Presley Enterprises, said:
    "This case is about a fragrance category and frankly, it stinks."

    Elvis Presley Enterprises added in a statement: "We regret what we
    believe to be an unfortunate and erroneous decision by the English High
    Court of Justice." 

    The judge said that even though the estate cashes in on the King's
    fame, it does not own "in any meaningful sense the words Elvis or Elvis
    Presley." 

    "Even if Elvis Presley was still alive, he would not be entitled to
    stop a fan from naming his son, his dog or goldfish, his car or his
    house 'Elvis' or 'Elvis Presley,' simply by reason of the fact that it
    was the name given to him at birth by his parents," the judge wrote. 

    A lawyer for Elvis Presley Enterprises, Peter Prescott, had argued
    earlier this month that fans buying Elvis memorabilia would want to
    know it came from an authorized distributor. 

    But Laddie said then that the average fan probably "did not give a
    toss" about who makes his Elvis coffee cup or toenail clippers. 

    Shaw hopes the ruling will make way for a bigger Elvis industry in
    Britain, including more shows by Elvis impersonators. 

    "It's really giving Elvis back to the people -- where he belongs," said
    Shaw. 

    He is also wondering whether to bring another case in the United
    States, where Presley Enterprises previously won a court order keeping
    him out of the U.S. market for Elvis goods. 

    "You cannot monopolize industries in America. Why can you monopolize
    the Elvis industry?" Shaw asked. "I really believe you should not be
    allowed to trademark the dead. Where do you stop? William
    Shakespeare?"
7.1176IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1573
    AP 18-Mar-1997 17:20 EST   REF5664

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Grape Juice May Help the Heart

    By DANIEL Q. HANEY

    AP Medical Editor

    ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Toasting the day with a glass of grape juice
    may be an especially good start for the heart. 

    A study found that 8 or 10 ounces a day of the purple variety has a
    potent effect on the blood cells called platelets, making them less
    likely to form clots that can lead to heart attacks. 

    In fact, purple grape juice might be even more potent than aspirin,
    which is widely recommended as a way of warding off heart attacks. 

    The researchers compared grape with orange and grapefruit juice and
    came to the conclusion that grape juice is better, at least for the
    heart. 

    The study was led by Dr. John D. Folts of the University of Wisconsin
    Medical School. His research has been funded for several years by the
    Nutricia Research Foundation of the Netherlands and the Oscar Rennebohm
    Foundation of Madison, Wis., and more recently by Welch Foods Inc., a
    grape industry cooperative that makes grape juice. 

    Folts noted that 10 companies make purple grape juice in the United
    States, and all probably work equally well. Purple juice appears to be
    more potent than white. 

    Heart attacks occur when blood clots stick to fatty deposits on the
    walls of the heart's arteries, choking off the supply of blood. Two
    decades ago, Folts was among the first to show -- first in animals and
    later in people -- that aspirin is good for the heart because it slows
    blood clotting. 

    Now, he is looking at the anti-clotting properties of a large group of
    natural substances called flavonoids that are found in many different
    kinds of foods. 

    Folts presented his latest findings Tuesday at a conference of the
    American College of Cardiology. 

    Experimenting on 17 volunteers -- himself included -- Folts found that
    both aspirin and red wine slow the activity of blood platelets by about
    45 percent, while purple grape juice dampens them by about 75 percent. 

    "His data are very convincing," said Dr. Arthur L. Klatsky of Kaiser
    Permanent Medical Center in Oakland, Calif., who studies the benefits
    of alcohol on the heart. However, he cautioned that anything that slows
    down platelets could also lead to unwanted bleeding. 

    Folts said his research is part of a larger effort to sort out the
    benefits of flavonoids. About 4,000 flavonoids are found in plants. 

    While grapefruit and orange juice also contain plenty of flavonoids,
    they are different from the ones in purple grape juice. 

    Folts found that when people drink purple grape juice once a day, the
    benefits linger. In one experiment, people drank the juice for a week.
    Even after they had stopped for two days, their platelets were still
    sluggish. 

    "It appears to be around-the-clock protection," Folts said. 

    Folts recommended including grape juice in a healthy diet, which should
    include five to seven servings a day of vegetables, fruits and juices.
    However, he said people should not stop taking aspirin or other heart
    medications just because they are drinking grape juice. 
7.1177IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:15103
    AP 17-Mar-1997 14:33 EST   REF5125

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Powerful Clot Blocker Studied

    By DANIEL Q. HANEY

    AP Medical Editor

    ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- A powerful new clot-preventing medicine appears
    to cut the risk of heart attack and death almost in half in people
    hospitalized with severe chest pain, a medical emergency that afflicts
    more than 1 million Americans annually. 

    The drug is one of a new class of medicines that are likely to
    revolutionize the treatment of unstable angina, an ominous attack of
    chest pain that is the leading reason for admitting people to coronary
    care units. 

    The medicine is a sort of super aspirin that works by stopping the
    formation of blood clots. These clots can trigger heart attacks by
    choking off the supply of blood to the heart muscle. 

    Currently, aspirin and a blood thinner called heparin are the mainstays
    of treatment for unstable angina. The new medicine proved to be
    powerfully effective when used in addition to these. 

    Doctors say the new therapy may turn out to be even more important than
    clot-dissolving drugs, an entirely different group of medicines that
    have transformed the treatment of heart attacks over the past decade. 

    "These are landmark studies that represent a scientific breakthrough,"
    said Dr. Harvey D. White of Green Lane Hospital in Auckland, New
    Zealand. 

    White said the drug will save the lives of 13 of every 1,000 unstable
    angina patients treated. By comparison, TPA, the leading
    clot-dissolver, saves 10 of every 1,000 heart attack patients treated. 

    White directed one of two large studies on the drug, called Aggrastat,
    that were released Monday at a meeting of the American College of
    Cardiology. 

    Dr. Rick Sax, who developed the drug at Merck & Co., estimated that if
    all the 1.2 million unstable angina patients hospitalized in the United
    States each year received Aggrastat, it would prevent between 5,000 and
    10,000 deaths and 30,000 to 40,000 heart attacks. 

    Aggrastat is still considered experimental. Merck plans to ask the Food
    and Drug Administration later this year for permission to put it on the
    market. 

    The medicine is available only as an injection for use in the hospital,
    but at least 19 new versions are being developed in pill form for
    long-term use in people with bad hearts. 

    A similar drug, Centocor's ReoPro, is already available but has been
    tested only for use during angioplasty, the technique used to reopen
    clogged blood vessels. 

    Aggrastat's success is likely to trigger an avalanche of similar
    medicines to capture a huge potential market. 

    The approach "really opens up the treatment of unstable angina," said
    Dr. Eugene Braunwald of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who was
    not involved in the studies. "It's a real advance. I'm encouraged." 

    Typically, unstable angina occurs when a fatty buildup on an artery
    wall breaks open during some form of stress. Blood cells called
    platelets congregate in this wound and clump together. In the narrow
    confines of an artery, this clot can be disastrous, for it may block
    blood flow entirely. 

    The platelets are hooked together by a protein called fibrinogen, which
    latches onto spots on the cells called glycoprotein IIb-IIIa receptors.
    Aggrastat -- or tirofiban -- is one of a class of medicines called
    glycoprotein IIb-IIIa blockers. As the name implies, the medicine keeps
    fibrinogen from linking up platelets to form clots. 

    Actually, 90 different biochemical triggers can start the cascade of
    steps that lead to clots. Aspirin blocks one of these steps. Aggrastat
    blocks all of them. 

    In one of the new studies, 1,615 patients with unstable angina were
    randomly assigned to get aspirin plus heparin or aspirin plus
    Aggrastat. One month later, 3.6 percent of the heparin patients had
    died, compared with 2.3 percent of the Aggrastat patients -- a 39
    percent reduction in death. 

    The other study was conducted on 1,570 even more severely afflicted
    patients, including some with mild heart attacks called non-Q-wave
    infarctions. In this study, all patients got both heparin and aspirin,
    and half took Aggrastat as well. 

    Aggrastat reduced the risk of heart attacks in the following week by 47
    percent: Seven percent of those getting heparin and aspirin alone got
    heart attacks, compared with 3.9 percent of those who got Aggrastat in
    addition. Heart attacks and deaths combined dropped 44 percent. 

    "This is a powerful approach. We have shown that it is clearly
    effective," said Dr. Pierre Theroux of the Montreal Heart Institute,
    one of the researchers. 
7.1178IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1588
    RTos 19-Mar-97 05:33    

    Israel Deflects Criticism, Braces for Violence

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    JERUSALEM (Reuter) - Israel rejected international criticism and said
    it was preparing for Palestinian violence after starting construction
    of a new settlement in Arab East Jerusalem. 

    The United States, Israel's closest ally, said bulldozers that tore up
    a hillside on Tuesday where 6,500 homes will be built for Jews, could
    crush the peace. Officials in Washington urged the two sides to resume
    talks. 

    Israeli troops remained on high alert after a brief confrontation with
    Palestinians near the construction site where work was expected to
    resume Wednesday. 

    "I recommend to all parties concerned to stop this hyperbole...I'm sure
    the peace process will continue," said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu whose cabinet approved the construction despite warnings from
    Palestinians and Israeli security officials that it could trigger
    widespread unrest. 

    Palestinian President Yasser Arafat consulted top aides late on Tuesday
    on the PLO's response to the project, which tightens Israel's grip on
    Jerusalem and strengthens its hand at talks on the final status of the
    city 

    "It is a black day for the peace process," said Palestinian negotiator
    Saeb Erekat. "I really wonder if we have a peace process anymore," he
    told Reuters. 

    Arafat has spurned Netanyahu's appeals to meet him, drawing Israeli
    accusations the Palestinian leader was trying to stoke already high
    tensions. 

    Netanyahu said Arafat had given Islamic militants who killed 59 people
    in suicide attacks against Israel last year the green light to resume
    the bombings. 

    "I think that the Israelis understand the difficulties that we see with
    their going forward," U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said
    after construction at Jabel Abu Gneim was launched. 

    State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns dismissed claims that the
    Palestinian leadership had sanctioned fresh guerrilla attacks. 

    "We're in a very difficult period in the peace negotiations. It's a
    period that's quite troubled, with animosity and distrust on both
    sides," he told reporters. 

    "We have not seen any evidence that Chairman Arafat has given the green
    light to anybody to incite violence in Jerusalem or the West Bank or
    the Gaza Strip. On the contrary we have recent assurances from Chairman
    Arafat that he stands against violence," Burns said. 

    His remarks were the latest U.S. jab at Israel since the settlement
    crisis erupted earlier this month. On Saturday Washington attended a
    conference convened by Arafat in Gaza to discuss the crisis despite
    Israeli objections. 

    The bulldozing also drew criticism from Britain, France, the United
    Nations and the Arab world. 

    About 50 Palestinian youths hurled stones from Um Tuba village at the
    edge of the construction site, a pine-covered hill known as Har Homa in
    Hebrew, between Jerusalem and Bethlehem. They burned tyres and blocked
    a road. 

    Police kept back and no injuries were reported. It was a foretaste of
    the unrest that both Israeli and Palestinian security sources say could
    break out. Sixty-one Palestinians and 15 Israeli soldiers were killed
    in Jerusalem-related clashes last September. 

    Faisal al-Husseini, the senior PLO official in Jerusalem, said at a
    protest tent-camp opposite the bulldozers that Palestinians' only
    option now was "to go down to the streets." 

    "I believe there will be an explosion if we don't solve this problem,"
    he said. 

    The housing will complete a ring of concrete around the half of
    Jerusalem that Israel occupied along with the rest of the West Bank and
    Gaza Strip in 1967. Israel views all of the city as its capital.
    Palestinians want East Jerusalem for the capital of a future
    Palestinian state. 
7.1179IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:15122
    RTw  19-Mar-97 05:24    

    FEATURE-Quirky Aussie film makers find recipe for ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE-Quirky Aussie film makers find recipe for success  By Marie
    McInerney 

    ADELAIDE, Australia, March 19 (Reuter) - A talking pig, a hero pianist
    who groans while he plays or transvestites tramping through the outback
    on a bus: Australian movie-makers have never been one for
    Hollywood-style formula features. 

    But they must be doing something right -- and something Hollywood likes
    -- if the success of the Oscar-nominated "Shine" is anything to go by. 

    A strong individual style and firm government support are the key to
    the success of an industry which has seen top overseas agents,
    distributors and stars drawn Down Under for ideas, locations and
    talent. 

    The industry is riding a wave of creative and commercial success which
    has seen stars like Marlon Brando and William Hurt on set in Australia
    and plans by Fox Filmed Entertainment for a studio in Sydney to
    generate A$85 million (US$67 million) in annual production. 

    And Australian movies will again be under the spotlight at next week's
    Academy Awards where "Shine," inspired by the remarkable comeback from
    a mental breakdown of pianist David Helfgott, is nominated for seven
    Oscars including best film. 

    Shine, made by Adelaide director Scott Hicks, is the third Australian
    film to feature strongly in recent Oscar nights, after the classic
    "Babe" (also with seven nominations) in 1995 and Australian/New Zealand
    production "The Piano" (eight nominations) in 1993. 

    Jan Chapman, producer of "The Piano" and one of the country's
    best-known film-makers, says a highlight this year is the number of
    independent films, including top nominee The English Patient,
    dominating Hollywood's night of nights. 

    "There is obviously an interest in idiosyncratic films that are true to
    what they are trying to say, that are not made to a formula, that are
    not part of that big studio system," she said. 

    "I think that really is a trend and of course that suits Australia
    perfectly because that is what we do," she said. 

    FROM MAX TO PRISCILLA 

    Australia has had its share of hit films in the last few decades, from
    the down-to-earth magic of "Crocodile Dundee," which grossed US$175
    million in the United States, to the futuristic "Mad Max" trilogy, and
    the haunting "Picnic at Hanging Rock." 

    But industry figures see an emerging depth, illustrated not only by the
    Oscar nominees but a stream of critically acclaimed commercial
    successes like "Muriel's Wedding," "The Adventures of Priscilla - Queen
    of the Desert" and "Strictly Ballroom." 

    As well, established Australian directors like Peter Weir and Bruce
    Beresford are being joined in Hollywood by a new group of Australian
    filmmakers, including Jane Campion ("The Piano," "Portrait of a Lady"),
    Gillian Armstrong ("Little Women") and Baz Luhrman ("Romeo and
    Juliet"). 

    Many in the industry, including Chapman and Australian Film Commission
    chairman Sue Milliken, attribute Australia's recent success to
    effective government investment support through the Film Financing
    Commission (FFC). 

    The FFC, they say, has managed to nurture both originality and
    commercial potential, allowing first-time feature directors such as
    Shine's Hicks a chance, but insisting on interest from distributors
    before committing investment funds. 

    Milliken says that as a result the Australian industry is very
    efficient, honest and enthusiastic. 

    "A lot of the time Australians imitate the rest of the world and if we
    do not do it like the Americans or the British, we do not think it is
    good enough," she said. 

    "In this case we have actually been ourselves, we have invented a way
    of making films here which really works for us and works for people who
    come here from outside to make films." 

    HOLLYWOOD DOWN UNDER 

    Industry statistics show the total production value of feature film and
    independent television drama in Australia in 1995/96 was A$478 million,
    up A$144 million on the previous year with a 45-percent rise in
    independent Australian productions. 

    Overseas investors pumped A$56 million into eight Australian
    productions and A$182 million into 14 foreign productions, including
    Jackie Chan's "First Strike." 

    David Pratt, from the government-funded Melbourne Film Office, said the
    success of films like Shine has made it easier for him to promote
    Australia as a film-making destination. 

    It is now not just about Australia's great locations, its vast
    coastline and remote outback providing new backdrops for U.S.
    directors, but about a pool of talent from development through to
    post-production. 

    It is also, he says, a question of cost -- exchange rates and efficent
    crews provide a 30-percent saving compared to films made in the United
    States. 

    Whatever its success at next week's Oscars, the industry believes
    Australia's star will continue to shine, although for Chapman the
    challenge now is to move up a level. 

    Productions with bigger ambitions and bigger budgets, like "Portrait of
    a Lady," will need overseas funding. 

    "It will be interesting to see whether the American companies are
    prepared to really back us -- and not just buy our films when they are
    finished," Chapman said. 
7.1180IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:1576
    RTw  19-Mar-97 03:27    

    Britain's Major pins poll hopes on jobless fall

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Gerrard Raven 

    LONDON, March 19 (Reuter) - Britain's ruling Conservatives, battling to
    stay in power in a May 1 general election, were set on Wednesday to
    greet a fall in unemployment as evidence their economic policies were
    working. 

    The Daily Mirror newspaper said it had received a leaked copy of
    official jobless figures showing a larger than expected drop of 68,200
    in February. 

    Economists had predicted the figures, which were not due to be
    announced until 9.30 a.m. (0930 GMT), would show a fall of some 40,000. 

    If the Mirror report is correct, it would put the seasonally adjusted
    unemployment total at 1,746,300, or 6.2 percent -- well below the level
    in many European countries. 

    The figures would be a welcome boost for Prime Minister John Major, who
    launched his re-election campaign on Monday. 

    The Conservatives, racked by divisions over Europe and sleaze
    allegations, and suffering from a "time for a change" feeling among
    many Britons after 18 years in power, are some 25 points behind the
    opposition Labour Party in opinion polls. 

    Major has predicted that as polling day nears, a buoyant economy would
    influence voters Britons to come back to his party as it seeks an
    unprecedented fifth consecutive term. 

    "We intend to continue to put people back to work as we have done in
    spectacular fashion in the last 18 months," Major said on Tuesday in
    what was probably his penultimate appearance in parliament before the
    election. 

    The Conservatives say Labour, by interfering in the labour market by
    introducing a minimum wage and accepting European Union workplace
    rules, would reverse the falling jobless trend. 

    Labour denies the charge, saying it would raise billions of pounds
    (dollars) to mount a massive blitz on dole queues by imposing a
    "windfall tax" on the excess profits of power, water, gas, rail and
    telecommunications companies privatised by the Conservatives. 

    In a speech to Conservatives on Tuesday, William Waldegrave, finance
    minister Kenneth Clarke's deputy, predicted a Labour government would
    bring Britain "higher taxes, higher spending and destruction of jobs." 

    Major is expected to be on his election "battle bus" when the jobless
    figures are announced, but his deputy Michael Heseltine has scheduled a
    news conference. 

    The Conservatives felt power drifting away from them on Tuesday when
    they went into negotiations with Labour on how legislation could pass
    through parliament before it breaks up on Friday for Britain's longest
    election campaign since 1918. 

    They were forced to make major concessions on bills designed to give
    parents of bright children a greater choice of schools and to give
    judges less discretion over the sentences they impose on convicted
    criminals. 

    Some of the ruling party's traditional newspaper allies are deserting
    it. 

    The top-selling Sun tabloid announced on Tuesday it now wanted to see
    Labour leader Tony Blair, a moderate who has shed the party's
    traditional socialist image, running the country. 

    REUTER
7.1181IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Wed Mar 19 1997 10:16143
    RTw  19-Mar-97 03:26    

    FEATURE - Mad cow crisis stalks British government

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, March 19 (Reuter) - The disease first surfaced in 1985, causing
    a black-and-white dairy cow to stagger, head-butt other cattle and shy
    away from farmhands. 

    Little did country veterinary surgeon Colin Whitaker suspect that the
    lone sick cow heralded an epidemic that would threaten Britain's beef
    industry, cause London's worst row with its European Union partners and
    kill young people. 

    Twelve years on, the government's handling of bovine spongiform
    encephalopathy, popularly known as mad cow disease, has helped to
    destroy the British electorate's faith in the ruling Conservatives. 

    "BSE is a symbol of this government -- incompetent, incapable and can
    never be trusted," says Tony Blair, leader of the main opposition
    Labour Party. Polls predict Labout will storm to a significant victory
    over the Conservatives in a general election set for May 1. 

    The disease, which causes characteristic sponge-like holes in the cows'
    brains, was found to be a close relative of scrapie, known to have
    killed sheep for 200 years. 

    Since it was identified, around 165,000 cattle have died of it in
    Britain and a further million have been culled as a preventative
    measure, according to figures up to January of this year. 

    Immediate worries arose over whether people could catch it from eating
    beef. Newspapers began to report on every case of a rare but inevitably
    deadly brain-wasting illness known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
    -- the human version of BSE. 

    GOVERNMENT SWORE PEOPLE NOT IN DANGER 

    Brushing aside apocalyptic warnings from "dissident" scientists like
    microbiologists Richard Lacey and Stephen Dealler, who said millions of
    meat-eaters could have been infected, the government insisted people
    were not at risk. 

    "We don't believe there are implications for humans at this time,"
    Chief Veterinary Officer Keith Meldrum said in 1988. 

    In May 1990 then-agriculture minister John Gummer cajoled his
    four-year-old daughter into eating a hamburger for the television
    cameras to demonstrate his faith in British beef. 

    After deciding that BSE came from feeding cattle the rendered remains
    of sheep infected with scrapie, the government banned the feed. Later
    it forbade the use of body parts known to harbour the rogue prion
    proteins believed to cause the disease, including the brain, spinal
    cord and lymph glands. 

    Nonetheless there were reports of banned feed still being used and of
    farmers, complaining they were not being compensated sufficiently,
    knowingly selling sick cows on the market. 

    The agriculture ministry admitted that surprise inspections showed
    slaughterhouses did not always comply with regulations. Infected parts
    could still be getting into burgers or pies. 

    Nevertheless, as late as November 1995 Chief Medical Officer Kenneth
    Calman, said: "There is currently no evidence that BSE can be
    transmitted to humans or that eating beef causes CJD." 

    But on March 20, 1996, researchers announced that 10 cases of a new
    kind of CJD had been identified and the only cause they could think of
    was the consumption of infected beef. The news was given to parliament
    by Health Minister Stephen Dorrell. 

    Panic ensued. Shoppers shunned the beef counters and the European Union
    immediately slapped a global ban on exports of British beef and beef
    products, a ban that still stands. 

    In October scientists found strong similarities between the new variant
    of CJD and BSE on the molecular level. 

    This added to evidence that people could get CJD from infected beef.
    But scientists said it would be decades before the full extent of any
    human epidemic would be known because the incubation period could last
    for up to 30 years. 

    The 14 known victims as of January, 1997, could be either the beginning
    or represent the full extent of the threat. 

    ACCUSATIONS OF INCOMPETENCE, COVER-UP 

    Scientists, veterinarians and consumer groups accuse the British
    government of at least incompetence and at worst a cynical cover-up
    aimed at protecting the valuable beef industry. 

    "It was something we'd been warning about," said Ian Tokelove, a
    spokesman for the Food Commission, an independent consumer group. "The
    scientific research was there -- it was just being ignored by the
    government at the time." 

    Tokelove said people no longer trusted the government to make sure food
    was safe. "Time after time ministers have said there's nothing to worry
    about, but people believe there is." 

    Dr Hugh Fraser, who worked at the Institute for Animal Health from 1986
    to 1995, told BBC radio that he and colleagues had been ordered to stay
    quiet about BSE. "We were told not to speak to the media...at all," he
    said. 

    Writing in the Lancet medical journal earlier this month, Ray Bradley,
    BSE Coordinator at the Agriculture Ministry's Central Veterinary
    Laboratory, and Gerald Collee, a microbiologist at the University of
    Edinburgh, were scathing. 

    "Delayed opportunities for tighter control together with slippage and
    manifestly careless, and, from time to time, dishonest practices have
    been responsible for the occurrence of almost 30,000 born-after-the-ban
    cases to date," they said. 

    "The State Veterinary Service calculations in July 1994 showed that
    only about half the theoretical tonnage of SBO (banned offal) was
    properly separated and rendered at the time." 

    They said controls on exports of beef products were too slow and it
    took too long to figure out how much food was infective. 

    The opposition Labour Party has had a field day with such criticism.
    Deputy leader John Prescott called it a "tale of such incompetence,
    stupidity and waste that it stands as a fitting memorial to (Prime
    Minister) John Major's government." 

    "Rightly has it been said that BSE also stands for Blame Somebody
    Else," Labour's Blair told Major last month. 

    "You would do a lot more credit to your office if, just for once, when
    your government makes mistakes, you would accept responsibility for it.
    That you won't is one part of the reason why this fiasco will stand as
    a symbol of incompetence in the most incompetent government in living
    memory," he added.

    REUTER
7.1182IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:51126
    AP 20-Mar-1997 0:11 EST   REF5879

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, March 19, 1997
   
    SUMMIT 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton flew out of Washington tonight on
    the eve of the U.S.-Russia summit. There are many strained words, in
    the meantime, out of both the White House and the Kremlin. Diplomatic
    relations are said to be at a low point after beginning to decline in
    late 1994 or early 1995. The biggest conflict is Moscow's objection to
    the U.S.-promoted expansion of NATO eastward toward Russia's borders.
    But tensions and uncertainty also linger about arms control, Boris
    Yeltsin's health, the path of economic reform and a months-long vacuum
    in the top ranks in the Russian government. No one is predicting
    breakthroughs in Helsinki, where the summit is to take place. 
   
    AMERICAN AIRLINES 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A big step has been reported in negotiations between
    American Airlines and its pilots. Both sides say an "agreement in
    principle" has been reached. But the pilots' union says negotiators
    still have to work out the details. The contract dispute erupted last
    month and threatened to shut down a major portion of the nation's air
    travel. Capt. Michael Cronin of the pilot union said a proposal would
    be presented to the pilots union board Friday. 
   
    LIGGETT-TOBACCO 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Under a settlement with all 22 states suing tobacco
    companies, Liggett Group Inc. will publicly acknowledge that cigarettes
    are addictive and cause cancer, broadcast reports said today. Liggett
    is expected to cooperate fully in efforts against other tobacco
    companies, ABC and NBC News reported. The smallest of the major U.S.
    tobacco companies, Liggett broke with the industry in March 1996 when
    it settled with five states seeking to recover the costs of treating
    sick smokers. 
   
    CIA DIRECTOR 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton has a new pick for CIA director.
    The president has nominated acting agency head George Tenet. The
    nomination comes two days after nominee Anthony Lake bowed out of
    Senate confirmation hearings amid Republican pressure saying,
    "Washington has gone haywire." Tenet is regarded as a safe alternative,
    due in part because he began his career on the staff of a GOP lawmaker.
   
    FEC-FUNDS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Election Commission reports Republicans
    and Democrats raised a total of $900 million for the 1995-96 election
    cycle. The GOP led $554.7 million to $345.5 million, helping it keep
    control of both houses of Congress. Together the parties raised $262.1
    million in unregulated soft money from corporations, unions and wealthy
    patrons -- three times the 1992 total.
   
    ABORTION BILL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congressional Republicans have decided to present
    the House with a bill, identical to the one vetoed last year, that
    would ban a late abortion procedure. The procedure, which a prominent
    abortion rights activist recently said happens less than often
    intimated, is more complicated than first-trimester abortions. The
    House voted to override Clinton's veto of the bill last year, but the
    Senate fell short. 
   
    COURT-INTERNET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court heard arguments today about free
    speech on the Internet. The court is being asked to uphold a law making
    it a crime to put indecent words or pictures online where children can
    find them. A decision by the high court is expected by July. Several
    Justices expressed doubts about the law. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
    suggested that the Internet could be viewed as a public place where
    speech has strong First Amendment protection. 
   
    TIME-COMPUSERVE 

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Time magazine has sued CompuServe, claiming the
    online programmer breached a two-year contract to carry Time's news
    service. The lawsuit seeks at least $3.5 million in damages and asks
    U.S. District Court to require CompuServe to continue to provide its
    customers with Time's online product, Time said. CompuServe said it
    chose to exercise an option to exit at the midpoint of the contract and
    notified Time. 
   
    YAHOO!-ENDOWMENT 

    SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) -- Jerry Yang and David Filo's business cards
    gleefully describe each as "chief Yahoo." But the young entrepreneurs
    are hardly uncivilized. They've given $2 million to endow a chair at
    Stanford University, where as students they developed the idea for the
    Internet directory that made them rich. 
   
    JFK-TEXT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A roll of Associated Press wire copy detailing news
    developments the day of President Kennedy's assassination was auctioned
    today for $10,000. Judi Kaller, who bought the dispatches, says the
    text will go on display in her antiquities shop in the Macy's store in
    Herald Square in Manhattan. The AP has an original copy of the same
    text. 
   
    WALL STREET 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Dow closed at 6,877.68, down 18.88. The Nasdaq
    composite index fell 20.15 to 1,249.19 as technology shares took a
    beating. Japanese financial markets are closed Thursday. 
   
    HAMILTON-CANCER 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Figure skater Scott Hamilton, a four-time world
    champion and the 1984 Olympic gold medalist, has been diagnosed with
    testicular cancer, and will start chemotherapy within a week. Hamilton,
    38, performed Sunday despite suffering from severe stomach pain
    recently. 
   
    FLYERS-MAPLE LEAFS 

    TORONTO (AP) -- Eric Lindros scored four goals and added two assists
    tonight to power the Philadelphia Flyers to a 6-3 NHL victory over the
    Toronto Maple Leafs. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by LISA M. COLLINS 
7.1183IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:51118
    RTw  19-Mar-97 22:09    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    HELSINKI - The United States and Russia prepared for their chilliest
    summit since the end of the Cold War, with hopes fading of a
    breakthrough in the row over NATO enlargement as both sides stuck to a
    tough line. A senior Russian official said Moscow would not drop its
    bitter opposition to NATO's enlargement plans, after U.S. Secretary of
    State Madeleine Albright vowed the alliance would not be deterred from
    taking in former Soviet bloc states. Russian President Boris Yeltsin
    and U.S. President Bill Clinton meet in the Finnish capital on Thursday
    and Friday. NATO's plans to enlarge eastwards tops the agenda. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli bulldozers carving into a hill in Arab East
    Jerusalem to build new homes for Jews have stoked Palestinian emotions
    to near boiling point where any spark could ignite an explosion,
    Palestinians said. Israel's police chief said the construction had
    harmed security cooperation with the PLO and raised the likelihood of
    guerrilla attacks. 

    BEIT SAHOUR, West Bank - Palestinians staged a mock crucifixion to
    protest against the Israeli construction work, witnesses said. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Police moved to secure Tirana airport to reopen Albania's main
    gateway to the outside world but the European Union (EU) said the
    country remained fraught with disorder. In Bonn, German Interior
    Minister Manfred Kanther ordered border guards to step up security on
    Germany's borders to prevent an influx of refugees from Albania. Italy
    decided to impose emergency measures to cope with a flood of Albanian
    refugees. Italian Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini said the exodus, which
    has brought more than 10,000 Albanians to Italy since March 13, posed a
    threat to all of Europe. 

    - - - - 

    NICE, France - Zaire President Mobutu Sese Seko, facing a
    fast-spreading revolt at home, left a hospital in Monaco after
    undergoing cancer treatment, witnesses said. His press service said he
    planned to return to Kinshasa by the end of the week to try to quell
    the rebellion in eastern Zaire. 

    NAIROBI - African leaders repeated a call for an immediate ceasefire in
    Zaire to pave way for negotiations. 

    BRAZZAVILLE - Relatives of Mobutu and other government leaders have
    joined a growing exodus from Kinshasa in the face of rebel advances in
    the east, Congo police say. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - A team of U.S. military specialists is en route to Zaire
    to study airfields, roads and communications in case a decision is made
    to evacuate Americans, the Pentagon said. 

    - - - - 

    ARUSHA, Tanzania - A prosecution witness testifying against a Hutu
    militia leader accused of genocide in the 1994 slaughter of Tutsis in
    Rwanda told the U.N. court he did not find any traces of bones in a
    school compound where a massacre allegedly took place. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Nine Palestinian inmates and four Israeli soldiers were
    injured in a riot in an army prison. An army spokesman said prisoners
    set tents ablaze while rioting over the extension of detention of
    Palestinians without trial. 

    - - - - 

    BRUSSELS - Britain swallowed a European Union deal under which beef
    sold in shops will from January 2000 have to carry a label showing
    where it comes from, although this could make exports difficult. 

    - - - - 

    MEXICO CITY - Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo denied charges by a
    leading opposition politician that he owed his own government several
    years of overdue taxes on a property in the resort city of Acapulco. 

    - - - - 

    BERLIN - The World Health Organisation (WHO) said eastern Europe had
    become one of the world's worst breeding grounds for tuberculosis and
    chastised the region for its "chaotic" treatment programmes. 

    - - - - 

    RIO DE JANEIRO - Governments spend an estimated $700 billion to $900
    billion a year on subsidies that do more harm than good to the economy
    and the environment, a study by the Dutch Institute for Research on
    Public Expenditure said. The study, released at the end of the Rio +5
    environment conference, concluded that many subsidies in agriculture,
    water, energy and road transportation no longer serve their original
    purposes, but harm the environment and serve the rich rather than the
    poor. 

    - - - - 

    CAPE TOWN - South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu said on
    Wednesday his prostate cancer appeared to have spread and he would go
    to the United States for radiation therapy. 

    - - - - 

    DUBLIN - The Irish government formally proposed President Mary Robinson
    for the post of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. The
    president said last week she was not standing for another eight-year
    term. 

    REUTER 
7.1184IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5140
    AP 20-Mar-1997 0:27 EST   REF5992

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Navy Analyst Faces Spy Charge

    ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- A former government computer analyst accused
    last year of passing classified documents to South Korea was indicted
    Wednesday on stiffer espionage charges. 

    A federal grand jury said Robert C. Kim, a civilian employee with the
    Office of Naval Intelligence, gave South Korea seven documents related
    to national defense. Six of the documents were classified "secret" and
    one was "confidential," according to the indictment. 

    If convicted, Kim, 57, of Sterling, faces life in prison and a $250,000
    fine. The original charge of passing classified documents, brought
    against Kim when he was arrested Sept. 24, carried up to 10 years in
    prison. 

    Kim, a native of South Korea who became a U.S. citizen in 1974,
    allegedly passed information to South Korean Navy Capt. Baek Dong-Il,
    an attache at the Korean Embassy. Shortly after Kim's arrest, the South
    Korean government recalled Baek to Seoul. 

    Investigators have said that over a nine-month period, Kim gave the
    South Koreans military information about China and North Korea and
    information about a computer sale to South Korea. 

    Investigators said they have no evidence that Kim accepted money from
    South Korean officials. 

    According to the indictment, Kim had access to classified material as
    the technical management officer for a joint Navy-Coast Guard computer
    system that enabled various U.S. agencies to share maritime
    information. 

    Kim's attorney, Peter Ginsberg, declined to comment. 

    Kim's arraignment is scheduled for March 31. 
7.1185IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5145
    AP 20-Mar-1997 0:25 EST   REF5990

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: Cellular Code Breached

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A team of computer security experts has cracked the
    electronic code meant to protect the privacy of calls made with new
    digital cellular telephones, The New York Times reports Thursday. 

    The experts planned to announce the breach Thursday as a public warning
    that the new phones may be no more secure from eavesdropping than
    analog cellular phones in use the last 15 years, the Times said. 

    Independent security experts now say the code is so easy to crack that
    anyone with sufficient technical skills could make and sell a
    monitoring device as easy to use as a police scanner. 

    Technical details of the security system were supposed to be a closely
    guarded secret, known only to industry engineers. But the researchers
    performed their work based on documents that were leaked from within
    the communications industry and disseminated over the Internet late
    last year. 

    "The industry design process is at fault," said David Wagner, a
    researcher at the University of California at Berkeley and a member of
    the team that broke the code. "We can use this as a lesson, and save
    ourselves vulnerabilities in the future." 

    The Times said other members of the team were Bruce Schneier and John
    Kelsey of Counterpane Systems, a Minneapolis consulting firm. Schneier
    is the author of a standard textbook on cryptography. 

    Fears about the digital code's effectiveness were raised five years ago
    when the communications industry agreed under government pressure to
    adopt a watered-down privacy technology. Several telecommunications
    industry officials told the Times that the pressure came from the
    National Security Agency, which feared that criminals or terrorists
    might benefit from stronger encryption technology. 

    Chris Carroll, an engineer at GTE Laboratories and chairman of the
    industry committee that oversees privacy standards for cellular phones,
    told the Times that work is being done to fix the problem. 

    "We're already in the process of correcting this flaw," Carroll said. 
7.1186IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5166
    AP 20-Mar-1997 0:20 EST   REF5987

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: Liggett Admits Dangers

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Liggett Group Inc. will publicly acknowledge that
    cigarettes are addictive and cause cancer under a settlement with all
    22 states suing tobacco companies, broadcast reports said Wednesday. 

    Liggett also is expected to cooperate fully with the states in efforts
    against other tobacco companies, ABC and NBC News reported. 

    Liggett, the smallest of the major U.S. tobacco companies, will turn
    over "a treasure trove" of incriminating new documents under the
    settlement, which could be announced as early as Thursday, NBC
    reported. 

    Liggett broke with the industry in March 1996 when it settled with five
    states seeking to recover the public health-care costs of treating sick
    smokers. Liggett also settled a federal class-action lawsuit filed by
    smokers. 

    Liggett, the Durham, N.C.-based maker of Chesterfield, Lark and L&M
    cigarettes, has agreed to pay $25 million up front, plus 25 percent of
    its pre-tax profits over the next 25 years, NBC said. 

    ABC's "World News Tonight" and The Wall Street Journal reported in
    January that the documents to be turned over include Liggett's lawyers'
    notes from about 30 years of meetings with attorneys from other tobacco
    companies. 

    Liggett will add a prominent warning to each pack stating that smoking
    is addictive, and acknowledge that smoking causes health problems,
    including lung cancer. It also will agree to government advertising,
    marketing and sales restrictions, the networks reported. 

    Mississipi Attorney General Mike Moore, in Washington for a meeting of
    the 50 state attorneys general, said "we're real close" to a
    settlement. 

    "If we do a deal with Liggett, the worth is not money. The worth would
    be in documentary evidence and witnesses," he told The Arizona Republic
    in a telephone interview on Wednesday. 

    But the other tobacco companies are sure to fight release of documents
    from the Committee of Counsel -- the lawyers working for the tobacco
    companies. "It would be improper," said Paul Eckstein, a Phoenix
    attorney representing Brown and Williamson. 

    R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. spokeswoman Peggy Carter said Wednesday night
    from Winston-Salem, N.C., that the company was not in a position to
    comment, calling the reports at the moment only "speculation and
    rumor." 

    Liggett is owned by the Brooke Group Inc. A spokesman for Brooke, based
    in Miami, declined comment on the reports. 

    The states have sued the industry to recoup millions of dollars spent
    to treat smoking-related health problems. About 46 million Americans
    smoke and the government says smoking kills 400,000 a year. 

    Smoking is the major cause of lung cancer and has been linked to
    cancers of the pancreas, stomach, breast, ovary and throat. It also
    causes emphysema, and is a major contributor to cardiovascular disease,
    impotence, stroke, heart attack and even dental disease. 
7.1187IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5140
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:49 EST   REF5864

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Group Claims UC Violates Rights

    SACRAMENTO (AP) -- Backers of affirmative action filed a federal civil
    rights complaint Wednesday, claiming that the University of
    California's "color-blind" admissions policy discriminates against
    minorities and women. 

    The complaint with the Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights
    claims that UC is violating equal educational opportunity requirements,
    making it ineligible for more than $1 billion in federal funds. 

    Since university regents adopted a policy of ignoring race and gender
    as factors in student admissions last July, enrollment of women and
    minorities in UC medical schools, engineering colleges, law and
    business schools have declined, said Joseph Jaramillo, attorney for the
    Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund. 

    "This is the resegregation of our public university system," Jaramillo
    said. 

    At UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law, for example, projected
    enrollment of racial and ethnic minorities other than Chinese, Japanese
    and Korean applicants will decline to about 4 percent in Fall 1997 from
    25 percent over the past several years, the complaint alleges. 

    At UC Berkeley's College of Engineering, such minority enrollment is
    projected to drop by 33 percent and the enrollment of women by 25
    percent, according to the complaint. 

    The complaint was filed by MALDEF, the National Association for the
    Advancement of Colored People Legal Defense Fund, California Women's
    Law Center and Equal Rights Advocates. 

    It asks for an immediate investigation into the effects of the policy
    and a return to policies that permit consideration of applicants'
    ethnic and racial background. 
7.1188IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5135
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:42 EST   REF5862

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Senate OKs Victims' Rights Bill

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate passed and sent to President Clinton on
    Wednesday a bill giving victims of the Oklahoma City bombing and other
    federal crimes the right to both attend the criminal trial and testify
    at subsequent sentencing hearings. 

    The legislation, effectively overturning a trial judge's ruling in the
    Oklahoma City bombing, was passed on a voice vote in the Senate a day
    after the House passed it 418-9. 

    Clinton, who departed Wednesday night for Finland for a summit with
    Russian President Boris Yeltsin, planned to sign the bill, but it was
    not immediately clear when, White House spokeswoman Mary Ellen Glynn
    said Wednesday night. 

    "We received it late today, right before he left for Helsinki," Glynn
    said. "He does plan to sign it. If he didn't sign it before he left,
    he'll sign it when he gets back." 

    The bill would overturn a ruling by U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch,
    who is presiding over the trail of Oklahoma City bombing suspect
    Timothy McVeigh. The trial is scheduled to open March 31 in Denver. 

    Matsch ruled that victims who plan to make statements at sentencing
    about how the crime has affected them cannot attend other trial
    proceedings. He said just seeing the defendants in court could taint
    their testimony. A federal appeals court has upheld his decision. 

    Federal evidence rules allow judges to exclude fact witnesses from
    trial proceedings to keep them from changing their testimony. 
7.1189IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5150
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:21 EST   REF5860

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Charges Filed in Synagogue Bomb

    By RON WORD

    Associated Press Writer

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- An Orthodox Jew pleaded guilty Wednesday to
    federal charges that he planted a bomb at a synagogue before an
    appearance by former Israeli prime minister Shimon Peres. 

    Harry Shapiro, a gas-station attendant and former kosher butcher,
    admitted using an explosive to threaten a foreign official,
    internationally protected person and official guest of the U.S.
    government. 

    "I placed gun powder in a pipe," Shapiro said. "I placed it in a house
    of worship. I threatened a life of a human being with it. I called 911
    and issued a threat to keep Mr. Peres from speaking." 

    The plea means Shapiro, 31, will avoid an additional charge of using an
    explosive in commission of a crime, which carries 30 more years in
    prison and a $250,000 fine. Instead, Shapiro will face a 10-year prison
    term. 

    Shapiro never intended to detonate an explosive -- the pipe bomb was
    intentionally a dud, said his lawyer, Hank Coxe. 

    "It couldn't have exploded," Coxe said. "He told law enforcement where
    the damn thing was and they never looked where he told him to ... The
    intent was for it to be found." 

    About three hours before Peres' speech on Feb. 13, a caller had told
    the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office he was a member of American Friends
    of the Islamic Jihad and warned of two bombs at the Jacksonville Jewish
    Center. 

    A search failed to turn up any explosive devices. Children eventually
    found the apparent pipe bomb on Feb. 22. 

    Authorities say Shapiro also told a co-worker at the Shell station, as
    well as his rabbi, Avraham Kelman, of his plans to disrupt Peres'
    appearance, saying he didn't believe Peres had a right to speak in
    Jacksonville. 

    The complaint said Shapiro thought police would simply cancel the
    speech. 
7.1190IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5128
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:21 EST   REF5795

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Air Traffic Controller Faulted

    NEW YORK (AP) -- An air traffic controller underwent refresher training
    after he allowed two jets to fly within 500 feet of each other, the
    Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday. 

    The close call happened March 6, about 2,500 feet above La Guardia
    Airport, as a U.S. Airways Boeing B-737 was climbing en route to West
    Palm Beach, Fla., and a Delta Air Lines Boeing B-757 was arriving from
    Cincinnati. 

    The FAA classified it as "an operational error" and said it ordered the
    controller to undergo the training. 

    The controller allowed the U.S. Airways jet climb too quickly, wrongly
    assuming the plane would pass behind the arriving Delta jet, the FAA
    said. 

    The planes came as close as 500 feet vertically and 1 1/2 miles
    laterally, the agency said. Standard separation requirements are 1,000
    feet vertically and three miles laterally. 

    A collision warning sounded on the U.S. Airways jet, and the pilot
    changed altitude and flew on to Florida. 
7.1191IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5127
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:12 EST   REF5761

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Coast Guard Officer Accused

    MOBILE, Ala. (AP) -- A Coast Guard petty officer has been accused of
    raping two female crew members and assaulting two others on the
    Mobile-based Sweetgum cutter. 

    Petty Officer Darrel R. Stirewalt, 26, of Clemson, S.C., remains jailed
    in Pensacola, Fla., on charges of maltreatment of a subordinate, rape,
    sodomy, assault consummated by a battery and adultery. 

    Stirewalt, a health services technician second class, faces a court
    martial and possible life in prison if convicted. No date has been set
    for the court martial. 

    Two women complained to their commander on Jan. 21 that they had been
    assaulted and raped by Stirewalt from October 1995 until January, said
    Schoen. A third woman has accused Stirewalt of assault and a fourth has
    accused him of adultery. 

    The officer has been jailed since Jan. 26. 

    Since 1991, 21 Coast Guard members nationwide have been prosecuted for
    harassment, 17 for sexual assault and six for rape. 
7.1192IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5140
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:09 EST   REF5742

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Guard Who Foiled Robbery Slain

    ORANGE, Calif. (AP) -- A gunman who robbed the same bank three times
    returned Wednesday and fatally shot a security guard, who was hailed as
    a hero for wounding the bandit and possibly saving lives. 

    At least six shots were fired in all. The gunman was hospitalized in
    serious condition. No one else was hurt. 

    The gunman walked into the Eldorado Bank about 10:15 a.m., drew his
    weapon and ordered customers and employees to the ground, police Lt. Ed
    Tunstall said. The gunman's surveillance camera photo was posted on the
    bank door. 

    "I heard a woman's voice real panicky yelling, 'It's him! It's him!"'
    witness Cheryl Chute said. 

    At that point, the guard stood up and shot the gunman, who returned
    fire and killed the guard, Tunstall said. The name of the guard, a
    54-year-old former policeman on the job just three weeks, wasn't
    released. 

    "With each robbery the suspect has become more vocal, more brazen,"
    Tunstall said. "This time, he entered, almost immediately brandished a
    weapon, threatened to kill people and ordered them to the ground. 

    "Certainly the security guard is a hero. He could very well have
    prevented somebody else inside the bank being hurt or killed. We can
    look at this man as being a hero." 

    The gunman robbed the same bank three times before in the past 16
    months, investigators said. They wouldn't say how much money was taken.

    Drew Lovett, a friend of the dead guard, said that when they recently
    discussed the possibility of another robbery, "He said it's probably
    not likely he'll hit a fourth time." 
7.1193IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5165
    AP 19-Mar-1997 22:51 EST   REF5683

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    CBS Turns Over TWA 800 Fabric

    By RICHARD PYLE

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- CBS said Wednesday that it has turned over to
    investigators a piece of seat fabric that a free-lance writer claims
    holds proof that TWA Flight 800 was shot down by a Navy missile. 

    The FBI wanted the fabric back because they are investigating whether
    evidence from the crash has been stolen from the hangar in Calverton,
    L.I., where pieces of the plane are being reassembled. 

    James Sanders, an advocate of the friendly fire theory that government
    officials say has no basis in fact, said he gave CBS the fabric, which
    he claims to have gotten from someone "inside the investigation." 

    Sanders and his publisher criticized CBS for bowing to pressure from
    the FBI in relinquishing the cloth. 

    "They gave it back when the FBI came calling," Sanders said. 

    "Here was a news agency that he entrusted confidentiality to ... and
    they willy-nilly turned it over to the authorities," said Paul Dinas,
    president of Kensington Publishing Corp. 

    CBS News spokeswoman Sandy Genelius would not confirm that it was
    Sanders who gave the fabric to the network. She would only say that "a
    source" told CBS it came from the jetliner that exploded last July 17
    off Long Island. 

    "CBS did not know if, in fact, it was from Flight 800, and in view of
    the gravity of the investigation, the fact that 230 people died, and
    the families don't know why, we determined that we should turn it over
    to the investigating authorities," Genelius said. 

    She said she did not know if CBS had the cloth tested before its
    return. 

    Sanders claimed two weeks ago that material from a seat from the plane
    showed evidence of missile fuel, but investigators have said that tests
    on similar material from the plane show the chemical was glue. 

    Sanders, a retired police officer and free-lance author, said his book
    will spell out his contention that a Navy missile downed the plane and
    that the government is engaged in a massive cover-up. 

    The FBI and the National Transportation Safety Board say the plane may
    have been destroyed by a bomb, a missile or mechanical failure. Both
    agencies and the Pentagon deny any Navy involvement. 

    Federal authorities said earlier that Sanders could face a grand jury
    subpoena or criminal charges if it turned out evidence was stolen.

    On Wednesday, FBI spokesman Joseph Valiquette refused to comment on
    whether the cloth was returned, or whether such an action could
    forestall criminal procedures against anyone suspected of stealing
    evidence. 

    "The investigation is continuing," he said. 
7.1194IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:51101
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:11 EST   REF5747

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Riots Flare in Papua New Guinea

    By GEOFF SPENCER

    Associated Press Writer

    PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea (AP) -- Rioting and looting flared anew
    Thursday, putting the government under greater pressure to sever its
    ties to mercenaries it hired to crush an island rebellion. 

    Major roads were closed and truckloads of police armed with automatic
    rifles and tear-gas launchers, and sirens wailing, roared across town
    to try to quell the unrest. 

    Police used tear gas to disperse a crowd at a downtown shopping center,
    where mobs tried to loot a general store, and local radio reported
    rioting at another suburban shopping center. No injuries were reported. 

    Shops, banks and schools were shuttered amid an army revolt against
    Prime Minister Sir Julius Chan's government that began Monday. 

    On Wednesday, more that 2,000 civilians staged what began as a peaceful
    protest against the government's multimillion-dollar contract with the
    British mercenary firm Sandline International, which comes as many
    Papua New Guineans and the government are struggling financially. 

    Despite the chaos on the streets, Chan has refused to send the 40
    mercenaries home. 

    Secessionist rebels on Bougainville, 800 miles northeast of the
    capital, Port Moresby, have been fighting the government for nine years
    in a conflict that has left more than 1,000 people dead, many of them
    army troops. 

    About 5,000 Protesters gathered again Thursday outside Murray Barracks,
    the main army camp in the capital, which was the focus of Wednesday's
    demonstration, and at other neighborhoods in the capital. 

    Police ordered the crowd to disperse or face arrest, but only about
    half left the scene. A group of about 30 looted a self-serve
    supermarket in full view of police, who unleashed tear gas and rubber
    bullets. 

    Inside the barracks, officers handed government officials a petition
    they said was signed by 4,700 soldiers, virtually the entire defense
    force. 

    Nevertheless, Chan still insists only a small faction of officers are
    in rebellion and that his government still commands most of the army. 

    The petition calls for the deportation of the mercenaries, full inquiry
    into their hiring and restoration of the army commander who led
    Monday's mutiny. The Cabinet will receive the petition later Thursday. 

    Six mercenaries who left Wednesday on a flight to Singapore said their
    mission has already been aborted, according to Australian Broadcasting
    Corp. radio. 

    One man, who refused to give his name, said the contract had been
    canceled with the mutual consent of the Papua New Guinea government and
    the mercenary firm, and the rest of his colleagues would leave the
    country soon. 

    Despite orders from Chan to let them go, Papua New Guinean soldiers are
    still holding about 35 foreign mercenaries in barracks where they had
    been training local troops in counterinsurgency techniques. 

    Tim Spicer, the chief executive officer of Sandline International, was
    among those being held, British Deputy High Commissioner Brian Baldwin
    said. No deal had been struck with the soldiers to deport Spicer and
    another Sandline executive also detained, Baldwin said. 

    Chan said publicity surrounding the mercenaries may have compromised
    plans for what was supposed to be a surprise assault on the
    Bougainville secessionists. 

    He also admitted that the Sandline contract may have been a "mistake"
    because he did not take into account the opposition from Australia, New
    Zealand, the United States and Britain. 

    "The timing of making that decision without taking into consideration
    the onslaught from our neighbors, that was inappropriate," he said. 

    He rejected demands that he resign and said he will meet a delegation
    from Australia, Papua New Guinea's former colonial ruler, on Thursday
    to discuss the crisis. 

    Australia, along with the United States, Britain and New Zealand, has
    condemned the use of mercenaries here. 

    The crisis flared Monday when Chan fired Brig. Gen. Jerry Singirok
    after the army commander denounced the $27 million contract with
    Sandline, arguing that his own troops were desperately underpaid and
    ill-equipped. 

    Chan accused Singirok, a close friend, of attempting a coup and said
    the former army boss faces possible treason charges. 
7.1195IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5255
    AP 19-Mar-1997 23:06 EST   REF5718

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Japan Nuclear Accident a Mystery

    By KELLY OLSEN

    Associated Press Writer

    TOKYO (AP) -- More than a week after two fires and an explosion heavily
    damaged a nuclear reprocessing plant near Tokyo, officials said
    Thursday they did not know what caused the accident or when the plant
    would reopen. 

    Thirty-seven workers were exposed to low-level radiation during the
    March 11 accident at Tokaimura, 70 miles northeast of Tokyo, in the
    worst incident at a nuclear facility in Japan's history. 

    The plant reprocesses nuclear waste to extract plutonium and treat
    radioactive waste for disposal. It has no reactor. 

    Fumitaka Watanabe, a spokesman for the Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel
    Development Corp., or Donen, said Thursday the plant would remain
    shuttered for now. 

    Prior to the accident, Donen had planned to conduct a series of
    government-mandated, regularly scheduled inspections and repairs that
    would have mostly closed the plant from the end of June until March
    1999. 

    The government-financed facility, which has been accused of failing to
    report the damage promptly, has not said how much radiation was
    released during the accident. But officials have assured residents
    there was no health danger. 

    On Tuesday, officials said a sudden increase in radiation has been
    observed southwest of the plant, suggesting the accident spread
    dangerous fumes over a larger area than previously thought. 

    Watanabe said both Donen and the government's Science and Technology
    Agency were investigating the accident, but had yet to determine its
    cause. 

    Energy-poor Japan has adopted an aggressive nuclear program, with 51
    conventional reactors already supplying a third of its electricity. It
    has said it intends to build a commercially viable breeder reactor by
    2030. 

    The latest accident follows one in December 1995 in which a sodium leak
    in a secondary cooling system forced an emergency shutdown at the
    fast-breeder reactor in Tsuruga, 220 miles west of Tokyo. 

    The reactor's operator tried to cover up the extent of the accident,
    which later tests indicated could have resulted in an explosion. 
7.1196IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5242
    AP 19-Mar-1997 21:07 EST   REF5207

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    40 Bodies Found in Burundi House

    BUJUMBURA, Burundi (AP) -- More than 40 bodies have been discovered in
    a pit and abandoned house in a market town just south of the capital,
    the independent radio station Studio Ijambo reported Wednesday. 

    An officer in the predominantly Tutsi army said the dead had been
    killed by Hutu rebels. But a civilian said he had seen many bodies
    dumped from several military trucks on the night of March 14. 

    Neither the army officer nor the civilian would give their names to
    reporters from the radio station -- a common occurrence in a country
    where people are afraid of the army, the rebels or both. 

    Several witnesses told the radio station that two of the bodies were
    found at Kanyosa market on March 15, while 23 others were turned up in
    a nearby pit and another 22 were discovered in a collapsed house. 

    Army spokesman Col. Isaie Nibizi told Studio Ijambo he knew nothing
    about the matter and would not comment on the reported presence of
    military trucks in the area. 

    But earlier in the week he said that 50 Hutu rebels and two government
    soldiers had been killed in a pitched battle in Mutuha commune near
    Kanyosha. 

    More than 150,000 people, most of them civilians, have died in violence
    carried out by the Tutsi army and Hutu rebels since Tutsi paratroopers
    assassinated Burundi's first democratically elected president -- a Hutu
    -- in an unsuccessful coup in October 1993. 

    Reports of mass killings and atrocities are common in Burundi. U.N.
    human rights observers have been unable to travel in much of the
    country to check on the reports, most of which come from church
    organizations or missionaries. 

    Retired army Maj. Pierre Buyoya, a Tutsi, seized power in a July 25
    coup he said was necessary to put an end to the spiraling violence. 
7.1197IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5235
    AP 19-Mar-1997 20:25 EST   REF5086

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tutu To Undergo Cancer Treatment

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) -- Retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu said
    Wednesday his cancer may have spread beyond the prostate gland and he
    would undergo hormone treatment and radiation therapy to treat it. 

    Tutu, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 for his anti-apartheid
    efforts, said he would undergo hormone treatments for three months,
    then undergo two months of radiation therapy at Memorial
    Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. 

    "I have now been advised that the cancer is suspected to have
    penetrated beyond the prostate gland and that as a result radiotherapy
    is the best option," he said in the statement. 

    Despite the rigors of his planned treatment, the 65-year-old Tutu said
    he intended to maintain a normal schedule and would set up an office in
    the United States to keep working as chairman of South Africa's Truth
    and Reconciliation Commission. 

    "I'm feeling good," he told journalists after meeting with visiting
    first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. 

    Tutu retired as Anglican archbishop of Cape Town last year after
    becoming head of the Truth Commission, a panel formed to investigate
    apartheid-era political crimes and grant amnesty to people who make
    full confessions. 

    The commission, considered crucial to President Nelson Mandela's
    efforts to promote reconciliation in South Africa, was expected to
    complete its work sometime next year. 
7.1198IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5271
    AP 19-Mar-1997 19:27 EST   REF5955

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Italy Sends Back Some Albanians

    By DANIEL J. WAKIN

    Associated Press Writer

    ROME (AP) -- Italy sent back hundreds of Albanians it considered
    dangerous Wednesday and declared a state of emergency that allows
    immediate expulsion of refugees the government deems undesirable. 

    The emergency decree was the government's first comprehensive response
    to a crisis that has brought more than 10,600 Albanian refugees, many
    of them in rickety boats, to Italian shores in the past week. 

    The decree also called for at-sea inspections of boats carrying
    would-be refugees, the seizure of vessels that do arrive and the
    granting of temporary visas for up to three months. 

    Meanwhile, an Italian navy ship with a battalion of more than 300
    marines entered the Strait of Otranto, the narrowest point between
    Italy and Albania, as a precautionary measure, said navy Lt. Pierpaolo
    Ribuffo. 

    The troops were prepared to maintain order on the ground in Albania in
    case of further repatriations, secure the delivery of humanitarian aid
    or disarm people, he said. 

    While local authorities struggled with the flow of refugees, the
    center-left government of Romano Prodi scrambled to deal with what is
    becoming a major political problem: criticism that its response has
    been slow and slap-dash. 

    In the past, the left has held itself out as a defender of immigrants
    and bastion of tolerance. 

    But memories are still fresh of the nearly 40,000 Albanians who flowed
    across the Adriatic Sea in 1991 after the fall of communism in that
    former Stalinist state. Half were sent back. 

    The Interior Minister, Giorgio Napolitano, defended the government's
    response: "The solution to the problems is not in Italy but in
    Albania," he told the Chamber of Deputies in detailing the decree. 

    Concern is widespread among Italians that many of the Albanians coming
    in will cause trouble. The government has acknowledged that criminals
    and other undesirables are blending in with Albanians genuinely fleeing
    the violence. 

    The government says that Albanian organized crime is taking advantage
    of the chaos to step up its refugee smuggling. For years the Albanian
    mob has been suspected of ferrying in Albanians illegally for a fee --
    along with prostitutes, drugs and other contraband. 

    In response, military helicopters sent 292 Albanians back to their
    homeland Wednesday. Interior Ministry officials said they included
    people who threatened an Italian rescue boat and others suspected of
    planning illegal acts. 

    Some documents sent from Albanian authorities also identified
    criminals, and fingerprint checks turned up others who either had tried
    to enter the country illegally before or had arrest records in Italy,
    officials said. 

    Brindisi, a ferry point across the Adriatic from Albania, has taken in
    the most refugees. About one-third have since been sent to the north,
    some to live in tent cities or vacant hotels, mainly along the Adriatic
    coast. 
7.1199IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:52101
    AP 19-Mar-1997 19:13 EST   REF5842

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Life-on-Mars Battle Continues

    By MATT CRENSON

    AP Science Editor

    HOUSTON (AP) -- After seven months of considering the bold claim that a
    brick-sized rock from Mars contains signs of ancient life on the red
    planet, the only thing scientists can agree on is that it's too early
    to tell. 

    The biggest debate yet on the topic, held in Houston Wednesday, quickly
    led to impasse. In discussing their findings since August, when NASA
    researchers claimed to have found signs of life in a Martian meteorite
    found in Antarctica, researchers soon discovered that they are not much
    further along now than they were then. 

    "We've just started," said Doug Blanchard, a NASA scientist not
    associated with the team that did the life on Mars work. "Six months is
    an incredibly short time." 

    In that period, researchers doing nearly identical experiments have
    come to diametrically opposite conclusions about the life on Mars
    question. 

    For example, when Kathie Thomas-Keprta of Lockheed Martin Corp. looks
    at tiny magnetic mineral grains in the Martian meteorite, she sees
    signs of life. The grains look just like magnetic mineral grains made
    by terrestrial bacteria. 

    But when meteorite expert Ralph Harvey looks at the same mineral,
    magnetite, he sees the same grains as well as others that could only
    have formed at temperatures above 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit -- far too
    hot for life. 

    Ditto for the oxygen in microscopic blobs of carbonate, another mineral
    said to have been deposited by the Martian microbes. John Valley of the
    University of Wisconsin in Madison says that the ratio of different
    types of oxygen demonstrates it formed in a low-temperature environment
    hospitable to life. 

    Laurie Leshin, another expert in the arcane science of determining a
    mineral's temperature of formation by its chemical composition, draws
    the exact opposite conclusion. 

    "Right now our data are not indicating an environment suitable for
    life," said Leshin, a professor at the University of California, Los
    Angeles. 

    The researchers shared their opposing viewpoints at the 28th Lunar and
    Planetary Science Conference, a meeting held every year since the first
    moon landing. 

    Some parties to the debate are more convinced than others. 

    NASA scientist Everett Gibson of Johnson Space Center, an author of the
    paper that first claimed to have found signs of life in the meteorite,
    said he was 90 percent certain the original contention would stand. 

    Since August he has found more evidence for life, including a film of
    organic material in the Martian meteorite similar to ones commonly
    found surrounding bacteria on Earth. The bacteria would have secreted
    the film the same way a snail or slug leaves a slimy trail. 

    He cited several developments since the August announcement that have
    firmed up his belief that the rock, known as ALH84001, contains signs
    of life. Tests have indicated that the meteorite probably wasn't
    contaiminated appreciably by sitting for more than 10,000 years on the
    Antarctic ice cap. 

    In addition, early criticisms that the bacterial fossils were much
    smaller than anything on Earth have faded away, as researchers have
    found examples of terrestrial bacteria comparable in size to the tiny
    blobs in the martian meteorite that some researchers consider ancient
    life. 

    "We feel stronger now about the conclusions that were in that
    manuscript than we did at the time it was published," Gibson said. 

    But the most controversial question, the temperature at which the
    possible signs of life formed, has not been so amenable to resoulution.

    Some analyses have suggested that the purported bacterial residues
    formed at temperatures below the boiling point -- a necessity if they
    were to have been produced by life. But other studies have come to the
    opposite conclusion, finding that the residues formed at more than 650
    degrees Celsius. 

    In the end, researchers said, it's important to remember that one
    meteorite can't represent an entire planet. Even in the possible signs
    of life in the Antarctic meteorite do wither under closer scrutiny,
    that doesn't necessarily mean that life never existed on Mars. 

    "There are really two questions here," Leshin said. "If you asked me if
    I think life got started on Mars, I would say more likely than not.
    Now, the evidence that I see presented for 84001 doesn't convince me at
    all." 
7.1200IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5256
    AP 19-Mar-1997 14:06 EST   REF5116

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Unborns Absorb Nicotine

    By DANIEL Q. HANEY

    AP Medical Editor

    ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Newborns whose mothers smoke during pregnancy
    have the same nicotine level as grown-up smokers and almost certainly
    spend their first days of life going through withdrawal, a new study
    finds. 

    "The baby of a smoking mother should be considered to be an ex-smoker,"
    said Dr. Claude Hanet of St. Luc University Hospital in Brussels. 

    The study, conducted principally by Dr. Laurence M. Galanti of
    Mont-Godinne University Hospital in Namur, Belgium, was presented
    Wednesday at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology. 

    In the United States, smoking during pregnancy is on the decline. But
    the latest data show that 15 percent of women still use cigarettes
    while pregnant. 

    Exposure to tobacco in the womb stunts fetal growth so babies are born
    small. After birth, these babies are more likely to suffer sudden
    infant death or have lung trouble, among other health problems. 

    Robert Merritt, a behavioral scientist at the U.S. Centers for Disease
    Control and Prevention in Atlanta, said the latest data "support what
    we have been saying all along: Smoking is not good for you, period." 

    The study was conducted on 273 children, including 139 babies just one
    to three days after birth. The researchers checked their urine for
    cotinine, the substance that remains when nicotine breaks down in the
    body. It lingers for several days after exposure to nicotine. 

    Cotinine levels in the newborns of smoking mothers were about 550
    nanograms per milligram of urine, virtually the same as the level found
    in the smoking women. 

    Amounts in toddlers with smoking mothers were much lower -- about 200
    nanograms -- but still considerably higher than in adult nonsmokers
    exposed to smoke at home. 

    "These data underline the importance of prevention programs intended to
    reduce exposure of children to tobacco smoke," Galanti said. 

    Virtually everything in the mother's bloodstream is passed to her fetus
    during development in the womb, including all the chemicals in tobacco
    smoke. Another study, released last April at a meeting of the American
    Association for Cancer Research in Washington, found that even
    nonsmoking women who inhale other people's cigarette smoke can pass
    cancer-causing chemicals to their fetuses. 
7.1201IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5269
    RTw  20-Mar-97 06:27    

    Rifkind says Britain won't loosen grip on EU veto

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Keiron Henderson 

    THE HAGUE, March 19 (Reuter) - Britain wants closer cooperation between
    European Union members, but believes the nation state must be
    maintained and must retain the right to veto EU decisions, Foreign
    Minister Malcolm Rifkind said on Wednesday. 

    "We want far closer cooperation than ever before, but with the nation
    state as the centrepiece," Rifkind told a gathering of Dutch
    parliamentarians, industrialists, civil servants and students. 

    The text of his address was made available to news media before
    delivery. 

    Rifkind, whose ruling Conservative party appears headed for defeat in
    elections on May 1, was on the last leg of a tour of four cities to
    debate the future of Europe. Earlier visits took him to Stockholm, Bonn
    and Paris. 

    Laying the groundwork for debate ahead of the planned conclusion of the
    Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) on EU reforms this summer, Rifkind
    said Britain wanted to reconcile the development of the EU and the
    preservation of the nation state. 

    Britain's desire for greater cooperation did not mean it would budge on
    its right to veto decisions, especially as the EU pondered enlarging
    the 15-member bloc. 

    "We do not need further institutional reform to deepen the Union before
    enlargement. It is a nonsense to suggest that an international
    organisation cannot work or cannot take big decisions by unanimity.
    Look at NATO," he said. 

    "We insist that every member state must have a say in how Europe's
    institutions are used, and how their own position will be protected.
    Europe's institutions, the Council, the Commission, the Court, belong
    to all 15 member states not to 10, 12 or 14," Rifkind said. 

    The Netherlands, which holds the EU presidency during the first half of
    1997, has targeted qualified majority voting in a range of areas which
    currently require unanimity. 

    The Dutch believe that unanimous decision-making could paralyse a much
    larger bloc. 

    The British opposition Labour party, strongly tipped by opinion polls
    to form the next government, has said it would not threaten the
    workings of the bloc with vetoes. 

    An EU summit in Amsterdam on June 16 and 17 is due to conclude the IGC
    which is considering changes in how the bloc operates before new
    members join. Many EU members believe existing procedures would be too
    unwieldy in an enlarged EU. 

    "Maintaining the right balance between intergovernmental cooperation
    and supranational integration is the real choice we face in the
    intergovernmental conference and thereafter," Rifkind said. 

    "There are occasions when supranationalism is necessary, but peoples'
    primary attachment to the nation state is legitimate and reasonable,"
    he told the meeting. 

    REUTER
7.1202IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5250
    RTw  20-Mar-97 04:16    

    HK launches cyanide checks on food from China

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    HONG KONG, March 20 (Reuter) - Hong Kong launched cyanide checks on
    food imports from China on Thursday after a huge cyanide spillage into
    a south China river caused alarm throughout the Pearl River delta
    region. 

    The action was taken in Hong Kong after reports that a truck carrying
    200 drums of toxic potassium cyanide had plunged into a tributary of
    the Pearl River. 

    "As a precaution, we will take samples of produce from the mainland,
    especially vegatables and seafood, to check whether they are poisoned
    with cyanide," a Health Department spokeswoman told Reuters. 

    However, she said the risk was very slight, as most of the produce
    coming from China was from the area of Shenzhen, just across the border
    from the British colony and on the eastern side of the Pearl River
    delta. 

    Hong Kong, with scarce land resources, has to rely on imported food,
    mostly from China. 

    Health checks on food imports are routinely carried out, for example to
    guard against pesticide poisoning, but the cyanide checks are new. 

    Authorities in southern China and Portuguese-administered Macau have
    issued warnings of cyanide poisoning in waters there. 

    Officials from Wuzhou in Guangxi province, further to the west, said
    three of the 200 drums were missing and 700 kg (1,545 pounds) of the
    toxic chemical, which was to have been used for electroplating, may
    have entered the West River river. 

    The river is a tributary of the Pearl River, which flows through
    heavily populated Guangdong province and into the South China Sea near
    Hong Kong and Macau. 

    A spokeswoman from Hong Kong's water department said the territory's
    water supply was not in danger as the water imported from China was
    from another tributary of the Pearl River system. 

    No deaths or sicknesses related to the spill have so far been reported
    in China, Macau or Hong Kong. 

    REUTER
7.1203IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5274
    RTw  20-Mar-97 03:19    

    EU marks 40 years since Treaty of Rome

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BRUSSELS, March 20 (Reuter) - What is now the European Union marks the
    40th anniversary next Tuesday of one of its founding documents, the
    Treaty of Rome. The following is a chronology of landmark EU events: 

    -- 1950: French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman launches plan to put
    West German and French coal and steel industries under single
    authority. Aim is to make another war between the two countries
    "materially impossible." 

    -- 1951: France, West Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy and
    Netherlands sign Treaty of Paris creating European Coal and Steel
    Community (ECSC). 

    -- 1957: the six sign Treaty of Rome establishing European Economic
    Community (EEC) and separate treaty creating European Atomic Energy
    Community (Euratom). 

    -- 1967: ECSC, EEC and Euratom merged to form European Community (EC). 

    -- 1973: Britain, Ireland and Denmark join EC. 

    -- 1979: European Monetary System, with European Currency Unit (Ecu) at
    core, launched to limit currency fluctuations; all EC members except
    Britain join as full members. 

    -- 1981: Greece joins EC. 

    -- 1985: EC leaders sign Single European Act to create a true single
    market by end-1992, aiming to strengthen EC economy against United
    States and Japan. 

    Frenchman Jacques Delors appointed president of European Commission. 

    -- 1986: Spain and Portugal join EC. 

    -- 1988: EC leaders ask Delors to chair committee to draw up blueprint
    for economic and monetary union (EMU). 

    -- 1990: East Germany reunifies with West Germany, joining EC. 

    -- 1991: EC leaders agree new treaty in Maastricht, the Netherlands,
    creating European Union (EU), setting up joint foreign and justice
    policy making and agreeing to introduce a single currency in qualifying
    countries by January, 1999, at the latest. 

    -- 1992: European Economic Area Treaty -- extending single market --
    signed with Austria, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Switzerland,
    Liechtenstein and Iceland. Switzerland rejects it in referendum,
    forcing Liechtenstein to revise its role at a later date. 

    -- 1994: Norway rejects EU membership in referendum. 

    -- 1995: Sweden, Finland and Austria join EU. 

    -- 1996: EU begins negotiations on new treaty to be completed by June
    1997 at summit in Amsterdam. 

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 

    -- Late 1997/early 1998: Start of membership negotiations with Cyprus
    (and Malta if it wishes). Proposed start of negotiations with some or
    all of the following: Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary,
    Slovenia, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Romania and Bulgaria.

    -- January 1, 1999: Introduction in qualifying countries of single EU
    currency, the euro. 
 
    REUTER
7.1204IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 09:5284
    RTw  20-Mar-97 01:31    

    UK's Major under pressure to publish sleaze report

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Helen Smith 

    LONDON, March 20 (Reuter) - British Prime Minister John Major is under
    heavy pressure to allow publication of a "sleaze report" expected to
    prove extremely damaging for his party just before a general election. 

    Opposition parties have joined forces to call for a delay in the
    suspension of parliament, due to take place on Friday, so that the
    report can be issued to a special committee. 

    They have accused Major of timing the general election to prevent the
    report from being made public before voters go to the polls on May 1. 

    "There is no other reason why parliament should rise this Friday other
    than that the government doesn't want publication of this report," said
    the Labour Party's foreign affairs spokesman Robin Cook. 

    The six-week gap between the dismissal, or prorogation, of parliament
    and voting day will make it the longest election campaign for 80 years. 

    Major, whose party is lagging Labour by around 25 points in opinion
    polls, is hoping that the long campaign will allow him to close this
    seemingly unassailable gap. 

    But his Conservative Party has been seriously dented in recent years by
    a string of sexual and financial scandals. 

    The "sleaze report," as it has been dubbed, examines claims that four
    Conservatives accepted money from Mohammed Al-Fayed, owner of London's
    Harrods department store, to ask questions in parliament on his behalf. 

    A motion put forward by the Labour Party and other opposition parties
    to put back the prorogation date has almost no chance of being heard
    before parliament closes. 

    It is largely seen as a ploy to put pressure on Major and keep the
    allegations of sleaze in the public mind. 

    Major called it "mischievous," while Deputy Prime Minister Michael
    Heseltine accused Labour of "nothing short of gutter politics and
    hypocrisy." 

    One of the members of parliament named in the report, Neil Hamilton, is
    also calling for it to be published, insisting it will clear his name
    and help his chances of being re-elected to his seat for a prosperous
    northwest England constituency. 

    The report's author, independent parliamentary commissioner Sir Gordon
    Downey, has said he could have it ready for publication by early next
    week. 

    The Standards and Privileges Committee looking into the "cash for
    questions" allegations said it will publish an interim report on
    Thursday into its work to date, but it was unclear how much, if any, of
    Downey's report this would include. 

    The issue is certain to be raised at Major's last prime minister's
    question time this parliament in the afternoon. 

    The next time Major faces Labour leader Tony Blair across the despatch
    box, Blair could be prime minister and he the leader of the opposition. 

    But Blair has been wary of complacency about his party's strong poll
    lead. Labour still bears the painful memory of the 1992 election
    campaign when voters apparently punished them for holding a
    triumphalist party rally a few days before the vote when opinion polls
    showed them with an eight-point lead. 

    They were defeated in the election a few days later. 

    "The election is not yet won. I discount the polls. I do not believe
    them," Blair said in an interview with the left-leaning New Statesman
    political weekly published on Thursday. 

    "I think it is going to be a far tighter and harder race than they
    suggest." 

    REUTER
7.1205IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:0450
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Who baas wins
    
    By Michael Fleet 

    SHEEP looking for the greener grass on the other side of the fence are
    using Commando techniques to get over cattle grids in a small village.

    The sheep living next to the New Forest village of Bramshaw, Hants,
    elect one of their number to lie on the cattle grid while others
    scramble over her and into a garden. Local people noticed the tactic
    being used in the summer of 1995 and since then sheep have also taken
    to rolling across the bars of grids, which protect individual gardens.

    Susan Wyatt, a former vice-chairman of Bramshaw Parish Council, alerted
    other villagers to the bridge method. She said: "I couldn't believe my
    eyes the first time I saw it. Once the sheep saw grass on the other
    side of my cattle grid, they obviously decided that nothing was going
    to stop them getting in."

    The village is now preparing itself for a fresh wave of sheep attacks
    this summer, particularly if grass is in short supply. Jack Sturgess,
    chairman of the parish council, said the problem "waxes and wanes" with
    the number of sheep and their need for fresh grass.

    "The sheep are a pretty resourceful lot and when there is a shortage of
    grass they are driven to use all sorts of tricks," he said. As a former
    Royal Marine officer cadet, Mr Sturgess, 71, recognised the tactics
    being used when Mrs Wyatt first reported what she had seen.

    "We did it in the Marines when we had to get over barbed wire. You
    elect a 'Number 1' who lies on his rifle on top of the coil and the
    others walk across him. When you all got across, the Number 1 is
    hoisted over. He might have the odd cut or two, but uniforms are made
    of very thick material so he would usually be all right. There are no
    rams allowed to roam the forest and the sheep tend to throw up a boss
    of the flock, an older and wiser animal who can pass on the tricks. I
    doubt that she would be the 'Number 1' herself, but would elect another
    unfortunate animal."

    The parish church has been forced to install side barriers to its own
    cattle grids to stop the sheep getting across and eating the flowers
    from graves while others have adopted different defences.

    "Some people have installed a small electric fence to give extra
    protection when sheep have been getting across. It can be a real
    problem," Mr Sturgess said. A spokesman for the National Farmers' Union
    said he had never heard of sheep using similar tactics to get across
    cattle grids.
7.1206IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:0634
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Girl guilty of mental assault
    
    By David Cross 

    A 16-year-old girl has been successfully prosecuted for assaulting a
    12-year-old schoolmate even though no physical contact was involved.

    In what was described as a landmark case for victims of school
    bullying, the 16-year-old was given a two-year supervision order after
    pleading guilty to assault. Mrs Mary Kelly, prosecuting, said that the
    case involved "intimidation, threats and insults over a period of nine
    weeks. She said: "The assault was of a psychological nature and changed
    the victim from a happy girl to being unhappy, nervous and withdrawn."

    Mrs Kelly told Wakefield Youth Court, West Yorks, that the bullying had
    perhaps started as a joke. The victim was timid and wore a brace on her
    teeth but because of the other girl's remarks she refused to wear it.
    She was so frightened the other girl would carry out threats to attack
    her that she arranged for her mother to meet her from school. Her fear
    of the older girl led to her leaving school early to avoid her
    tormentor.

    John Mitchell, defending, said the accused girl had never been in
    trouble before and did not realise the effect her conduct had had on
    the younger girl. She was not aware of the distress and upset she had
    caused. He said: "It is a regrettable situation but has sorted itself
    out and there has been no repetition." It was unfortunate that action
    was not taken by the school and matters sorted out before criminal
    proceedings were necessary, he added.

    The chairman, Mrs M B Rhodes, told the girl: "You cannot go through
    life pushing people about."
7.1207IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:0641
7.1208IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:0855
7.1209IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:0932
7.1210IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:0924
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Beef for EU must carry British label
    
    By David Brown, Agriculture Editor 

    BRITAIN surrendered to European Union pressure in Brussels last night
    and accepted a compulsory meat labelling scheme that could damage
    attempts to restore sales of beef abroad when the current EU export ban
    is lifted.

    The deal effectively revives "national" marketing of food in the EU,
    contrary to the aims of the single market. The labelling scheme will be
    optional for meat sold on the home market, but compulsory from the
    start of 2000 for meat exported elsewhere in the EU if the importing
    country has adopted the labelling plan.

    Before then, it will not be compulsory to label meat for export.

    However, in effect, unlabelled meat would be readily identified in
    foreign butcher shops as British if, as expected, the produce of other
    member states is clearly marked. Consumers will be entitled to know the
    country of origin of the meat or the farm where the animal was fattened
    or slaughtered.
7.1211IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1054
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Accident left man thinking family were imposters
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    A BIZARRE disorder that makes sufferers believe that their parents,
    children and siblings are imposters, even undermining the sense of
    self, is shedding new light on how the brain works.

    Researchers at the University of California at San Diego have been
    working with a sufferer from Capgras syndrome, New Scientist reports
    today. The patient, a 30-year-old Brazilian man known only as DS,
    suffered a head injury in a traffic accident.

    The Capgras delusion is one of the rarest and most colourful in
    neurology. The most striking feature is that the patient, who is often
    mentally quite lucid, comes to regard close acquaintances as imposters.
    When DS was asked why he thought his father was an imposter, he would
    say: "That is what is so surprising, doctor - why should anyone want to
    be my father? Maybe my father employed him to take care of me."

    Drs Vilayanur Ramachandran and William Hirstein used a lie detector
    technique - a measure of skin conductance - to show that DS had no
    response to any faces, not even those of his parents, or even old
    pictures of himself. He asked his mother: "If the real DS returns, do
    you promise that you will treat me as a friend and love me?"

    This suggests that the mechanism in the brain that recognises faces,
    located in the inferior temporal cortex, has lost its connection with
    the limbic system, which deals with emotion. For comparison, another
    disorder called prosopagnosia, an inability to recognise faces, does
    show a skin conductance response, suggesting that face processing
    machinery remains connected to the limbic system in these cases.

    DS visually "recognises" a familiar face, but lacks the emotional
    "glow" that such a face would normally evoke, along with the skin
    conductance change. Dr Ramachandran suggests that the right side of the
    brain usually overrules ideas that become too divorced from reality.
    But if the brain is damaged, it may not be able to - hence the
    delusion. He also believes that the syndrome gives insights into "the
    formation of new memories caught in flagrante delicto".

    The father of DS attempted to get rid of his delusion by telling him
    that the "other" father, the imposter, had been sent to China and that
    he was his real father. The delusion did abate, though only for a few
    days, and the team is now investigating whether this approach could
    help patients.

    The Californian scientists speculate on whether this kind of mechanism
    could throw light on racism. "Perhaps a single unpleasant episode with
    one member of a visual category sets up a limbic connection that is
    inappropriately generalised to include all members of that class," they
    said.
7.1212IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1135
7.1213IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1248
7.1214IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1337
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Star's ex-boyfriend faces life
    
    By Maurice Weaver 

    THE former lover of the pop star Gabrielle was facing a life sentence
    last night for murdering his stepfather and decapitating him with a
    samurai sword in a row over money and family pride.

    Anthony Antoniou, 30, who knew the singer before she found fame, is the
    father of her one-year-old son, Jordan. She wept after giving evidence
    but was not in court to see the jury convict him. Gabrielle, 29, real
    name Louise Bobb, is on a six-week Mediterranean break, her agent,
    Robert Partridge, said.

    Antoniou, a former fish-and-chip shop owner, of Southey Green Road,
    Sheffield, was charged with his friend, Timothy Redhead, 29, with
    stabbing Walter McCarthy, 59. Both denied murder.

    The jury at Nottingham Crown Court found Antoniou guilty yesterday
    after eight-and-a-half hours. It will continue its deliberations on
    Redhead today. Antoniou, born in Britain of Cypriot parents, will be
    sentenced when a verdict has been reached on Redhead.

    Mr Partridge said Gabrielle, who told the court their affair had
    "fizzled out" some time ago, was nevertheless distressed by the news.
    When called to give evidence by the prosecution, she described her
    former lover as "a kind and considerate man who would spoil me rotten".

    The jury was told that Antoniou showed a different nature when his
    stepfather boasted of his affairs and of abusing children. Antoniou
    said he had suffered abuse by Mr McCarthy as a boy. The court was told
    that Mr McCarthy was killed in a car in the Peak District. His body was
    dumped at a beauty spot and his head was later buried in Bedfordshire.

    The case continues.
7.1215IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1329
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Call to waive consent from organ donors
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    PEOPLE killed in accidents should be presumed to have given consent for
    their organs to be used for transplants, unless they have previously
    registered an objection, according to a leading specialist in the
    field.

    Roger Williams, Professor of Hepatology at University College London,
    will tell a medical conference today that only five per cent of the
    population have registered a wish to donate organs. He proposes that
    the NHS transplant register be extended to record people's objections
    as well. "This would help to inform public opinion and move the UK
    towards a system of presumed consent." 

    The total number of transplants decreased for the first time last year
    because fewer organs were available, he will tell a meeting of the
    British Society of Gastroenterology in Brighton. About 6,500 patients
    are on waiting lists for all types of transplant operations, including
    kidney, heart, lung and liver operations.

    Prof Williams says there is no feasible alternative for saving the
    lives of patients with liver failure. "Liver transplantation must
    surely represent the biggest single clinical advance in the treatment
    of liver disease in our time, yet the number of transplant operations
    has plateaued in the last three years at around 650 operations a year."
7.1216IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1427
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Top award for 'rebel' architect
    
    By Rowan Moore, Architecture Correspondent 

    TADAO Ando, a Japanese designer whose lack of formal education would
    not entitle him to call himself an architect in Britain, has won this
    year's Royal Gold Medal, the world's most coveted award for
    architecture.

    Ando, who was born in 1941, is known for his simple geometric buildings
    which, although usually made of bare concrete, are sensitive and
    humanly scaled. The reputation of the former carpenter is largely based
    on small-scale designs, but he has already won the world's richest
    prizes for architecture: the Pritzker and the Carlsberg awards. Among
    his works are two in Japanese cities, the Chapel on the Water near Kobe
    and the Church of the Light in Osaka, both built to serve a Japanese
    taste for church weddings rather than as places of regular Christian
    worship.

    The unusually lyrical citation of the jury, which included Sir Norman
    Foster, the leading British architect, described Ando as "a creative
    rebel" in his own country. "To the rest of the world, he is an
    architectural hero."

    The Royal Gold Medal was inaugurated by Queen Victoria in 1848.
7.1217IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1571
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Army needs 100,000 more acres for training
    
    By Tim Butcher, Defence Correspondent 

    THE Army is no longer able to maintain training standards because of a
    100,000 acre shortfall in the amount of land available for exercises,
    according to an internal Ministry of Defence survey.

    Planners remain, nevertheless, convinced that they do not need to buy
    separate training areas, but to expand what they already own. The
    operational effectiveness of artillery and tank units is being
    compromised by the lack of training land, according to the Land
    Reconciliation Study which assesses the balance between training assets
    and requirements.

    The shortfall results from the post-Cold War relocation of troops to
    Britain and increased environmental concerns. The problem is likely to
    get worse as more space is needed to train new rapid deployment units.
    The ministry will use the survey at a public inquiry next month to
    support its application to build more training facilities at the
    Otterburn range in Northumberland.

    "The effective shortfall in training land in the UK is around 100,000
    acres taking into account personnel rotation in Northern Ireland,
    training facilities available outside the UK and the impact of
    operational commitments and training on private land," the survey said.

    "This is a significant deficiency of about 21 per cent compared with
    the overall requirement. The study provides statistical support for the
    conclusion that there is a shortfall which is adversely affecting
    operational readiness."

    The study also supports plans for the development of the Otterburn and 
    Kircudbright training areas and "the need to expand existing training
    areas where the opportunity presents itself".

    Before the end of the Cold War, 49 per cent of the Army was based in
    Britain but the proportion is now about 75 per cent. It has meant an
    increase of 15,000 in the number of soldiers in Britain and in crude
    terms there is not enough land for them to use for training. In
    addition new weapons systems such as the AS90 self-propelled howitzer,
    the Apache attack helicopter and the MLRS artillery system all require
    large amounts of space.

    Technological developments in communications and transport mean that
    soldiers need to fight over greater areas and Salisbury Plain in
    Wiltshire, itself around 90,000 acres of military training ground, is
    big enough for only half a brigade to train fully at one time.

    Although more use is being made of overseas training areas in Canada,
    Kenya and Poland, it is expensive and cannot make up for all the
    shortfall. Army planners said they would try to solve the problem by
    using more simulation and private land. They would also expand round
    the edges of training areas and use redundant MoD sites such as the old
    United States Air Force bases at Sculthorpe and Woodbridge.

    The Army, aware of the environmental impact of training, has spent 18
    months completing a sound analysis computer programme that gives sound
    levels at locations near training areas. It has been developed for the
    Otterburn ranges but can be used for other areas to ensure that
    environmental health standards are not abused by soldiers during firing
    exercises.

    If weather conditions, charge size and weapons system data is put into
    the computer programme it can tell to within three decibels what the
    noise level will be at any location in the area. It is a tool that will
    be cited at the Otterburn public inquiry to show the MoD's concern for
    maintaining environmental standards as it calls for more training
    facilities to be built.
7.1218IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1649
7.1219IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1769
7.1220IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1847
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Women's drinking hits health policy
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 

    INCREASED drinking by women is causing the Government to miss a key
    target in its Health of the Nation strategy, the Commons public
    accounts committee said yesterday. 

    Thirteen per cent of women were estimated to be drinking more than the
    recommended "safe" level of alcohol two years after the strategy was
    launched with a goal to reduce the figure to seven per cent by 2005.
    "The Department of Health will need to do more to assess the reasons
    for the increase in consumption before they can devise effective
    measures to counter it, through more closely-directed health education
    programmes," the MPs' report said.

    Figures in the report relate to a "safe" level of 14 units - equivalent
    to 14 glasses of wine or 14 single measures of spirits - a week. This
    limit was controversially raised to a maximum of 21 units by the Health
    Department just before Christmas 1995. Yesterday, the British Medical
    Association said that raising the maximum had been a mistake. Dr Sandy
    Macara, the BMA chairman, said: "Alcohol is known to be a factor in the
    majority of accidents, murders and fights as well as contributing to a
    huge range of chronic diseases. We should not be encouraging a casual
    approach to the consumption of alcohol."

    The public accounts committee said that two others of the Government's
    27 Health of the Nation targets were regressing - smoking by 11 to
    15-year-olds and levels of obesity.

    The MPs were "dismayed" that smoking by young people in that age
    bracket had risen to 12 per cent, compared with a target of six per
    cent. Rising levels of smoking by children prompted the BMA to renew
    its call for a ban on tobacco advertising.

    Dr Macara said: "Cigarettes are the greatest single cause of avoidable
    death and disability, contributing to 120,000 deaths a year.
    Advertising and sponsorship must be stopped if we are to avoid a
    further huge toll of illness, disability and premature death as today's
    teenagers hit their middle years."

    Obesity among men and women was also on the increase, despite efforts
    to reduce the condition, the committee said. But the MPs recognised
    that progress depended on "individuals deciding to alter their
    lifestyles".
7.1221IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:1945
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Avenue of statues to mark the millennium
    
    By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent 

    AN avenue of statues featuring some of Britain's greatest names is
    being planned for London as part of the millennium celebrations. It is
    expected to include such luminaries as Sir Isaac Newton and George
    Stephenson and is designed to pay homage to Britain's "creative
    genius".

    Ministers have approved the plan in principle and possible sites
    include the South Bank or near the South Kensington museums. Iain
    Sproat, the heritage minister, has asked Sir Neil Cossons, director of
    the Science Museum, to chair a working party to consider names of
    famous Britons eligible for the honour of a place in the avenue.

    Mr Sproat said yesterday that he had won backing to include the plan as
    a millennium project which would involve both National Lottery money
    and private-sector funds. Among his favourites for a place in the
    avenue were: James Watt, creator of the steam engine; Sir Frank
    Whittle, pioneer of the jet engine; Alan Turning, pathfinder for the
    computer; Sir Christopher Cockerell, who designed the hovercraft; and
    Sir Alexander Fleming, who developed penicillin. He also mentioned
    Isambard Kingdom Brunel, John Logie Baird, the inventor of television,
    and Barnes Wallis, the creator of the bouncing bomb.

    "This country started the industrial revolution and it is appropriate
    that we should recognise the British genius in invention, science and
    industry," Mr Sproat said. "Too little attention has been paid to
    science and invention and we should celebrate and encourage more of it.
    "Fifty five per cent of commercially successful innovations since the
    end of the war have originated in this country. The United States is
    second with just 25 per cent."

    Sir Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal, welcomed the idea. His choices
    for the avenue were Newton, Charles Darwin and James Clerk Maxwell, who
    developed the theory of electro-magnetism. "He ought to be better known
    than he is, better known than Michael Faraday," Sir Martin said.

    But Prof Steve Jones, professor of genetics at University College
    London, was sceptical. "It smacks of bathos," he said. "If you want to
    spend money spend it on science not on scientists, and dead ones at
    that. It is raising a gravestone rather than the profile of science."
7.1222IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2026
7.1223IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2026
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    Scientists learn the knowledge
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 

    THE brains of London cabbies have been scanned by scientists to see
    what is happening when they talk.

    Cabbies were given complicated journeys to think about and then asked
    to talk, on and off, for an hour-and-a-half about their routes, film
    plots and everyday activities. The experiment was done by scientists at
    the Institute of Neurology in London, who wanted to know which part of
    the brain controls navigation memories.

    The scientists used a PET (positron emission tomography) scanner, which
    records the blood flow in different regions of the brain while it
    performs a task. Dr Eleanor Maguire, the neuroscientist who led the
    research, gave 12 drivers complex routes to work out.

    Each driver was put into the scanner for 96 minutes during which 12
    scans were taken. During some, the driver talked aloud about the route
    and during others he talked on issues that used different types of
    recall. "We needed subjects who had special navigational knowledge," Dr
    Maguire said. "Ordinary people have differing amounts of this
    knowledge. The obvious people to scan were London taxi drivers."
7.1224IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2280
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue 664

    The mysterious case of Conan Doyle and Piltdown Man
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    THE debate over the Piltdown hoax will reopen today in London, with a
    renewed claim that it was perpetrated by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

    Last year, details were published of the contents of a canvas
    travelling trunk with the initials of Martin A C Hinton, found at the
    Natural History Museum, which was thought to end decades of speculation
    over who was behind the deception. The claim that Hinton was
    responsible was made by Prof Brian Gardiner, of King's College, London,
    the President of the Linnean Society (Linnaeus invented the system of
    Latin classification for animals and plants). Mr Hinton was a curator
    of the museum in 1912 when the combination of a human skull fragment
    and orang-utan jaw, both stained to look ancient, was announced as the
    "Dawn Man of Piltdown". His trunk contained rodent teeth stained in the
    same manner as the forged fossils and associated artefacts, which
    aroused Prof Gardiner's suspicion that Mr Hinton was the architect of a
    hoax that fooled many great minds for 40 years.

    The Piltdown remains were finally exposed as a forgery by dating
    methods in the early 1950s. Today, at a debate staged by the Linnaean
    Society as part of National Science Week, Richard Milner, a historian
    of science from the American Museum of Natural History will offer
    evidence that Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes, was
    responsible.

    There was no date on the trunk and some sceptics of Prof Gardiner's
    hypothesis point out that the materials inside it would have been used
    by Mr Hinton to study how the hoax may have been carried out. "There
    was no direct link," said Mr Milner, who also doubts the plausibility
    of Mr Hinton's motivation. Sir Arthur's motive was "much deeper and
    more demonstrable".

    At the time, there was a battle between spiritualists and materialist
    scientists. Sir Arthur was a zealous spiritualist, embittered by the
    exposure and prosecution of Henry Slade, one of his favourite psychics.

    His motive for the fraud: revenge on the scientific establishment by
    faking evidence of something they wanted to believe in - the "first
    Englishman", proof of man's ape-like ancestry that fitted in with
    "missing links" suggested by Darwin.

    Sir Arthur lived near the site where the bones were found and was often
    seen in the neighbourhood, notably at the Piltdown golf course. And he
    seems to have left many clues that he had carried out the hoax in his
    classic dinosaur adventure, The Lost World, published in 1912. Although
    Sir Arthur was first implicated 15 years ago, Mr Milner says that the
    evidence of his involvement has strengthened.

    The book describes a bone shaped like a cricket bat. And at the
    Piltdown site was found what can only be described as a Pleistocene
    cricket bat (as befits the first Englishman) carved from a leg bone of
    an extinct elephant. When it was uncovered it was pronounced to be "a
    supremely important example of the work of palaeolithic man".

    The main character in the adventure, Prof Challenger, is Sir Arthur's
    alter ego, said Mr Milner, adding that another character says that
    faking bones is as easy as faking photographs.

    A map of the caves, a puzzle containing 18 characters, that enable the
    fictional characters to escape from the lost world may offer another
    clue. One solution proposed that the 18 characters correspond to the
    holes on the Piltdown Golf Course. "This would give a new meaning to
    the phrase missing links," he said. "But I rather think it is a
    cryptogram, not a map."

    Sir Arthur also takes the trouble to give the Latin name for a sample
    of wood that appears in The Lost World. It came from the Monkey Puzzle
    tree, said Mr Milner.

    The final issue is why Sir Arthur did not "spring the trap" and
    announce that he had fooled the scientists. The reason, says Mr Milner,
    was the outbreak of the First World War. Sir Arthur wanted to advise
    the Government, particularly warning of the dangers of U-boats. "He
    needed all his credibility. That was not the time to say he was a
    practical joker."
7.1225IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2390
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue
    664

    Satan cult leaders hunted after teenagers found hanged
    
    By Alan Philps in Moscow and Dmitry Belyakov in Tyumen 

    RUSSIAN police are searching for the ringleaders of a Satanic cult in
    western Siberia, after a series of deaths among young devotees. 

    The cult was concentrated near the oil city of Tyumen, 1,400 miles east
    of Moscow, where five young people were found hanged. The deaths were
    originally thought to be suicides. But pressure from the parents and
    the discovery of cabalistic jottings suggest the youths were involved
    in a seven-stage initiation ceremony that culminated in ritual
    suffocation.

    The deaths occurred last year, but the authorities have only now begun
    to act on evidence that the youths were suffocated before being hung up
    by leather belts to simulate suicide. The first death was in April,
    when Denis Abramov, 19, was found hanged in his room at home. In May it
    was the turn of Dima Bronnikov, 17, and in July, Stas Buslov was found
    hanged from a tree. Three days later his friend Sergei Sidorov, 18,
    died in the same manner at home, as did Tanya Stankeyeva, 22, in
    October.

    The first death occurred in the village of Roshchino, the other four in
    Antipovo, both villages on the edge of Tyumen. All the victims used to
    meet in a basement, which was equipped with a kind of Satanic altar and
    had walls painted with diabolical signs and cryptic symbols. 

    The police, who have no experience of weird cults and want to keep the
    crime figures down, originally showed no interest in the deaths. But
    police captain Sergei Denisov said: "We have now launched an
    investigation into criminal activity by a Satanist sect. We are looking
    for the cult leader."

    Boris Buslov, the father of Stas, has spent months going through
    diaries left by his son. "I was looking for a suicide note or a hint of
    why he had hanged himself. When I started to read and decode his
    diaries it became clear that his death was the result of a cruel cult
    ritual - or perhaps it was that he knew who killed Dima Bronnikov and
    they could not let him escape."

    One of the notes left behind by Stas shows him predicting his own
    death: a boy is shown hanging from a tree. His father believes that
    four codenames - Gabriel, Sashiel, Anael and Mikhael - refer to the
    three dead boys and a fourth member, who has fled the town for fear of
    death.

    The mother of Sergei Sidorov said her son admitted to her shortly
    before his death that he was involved in a cult. "Mama, I'm a Satanist.
    I know it is bad, but I cannot escape. They are terribly strong."

    Thanks to contacts in the security services, Mr Buslov discovered that
    36 young people aged from 12 to 22 have hanged themselves in Tyumen
    province (population 700,000) in the past year. While there is no known
    connection to any cult, the high number of deaths has shaken the whole
    of western Siberia. 

    A spokesman for the provincial prosecutor's office said: "We may be
    dealing with a serial killing, though it is not clear if this is murder
    or incitement to suicide." 

    The leader of the cult is said to be a man in his 40s, who, helped by
    two younger acolytes, exerted enormous influence on naive provincial
    children. But, thanks to the tardiness of the police, there seems
    little chance of catching those responsible.

    The Orthodox Church originally refused to give the hanged youths a
    Christian burial, as it regards suicide as a mortal sin. But it has now
    decided that they are murder victims and will give them a proper burial
    once the investigations are completed. Churchmen blame the authorities
    for allowing a post-communist boom in cults - from foreign imports such
    as the Moonies to home-grown sects such as the Holy Virgin Centre and
    the White Brotherhood, whose supporters once flocked to the centre of
    Kiev to await the end of the world. 

    "We must all share the blame for this," said Archbishop Dmitry of
    Siberia, speaking in the town of Tobolsk. He criticised President
    Yeltsin for sending his grandson to school in England. "Don't the
    politicians understand that, when their children come back to Russia,
    they also share the risk of being involved in an evil sect like the one
    killing children in Tyumen?"

    The archbishop had his own explanation for the Satanic cult: Lenin's
    mummified corpse, which is still housed in a mausoleum on Red Square in
    Moscow, was brought to Tyumen for safety during the war in 1942. "The
    seeds of Satanism were left behind after the body returned to Moscow,"
    he said. 
7.1226IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2434
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue
    664

    Fans hit by rubber bullets
    
    By Will Bennett 

    SEVERAL Manchester United fans were taken to hospital after Portuguese
    police shot at them with rubber bullets after their team's Champions
    League game last night.

    One had a rubber bullet lodged in his head and around six others were
    wounded when police opened fire to stop them leaving the ground before
    the end of the 0-0 draw with FC Porto.

    Trouble began when around 200 were barred after arriving with forged
    tickets. Scuffles broke out before space was found for them in the
    ground. Police later intervened with firearms and CS gas when a crowd
    rushed the turnstiles after being told that they would have to stay in
    the stadium for up to 45 minutes after the final whistle.

    Up to 10,000 fans had followed the team but only 6,400 were on official
    trips. The rest took charter flights and searched for tickets when they
    arrived. "They apparently had forged tickets and the police refused to
    let them join their fellow supporters," said Ken Merrett, the
    Manchester United secretary. "But eventually space was found for them
    and they were allowed in."

    Marilia Astle, for the British consul, said: "There were hundreds of
    fans getting very agitated outside the stadium because they couldn't
    get in and the turnstiles were closed. In the end more gates were
    opened and it is inevitable that some fans got in without tickets just
    to ease the crush. There was a lot of jostling and panic but no
    fighting and it all died down very quickly."
7.1227IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2532
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue
    664

    TB method 'will save 10 million'
    
    By David Fletcher 

    AN increase in cases of tuberculosis is being halted by a new method of
    fighting the disease, the World Health Organisation announced
    yesterday.

    It predicted that the annual number of new sufferers, currently between
    six and eight million throughout the world, could be halved in the next
    10 years. The turnaround is a result of DOTS - Directly Observed
    Treatment Short-course. This uses "patient observers" who watch
    patients swallow each dose of their anti-TB medicine.

    The method helps overcome one of the most difficult problems that has
    hindered TB control to date. Patients take enough of their medicine to
    feel better, but fail to finish the course so they are not completely
    cured and remain infectious.

    Announcing the success of the method, Dr Hiroshi Nakajima, WHO director
    general, said: "DOTS is the biggest health breakthrough of this decade
    in terms of the lives we will be able to save. We anticipate that at
    least 10 million deaths from tuberculosis will be prevented in the next
    10 years with the introduction and extensive use of the DOTS strategy."

    Tuberculosis, the scourge of Victorian England, has been substantially
    reduced in Europe, Japan and north America but has increased in the
    rest of the world, including Russia and the former communist countries
    of eastern Europe.
7.1228IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2630
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue
    664

    Costner sues over 'fake' Hello! interview
    
    By John Hiscock in Los Angeles 

    KEVIN Costner is suing Hello! magazine, claiming that it published an
    interview with him that was "pure fiction".

    In his lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, the actor asks for
    damages for libel and invasion of privacy and accuses the magazine of
    inventing the question-and-answer "interview" to titillate its
    readership. It is the first time that Costner, 42, has sued a
    publication. Hola SA, the Spanish company that owns Hello!, and the
    interviewer Michael Miller are named in the suit.

    Costner claims that the article in the March 8 issue quoted him as
    making unfavourable comments about his former wife, Cindy, and about
    the mother of his illegitimate child, Bridget Rooney. She was said to
    have "tricked me into thinking she was using contraception when she
    wasn't".

    The lawsuit states that he is falsely portrayed as "callous and
    uncaring about the dissolution of his former marriage and as having so
    little regard for his former wife and so little respect for her privacy
    that he would reveal his innermost feelings about her to a tabloid". 

    A spokesman for Hello! in London said last night: "The matter is in the
    hands of our solicitors. We have no further comment to make."
7.1229IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Mar 20 1997 13:2728
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 20 March 1997 Issue
    664

    Space is final frontier for rocket group
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    SPACE enthusiasts who have been developing a rocket for two years are
    to attempt to launch the first amateur craft into space.

    A chapter of the National Space Society in Alabama will make the
    attempt on Saturday. The rocket is a "rockoon", an unmanned craft
    launched from a high altitude balloon. Rockoons were first flown in the
    1950s but were abandoned in favour of ground-based rockets. The society
    has updated the concept.

    The rocket uses asphalt as fuel and nitrous oxide, "laughing gas", as
    the oxidiser. The society has performed 50 static firings of its rocket
    motors and one from the ground. The garage-built rocket, to be launched
    off the coast of North Carolina, will become the first of its kind to
    make it into space if it exceeds 300,000ft. The highest hybrid flight
    to date was on Jan 8, when a team sent a sounding rocket to 119,780ft.

    The balloon to be used is made of polyethylene plastic. At the launch
    altitude of 90,000 feet, it will expand to 47 feet in diameter. In the
    frigid stratosphere, the unmanned balloon will be brittle enough to
    "pop" when the rocket shoots through it. The balloon gondola will carry
    a camera to record the launch and transmit images to Earth.
7.1230IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:56117
    AP 21-Mar-1997 0:01 EST   REF5980

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, March 20, 1997
   
    LIGGETT-TOBACCO 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The maker of Chesterfield cigarettes settled 22
    state lawsuits Thursday by agreeing to warn on every pack that smoking
    is addictive and may cause cancer. Liggett Group also admitted the
    industry markets cigarettes to teen-agers and turned over hundreds of
    documents that include industry-wide discussions of tobacco dangers and
    marketing. That may prove industry fraud and conspiracy, Arizona
    Attorney General Grant Woods said. But tobacco giant Philip Morris and
    three other Liggett competitors won a temporary restraining order to
    keep the documents secret for at least 10 more days. 
   
    ANTI-SMOKING ADS 

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- California unveiled a $22 million
    advertising assault on smoking Thursday, including a TV commercial
    featuring a woman who lost her larynx to cancer and smokes through a
    hole in her throat. The 16 radio, TV and billboard ads are part of a
    three-year, $67.5 million state campaign to highlight the powerfully
    addictive nature of cigarettes and the dangers of secondhand smoke. 
   
    U.S.-RUSSIA 

    HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -- President Clinton and Boris Yeltsin opened
    talks Thursday struggling to calm tensions in the thorniest East-West
    dispute since the Cold War. Changing his tone from tough rhetoric,
    Yeltsin hoped for "compromises" while Clinton offered arms concessions.
    The two leaders are deadlocked over the U.S.-led move to expand NATO
    eastward toward Russia's borders. The question of NATO expansion has
    been a sticking point between Washington and Moscow since 1994 but
    tensions have grown as the date nears for NATO's July announcement of
    new members. 
   
    TWA-EXPLOSION 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A mystery blip on the official radar tape of the sky
    just before TWA Flight 800 exploded belongs to an unarmed Navy plane
    passing 7,000 feet above the jetliner, the FBI's chief investigator
    said Thursday. Friendly fire theorists claim to have obtained authentic
    radar tapes showing a missile racing towards the flight moments before
    it blew up. 
   
    NASA-AIR TRAVEL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The frequency of aircraft accidents could increase
    within 20 years to one a week if increased safety measures are not
    taken, the head of NASA warned Thursday. NASA administrator Dan Goldin
    cited predictions that the number of aircraft flying will double in 12
    years and triple in 20. At the current rate of 1.5 accidents for every
    million flights, he said, the industry is headed for major problems.
    NASA's top goal is to provide the technology to reduce the aircraft
    accident rate. 
   
    WSJ-LIBEL 

    HOUSTON (AP) -- A federal jury awarded a record $222.7 million Thursday
    to a defunct brokerage in a libel suit against Dow Jones & Co. over a
    1993 Wall Street Journal article. The verdict, which included $200
    million in punitive damages, is the largest libel verdict ever
    delivered by a jury, according to the New York-based Libel Defense
    Resource Center. The defunct firm, Money Management Analytical Research
    of Houston, had claimed the article by the Journal contained false
    information and helped force it out of business. 
   
    ABORTION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House again voted to ban some late-term
    abortions -- a procedure critics call "partial birth" abortions. The
    bill is identical to one President Clinton vetoed last year. He argued
    it failed to make exceptions for the health of the mother. Clinton has
    warned he'll veto this measure, too, unless it's changed. But
    Thursday's margin of passage -- 295-136 -- would be enough to override
    a veto. 
   
    U.S.-MEXICO 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate voted Thursday to accept President
    Clinton's designation of Mexico as a U.S. ally in efforts to combat
    illegal drugs. The measure, approved 94-5, decries both countries'
    losses to narcotics traffickers and demands progress on both sides,
    with Clinton required to make another assessment Sept. 1. 
   
    MEDIA POLL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A poll reveals that many Americans view the media as
    vultures feeding upon tragedy and scandal, but most are drawn to
    sensational reports despite themselves. A survey by the Pew Research
    Center for The People and The Press indicated that many find the media
    inaccurate, intrusive and unfair. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar bought 123.54 yen, up 0.52 on Friday in Japan.
    At midday, the Nikkei rose 3.40 to 18,497.11. On Wall Street, the Dow
    closed at 6,820.28, down 57.40. 
   
    CLEMSON-MINNESOTA 

    SAN ANTONIO (AP) -- Bobby Jackson scored five straight points in the
    second overtime and finished with a career-high 36 Thursday night as
    top-seeded Minnesota held off Clemson 90-84 to reach the NCAA Midwest
    Regional finals. 
   
    STANFORD-UTAH 

    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Utah withstood All-American Keith Van Horn's
    fouling out and a furious comeback by Stanford to beat the Cardinal
    82-77 in overtime Thursday night to enter the NCAA West Regional
    finals. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by LISA M. COLLINS 
7.1231IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5672
    RTw  20-Mar-97 21:38    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    HELSINKI - The United States and Russia started a difficult summit
    dominated by NATO's planned expansion to include former communist
    eastern European countries, but each stressed the strength and value of
    their post-Cold War partnership despite tough talk from the Kremlin. 

    - - - - 

    BETHLEHEM, West Bank - Palestinians angered by Jewish settlement in
    Jerusalem threw petrol bombs and rocks at Israeli soldiers, in violence
    reminiscent of a six-year uprising ended by a peace deal now under
    fire. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania reopened its main airport and was negotiating for the
    Italian navy to patrol its waters to stop a mass refugee exodus. 

    GJIROKASTER, Albania - Rebel-held towns in southern Albania edged
    towards their midnight deadline for the resignation of President Sali
    Berisha, with no obvious plan if he refuses. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - President Mobutu Sese Seko prepared to head home after
    cancer treatment, in search of a political solution to Zaire's civil
    war. 

    France advised its nationals to leave Zaire and sent troops and
    aircraft to Congo and Gabon to protect them if needed. 

    Zaire's main opposition group said it had sent envoys to talk to rebel
    leader Laurent Kabila, whose forces are advancing relentlessly. 

    - - - - 

    YEREVAN - Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrosyan named the leader of
    Azerbaijan's breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region, Robert Kocharyan, as
    Armenia's new prime minister, in a move likely to enrage Baku. 

    - - - - 

    HAVANA - Cuba confirmed it had accepted a formal request from Japan to
    grant asylum to Peruvian Marxist rebels holding 72 hostages at the
    Japanese ambassador's home in Lima if there was a negotiated settlement
    to the 93-day crisis. 

    - - - - 

    WARSAW - Poland's Prime Minister held out a lifeline to save 2,000 jobs
    at the sinking Gdansk shipyard, then accused the Solidarity union of
    fomenting chaos by illegal protests in the yard's defence. 

    - - - - 

    MINSK - Authorities in Belarus slapped a big fine on prominent
    opposition deputy Mecheslav Grib for organising a rally and arrested 20
    people at a peaceful protest against hardline President Alexander
    Lukashenko. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Prime Minister John Major refused to extend parliament to
    allow publication of a report into sleaze charges against members of
    his ruling party that have soured his campaign for the May 1 election. 

    REUTER 
7.1232IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:56148
    RTw  21-Mar-97 06:24    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Summit notebook- Low-fat dinner and low-key demos 

    HELSINKI - Low-fat Finnish delicacies generally good for a man with
    heart problems -- consomme, fish and reindeer -- featured on the menu
    for the pre-summit supper in Helsinki's presidential palace. 

    Reindeer roam freely in Arctic northern Finland and scratch food from
    often frozen ground, keeping their meat very lean. 

    "It's a healthy menu: quite plain; but it includes the best ingredients
    Finland can offer at this time of year," said Jaakko Nuutila, chef at
    upmarket Helsinki restaurant Savoy. "The goose consomme will be the
    dish of the menu -- that's unusual." 

    Geese are farmed in Finland's southwestern islands. 

    - - - - 

    Comedian Cosby to lighten up S. Africa jail island 

    CAPE TOWN - U.S. comedian Bill Cosby cracked jokes with President
    Nelson Mandela and vowed to bring "fun and laughter" to South Africa's
    vale of tears, Robben Island. 

    Cosby is the star of a fund-raising dinner on the island, a former jail
    and now a museum of the apartheid era, on Thursday night. About 70
    guests are paying 125,000 rand ($28,000) a head. 

    "This is all fun and laughter this time," Cosby told reporters after
    meeting Mandela at his official Cape Town residence. "There's no
    solemness, we are celebrating." 

    - - - - 

    Sultan's alleged 'sex toy' sues for $90 million 

    LOS ANGELES - A former Miss USA beauty queen who alleges the Sultan of
    Brunei tried to turn her into his "sexual toy" is suing the world's
    richest man and others for more than $90 million, according to court
    papers. 

    In her federal lawsuit, Shannon Marketic says she was duped into
    believing she was going to Brunei for modelling and promotional work,
    while the real purpose was "to use her only as a sexual toy." 

    Earlier this month, the sultan "categorically" denied the allegations
    in a statement from the Brunei prime minister's office. "His Majesty,
    the sultan ... has never been acquainted with, nor met, Ms. Marketic,"
    the statement said. 

    - - - - 

    Hillary predicts woman U.S. president in 20 years 

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa - U.S. First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton
    predicted the United States will elect a woman president within 20
    years and said some prominent women may make a run at the office in
    2000. 

    "Hope springs eternal," President Clinton's wife said to laughter at
    the University of Cape Town when she was asked whether America would
    soon put a woman in charge of the White House. 

    - - - - 

    Madame Chiang Kai-shek celebrates 100th birthday 

    NEW YORK - Madame Chiang Kai-shek, once the most powerful woman in
    China as the wife of Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-Shek, quietly
    celebrated her 100th birthday at a party at her Manhattan apartment
    attended by her closest relatives, a spokesman said. 

    The spokesman said that between 20 and 30 relatives, including nieces,
    nephews, grandchildren and great grandchildren, attended the party. 

    Madame Chiang has lived in New York on and off since her husband died
    in 1975 in Taiwan, where he and his followers fled when Mao Tsetung's
    Communist army took power on the Chinese mainland in 1949. 

    - - - - 

    Snoring dangers exaggerated, researchers say 

    LONDON - Snoring may make sufferers sleepy and grumpy, but it is
    probably not a great danger to their health, British researchers
    concluded. 

    In a report sure to anger tired wives seeking to frighten snoring
    husbands into doing something about their problem, John Wright and
    colleagues at Bradford Royal Infirmary said they could find no strong
    links between snoring and disease. 

    Several studies have linked snoring with problems ranging from heart
    attacks to car crashes. The big target has been sleep apnoea, a
    condition that causes sufferers to stop breathing during sleep when
    their airways close up. 

    - - - - 

    Mother of Playboy's Hefner dies at 101 

    LOS ANGELES - The mother of Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner died
    after a brief illness, a spokesman for Playboy Enterprises said. 

    Grace Hefner died in a hospital in Scottsdale, Arizona, Bill Farley
    said. She was 101 years old. 

    "She often told me that she wished I had become a missionary," Hugh
    Hefner said in a statement. "Eventually, I did become a missionary of
    sorts, although not quite in the manner she intended," he said,
    referring to Playboy's advocacy of hedonism in the sexually-liberated
    60's. 

    - - - - 

    British media highlights political leaders' wives 

    LONDON - With Britain's general election campaign barely under way, the
    nation's press and television have already highlighted the contrasting
    styles of the wives of Prime Minister John Major and Labour leader Tony
    Blair. 

    Most newspapers and TV channels focused on Thursday on the first public
    appearance together of the leading ladies, Norma Major and Cherie
    Blair. 

    While their husbands battled in parliament over a committee report on
    political sleaze, photographs of the two women sharing a laugh together
    at a bravery awards luncheon were splashed across the front pages of
    the nation's press. 

    Veteran political wife and country housewife Norma Major was deemed to
    have won the style war in her smart fuschia suit, while working mother
    and top lawyer Cherie Blair, 10 years her junior, was criticised for
    her more casual black trouser suit. 

    REUTER
7.1233IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5647
    AP 21-Mar-1997 0:44 EST   REF6117

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ark. Gov. Nixes 'Act of God' Aid

    By DAVID A. LIEB

    Associated Press Writer

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- State lawmakers mixed politics and religion
    Thursday, and came to the conclusion that, no matter what Gov. Mike
    Huckabee believes, tornadoes are, in fact, attributable to God. 

    The House voted to leave intact the phrase "acts of God" as a synonym
    for natural disasters in a bill allowing disaster victims to keep their
    insurance. 

    The Republican governor, a Baptist minister, had told the bill's
    sponsors that it was "a matter of deep conscience to me to attribute in
    law a destructive and deadly force as being an 'act of God."' 

    Huckabee said he couldn't in good conscience sign the disaster-relief
    bill unless it replaced the phrase with the words "natural disasters." 

    The House, after debating God's role in the world, deciding instead to
    use both phrases side by side. 

    "To say God didn't create tornadoes is just like saying he didn't
    create spring rains," said Rep. Jim Luker, D-Wynne. "If God didn't
    create this universe and all the forces in it, then I don't know who
    did." 

    Luker suggested a religious compromise for Huckabee -- neither sign the
    bill, nor veto it. 

    According to the state constitution, legislation automatically becomes
    law if the governor does not act upon it within five days after its
    passage, so long as the Legislature is in session. 

    "That certainly is a very viable option," Huckabee spokesman Rex Nelson
    said after the House vote, which sent the bill back to the Senate. He
    said the governor had not decided what to do. 

    Severe storms swept across Arkansas on March 1, spawning tornadoes that
    killed 25 people and leaving flooding that has continued to force
    people from their homes. 
7.1234IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5632
    AP 21-Mar-1997 0:19 EST   REF6106

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Runaway Barges Clog Mississippi

    BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- It's been one problem after another lately on
    the flood-swollen Mississippi River. Add runaway barges to the list.

    A 13-mile stretch of the river was closed for several hours early
    Thursday after more than 130 barges got loose overnight. 

    First, more than 40 barges broke loose, floated down the river and
    collided with other parked fleets, setting another 90 barges free, the
    Coast Guard said. 

    "The Mississippi River is a mighty force, a physical force," said Cmdr.
    Dan Whiting. 

    Salvage efforts on an overturned hazardous chemical barge that
    overturned after a Monday night accident continued Thursday near Baton
    Rouge. 

    State police said the plan was to unload the estimated 400,000 gallons
    of toxic toluene and benzene from the barge on Saturday. 

    The barge leaked some of its benzene cargo and the fumes forced the
    evacuation Tuesday of Southern University. No fumes have been detected
    since midnight Tuesday. 

    The accidents have resulted in various towing restrictions along the
    lower Mississippi. 
7.1235IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5668
    AP 20-Mar-1997 23:25 EST   REF5895

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Judge Sues Paper Over Wiretaps

    By JUSTIN HYDE

    Associated Press Writer

    DETROIT (AP) -- In a $100 million lawsuit filed Thursday, a judge
    accused the Detroit Free Press of violating federal wiretap laws by
    writing about phone conversations taped by her ex-husband that
    purportedly caught her making racist and anti-Semitic remarks. 

    Wayne County Circuit Judge Andrea Ferrara also named her ex-husband,
    Howard Tarjeft, and a Free Press reporter as defendants. 

    Tarjeft has said that he taped phone conversations between him and Ms.
    Ferrara over 11 months beginning in 1992, just before she was elected
    to the bench. 

    On the tapes, a woman identified by Tarjeft as his ex-wife repeatedly
    uses racial slurs against blacks and Jews, according to a report first
    published by the Free Press. 

    Ms. Ferrara, 44, denies ever using the epithets, and accused Tarjeft of
    doctoring the tapes to destroy her career. 

    Since the tapes were released, civil rights activists have called for
    Ms. Ferrara's removal and she is under investigation by the state
    judicial watchdog commission. 

    In the lawsuit, she claims Tarjeft made the tapes to get custody of
    their twin children, to avoid paying $12,000 in overdue child support
    and "for his own personal gratification of seeing his name in the
    newspapers and television." 

    Free Press attorney Herschel Fink said the judge's lawsuit contradicts
    her earlier claims that it's not her voice on the tape. 

    "The complaint tacitly, if not explicitly, admits that it is Judge
    Ferrara's voice on the tapes making the anti-Semitic and racist slurs,"
    Fink said. 

    "... It's kind of bizarre that she files this lawsuit that her voice
    was wrongly disseminated, which it wasn't," Fink said. 

    He also said the wiretap law didn't apply because Tarjeft, not a third
    party, recorded the conversations. 

    When asked if the lawsuit was an admission that it's her on the tape,
    Lawrence Stockler, the judge's lawyer, told WDIV-TV: "I really could
    care less what was on the tape. You can't use the contents." 

    Stockler declined to comment to The Associated Press. He said he would
    hold a news conference Friday. 

    The Free Press said a forensic expert who examined the tape found no
    evidence that Tarjeft fabricated it. 

    Stockler said he would try to keep the state Judicial Tenure Commission
    from considering the tapes as evidence, calling it "fruit from the
    poison tree" because he claims it was made illegally. 

    Ferrara is on a leave of absence until June. 

    A hearing on the lawsuit is scheduled for March 27. 
7.1236IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5670
    AP 20-Mar-1997 23:23 EST   REF5885

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    NASA Head Warns of Plane Havoc

    By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Without dramatic improvements in safety, the
    frequency of aircraft accidents could increase within 20 years to one a
    week, the head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    warned Thursday. 

    "Imagine opening your paper every Tuesday morning to a weekly column to
    see what new airline catastrophe has happened in the world," NASA
    administrator Dan Goldin told the Aero Club of Washington, an
    association of industry executives. 

    He cited predictions that the number of aircraft flying will double in
    12 years and triple in 20. At the current rate of 1.5 accidents for
    every million flights, he said, the industry is headed for major
    problems. 

    "It isn't a matter of statistics. It's a matter of perception," Goldin
    said. "People who have never flown will refuse to do so. People who
    absolutely must, will be terrified. Eventually, companies will not be
    able to encourage people to fly and conduct business. It will shake the
    economy of the country. 

    "So we must do something about safety." 

    Human error plays a part in 60 to 70 percent of aircraft accidents,
    mechanical problems roughly 20 percent and the weather about 5 percent.

    "We know we cannot prevent human error," Goldin said. "We can, however,
    provide a high level of confidence that the results of a human error
    will not lead to an accident." 

    NASA's top goal, out of 10 for the next century, is to provide the
    technology to reduce the aircraft accident rate by a factor of five in
    10 years and by a factor of 10 in 20 years, Goldin said. 

    These are the others: 

    --Triple the current capability to fly in bad weather. "What that means
    is the planes will fly through fog as if it were a clear day," he said. 

    --Cut pollution from future aircraft by two-thirds within 10 years and
    by 80 percent in 20 years. 

    --Reduce by half the noise level of future subsonic aircraft in 10
    years and by half again within 20. 

    --Cut the cost of air travel by 25 percent in 10 years and by 50
    percent in 20. 

    --Slice the development time for aircraft in half. 

    --Invigorate general noncommercial aviation, producing 10,000 aircraft
    a year within 10 years and 20,000 a year within 20. 

    --Cut the travel time to the Far East and Europe in half within 20
    years -- and do it at today's subsonic prices. 

    --Put payloads into space for $1,000 a pound within 10 years; the cost
    is $10,000 a pound today. 

    --Reduce that cost further to hundreds of dollars per pound by 2020.
7.1237IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5685
    AP 20-Mar-1997 21:52 EST   REF5200

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Calif. Unveils Anti-Smoking Ads

    By ANN BANCROFT

    Associated Press Writer

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- California unveiled a $22 million
    advertising assault on smoking Thursday, including a TV commercial
    featuring a woman who lost her larynx to cancer and smokes through a
    hole in her throat. 

    The 16 radio, TV and billboard ads, to begin airing Monday, are part of
    a three-year, $67.5 million state campaign to highlight the powerfully
    addictive nature of cigarettes and the dangers of secondhand smoke. 

    They also use what officials in Gov. Pete Wilson's administration say
    are psychological techniques proven to target a tough audience -- teen
    smokers who aren't swayed by lectures or statistics about long-term
    health effects. 

    The most powerful of the TV ads features a 47-year-old woman who lost
    her larynx to throat cancer in 1992. She tells the audience she began
    smoking when she was 13, and tried to quit when she became aware of
    dangers to her health, but couldn't. 

    "They say nicotine is not addictive," she says, just before sucking a
    drag of smoke through the hole in her throat. She exhales, then asks,
    "How can they say that?" 

    Another commercial shows cowboys representing the tobacco industry
    herding children into a pen, slamming the gate shut and riding off with
    twirling lassos. 

    "They spend millions trying to grab your attention and push you into
    smoking," a voice says. "Because once they get you where they want you
    ... they got you for good." 

    And in a merciless parody of the Marlboro Man billboards, another ad
    features two cowboys on horseback, with one confiding in the other:
    "Bob, I've got emphysema." 

    Tom Lauria, a spokesman for The Tobacco Institute in Washington, D.C.,
    said tobacco companies had not yet seen the ads, adding, "Until we have
    a chance to see and review them it would be inappropriate for us to
    comment." 

    The state's campaign is paid for by money raised under Proposition 99,
    a 1988 ballot measure which raised tobacco taxes to fund a variety of
    anti-smoking, health and environmental programs. 

    Health organizations that hammered the Wilson administration for months
    for what they claimed was ineffective handling of the Proposition 99
    program gave somewhat grudging approval on Thursday to the ad campaign. 

    "It's definitely a step in the right direction," said Kirk
    Kleinschmidt, communications director for the American Heart
    Association. 

    "I also feel very strongly that if we hadn't been very vocal about our
    issues, we would not be seeing the type of ads we saw today," he added. 

    The American Cancer Society, American Heart Association and Americans
    for Nonsmokers Rights last week took out a full-page ad in The New York
    Times, skewering the Wilson administration for withdrawing earlier
    anti-tobacco ads. 

    The Times ad showed Wilson's picture under an internal memo from Philip
    Morris Companies Inc., describing Wilson as "still 'pro-tobacco."' 

    The ads withdrawn from billboards and television said the tobacco
    industry lies about the addictive and carcinogenic nature of cancer.
    One of those ads, featuring tobacco executives testifying that nicotine
    is not addictive, was pulled after R.J. Reynolds threatened to sue. 

    Health and Welfare Secretary Sandra Smoley said the "industry lies" ads
    were pulled because they made subjective accusations against a legal
    industry that "we didn't feel our research could back up." 

    "I've never said we're not going to take on the tobacco industry,"
    Smoley said. "We're moving forward, and we're proud of what we're
    doing." 
7.1238IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5689
    AP 20-Mar-1997 21:00 EST   REF5163

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Albania Premier in Tough Spot

    By JUDITH INGRAM

    Associated Press Writer

    TIRANA, Albania (AP) -- Albania's new premier was caught in the middle
    Thursday between heavily armed southern insurgents who want President
    Sali Berisha ousted and supporters of the president who have vowed to
    stop the rebels. 

    As Prime Minister Bashkim Fino's new coalition government tried to
    assert its authority, there also was concern that Berisha was scheming
    to consolidate his own power. 

    Fino has reportedly resisted Berisha's attempts to direct the workings
    of the new government -- and has refused insurgents' demands that
    Berisha step down before elections, to be held by June. 

    The newly appointed Socialist leader has announced twice that he would
    go south to push his plan for national reconciliation with the leaders
    of 12 rebel-controlled districts -- and both times canceled the trip
    without giving a reason. 

    The latest postponement came after the shadowy Committee for National
    Salvation warned Wednesday it would mobilize thousands of supporters to
    fight those who insist on Berisha's removal. Militant supporters of
    Berisha's Democratic Party are suspected to be behind the group. 

    In other signs of a power struggle, the Democratic-controlled
    legislature has refused to transfer authority over state radio and
    television from the parliament to the government. It also rejected a
    government bill to allow newspapers to start publishing again without
    censorship. 

    Southern rebels who fomented the unrest that began in January over the
    collapse of high-risk investment schemes repeated their call for
    Berisha to go but softened the demand with a promise not to go to war. 

    "All we want is to force Berisha to resign. That's why we took weapons
    in our hands -- not to kill but to force his removal from power," said
    retired Gen. Xhevat Kociu, the commander of Albania's rebel-held south. 

    He warned, however, that insurgents' support for the caretaker
    government may be short-lived if the newly appointed Socialist premier
    failed to help their cause. 

    "We support Fino because we believe he is asking Berisha to resign. If
    he is not doing this, then we will not support him," Kociu said. 

    Officials in Rome said Fino was to meet with the European Union's 15
    foreign ministers in that city on Tuesday to discuss an end to the
    civil conflict. 

    As for the rebels, they were to meet Friday in Tepelena, 100 miles
    south of Tirana, to chart their next moves. 

    Although rebels have formed local councils to oversee their regions,
    anarchy still gripped the south Thursday. 

    At least two people were reported killed in Korca in fights Thursday
    between opposing groups of armed looters, bringing the toll to 26 dead
    in eight days of violence there. 

    British security forces helped evacuate 22 children Thursday from an
    orphanage run by a British couple in Elbasani, a chaos-wracked town 22
    miles south of Tirana. The children were brought to Tirana. 

    Italian warships patrolled Albanian waters to try to stem the exodus of
    refugees toward Italy -- a flood that has brought in 10,000 Albanians
    so far. 

    Around dawn Thursday, an Italian frigate towed an Albanian fishing boat
    crowded with 350 would-be refugees back to Albania after the boat ran
    into trouble in rough waters. 

    Later, Italy sent 100 Albanian "undesirables" home by helicopter. On
    Wednesday, about 300 Albanian men were deported from Brindisi, Italy. 

    The combination of stormy weather and forced returns appeared to have
    discouraged Albanians from attempting a crossing Thursday. The Adriatic
    port of Durres and surrounding beaches were virtually deserted. 

    An Albanian Airlines jet from Sofia, Bulgaria, was the first to land at
    Tirana's airport, which reopened Thursday after eight days' closure.
7.1239IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5642
    AP 20-Mar-1997 17:55 EST   REF5942

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Russian Hid in U.S. Embassy

    MOSCOW (AP) -- A Russian man in military fatigues spent a night in the
    U.S. Embassy compound in Moscow after apparently scaling a wall to get
    inside. 

    The intruder, found by startled residents earlier this month, was
    turned over to Russian authorities and "at no time did he have access
    to classified material," embassy spokeswoman Kathryn Sylvester said
    Thursday. 

    The security breach took place just yards from a red brick embassy
    building that is being rebuilt because it is riddled with electronic
    bugs. 

    U.S. charge d'affaires John Tefft has ordered a review of security
    because of the incident, Sylvester said. 

    She refused to confirm a report in The Washington Post that the
    intruder was found naked in the shower of Tefft's townhouse by Tefft's
    wife, Mariella. 

    But in Washington, State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns
    acknowledged that the intruder entered Tefft's townhouse through an
    unlocked door and helped himself to food in the refrigerator. 

    In the absence of a U.S. ambassador to Russia, Tefft is the highest
    ranking U.S. diplomat in Moscow. Although there was no evidence the man
    was spying, the Post said embassy officials couldn't explain how he
    happened to wind up in the townhouse of the top American official. 

    There are 120 residences in the 10-acre compound, which is surrounded
    by walls and is usually well-guarded. The break-in occurred in a
    section containing residences, a cafeteria, a gymnasium and a school. 

    Sylvester said the intruder described himself as a Russian army
    conscript, but she did not know his name or what happened to him after
    he was turned over to Russian authorities March 9. 
7.1240IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5670
    AP 20-Mar-1997 17:43 EST   REF5926

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cuba, Spain in Diplomatic Spat

    By JOHN RICE

    Associated Press Writer

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Cuba's foreign minister called his counterpart in
    Spain a "liar, blackmailer and meddler" Thursday for criticizing Cuba's
    treatment of a tourist involved in a traffic collision. 

    Foreign Minister Roberto Robaina was responding to a warning by Spanish
    Foreign Minister Abel Matutes on Wednesday that Spain might urge its
    citizens not to vacation in Cuba. 

    Relations between Cuba and Spain have deteriorated since a conservative
    government took power in Spain from the Socialists last May, but
    Robaina's comments Thursday appeared to be the harshest yet. 

    Tourism has become Cuba's largest source of foreign income and Spain is
    the third-largest source of tourists, after Italy and Canada. More than
    100,000 Spaniards visited Cuba last year. 

    The revenue is crucial to the communist island nation as it struggles
    against a U.S. economic embargo and an economic crisis caused by the
    collapse of its East European allies. 

    Matutes on Wednesday insisted that Cuba resolve the case of tourist
    Jesus Martin. 

    Spanish news media say Martin was arrested after a traffic accident on
    March 2 in which no one was injured and damage was minor. 

    But Cuba's official news agency, Prensa Latina, said a motorcyclist was
    seriously hurt in the crash. Robaina said Martin was never arrested,
    but had spent several hours at a police station making a declaration. 

    Martin apparently cannot leave the island due to pending legal action. 

    Robaina said Matutes acted "in the worst style of Yankee arrogance, now
    Spanish-style," and accused him of misstating the facts of the case. 

    A spokesman for Spain's foreign ministry said Robaina's comments seemed
    desperate. 

    "Things have to be pretty bad in Cuba if it goes back to using language
    and procedures we thought were eradicated and which we have always
    avoided, whether there was friction between the two governments or
    not," Inocencio Arias told the official EFE news agency. 

    Spain, which ruled Cuba until the turn of this century, was Cuba's
    closest European ally under former Socialist Prime Minister Felipe
    Gonzalez, who encouraged European nations to ignore the U.S. embargo of
    Cuba. 

    But the government of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, while opposing
    the U.S. embargo, has taken a tougher line and has pushed for greater
    democracy in Cuba. 

    Spain has not appointed an ambassador to Havana following Cuba's
    rejection in November of Aznar's original choice, Jose Coderch. Cuba
    had been irked by Aznar's reference to Castro as a "dictator" and by
    Coderch's statement that Cuban dissidents would be welcome at the
    embassy. 

    Under Aznar, Spain has cut back credits to Cuba and has urged the
    European Union to use aid to push for change on the island. 
7.1241IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:56117
    AP 20-Mar-1997 17:34 EST   REF5916

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tear Gas Clouds Holy City

    By JACK KATZENELL

    Associated Press Writer

    BETHLEHEM, West Bank (AP) -- Clouds of tear gas filled Bethlehem's
    streets Thursday after Palestinian anger over Israel's decision to
    build Jewish homes in disputed east Jerusalem erupted into clashes with
    Israeli soldiers. 

    Hundreds of protesters threw stones at the soldiers, who fired back
    tear gas, rubber bullets and a barrage of water cannon spray. 

    Stone-throwing clashes also broke out between Palestinian youths and
    soldiers in the village of Beit Omar, on the main road between
    Jerusalem and Hebron. 

    In an apparent effort to appease the Palestinians, the government has
    drawn up plans for 6,000 homes for Arabs in east Jerusalem, Israel TV
    reported. 

    Palestinian officials responded warily to Israeli Prime Minister
    Netanyahu's proposal to skip the interim phase when Israel is supposed
    to make two further withdrawals from the West Bank, and move directly
    to talks on the big issues -- Jerusalem and Palestinian demands for
    statehood. 

    Yasser Arafat, in an angry speech to Palestinian legislators in Gaza
    City, alluded to Netanyahu's proposal, accusing the Israeli leader of
    trying to get out of Israel's commitment to give back land. 

    "Day after day, we have more statements from this (Israeli) government
    about their non-commitments and suggesting new ideas and new
    additions," Arafat said. "They want to replace land-for-peace with the
    peace-for-peace notion." 

    Arafat accused Netanyahu's government of "trickery and conspiracy" for
    building the Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem, which Israel
    captured in the 1967 Middle East war and where the Palestinians want to
    build their future capital. 

    He said the move would return the region to a "cycle of violence and
    destruction." 

    "Do they think us dumb or lazy children?" Arafat asked. "We reject
    Israel's attempts to decide the future of Jerusalem unilaterally." 

    The clashes in Bethlehem broke out during a Palestinian march
    protesting the start of construction on the new Jewish neighborhood. 

    Hundreds of Palestinians stoned Israeli troops guarding the grave of
    the biblical matriarch Rachel on the outskirts of the city. Soldiers
    fired back rubber bullets, tear gas, water cannons and sound grenades
    in clashes that lasted more than three hours. Some demonstrators
    grabbed tear gas canisters from the ground and flung them back at
    soldiers. 

    Palestinian officials made sporadic efforts to hold back the crowd,
    beating demonstrators with wooden batons. 

    Twenty Palestinians and one soldier were treated for tear gas
    inhalation, and two Palestinians were injured by rubber bullets. 

    Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai, visiting troops guarding
    the east Jerusalem construction site, said he had received new warnings
    of Palestinian violence following Muslim prayers on Friday. 

    He urged the Palestinians to return to talks with Israel "to find how
    we can move forward together." 

    Arafat has refused to meet with Netanyahu since the construction began,
    and Israel-Palestinian negotiations are on hold. 

    A Housing Ministry proposal for 6,000 new Arab homes in east Jerusalem,
    including 2,500 adjacent to the new Jewish neighborhood, was to be
    discussed in the weekly Cabinet meeting Friday, Israel TV reported. 

    It was not clear whether the plan involved building the homes or merely
    providing infrastructure and approving building permits, in line with
    previous plans for Arab housing in Jerusalem. 

    Netanyahu's proposal would set aside the step-by-step approach that has
    prevailed since the Israel-PLO accord signed in September 1993. 

    The two sides would focus on the so-called final status issues -- the
    future of Jerusalem, Palestinian refugees, Jewish settlements and
    Palestinian demands for statehood. 

    Talks would last six to nine months and move to a Camp David-style
    mediation supervised by President Clinton if agreement was not reached
    by then. 

    If the accelerated efforts failed, Netanyahu pledged to go back to the
    old timetable calling for a three-stage pullback from rural areas of
    the West Bank to be completed by mid-1998. 

    Saeb Erekat, the Palestinian chief negotiator called the proposal a
    "gimmick." It was also criticized by Arab leaders. 

    "Don't play games with us," Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa said
    following a meeting of Arab leaders in Cairo. "We will not accept any
    promises, generalities or sugar-coated talk." 

    Also Thursday, five Jewish settler families moved secretly into a home
    in the Arab neighborhood of Silwan in east Jerusalem. 

    The house was purchased from its Palestinian owner, Mahmoud Siam, who
    lives in the United States, said a relative, who spoke on condition of
    anonymity. 

    Jewish settlers have tried to buy homes in Arab neighborhoods of
    Jerusalem to cement Israeli control. 
7.1242IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5755
    AP 21-Mar-1997 0:20 EST   REF6108

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Protein-Cancer Link Identified

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Researchers have identified a protein, called
    beta-catenin, that plays a role in disrupting normal cellular gene
    expression in a process that can lead to the development of colon
    cancer. 

    A second group of researchers concluded in a separate study that
    excessive beta-catenin may also play a role in the formation of
    melanoma cancers. 

    Scientists at Johns Hopkins University and the University Hospital in
    Utrecht, Netherlands, say test tube experiments show the beta-catenin
    protein can combine with another protein in cells with a particular
    gene deficiency and start genetic changes. 

    The studies, appearing Friday in the journal Science, offer an
    explanation of why patients with colon cancer have a mutated form of a
    gene called adenomatoous polyposis coli, or APC. 

    In its normal form, APC is known as a tumor suppressor. But a mutated
    form of APC is found in about 85 percent of all colon cancer tumors.
    Patients who inherit mutated APC genes can develop thousands of colon
    tumors. 

    In the studies, the researchers show that the normal APC acts to clear
    cells of beta-catenin. When the APC gene malfunctions, however, the
    amount of beta-catenin in cells increases. 

    The excessive beta-catenin combines with another protein, called
    Tcf-Lef, and the combination then disrupts the normal genes in a cell,
    leading to the development of a malignancy, according to the studies. 

    Dr. Mark Peifer of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill said
    the role of beta-catenin may be the "smoking gun" that explains on a
    molecular level what causes normal colon cells to become cancerous and
    how a flawed APC gene can lead to the disease. 

    A related study in Science by researchers at Onyx Pharmaceuticals in
    Richmond, Calif., and at the National Cancer Institute suggests that
    beta-catenin may play a role in other forms of cancer, too. 

    The researchers found abnormally high levels of beta-catenin in seven
    of 26 human melanoma cell cultures. They also found that the APC gene
    was flawed or missing in two of the cell lines. 

    When APC was added to the cell lines lacking the normal form of the
    gene, it wiped out the excessive beta-catenin. 

    Science, which published the papers, is the journal of the American
    Association for the Advancement of Science. 
7.1243IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5727
    AP 20-Mar-1997 16:01 EST   REF5536

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Easter Pets Can Make People Sick

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Baby chicks and ducks, a popular Easter present for
    children, caused salmonella poisoning in three states in 1995 and 1996,
    the government said Thursday in warning again that people who handle
    fowl should wash their hands afterward. 

    Thirty-nine people, almost half of them 2 or younger, got sick with
    salmonella Montivideo in Idaho, Washington and Oregon, the Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention said. 

    Salmonella, which sickens about two to four million people a year, is
    more commonly linked to raw chicken. It is a potentially fatal illness
    that causes diarrhea and vomiting. 

    The cases occurred around Easter. Of the 23 people who got sick in
    Idaho and Washington, at least 17 had touched chicks. Seven of the 16
    people in Oregon had held a chick, hen or rooster, the CDC said. 

    The CDC said people should avoid feces of fowl and should thoroughly
    wash their hands after touching them. 

    Researchers linked chicks and ducks to salmonella in 1992. 
7.1244IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5796
    AP 20-Mar-1997 16:01 EST   REF5531

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Origin of 1918 Flu Pandemic Found

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The 1918 influenza virus that killed more than 20
    million people worldwide originated from American pigs and is unlike
    any other known flu bug, say researchers. They warn that it could
    strike again. 

    Using lung tissue taken at autopsy 79 years ago from an Army private
    killed by the flu, scientists at the Armed Forces Institute of
    Pathology made a genetic analysis of the virus and concluded it is
    unique, though closely related to the "swine" flu. 

    "This is the first time that anyone has gotten a look at this virus
    which killed millions of people in one year, making it the worst
    infectious disease episode ever," said Dr. Jeffery K. Taubenberger,
    leader of the Armed Forces Institute team. "It does not match any virus
    that has been found since." 

    Although the disease that caused the worldwide epidemic was called
    "Spanish flu," the virus apparently is a mutation that evolved in
    American pigs and was spread around the globe by U.S. troops mobilized
    for World War I, said Taubenberger. 

    The Army private whose tissue was analyzed contracted the flu at Fort
    Jackson, S. C. For that reason, Taubenberger and his colleagues suggest
    in the journal Science that the virus be known as Influenza A/South
    Carolina. 

    Science is publishing the study Friday. 

    Army doctors in 1918 conducted autopsies on some of the 43,000
    servicemen killed by the flu and preserved some specimens in
    formaldehyde and wax. 

    Taubenberger said his team sorted through 30 specimens before finding
    enough virus in the private's lung tissue to partially sequence the
    genes for hemagglutinin and neuraminidase, two key proteins in flu
    virus. 

    "The hemagglutinin gene matches closest to swine influenza viruses,
    showing that this virus came into humans from pigs," said Taubenberger.

    The finding supports a widespread theory that flu viruses from swine
    are the most virulent for humans. 

    Most experts believe that flu viruses reside harmlessly in birds, where
    they are genetically stable. Occasionally, a virus from birds will
    infect pigs. The swine immune system attacks the virus, forcing it to
    change genetically to survive. The result is a new virus. When this new
    bug is spread to humans, it can be devastating, said Taubenberger. 

    Two other flu viruses spread all over the world since 1918 -- Asian flu
    in 1957 and the Hong Kong flu in 1968 -- and both mutated in pigs. 

    Robert Webster, a virologist and flu specialist at St. Jude Children's
    Research Hospital in Memphis, said the study is important because
    "eventually we will have another influenza pandemic." Knowing what the
    1918 virus was like may help researchers learn why it was so deadly and
    virulent, he said. 

    "Now we are in a better position to combat it," he said. "If it comes
    back, we can design a vaccine based on that genetic sequence." 

    Webster said the study supports the idea that health authorities should
    monitor viruses in pigs worldwide to develop an early-warning system of
    mutating flu bugs that could plague humans. Currently, flu infections
    are monitored in humans only, he said, and flu vaccines are redesigned
    annually to be effective against the most common strain of the virus
    found in humans. 

    Taubenberger said few people appreciate just how devastating the 1918
    flu pandemic was. 

    "It killed 21 million people worldwide in less than a year," he said.
    "Some analysts suggest it could have been 40 to 50 million." 

    In the United States, about a quarter of the population had the flu and
    2 percent to 3 percent died -- some 700,000 people. The Asian flu and
    Hong Kong flu pandemics were much milder and had a death rate of less
    than 0.1 percent. 

    Taubenberger said many of the thousands of young men crammed onto World
    War I troop ships were just developing the flu as they left the United
    States. 

    "After a week's crossing, the ships would arrive in France with
    hundreds of sick servicemen. Many would die," he said. "There were
    horrible casualties on those troop ships." 
7.1245IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5794
    RTw  21-Mar-97 06:20    

    PNG police clamp down, army commander attacks Chan

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Michael Perry 

    PORT MORESBY, March 21 (Reuter) - Police moved to stamp out unrest in
    Papua New Guinea on Friday as the country's sacked army commander gave
    embattled Prime Minister Sir Julius Chan another deadline to quit. 

    Roadblocks were set up across the capital and police sealed off the
    main army barracks, but protests spread to the country's main
    university and the provinces. 

    The worst crisis in PNG's 22-year history began on Monday when army
    chief Brigadier-General Jerry Singirok demanded that Chan quit over his
    hiring of foreign mercenaries to put down an uprising on Bougainville
    island. 

    Singirok was promptly sacked but on Friday, holed up inside the Murray
    barracks, the popular general repeated his demand and said Chan and two
    other senior ministers must quit before parliament sits again next
    Tuesday. 

    He rejected a commission of inquiry announced by Chan into the
    now-suspended mercenary contract because he said Chan himself would
    control it. 

    "I cannot back down on the call for this prime minister and the
    ministers who are implicated to resign from their ministerial offices,"
    Singirok told a news conference. 

    "With a bit of commonsense and guidance from God, the prime minister
    and his two ministers will see the light and resign by next Tuesday." 

    The Murray barracks have been the focal point for anti-government
    dissent this week. Dozens were injured outside it on Wednesday and
    Thursday in running battles between police -- who have remained loyal
    to Chan -- and protesters. 

    Demonstrators were effectively cut off from the barracks on Tuesday as
    police set up roadblocks and diverted traffic from the main road which
    passes by the compound. 

    Soldiers remained in their barracks, as they have done all week but
    fears remained that they could eventually come into direct
    confrontation with the police, their traditional rivals. 

    Around 1,000 students at Papua New Guinea University called off a march
    on parliament but gave the government a petition demanding Chan's
    resignation and Singirok's return. 

    "We will not stop until corruption is out of this nation," student
    leader Kevin Kepore told a sit-in at the entrance to the university. 

    As police clamped down in Port Moresby, the government was said to be
    considered imposing a state of emergency. 

    There were reports of unrest in at least one provincial town. Local
    radio said police fired teargas at thousands of demonstrators in the
    northern town of Lae. 

    Chan on Thursday announced that PNG's contract with British mercenary
    company Sandline International was being suspended pending an
    investigation into the US$36 million deal. 

    Singirok on Friday handed out copies of the contract to journalists,
    saying it was "unconstitutional, unlawful and against all general
    principles of humanity." 

    The mercenaries, mostly South African veterans and said to number up to
    70, have already begun to leave PNG. 

    Their plans to use helicopter gunships to quash a nine-year rebellion
    on Bougainville were thwarted not by international pressure but by the
    troops they were meant to be leading. 

    Protesters dismissed Chan's promised inquiry into the mercenary
    contract. "We do not want a review," said one student leader. "Chan is
    a wily politician and he is just trying to water down the situation." 

    Australia, the country's former colonial administrator, welcomed Chan's
    suspension of the contract and urged the immediate departure of the
    hired guns to help restore calm to the South Pacific nation. 

    A top Australia diplomat sent to help resolve the crisis was due to
    resume meetings with Chan and senior officials. Canberra has offered
    "practical alternatives" to the use of mercenaries, thought to involve
    increased training for the ill-equipped and poorly-trained Papua New
    Guinea military.

    REUTER
7.1246IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:5777
    RTw  21-Mar-97 01:49    

    Sleaze cloud hangs over Major's re-election bid

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Alan Wheatley 

    LONDON, March 21 (Reuter) - A cloud of sleaze is hanging over the start
    of British Prime Minister John Major's re-election campaign, much as it
    has enveloped the last few years of Conservative rule. 

    Major, fighting to claw back the main opposition Labour party's huge
    opinion poll lead, was forced on the defensive by allegations that he
    tried to smother a probe into influence-peddling involving members of
    his ruling Conservative party. 

    In his final clash of the parliamentary session with Labour leader Tony
    Blair, Major furiously denied shortening the work of the House of
    Commons to delay a sleaze inquiry that could have further reduced his
    chances of retaining power. 

    Lashing out at Blair, who said the affair would stain the character of
    his government, he said: "The stain, if stain there will be, is on a
    Labour front bench that have smeared and smeared and smeared again. You
    have traded in double standards from the moment you took up office." 

    He accused Blair of a political stunt to deflect attention from figures
    on lower unemployment that bolstered the government's contention that
    Britain has the best economy in Europe. 

    Major's problem is that good economic news no longer cuts any ice with
    voters, whereas headlines about sleaze confirm the instincts of many
    that all politicians, but especially Conservatives, put themselves
    before their constituents. 

    "It adds to the general feeling that this is an administration adrift,
    that it's come to the end of its life in a messy way with some sleazy
    things going on," Andrew Neill, editor-in-chief of The Scotsman, told
    Channel Four television. 

    "The public don't like it: they feel that the government's been in
    power for so long that it's been cut off from what it was elected to do
    in the first place." 

    The impression of impropriety has taken root because no less than 19
    ministers, government business managers and ministerial aides have
    resigned since January 1994 because of financial irregularities, sexual
    peccadilloes or crass political gaffes. 

    Regardless of whether Blair was right to smell a government cover-up or
    whether Major was right to detect opposition opportunism and hypocrisy,
    the row ensured three days of negative press that the Conservatives can
    ill afford in the first week of the election campaign. 

    Andrew Marr, editor of The Independent, said hardly any newspapers
    still enthusiastically backed the ruling party. 

    The problem, he told Channel Four, was that Major had had to direct his
    energies toward keeping his feuding party together. 

    "That's not been a pretty spectacle. He hasn't been able to beam out to
    the nation a strong personal vision or sense of direction that the
    country got used to under (predecessor) Margaret Thatcher," Marr said. 

    "The internal battles of the Conservative Party have dominated politics
    and I think turned a huge swathe of natural supporters away from that
    party, certainly for this election and maybe for several to come." 

    A Harris opinion poll in the Friday edition of Marr's paper appeared to
    lend credence to that theory. 

    It said Labour widened its lead over the Conservatives to 27 from 25
    percentage points in the past week. This would return Labour to power
    for the first time since 1979 in a landslide on polling day on May 1. 

    REUTER
7.1247IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Fri Mar 21 1997 09:57123
    RTos 20-Mar-97 21:55    

    Liggett Tobacco Pact with States Expected

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Liggett Group Inc. and the attorneys general of
    several states were expected Thursday to announce a historic settlement
    of anti-smoking litigation that would contain unprecedented concessions
    by a tobacco company, including the admission that nicotine is
    addictive. 

    The attorney general of Massachusetts, while declining to confirm that
    a settlement had been secured, said nonetheless that the anticipated
    agreement was expected to include for the first time an admission by a
    major cigarette manufacturer that tobacco is addictive. 

    Scott Harshbarger, the Massachusetts attorney general, also told a news
    conference on the White House lawn that Liggett was also expected to
    agree to turn over potentially damaging evidence against the tobacco
    industry as part of the settlement. 

    "This, were it to be finalized, would be the first time the stonewall
    has been breached, that evidence is actually being made available from
    the companies themselves," Harshbarger, who is president of the
    National Association of Attorneys General, told reporters. 

    Harshbarger said the evidence could be used in the numerous lawsuits
    against the tobacco industry. 

    "This is a very significant victory, we believe," he said. 

    He added: "This settlement will produce information that indicates that
    major tobacco companies were fully aware that the product they were
    selling is addictive, that the product they were selling had great
    impact on public health in terms of disease and lung cancer and that
    there was a targeting ... of young people as a major way to try to
    addict the next generation of adults." 

    A news conference on the expected accord was scheduled for 4 p.m. EST
    Thursday in Washington, although sources said the deal could still come
    unraveled. 

    Anticipation of a possible settlement sent most tobacco stocks
    plunging. 

    Shares of Philip Morris Cos. Inc., the nation's biggest cigarette
    company, lost $5.125 to $116.875 in early afternoon trading on the New
    York Stock Exchange, where it was the most heavily traded issue. 

    However, Brooke Group Ltd, which owns Liggett, added 62.5 cents to
    $4.875, also on the NYSE. 

    Attorneys general involved in the negotiations had been meeting
    non-stop since Tuesday night to iron out details of the potential
    settlement with Liggett, which makes Chesterfield and other cigarettes. 

    "We're hoping for a unanimous deal," Mississippi Attorney General
    Michael Moore, who was spearheading the negotiations with Liggett, told
    Reuters. 

    Negotiations between Liggett and the states heated up just after the
    first anniversary of Liggett's historic break with the industry to
    become the first cigarette company to offer to settle smoking
    litigation. 

    On March 13, 1996, Liggett, which is owned by Bennett LeBow through his
    Brooke Group, agreed to settle a federal class action in New Orleans.
    The federal class action has since been thrown out by an appeals court. 

    Two days later it reached an accord with five states that sued the
    industry to recoup Medicaid health care costs of smokers. 

    Sources said the latest potential settlement would include a Liggett
    offer to turn over potentially damaging documents about the entire
    industry and would allow current and former employees to testify about
    Liggett's involvement with other companies. 

    It would also include Liggett's agreement to carry a warning label that
    cigarettes are addictive. This would mark a major break with the rest
    of the tobacco industry, which has maintained that nicotine is not
    addictive. 

    Such a settlement would be the harshest blow yet to the cigarette
    industry, which is facing a barrage of anti-smoking lawsuits. 

    Since last year, a total of 22 attorneys general as well as the
    lieutenant governor of Alabama have filed Medicaid suits against the
    tobacco industry. Pennsylvania, Missouri and Alaska are also
    considering filing similar suits. 

    Because of this, LeBow has been negotiating a broader agreement that
    would satisfy a larger number of states. 

    Sources said a key part of the settlement would be LeBow's offer to
    turn over potentially damaging documents about the entire industry and
    the prospect that Liggett employees or former employees would testify
    against other companies. 

    However, Philip Morris said Thursday that a North Carolina court had
    granted a temporary restraining order that prevents Liggett from
    disclosing documents owned jointly with the other four major U.S.
    tobacco companies. 

    The emergency ruling was granted on behalf of Philip Morris, R.J.
    Reynolds Tobacco Co., a unit of RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp., Lorillard
    Tobacco Co., a unit of Loews Corp., and Brown & Williamson Tobacco
    Corp., a unit of B.A.T Industries Plc of Britain. 

    The expected settlement by Liggett comes amid a U.S. Justice Department
    criminal investigation into the tobacco industry on several issues,
    including whether the top officers of the major cigarette makers lied
    to Congress in 1994 when they testified that nicotine is not addictive. 

    While the sources were optimistic a settlement would soon be reached to
    end more state suits against Liggett, they said the larger tobacco
    companies had made no effort to negotiate directly with the attorneys
    general or lawyers representing other plaintiffs suing the industry. 

    They said that if any such industry-wide settlement were to emerge, it
    would not be for a very long time. 

    REUTER
7.1248JGODCL::BOWENTwo stars short of a GalaxyWed Mar 26 1997 14:43131
7.1249Last before Next Tues...JGODCL::BOWENTwo stars short of a GalaxyThu Mar 27 1997 11:04137
7.1250Lets' hope Laurie doesn't kill this issueJGODCL::BOWENTwo stars short of a GalaxyWed Apr 02 1997 11:28107
7.1251Friday'sJGODCL::BOWENTwo stars short of a GalaxyFri Apr 04 1997 12:51134
7.1252VAXCAT::LAURIEDesktop Consultant, Project EnterpriseSat Apr 05 1997 20:228
7.1253IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:41117
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 7-Apr-1997 1:02 EDT   REF5589

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, April 7, 1997
   
    VIETNAM-RUBIN 

    HANOI, Vietnam (AP) -- Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin is in Vietnam,
    seeking to develop closer economic ties to the country. Rubin and
    Vietnamese officials discussed a pact obliging the communist government
    to repay the wartime debts of South Vietnam. Rubin and the Vietnamese
    will sign the agreement during a ceremony Monday, officials said. Rubin
    is the highest-ranking U.S. economic official to visit Vietnam since
    the war's end in 1975. 
   
    U.S.-MIDEAST 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- As President Clinton prepares to meet with Israeli
    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, U.S. officials are pleading for
    Israeli and Palestinian leaders to renew face-to-face talks.
    Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat insists building must stop on an
    Israeli housing project in east Jerusalem before peace talks can
    resume. Meanwhile, Netanyahu pressed his case with his closest friend
    among Arab leaders, King Hussein of Jordan, who was recovering from
    prostate surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. 
   
    PLAINS-BLIZZARD 

    BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) -- North Dakota Governor Ed Schafer is asking
    President Clinton to declare his state a disaster area after a spring
    blizzard shut down much of the northern Plains with blinding wind-blown
    snow and drifts up to 20 feet high. Hundreds of miles of highways were
    closed in Wyoming, the Dakotas, Nebraska and the eastern edge of
    Montana. 
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Space shuttle Columbia and its seven
    astronauts will return to Earth Tuesday, 12 days earlier than planned,
    because of a deteriorating and potentially explosive power generator.
    It is only the third time in space shuttle history that a mission has
    been cut short by equipment failure. 
   
    LOCKHEED-CONTRACT 

    FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- Machinists at a Lockheed Martin airplane
    plant approved a three-year contract, averting a strike by 2,700
    employees. Union members, who had gone without a raise since 1993, had
    threatened to walk out or stage a work slowdown if a new contract were
    not reached by 12:01 a.m. Monday. A strike could have shut down
    production of F-16 fighter jets. 
   
    MICROSOFT-WEB TV 

    LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Microsoft is buying WebTV Networks, a company that
    sells systems that allow people to surf the Internet over their
    television sets. Microsoft officials said the purchase price for the
    Palo Alto, California-based WebTV Networks was $425 million. 
   
    CHINA EARTHQUAKES 

    BEIJING (AP) -- Two powerful earthquakes struck Xinjiang province in
    northwestern China, injuring at least 23 people and causing heavy
    damage to a county still hobbled by several strong temblors earlier
    this year. The quakes hit Jiashi County, about 2,000 miles west of
    Beijing, state television reported. The first had a preliminary
    magnitude of 6.3 and the second 6.4. They were followed by numerous
    aftershocks. There were reportedly no deaths in the quakes, but about
    2,000 rooms or buildings were damaged. 
   
    GREENSPAN-MITCHELL 

    WASHINGTON, Va. (AP) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and NBC
    reporter Andrea Mitchell were married in rural Virginia. About 75
    friends and family members were invited along with many media
    personalities. Greenspan and Mitchell met in 1983 when she interviewed
    him about the future of Social Security. It is the second marriage for
    both. 
   
    ZAIRE 

    GOMA, Zaire (AP) -- Rebel leader Laurent Kabila is objecting to the
    presence of American troops on Zaire's border, calling them a threat to
    his country's integrity. Kabila also said there should be no
    international intervention in Zaire. About 1,200 U.S., Belgian, French
    and British forces have set up camp in Brazzaville, Congo, across the
    Zaire River from the Zairian capital of Kinshasa, in case Westerners
    have to be evacuated. 
   
    JAPAN-MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar bought 124.71 yen Monday morning, up 1.15 yen
    from its late level Friday and also above its level of 122.43 yen
    Friday in New York. The Nikkei rose in early trading. 
   
    OBIT-COOKE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Jack Kent Cooke, the flamboyant owner of the
    Washington Redskins, died from cardiac arrest. He was 84. Cooke, who
    oversaw the Redskins glory years of three Super Bowl titles under coach
    Joe Gibbs, was one of Washington's noted personalities. 
   
    BULLS-MAGIC 

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Michael Jordan is fifth on the NBA's all-time
    scoring list after hitting for 37 in Chicago's 110-94 triumph at
    Orlando. He moved past Oscar Robertson with 26,726. points. Jordan hit
    his first six shots of the second half and scored 13 points in the
    Bulls' 21-2 burst. The Bulls led by three until he scored 24 points
    after halftime. Scottie Pippen added 21 points for the Bulls. Penny
    Hardaway and Rony Seikaly scored 23 apiece for the Magic, which has
    dropped five of six. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1254IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4174
    RTw  07-Apr-97 04:39    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    ROCHESTER, Minnesota - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met
    Jordna's King Hussein at a Minnesota hospital, calling him a "great
    friend of peace" but offering no clue as to whether the session helped
    unlock the stalled Middle East peace process. The Arab monarch
    underwent routine prostate surgery on Saturday at the Mayo Clinic. 

    Netanyahu's meeting with Hussein lasted for about 45 minutes, after
    which he headed for Washington to see President Bill Clinton on Monday
    amid U.S. efforts to push the region toward peaceful resolution of the
    decades-long conflict. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean lawmakers grilled the founder of the scandal-hit
    Hanbo Group in a hearing broadcast live on national television from a
    Seoul jail. Chung Tae-soo, wearing a light blue prison uniform, was
    questioned over the collapse of Hanbo's steelmaking flagship under $5.8
    billion in debt. Chung and nine others are in custody while standing
    trial on bribery and other charges in connection with South Korea's
    biggest corporate failure. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peruvians have grown frustrated with the way the 110-day-old
    hostage crisis is being handled, but they support President Alberto
    Fujimori's pledge to reach a negotiated solution, an opinion poll
    showed. The survey results reflected impatience with the slow pace of
    talks to free the 72 hostages held by the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary
    Movement (MRTA) rebels. 

    - - - - 

    PORT-AU-PRINCE - In a silent protest against unrelenting hardship and
    poverty, Haitians stayed away in huge numbers from Senate and local
    elections in the poorest country in the Americas. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - The surplus in Japan's current account, the broadest measure of
    trade in goods and services, rose 15.4 percent to 865.2 billion yen in
    February from a year earlier, the Ministry of Finance announced. The
    surplus in merchandise trade alone also rose 2.9 percent to 878.0
    billion yen from the same month a year earlier. 

    - - - - 

    LIVERPOOL, England - Britain's most famous horse race, the Grand
    National steeplechase, is to be run amid a security "ring of steel" on
    Monday, 48 hours after a bomb alert blamed on the IRA forced it to be
    postponed. 

    - - - - 

    MIAMI - Fire broke out in a linen locker aboard the Cunard cruise ship
    Vistafjord near the Bahamas, killing a crew member and forcing hundreds
    of passengers to prepare to abandon ship, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
    The fire on the ship, carrying 991 passengers and crew on a
    trans-Atlantic voyage, did not spread and evacuation plans were
    cancelled. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and NBC
    television correspondent Andrea Mitchell were married in what has been
    dubbed the capital's wedding of the year. The private ceremony took
    place at the elegant Inn at Little Washington in Washington, Virginia. 

    REUTER
7.1255IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:41117
    RTw  07-Apr-97 05:07    

    FEATURE - British cheesemakers seek slice of ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - British cheesemakers seek slice of French market 

    By Alister Doyle 

    PARIS, April 7 (Reuter) - Undeterred by comparisons with selling ice to
    Antarctica or sand to the Arabs, British dairy producers are vying for
    a bigger bite of France's cheese market. 

    The French are already so spoiled for choice, from creamy camemberts to
    green-veined roqueforts, that late president Charles de Gaulle once
    observed that a country producing 246 cheeses was ungovernable. 

    Touting cheeses with names like stinking bishop or Cornish yarg,
    British producers are hoping to add to the anarchic range of cheese in
    a land convinced it has the world's finest cuisine -- and widely
    convinced that much British food is foul. 

    "On the one hand, it's like carrying coals to Newcastle. On the other
    we may have a chance because this is a very discerning market," said
    Stephen Fletcher of Ram Hall in England, who hopes to export his tangy
    ewe's milk cheeses. 

    British producers of cow, goat, sheep and even buffalo cheese point to
    the surprise success of British retailer Marks and Spencer (MKS.L) in
    France -- it even sells plastic-wrapped fish and chips with vinegar, a
    typical British dish, in France. 

    "We sold 125 tonnes of British cheese last year in our 20 shops," said
    M&S spokeswoman Francoise Martin after the launch of the cheese export
    drive at the British embassy. 

    The company's cheese sales, mostly cheddar and stilton but also
    cheshire and red leicester, account for about 75 percent of tiny
    British cheese sales in France. 

    Britain has had other cultural upsets in Paris -- including the
    appointments last year of fashion designers John Galliano at Christian
    Dior or Alexander McQueen at Givenchy. 

    FROM CHALK TO CHEESE IN 30 YEARS 

    Michel Roux, a French chef who runs one of only four restaurants in
    Britain with three stars in the Michelin Guide, the gourmet's bible,
    said British cheeses had improved dramatically in recent decades. 

    "Thirty years ago in Britain there was no good cheese apart from
    stilton and cheddar. It all tasted like chalk," he said. 

    "But many new British cheeses are not gimmicky...If a French cheese
    master put it in his shop, he'd hit the jackpot," he said. "There's
    also a snob factor -- the French like to try anything that's British,
    at least once." 

    But he said foreign cheese producers faced the same problem as wine
    exporters from Australia, Chile, South Africa or California -- the
    French are convinced their products are best. 

    "Many New World wines are excellent, but the French drink their own,"
    said Roux, who runs the Waterside Inn in Berkshire, southern England. 

    "It makes me a bit sick that I can't sell in France," said Robert
    Pouget, a Frenchman who lives in England and now wants to export his
    Oxford Blue cheese. "One problem is that some mass-produced French
    blues aren't as expensive as mine." 

    French pride about cheese -- hard, gooey, crumbly or smelly --
    stretches back a long way. 

    PLINY THE ELDER RAVED ABOUT FRENCH CHEESE 

    In the first century AD, the Roman historian Pliny the Elder wrote that
    the most prized cheeses in Rome were from Nimes, the Lozere area or
    villages in Gevaudan. Historians believe he was referring to the
    ancestors of cantal and roquefort. 

    "The problem is the diversity of French cheeses," said Christian Le
    Gall of Z. Lanquetot, a wholesaler at the giant Rungis food market near
    Paris, who won a certificate from the British embassy for selling
    British cheese. 

    "Any shop owner who sells British or other foreign cheeses will have to
    make space by taking away one of their existing cheeses. That's a tough
    decision," he said. 

    He said he sold three tonnes of British cheese last year, a tiny
    fraction of the 1,500 tonnes of French cheese he sold, such as brie,
    comte, beaufort or munster. 

    France already consumes quantities of foreign cheese such as Swiss
    gruyere, Greek (and sometimes unwittingly Danish) feta, Dutch edam or
    Italian parmesan. 

    But with the notable exception of crumbly blue stilton, most British
    cheeses have yet to graduate from the mousetrap to the French gourmet's
    table. 

    Potential candidates for export to France include wensleydale -- mixed
    with ginger, cranberries or apricots -- cumberland, Yorkshire blue,
    tiskey meadow, sage derby, double gloucester or whisky cheddar. 

    British officials insisted cheese was not a backdoor way of
    rehabilitating British cattle in France, a year after the crisis over
    mad cow disease led to a worldwide ban on British beef exports.

    Dairy products have not been tied to the fatal brain disease. 

    Cheese has been made at least since the Stone Age in Britain. It got a
    boost from Cistercian monks who introduced their techniques about 1,000
    years ago -- from France. 

    REUTER
7.1256IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:41151
    RTw  07-Apr-97 04:34    

    FEATURE - Vote-theft accusations in Northern ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Vote-theft accusations in Northern Ireland poll 

    By Martin Cowley 

    BELFAST, April 7 (Reuter) - For decades "vote early and vote often" was
    a slyly whispered dictum that gave an air of jaunty bravado to Northern
    Ireland politics. But not any more. 

    In the heat of a British election crucial to peace hopes and with the
    threat of guerrilla war in the air, vote-rigging has shed any naive
    glamour it may have had. 

    "It has been very clear for a considerable time that the whole question
    of abuse of voting is very serious in Northern Ireland," says
    nationalist SDLP leader John Hume, pointing an accusing finger at the
    IRA's political arm, Sinn Fein. 

    "Everbody knows it. Go and check the electoral register as we did in a
    small area just to demonstrate it, and look at the results we
    produced." 

    But Sinn Fein, the SDLP's rival among the region's minority Catholics,
    vehemently denies its supporters are involved in vote-stealing or
    trying to manufacture extra votes. 

    "The SDLP engages in this form of negative campaigning every time there
    is an election. They have yet to produce any evidence to support the
    allegation," said Sinn Fein's Richard McAuley. 

    Hume's broadside highlighted the sinister contrast with the election
    campaign under way in the rest of Britain. Politics Northern
    Ireland-style are a life and death issue. 

    In the mainland's cities and shires, the red rosettes of the opposition
    Labour Party jostle with the blue of the ruling Conservatives in a bid
    for national power. 

    Northern Ireland's struggle is chiefly between "orange and green," the
    ancient battle colours of Protestant and Catholic. 

    Pro-British Unionist parties fight an unremitting battle for votes
    inside the Protestant majority community and at the end of the day
    their so-called "Unionist family" ends up with more parliamentary seats
    than the Irish Catholic minority. 

    BATTLE FOR CATHOLIC VOTE 

    This time a rare battle is being waged for the soul of the Catholic
    minority. Hopes of an electoral pact have collapsed. The SDLP faces a
    stiff Sinn Fein challenge and insults fly. 

    "My party has revealed evidence of continuing intention to engage in
    every kind of electoral malpractice, from multiple registration of
    their (Sinn Fein) own members to the forging of (voter-identity)
    medical cards to facilitate vote-stealing," Hume wrote on February 20
    in Belfast's Irish News. 

    Hume said there had been attempts to intimidate two SDLP officials who
    carry out anti-impersonation duties in polling stations at each
    election. There had been "hypocritical and false allegations" that the
    SDLP steals votes. 

    Sinn Fein has condemned attacks on two SDLP councillors' homes and says
    republicans will not indulge in electoral abuse. 

    Senior Sinn Fein official Martin McGuinness said: "The slogan 'vote
    often and vote early' was a maxim long before Sinn Fein came into
    electoral politics and it was perfected by the so-called constitutional
    parties." 

    Sinn Fein is banned from peace talks on Northern Ireland's future until
    the outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA) renews a ceasefire broken in
    February 1996. 

    NORTHERN IRISH CAMPAIGNING DIFFERS FROM MAINLAND 

    Northern Ireland's campaign climate is vastly different from the bread
    and butter polemics that underpin the hustings haggling of the big
    London-based parties. 

    Irish Republican Army extremists, spurning entreaties from moderate
    Catholics and political leaders London, Dublin and Washington, are
    waging war on British rule. 

    Election day will see armed police positioned outside polling stations.
    Military patrols complete the image of the troubled province as a place
    apart. 

    In last May's province-wide elections for a local assembly, a polling
    station in nationalist Londonderry city was turned into a riot zone at
    the end of the day-long voting. 

    Youths threw petrol bombs and rocks at police trying to escort
    ballot-boxes from the station to a central count. 

    VOTING IRREGULARITIES DATE FROM PARTITION 

    Claims about widespred vote-stealing have dogged elections fought by
    Protestant and Catholic parties since Britain retained Northern Ireland
    after Irish partition 75 years ago. 

    Arson, street clashes and guerrilla conflict in 1969 forced thousands
    in Belfast to flee burnt-out homes to safer areas. 

    Widespread postal voting was introduced to ease fears among Catholics
    and Protestants that they would be intimidated by "the other side" if
    they returned to their old areas to vote. 

    "Down the years polling stations and my staff in many areas have been
    subjected to stones, petrol bombs and the occasional shot. They and
    police escorting the ballot boxes have been attacked and injured," said
    Chief Electoral Officer Pat Bradley. 

    Voting at polling stations is overseen by representatives of the rival
    parties who scrutinise electors before they cast their ballot in
    secret. Since 1985 voters must show identity documents but party agents
    may challenge them if in doubt. 

    Bradley says he is always concerned for the probity of the electoral
    system but has no evidence of organised personation, although there are
    signs of postal vote malpractice. 

    "Last May there were allegations of a seriously high level of
    personation, particularly in respect of West Belfast. 

    "I was clearly concerned at such allegations and asked publicly for at
    least some examples to be given to me so that the matter could be
    investigated...I still have not received a single example," he told
    Reuters. 

    Bradley said names could be innocently duplicated on a draft register
    of voters, but there would also be people who would attempt to abuse
    the system. 

    "It is difficult to say for certain whether personation goes on at a
    major scale," said Sydney Elliott, a politics lecturer at Queen's
    University in Belfast. But "in some constituencies the level of party
    competition is such that in all probability old practices still
    remain." 

    Bradley, who acts as an independent monitor in elections in foreign
    trouble-spots, said: "I have never come across any place where there is
    perfection. I have never said there is perfection here." 

    REUTER
7.1257IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4141
    RTw  07-Apr-97 02:14    

    Bonn softens stance on EMU rules - British newspapers

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 7 (Reuter) - German Finance Minister Theo Waigel has
    softened his stance that countries qualifying for European Monetary
    Union (EMU) must hit a public deficit target of three percent of gross
    domestic product, British newspapers reported on Monday. 

    "I have never nailed myself on the cross of three percent. When I said
    in the past 'three percent means three percent' I did not necessarily
    mean 3.0 percent," the Guardian quoted Waigel as saying.

    Waigel made his comments after a meeting of European Union finance
    ministers in the Dutch town of Noordwijk at the weekend, the papers
    said. 

    Coming just days after German Chancellor Helmut Kohl said he would seek
    re-election next year and that EMU would proceed on time in 1999,
    Waigel's remarks dampened speculation that monetary union would be
    delayed, the Financial Times said. 

    "I don't like to accentuate the negative, but you must say what happens
    if EMU goes wrong. It would damage the German economy, hurt German
    exporters, and there would be a flight into the D-mark," the newspaper
    quoted Waigel as saying. 

    German political heavyweights, including Waigel, have repeatedly
    insisted that the EU's Maastricht Treaty on monetary union allows for a
    maximum budget deficit of three percent, even though economic
    difficulties in EMU-linchpin Germany have cast doubt on its ability to
    meet that goal. 

    Speaking to reporters in Noordwijk, Waigel quashed talk that Germany
    might miss the stringent economic entry conditions for currency union. 

    "There is no change on that -- we will meet the criteria," he said. 

    REUTER
7.1258IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4174
    RTw  07-Apr-97 01:48    

    British Conservatives hit by BBC's ``Mr Clean''

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Giles Elgood 

    LONDON, April 7 (Reuter) - Britain's Conservatives suffered a new blow
    to their re-election hopes when a veteran BBC reporter stepped forward
    to stand as an "anti-sleaze" candidate aganist a former government
    minister accused of corruption. 

    Opposition Labour Party leader Tony Blair was expected, meanwhile, to
    try to undermine the Conservatives by staging a policy reverse to
    espouse one of the ruling party's big ideas -- privatisation of state
    assets. 

    In a move seen as a serious setback for the Conservative leadership,
    both main opposition parties backed BBC war correspondent Martin Bell,
    one of Britain's best-known journalists, to stand against former
    minister Neil Hamilton in the May 1 election. 

    Hamilton, who denies receiving cash for asking parliamentary questions,
    has come under pressure from his party leadership to quit but local
    Conservatives in his Tatton constituency in northwest England have
    stood by him. 

    Bell will replace the Labour and Liberal Democrat candidates unless
    Hamilton, a former industry minister, quits. He had a majority of
    15,860 in the 1992 election, making Tatton the Conservatives' fifth
    safest seat. 

    But an opinion poll in Sunday's Observer newspaper suggested that a
    high-profile anti-corruption candidate supported by both Labour and the
    Liberal Democrats could unseat Hamilton if he remained the Conservative
    candidate. 

    Bell, who superstitiously always wears a white suit for luck, has
    covered wars for more than 30 years and was wounded by shrapnel in
    Sarajevo while delivering a live television report. 

    With polling day little more than three weeks away, the Conservatives
    show little sign of closing Labour's massive opinion poll lead. 

    A Gallup survey in Monday's Daily Telegrpah gave Labour 53 percent
    support, 21 points ahead of the Conservatives. 

    The poll indicated that neither a rumpus over controversial statements
    by Blair last week on Scottish devolution nor Conservative claims that
    he is untrustworthy had dented Labour's lead. 

    Blair was expected to use a keynote speech on the economy on Monday to
    make clear that Labour had now dropped its long-standing opposition to
    selling off state assets. 

    "Where there is no over-riding reason for preferring public provision
    of goods and services -- particularly where those services operate in a
    competitive market -- then the presumption should be that economic
    activity is best left to the private sector, with market forces being
    encouraged to operate," one report said he would say. 

    Labour finance spokesman Gordon Brown said the party would take a hard
    look at public assets. "If necessary, we will sell them off," he said. 

    Prime Minister John Major poured scorn on Blair's so-called "New
    Labour" party, accusing it of seeking to steal his own party's
    policies. 

    New Labour might sound increasingly like the Conservatives, he told BBC
    television, but "the belief that they could deliver Tory (Conservative)
    policies is just idiocy." 

    REUTER
7.1259IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4184
    RTw  07-Apr-97 00:57    

    Tight security for Britain's postponed ``National''

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Dave Thompson 

    LIVERPOOL, England, April 7 - Britain's most famous horse race, the
    Grand National steeplechase, is to be run amid a security "ring of
    steel" on Monday, 48 hours after a bomb alert blamed on the IRA forced
    it to be postponed. 

    Organisers hope 10,000 spectators, defying the Irish Republican Army's
    bomb threats, will turn up at Aintree racecourse near Liverpool for the
    150th Grand National. 

    "We are going to put a ring of steel around this race course," said
    Mark Sutcliffe of Merseyside police. 

    As Britain's May 1 general election approaches, the IRA has stepped up
    its campaign of violence against British rule in Northern Ireland in a
    clear attempt to force the issue on to the political agenda. 

    Police received two coded bomb warnings just 30 minutes before the race
    was due to start on Saturday. They mounted a massive security sweep,
    carrying out three controlled explosions on suspect packages but
    finding no bombs. 

    Nearly 70,000 people were evacuated from the course after the race was
    postponed and thousands of racegoers were stranded overnight in
    Liverpool while police checked 7,000 cars and coaches in the Aintree
    carparks. 

    Drivers were allowed to retrieve their vehicles on Sunday after police
    using sniffer dogs trained to detect explosives gave the all clear. 

    Owners, jockeys and trainers were adamant that the race should be run
    on Monday and it is now scheduled to start at 1700 (1600 GMT). 

    "We're not going to be put off by a bit of aggro (trouble)," said
    Charlie Brooks, trainer of Suny Bay, one of the favourites. 

    Fellow trainer Jenny Pitman, who burst into tears when the race was
    called off, said: "It must go ahead for the sake of racing and the
    whole country. Otherwise there will be calls from terrorists to every
    big sporting event." 

    Fears that Sunday's soccer league cup final between Leicester City and
    Middlesbrough at London's Wembley stadium could also fall victim to
    bomb threats proved unfounded. The match, a 1-1 draw, was played
    without incident amid heavy security. 

    At Aintree, staff worked flat out to prepare the track as police
    searched the sprawling racecourse complex in an operation expected to
    continue until Monday afternoon. 

    Deputy police chief Paul Stephenson said: "No one has yet claimed
    responsibility for the bomb threats and we can all draw our own
    conclusions from that." 

    Prime Minister John Major said he had no doubt that the IRA was to
    blame for the bomb scare, which he said could only hinder peace efforts
    in Northern Ireland. 

    "These people are murderers. They have murdered before. They will
    murder again, and people ought not to take these threats lightly,"
    Major told BBC television. 

    He said the Aintree bomb threat, which came after IRA bombs were found
    at major road and railway points in England, would only hurt prospects
    that the IRA's political allies, Sinn Fein, could take part in peace
    talks. 

    In Liverpool more than 2,000 people were forced to spend Saturday night
    wherever they could find an empty corner out of the blustery weather.
    One couple slept in a hotel sauna, another racegoer in the stable lads'
    hostel on the course. 

    "The public were ringing in with offers," said an employee at
    Liverpool's social services department. "I think some pubs and clubs
    were open all night to try and help out." 

    REUTER
7.1260IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4230
    RTw  06-Apr-97 22:12    

    UK Labour opinion poll lead unaffected by gaffe

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 6 (Reuter) - Britain's main opposition Labour Party has
    increased its opinion poll lead and remains 21 points clear of the
    ruling Conservatives ahead of May 1 elections, according to a survey in
    Monday's Daily Telegraph. 

    The Gallup poll gave Labour 53 percent, up one point from last week,
    while the Conservatives were also up one point to 32 percent. The
    Liberal Democrats saw their support drop to 10 from 11 percent. 

    The Telegraph said the poll showed that neither a rumpus over Labour
    leader Tony Blair's controversial statements on Scottish devolution nor
    Conservative claims that Blair is untrustworthy had dented Labour's
    massive lead. 

    The results formed part of a "rolling poll" which the Telegraph will
    publish daily between now and May 1. In the telephone poll, 300 people
    will be interviewed each day, rising to 500 in two week's time. 

    Each published poll will reflect answers from at least 1,000 people
    over the previous three days. Data from each day's interviews is added
    while the equivalent number of interviews conducted three days earlier
    is dropped. 

    REUTER
7.1261IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4239
    RTw  06-Apr-97 22:10    

    Albania urges looters to hand in radioactive parts

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    TIRANA, April 6 (Reuter) - Albania urged looters on Sunday to return
    lethal chemicals and radioactive materials, some of them used in
    radars, that were seized from military bases during an insurrection
    last month. 

    "They can kill...please hand them back," Colonel Asllan Bushati, head
    of the army chemistry unit, told Albanian television. 

    He said the materials were stolen from four depots during an armed
    rebellion in March triggered by protests at the collapse of popular
    savings schemes. Bushati said the objects had no value or use for
    civilians. 

    The radioactive objects, some looking like square tiles and others tiny
    capsules, contained strontium or cobalt, he said. Some parts were used
    in radars and remained radioactive for up to 30 years. 

    Barrels containing chemicals that could sting eyes or skin and make
    breathing difficult had also been stolen, he said. 

    Bushati also urged people not to abandon the radioactive objects in
    fields. "They pass from grass to livestock," he said, warning that the
    radiation could then end up in beef and pass to humans. 

    British-based defence experts Jane's Information Group says in a 1996
    report that Albania has chemicals, like tear gas, for riot control but
    has no programmes for developing chemical weapons. 

    It also says there is no evidence that Albania's former communist
    rulers, who ruled until 1990, ever sought to develop biological
    weapons. Albania has no nuclear weapons. 

    REUTER
7.1262IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:42129
    AP 7-Apr-1997 1:50 EDT   REF5010

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    States Rely on Tobacco Investments

    By GLENN ADAMS

    Associated Press Writer

    States are suing tobacco companies and passing laws to stamp out butts,
    but when it comes to making money, many consider the weed a dependable
    friend. 

    State pension systems keep billions of dollars in tobacco stocks, and
    overseers are reluctant to dump what has been a cash cow. 

    "So long as tobacco companies make money, we'll make money off them,"
    said Dee Williams, public pension system director in Utah, which has
    one of the nation's lowest smoking rates. 

    At the same time, other states are swearing off tobacco stocks.
    Maryland's retirement agency last year divested after joining 21 other
    states in a suit against major tobacco companies to recoup health-care
    costs associated with smoking. New Hampshire, too, has sold its tobacco
    holdings, after its pension manager branded them a bad investment. 

    South Carolina lies deep in tobacco country, but its longstanding
    policy bans pension investments in any stocks. A pending constitutional
    amendment could lift that prohibition, however. 

    West Virginia is also barred from dabbling in stocks, and Indiana
    hasn't bought any since it got the go-ahead to invest pension funds
    last year. 

    But other states, including many that are suing tobacco companies,
    remain heavily invested in companies that make cigarettes. 

    Michigan keeps $353 million invested in five companies that market
    tobacco products despite Gov. John Engler's push to sell them off.
    Their value has nearly tripled since the stocks were purchased. 

    The investment board in Minnesota, another litigant, has $281 million
    tied up in tobacco-related stocks, despite challenges by Gov. Arne
    Carlson to justify it. 

    "Why do we want to invest in a ship that's sinking?" Carlson demanded. 

    "You have to do it," said David Bronner, director of the pension system
    in Alabama, which has almost $100 million in tobacco stocks. "It's the
    same thing as making investments in the gambling industry." 

    James Tierney, a former Maine attorney general who is coordinating the
    22 states' cases, believes the tobacco investments themselves are a
    gamble. 

    "If we win one suit," Tierney said, "the whole industry will become a
    very bad investment. 

    "If you're sitting there running a pension system, you have to bet
    whether there's going to be a congressional settlement" in the case,
    Tierney said. 

    Health groups say more is at stake than money. 

    "The governor and legislators feign this self-righteous indignation
    over smoking, then the state gives the tobacco companies millions of
    dollars to play with," said Rick Steiner, who heads a citizens group
    pressing Alaska's Permanent Fund to sell $150 million in Philip Morris
    Inc. shares. 

    Philip Morris spokesman Nicholas Rolli declined to comment specifically
    on pension investments but said the company had been a solid performer
    for investors. Philip Morris delivered a 31 percent return last year,
    including stock appreciation and re-investment of dividends, he said. 

    Figures from the states put the total in tobacco stocks held by pension
    systems at $6 billion to $7 billion. 

    Most states say tobacco investments make up 1 percent or less of their
    total portfolios. The collective portfolio of all of the states'
    pension systems was about $1 trillion as of the third quarter of 1996,
    said Paul Zorn, manager of the Government Finance Officers Association
    in Washington. 

    California has the largest sum socked away in tobacco: $1.2 billion in
    separate teachers' and public employees' pension systems. A bill that
    would have required the public funds to divest died last year. 

    The board of the California Public Employees Pension Fund, or CalPERS,
    "is guided solely by obtaining the highest return for the fund, and
    social and political decisions really are not to influence our
    investment policies or decisions," said spokesman Brad Pacheco. 

    New York's public employee pension fund has $583 million in tobacco
    stocks. While the stocks have performed well, advisers say current
    valuations are discounted for litigation risks, which make them more
    volatile. 

    "As a long-term investor, I believe it is appropriate now to limit the
    fund's exposure to that volatility," New York Comptroller H. Carl
    McCall said. 

    Texas, whose teachers' retirement fund has $477 million in tobacco
    holdings, and Maine, whose pension fund has a relatively meager $10
    million tied up in tobacco, say constitutional restrictions keep them
    from flicking away stocks that, to some, are socially questionable. 

    Nevertheless, Maine is currently considering raising cigarette taxes by
    as much as $1 a pack; Texas is among the 22 states suing tobacco
    companies. 

    Rhode Island's pension fund holds $32 million in tobacco stocks months
    after passing laws cracking down on sales to minors. Florida, with
    about $750 million in tobacco stocks, is weighing a bill to raise
    cigarette taxes by a dime a pack. 

    Dropping tobacco stocks is not as easy as it may seem, said Don
    Schaefer of the Public Employees Retirement Association in Colorado,
    which has $174 million in four companies that handle tobacco products. 

    About 80 percent of the $20 billion retirement fund is in index funds,
    which mirror the Standard & Poor's 500 index. To be in the S&P 500
    index, Schaefer explained, investors must have stock in all 500
    companies -- including those that sell tobacco products. 

    Schaefer also said that Philip Morris has diversified holdings in
    coffee, meat, cereal, beer and other companies, so not all of the
    investment is really in tobacco. 
7.1263IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4287
    AP 7-Apr-1997 1:14 EDT   REF5594

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Disaster Awareness Project Planned

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans are treated to a seemingly endless litany
    of weather disasters on the evening news, yet most do not expect it to
    happen to them. 

    "A lot of people believe that severe events happen somewhere else, but
    don't happen where they are," said Rocky Lopes of the American Red
    Cross. Citing a poll, he said, about 52 percent believe they are not at
    risk. 

    But weather disasters can, and have, happened in every state, Lopes
    noted. 

    That is why the Red Cross and The Weather Channel are launching Project
    Safeside, an effort to teach the public about the dangers of severe
    weather, how to prepare for it and what to do when it occurs. 

    Floods, hurricanes, lightning, tornadoes and extreme heat are the five
    hazards to be stressed in brochures, broadcasts, lectures and the
    computer Internet in the education effort, beginning about mid-April,
    Lopes said. 

    Red Cross offices can add localized assistance, such as sites of
    shelters and evacuation routes. 

    A random telephone survey of 2,039 households in January found only 15
    percent of people claim to be "very prepared" for a disaster. 

    Only 45 percent said they would know where to go if told to evacuate
    their homes, just 43 percent have stored water and 39 percent have a
    first aid kit. 

    There is a lot of denial among people when it comes to expecting
    weather disasters, Lopes said. Many think their area is safe because
    nothing has happened recently or they believe in myths, such as that a
    "hundred-year" flood actually happens only once in 100 years when
    that's only an average. 

    The first step in being prepared, Lopes said, is to have a family plan
    to meet somewhere if a disaster occurs while the members are scattered
    at work or school, and to have essential supplies in one place "so you
    can grab and go when disaster strikes." 

    What should a preparedness kit contain? A flashlight, battery-powered
    radio, extra batteries, first aid kit, canned food and at least three
    gallons of water per person, Lopes said. 

    His advice for various weather dangers: 

    --Flooding. If you approach a flooded area, turn around and go another
    way. Eighty percent of flood deaths involve people in vehicles. Know
    the difference between flood watches and warnings and take action when
    a warning is given. Know that a flash flood can happen so fast that the
    safest thing to do is to climb to higher ground. 

    --Hurricanes. Listen to local media and follow advice of local
    officials. Cover every window of the home with plywood or shutters.
    Evacuate if told to do so, even if the sky is still sunny. If not told
    to evacuate, stay put to avoid contributing to traffic gridlock. 

    --Lightning. Many people fail to recognize that the safest thing is to
    go inside. Turn off appliances, including the air conditioner. If stuck
    outdoors, squat low but make as little contact with the ground as
    possible; do not lie flat. 

    --Tornadoes. Go to the lowest part of the home in a room without
    windows. Bring a battery-operated radio and disaster supplies and wait
    to hear that it's safe to return. 

    --Heat. If you must go outdoors, wear white, loose-fitting clothing,
    drink plenty of fluids even if not thirsty. Do any strenuous activity
    early in the day. Do not use salt tablets unless your doctor says to.
    Go to cool places such as shopping malls and theaters. 

    ------ 

    EDITOR'S NOTE -- When Project Safeside goes into operation later this
    month, the Internet address will be www.weather.com/safeside. 
7.1264IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4239
    AP 6-Apr-1997 23:25 EDT   REF5492

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Small Plane Crashes on N.Y. Lawn

    HOLTSVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -- A small plane crashed on the lawn of a Long
    Island home Sunday afternoon, critically injuring all three people on
    board, officials said. 

    Two passengers, Matilda Austin, 69, and Worth Austin, 58, of Bellport,
    were in critical condition at University Medical Center at Stony Brook,
    hospital administrator Ellen Barohn said. Ms. Austin had broken ankles
    and internal injuries, she said. The Austins' relationship was not
    immediately clear. 

    Pilot Paul Potter, 46, also was in critical condition, she said. 

    The single-engine Piper Cherokee, traveling from Bar Harbor, Maine, to
    the airport in Islip, came down at about 3 p.m., according to a
    recording on the Federal Aviation Administration's accident hotline. 

    Dennis Jones, director of the northeast region for the National
    Transportation Safety Board, told The New York Times that the pilot
    radioed a distress call to the tower at MacArthur Airport shortly
    before the crash. 

    "I heard it and I didn't know what it was," neighbor John O'Grady said.
    "It didn't sound like two cars crashing, where you hear that crunch of
    metal, it didn't sound like an explosion. It was just kind of a bang." 

    O'Grady said the Piper Cherokee rolled to a stop just short of his
    neighbors' house. He said no one was home at the time. 

    "It looks like it came as close as you can come to the house without
    hitting it," he said. 

    O'Grady said he saw one passenger crawl out of the plane before being
    taken to the hospital. 
7.1265IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4218
    AP 6-Apr-1997 23:09 EDT   REF5478

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Continental Jet Lands for Emergency

    WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- A Continental Airlines jetliner carrying 125
    passengers made an emergency landing in Wichita early Sunday because of
    engine trouble. 

    Continental Flight 238 landed safely about 4:50 a.m., said Romie Carr,
    an operational officer for the Federal Aviation Administration.
    Continental spokesman Dave Messing said one of the plane's two engines
    malfunctioned. 

    The Boeing 737 was en route from Los Angeles to Cleveland. The
    passengers were flown to Cleveland on another Continental plane,
    Messing said. 
7.1266IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4250
    AP 6-Apr-1997 19:50 EDT   REF5045

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Cult Member Explains Mysteries

    NEW YORK (AP) -- After Heaven's Gate leader Marshall Applewhite was
    castrated, five other cult members eagerly followed and "couldn't stop
    smiling and giggling" about the procedure, says the former member who
    discovered the mass suicide. 

    Applewhite decided to get castrated a year ago after two cult members
    quietly went to Mexico for the procedure, Rio DiAngelo told Newsweek.
    Once Applewhite got castrated, five other cultists did the same. 

    "They couldn't stop smiling, and giggling" about the procedure,
    DiAngelo said. "They were excited about it." 

    DiAngelo, who said he left "39 of my closest brothers and sisters"
    about a month before they killed themselves, explained some of the
    cult's mysteries in the magazine's April 14 issue, on newsstands
    Monday. 

    DiAngelo, whose real name is Richard Ford, received two videotapes that
    described the cult members' intentions. He went to the cult's rented
    mansion near San Diego on March 26 and discovered the 39 bodies.

    Investigators found five-dollar bills in the pockets of the dead -- a
    curiosity DiAngelo said was a response to a cult member being hassled
    by police for vagrancy. After that, DiAngelo said, all members carried
    identification and a small sum of money. 

    DiAngelo said he became involved with Heaven's Gate after hearing
    members speak in California. He said the cult allowed him to escape a
    troubled life that included a divorce, a violent, unstable mother and
    other bad relationships. The group also shared DiAngelo's interest in
    UFOs, music and Eastern religions. 

    Cult members who killed themselves believed a spaceship would take them
    to heaven. 

    DiAngelo said that after three years with the group, he had a
    "disturbing feeling" in February and decided to leave. 

    He said he believed that everyone who committed suicide with a cocktail
    of drugs and alcohol did it "on their own." But DiAngelo said he felt
    no one wanted to be left behind without Applewhite. 

    DiAngelo told Newsweek he hopes to join the others someday, but suicide
    "is not part of my plan." 
7.1267IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4273
    AP 6-Apr-1997 18:28 EDT   REF5551

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Army Drops Charge That Private Lied

    By DAVID DISHNEAU

    Associated Press Writer

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- The Army on Sunday dropped its
    allegation that a female trainee lied about having sex with an
    instructor. 

    The Army said the charge against Pvt. Toni Moreland wasn't a priority
    and it didn't want to bring in an out-of-town witness. The soldier's
    attorney accused the Army of ducking a confrontation over its
    investigation of the Aberdeen sex scandal. 

    Ms. Moreland, 21, pleaded guilty to other minor charges Sunday at a
    summary court-martial, the lowest level of military court. She was
    sentenced to 16 days in a military prison and fined $300. 

    Ms. Moreland was the first of five Army privates who accused Army
    investigators of trying to bully them into falsely claiming they were
    raped by instructors at the weapons training school at the Army's
    Aberdeen Proving Ground in northern Maryland. 

    Ms. Moreland was charged with two counts of making a false statement
    after she recanted a sworn statement that she had consensual sex with
    Staff Sgt. Marvin Kelley. She repeated Sunday that she never had sex
    with Kelley and signed the statement only to appease investigators. She
    said investigators were pressuring her to claim he raped her. 

    Consensual sex between superiors and subordinates is prohibited in the
    military. 

    No charges were filed based on Ms. Moreland's original statement. Army
    officials have denied that investigators tried to force false
    accusations from interview subjects. 

    Kelley has been charged with other offenses, including adultery and
    obstruction of justice. 

    Ms. Moreland's attorney, Stuart Robinson, suggested the Army was
    ducking a confrontation over the tactics used by investigators. 

    "It gives absolute credence to the characterization of how the
    investigation was handled," by the Army's criminal investigations
    division, he told reporters outside the courtroom. 

    Ms. Moreland said she regretted not being able to face the
    investigators. 

    "I believe they're trying to make some kind of example of things that
    happened here. I think they got carried away," she told reporters.

    One false-statement count was dropped because the government didn't
    want to fly in at least one out-of-town witness, according to Maj.
    Susan Gibson, the second-highest legal adviser at Aberdeen. 

    The court-martial's presiding officer dismissed the other count because
    it was too vague and because Ms. Moreland may not have been properly
    advised of her rights. 

    Ms. Gibson said proving the charges wasn't a high Army priority. 

    "This is just a summary court. We don't ordinarily bring witnesses back
    for summary courts," she said. 

    Ms. Moreland was convicted of one count each of being absent without
    leave, failing to report for extra duty, disobeying an order and
    breaking restriction to certain areas of the post. 
7.1268IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:4231
    AP 6-Apr-1997 20:36 EDT   REF5138

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Libya Urges Action Against Israel

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi urged Arabs on
    Sunday to quit talking and start acting to counter Israeli construction
    in east Jerusalem. 

    "The Zionist movement in east Jerusalem must be confronted by an Arab
    countermovement to occupy east Jerusalem and deny any Zionist entry,"
    Gadhafi told students at Al-Fatih University in the Libyan capital,
    Tripoli. "It is not through paper resolutions." 

    The speech was carried on state-run Libyan Television and monitored by
    The Associated Press in Cairo. 

    Israel's decision last month to build 6,500 housing units for Jews in
    east Jerusalem has drawn strong criticism from the Arab League, the
    Organization of the Islamic Conference and the OIC's Jerusalem
    Committee. 

    Muslims revere the city because it is the site of Islam's third holiest
    shrine, Al Aqsa Mosque. Peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians
    have stalled over the construction in east Jerusalem, which the
    Palestinians want as the capital of a future state. 

    Gadhafi did not recommend any specific action to be taken. In a speech
    last month, he said Netanyahu's policies gave the Arabs no alternative
    but to go to war to liberate their land from the Jewish state. 
7.1269IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Mon Apr 07 1997 11:42107
    AP 7-Apr-1997 1:29 EDT   REF5001

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Possible Obesity Virus Studied

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Frustrated dieters searching for something to blame
    for those extra pounds might have a new culprit: A virus may increase
    some people's chances of obesity, University of Wisconsin scientists
    say. 

    Only circumstantial evidence so far links the virus with human obesity,
    researcher Nikhil Dhurandhar emphasized, although he did prove it
    fattens animals. 

    Early study of the virus yielded an intriguing paradox: Obese patients
    who show signs of viral infection have normal cholesterol, not the
    heart-threatening levels typical of overweight Americans, said
    Dhurandhar, who was presenting his findings today at a biology meeting
    in New Orleans. 

    "We cannot prove the virus causes (human) obesity unless we inject
    people and they get fat," something clearly impossible, said
    co-researcher Dr. Richard Atkinson, a Wisconsin medicine professor who
    is president of the American Obesity Association. "But this is
    tantalizing evidence." 

    The findings are preliminary but strong enough to justify prompt
    additional research, said Dr. Benjamin Caballero of Johns Hopkins
    University, a leading specialist in obesity. 

    "Look at the larger picture of infectious agents causing chronic
    diseases," Caballero said, pointing to recent discoveries that viruses
    and bacteria contribute to heart disease and some cancers, even ulcers.

    "I have no reason to believe obesity would be any different," he added.
    "I think it's very plausible." 

    Dr. John Foreyt of the Baylor College of Medicine cautioned that the
    Wisconsin scientists cannot yet speculate how the virus, biologically,
    could cause obesity. But he said veterinarians have proved that certain
    viruses cause obesity in horses and pigs, so one for humans is not
    farfetched. 

    "With the big increase in obesity in the world ... I wouldn't rule it
    out," Foreyt said, calling the new study "provocative." 

    The government estimates that one-third of Americans are obese, about a
    25 percent rise in 30 years. The extra pounds cause high blood
    pressure, heart disease and diabetes, and obesity-related diseases kill
    300,000 Americans a year. 

    Poor diet and lack of exercise are the overwhelming causes over
    overweight, doctors agree. 

    But Dhurandhar suggested that the Ad-36 virus, from a common family of
    adenoviruses that typically cause mild respiratory infections, may play
    a role, too. 

    He studied 105 patients at the University of Wisconsin's obesity
    clinic, and 23 lean people for comparison. Eighteen percent of the
    obese people showed signs of infection with Ad-36. They were not sick,
    but they carried antibodies to the virus, substances the immune system
    produces to fight infections. 

    None of the lean people had those antibodies. 

    Then Dhurandhar compared the two groups of obese patients. 

    Both groups were equally overweight, yet they had significantly
    different levels of artery-clogging cholesterol and a related blood
    fat, triglycerides. Patients believed infected with Ad-36 had normal
    cholesterol and triglyceride levels -- about 185 and 104, respectively.

    The patients without signs of Ad-36, on the other hand, had elevated
    cholesterol and triglycerides -- an average of 213 and 155,
    respectively. 

    Dhurandhar already has proved that Ad-36 fattens animals. In research
    presented to the North American Association for the Study of Obesity
    last year, he injected chickens with Ad-36 and they grew fat while
    their cholesterol and triglycerides stayed as low as virus-free
    "control" chickens. 

    In people, antibodies merely show that someone was exposed to a virus,
    not that the virus actually harmed them. Indeed, many healthy people
    harbor viruses that appear to cause no symptoms. 

    All that is known about Ad-36 is that it was discovered in 1978 from a
    German girl suffering diarrhea, Dhurandhar said. 

    But he targeted Ad-36 because it closely resembles a chicken virus that
    prompted his research in India several years ago. 

    A severe outbreak struck Bombay's poultry farms and a veterinarian
    mentioned puzzling autopsies showing the chickens full of fat -- not
    the wasting typical of viral infections. Dhurandhar investigated, and
    found this avian adenovirus indeed fattened chickens while not
    affecting their cholesterol. 

    But the chicken virus never infects people, so Dhurandhar closed his
    Bombay medical practice and moved to Wisconsin to hunt a human
    adenovirus similar enough to cause the same syndrome. 
7.1270MondayJGODCL::BOWENTwo stars short of a GalaxyMon Apr 07 1997 11:5975
7.1271IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:43112
    AP Top News at Midnight EDT

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, April 7, 1997
   
    MILITARY-PLANE SEARCH 

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -- Five days after an Air Force jet disappeared in
    Arizona on Wednesday, searchers aided by a U-2 reconnaissance aircraft
    concentrated their efforts today on a mountain in the central Colorado
    Rockies. The Federal Aviation Administration has used tips from the
    public and radar logs to try to recreate the possible path of the A-10
    Thunderbolt II. The aircraft was with two other jets headed from
    Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson to a bombing range. The jet
    piloted by Capt. Craig David Button vanished after in-flight refueling.
   
    YOUTH-KILLED 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A teen-ager killed by police after he allegedly
    threatened officers with a machete was shot in the back, Police
    Commissioner Howard Safir said Monday. Safir and Manhattan District
    Attorney Robert Morgenthau promised a full investigation into the
    shooting early Sunday of 16-year-old Kevin Cedeno by Officer Anthony
    Pellegrini. On Sunday, police said Pellegrini, 25, fired a single shot
    after Cedeno threatened the officers with a machete. Kevin's friend
    said he was shot while walking away from a fight. Safir said it was too
    early to say whether Pellegrinin acted properly. 
   
    BLIZZARD-FLOODING 

    GRANITE FALLS, Minn. (AP) -- Volunteers raced to stack more sandbags
    today, afraid that meltdown from a spring blizzard could worsen what's
    already some of the most severe flooding on the northern Plains in
    years. The National Weather Service issued a flood warning extending
    for the next two weeks along parts of three rivers -- the Minnesota,
    Mississippi and St. Croix. 
   
    U.S.-MIDEAST 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the
    Israelis are keeping their end of the deal in trying to promote peace,
    while, he says, the Palestinians are not. Netanyahu met with President
    Clinton today. But their White House meeting failed to produce an
    immediate formula to resume stalled Mideast peace talks. The chief
    Palestinian representative in Washington said again that talks could
    not be resumed until Israel stops construction of new Jewish housing
    units in east Jerusalem. 
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Astronauts on the shuttle Columbia have
    been cramming in as many experiments as possible before tomorrow's
    early return to Earth. A faulty fuel cell is forcing what was supposed
    to be a 16-day science mission to end after just four days. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- The search for a jury for the Timothy McVeigh Oklahoma
    City bombing trial resumed at the same slow pace that marked the first
    week. Only six prospective jurors were interviewed today, bringing the
    total questioned so far to 37. McVeigh, 28, is charged with murder and
    conspiracy in the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Oklahoma City federal
    building that killed 168 people and injured hundreds more in the
    nation's worst domestic act of terrorism. If convicted, he could be
    sentenced to death by injection. By law, only prospective jurors who
    say they would at least consider the death penalty may serve. 
   
    PULITZERS-ARTS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis became the first jazz
    composer to win the Pulitzer Prize for music today, receiving the award
    for "Blood on the Fields," his epic oratorio on slavery. The piece,
    written for 14 musicians and three singers, was commissioned by Lincoln
    Center where Marsalis has been artistic director of its Jazz at Lincoln
    Center for the last decade. 
   
    HEPATITIS SCARE-LAWSUIT 

    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Epitope Inc. filed a lawsuit today seeking to
    rescind its acquisition of the food distribution company implicated in
    sales of hepatitis A-infected strawberries to the nation's school lunch
    program. Epitope alleges in its lawsuit that Andrew & Williamson Sales
    Co. of San Diego committed fraud and securities violations when it
    failed to disclose that berries certified as U.S. grown were actually
    grown in Mexico. 
   
    S. KOREA-SHALIKASHVILI 

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- The chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs of
    staff arrived in Seoul Tuesday for three days of security talks with
    South Korean officials. Gen. John Shalikashvili was to meet with South
    Korean Defense Minister Kim Dong-jin and Foreign Minister Yoo Chong-ha
    to review the security situation on the peninsula. Among the topics
    expected to be discussed by the two U.S. defense leaders is South
    Korea's interest in purchasing Russian-made SA-12 air defense missiles
    instead of U.S.-made Patriot missiles. 
   
    MARKETS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The dollar traded at 125.82 yen, up 1.12 yen. The
    Nikkei fell 60.00 points, to 17,655.67 points. The Dow rose 29.84 to
    6,555.91, while the Nasdaq rose 14.61 to 1,251.34. 
   
    76ERS-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Michael Jordan scored 30 points as the Chicago Bulls
    clinched homecourt advantage throughout the playoffs with a 128-102
    victory over the Philadelphia 76ers on Monday night. Rookie Allen
    Iverson had a career-high 44 points for the 76ers. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by BENITA GREEN 
7.1272IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4362
    RTw  08-Apr-97 04:38    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton held "frank, candid" talks with
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, rebuffing his call for a
    U.S.-led Mideast summit while trying to revive stalled peace efforts.
    Tough talk by both Clinton and Netanyahu reflected the difficulties
    they face trying to keep an outbreak of violence over new Jewish
    housing in East Jerusalem from derailing the Israeli-Palestinian peace
    process. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Amid a growing sympathetic international response to its
    severe food shortages, North Korea has told the United States it will
    soon decide whether to enter peace talks with rival South Korea, U.S.
    officials said. 

    WASHINGTON - Giant U.S. grain trader Cargill Inc reached a hard-fought
    agreement with the government of North Korea to sell them an
    undisclosed amount of U.S. wheat, marking a rare commercial sale of
    American grain to the communist regime. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - China, a focus of controversy over its human rights record,
    is ready to sign the U.N. International Covenant on Economic, Social
    and Cultural Rights before the end of this year, President Jiang Zemin
    has said. Government departments are studying domestic legislation
    related to the covenant, Jiang told visiting French Defence Minister
    Charles Millon. 

    - - - - 

    PORT MORESBY - Illegal firearm charges against British mercenary leader
    Tim Spicer have been dropped, a prosecution official said. Spicer's
    US$36 million mission to Papua New Guinea at the head of 70 mercenaries
    sparked the worst political crisis in the country, with the army
    revolting and forcing the prime minister Sir Julius Chan to step aside
    pending an inquiry into the mercenary deal. 

    - - - - 

    LUBUMBASHI, Zaire - Zaire's crisis entered a critical stage with rebels
    closing in on the chief economic city while the capital slid further
    into political anarchy. International efforts to negotiate an end to
    six months of civil war showed no sign of a breakthrough after a third
    day of talks between warring parties in South Africa. 

    - - - - 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida - The crew of U.S. space shuttle Columbia used
    flashlights to work in their darkened, power-starved spaceship as they
    crammed in some last-minute research and prepared to return home early.
    NASA ordered the shuttle back to Earth after one of three crucial
    electricity generating fuel cells failed on Sunday, less than two days
    into what was to have been a 16-day science mission. 

    REUTER 
7.1273IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:43137
    RTw  08-Apr-97 04:32    

    FEATURE - British Labour Party shies away from ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE -  British Labour Party shies away from socialism  By Robert
    Woodward 

    LONDON, April 8 (Reuter) - Before the 1983 election, Britain's Labour
    Party issued a manifesto promising a programme of "socialist
    reconstruction" if it won power. 

    Pledges included leaving the European Community, ridding Britain of
    nuclear weapons, borrowing to finance an Emergency Programme of Action
    and spending "strongly" to cut unemployment. 

    The electorate was not impressed. Labour won just 28 percent of the
    vote and 209 seats, compared with 397 won by Margaret Thatcher's
    Conservatives. One Labour member of parliament called the manifesto
    "the longest suicide note in political history." 

    When Labour published their 1997 manifesto last week, there was no
    allusion to socialism. The old Left was portrayed as a quaint
    anachronism. The manifesto pledges were very light pink compared with
    the ideas put forward 14 years ago. 

    The crushing defeat in 1983 triggered the modernisation of the party
    under Neil Kinnock, John Smith and now Tony Blair. 

    The free market has been embraced, nuclear disarmament is no longer
    sought and the party is committed to rigid controls on public spending.
    Promises have even been made to freeze income tax rates for the next
    five years if Labour wins on May 1. 

    Socialism is not yet a dirty word in Tony Blair's New Labour but it has
    definitely lost its capital letter and influence on party policy. The
    "s" word is avoided by party leaders and normally has a qualification
    attached. 

    HELPING PEOPLE TO HELP THEMSELVES 

    Ethical socialism and democratic socialism are okay. The party that was
    committed in 1983 to helping the poor and the disadvantaged now seeks
    to help them help themselves. 

    Better education rather than government handouts is the way to
    prosperity, Labour believes. Redistribution of wealth through heavy
    taxation of the rich is out. Millionaires are welcomed as job
    providers. Utilities will not be re-nationalised. 

    "Socialism to me was never about nationalisation of the power of the
    state," Blair said in 1995. "Not just about economics or politics even.
    It is a moral purpose to life. 

    "A set of values. A belief in society. In co-operation. In achieving
    together what we are unable to achieve alone." 

    Founded on Blair's strong religious beliefs, the values inherent in
    this brand of socialism are shared by the vast majority of British
    people, Blair believes. 

    Agreed, say left-wingers, but could this not be its weakness and not
    its strength? Is Labour not in danger of making the party
    indistinguishable from the Liberal Democrats and the soft "One Nation"
    end of the Conservative party? 

    Left-wingers say that in order to make itself attractive to the middle
    classes of Britain, the party has sacrificed the needs -- and support
    -- of the people it was founded in 1900 to protect. 

    "The political defeat of the working class is the precondition for New
    Labour. The Old Labour project of defending working class living
    standards through trade unionism and welfare reform was effectively
    defeated in the seventies," James Heartfield wrote in Living Marxism in
    February. 

    "Now that the Conservatives have exhausted their programme the
    likelihood is that the country will be remade in the image of New
    Labour." 

    REVAMPING IDEOLOGY 

    Blair and his fellow modernisers say left-wingers became bogged down in
    ideology and espouse just one strand -- state socialism -- of a complex
    political idea. "Socialism as a rigid form of economic determinism has
    ended," Blair says. 

    He has tried to revamp Labour's ideology and keep the support of
    traditional Labour voters by stressing the strength of shared values.
    Radicalism is not owned by the left and right wings of British
    politics, it can come from the centre as well. 

    "Our values do not change. Our commitment to a different vision of
    society stands intact. But the ways of achieving that vision must
    change," he said in a lecture in July 1995. 

    Blair's socialism has the emphasis on social, not the -ism. 

    "It works not through some dry academic theory or student Marxism," he
    said on becoming Labour leader in July 1994. "It is time to talk a new
    language of social justice -- of what is just and unjust, fair and
    unfair, right and wrong." 

    This language of shared values has kept most left-wingers quiet, albeit
    grudgingly, in the run-up to the election. Power is everything after
    nearly two decades in the wilderness and a few months silence is a
    small price to pay, they reason. 

    But just as the Michael Foot socialist experiment of the early 1980s
    provoked a split that led to the creation of the Social Democratic
    Party, so Blair's swing to the right prompted miners' leader Arthur
    Scargill to found Socialist Labour. 

    "The leadership of New Labour has abandoned their socialist faith and
    embraced capitalism which is tantamount to embracing the devil,"
    Scargill says. 

    Labour's abandonment of the totemic Clause 4 of its constitution,
    espousing the public ownership of key economic assets, was the final
    straw for Scargill. 

    Others felt as strongly but believe their power to influence the party
    will be increased when it is in government. 

    For now deputy leader John Prescott, ex-ship's steward and fervent
    trade unionist, is the keeper of the socialist flame in a Labour
    hierarchy packed with earnest modernisers. 

    Prescott has had to bend to the prevailing wind in the party but says
    he may have changed his ideas, but not his values. 

    "I'm still the old kind of old-fashioned socialist that believes in the
    language of priorities, the ones of commitment, of how do you make
    difficult decisions between the various choices," says Prescott. 

    REUTER 
7.1274IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4346
    RTw  08-Apr-97 04:22    

    PNG drops charges against British mercenary commander

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    PORT MORESBY, April 8 (Reuter) - Papua New Guinea prosecutors have
    dropped illegal firearm charges against a retired British colonel who
    led a group of 70 African mercenaries into the South Pacific nation, a
    prosecution official said on Tuesday. 

    "I am greatly relieved. Now I can go home," said a tired loooking Tim
    Spicer, who has been unable to leave Papua New Guinea since being
    detained by rebel army officers last month. 

    Spicer, 44, had pleaded not guilty to illegally possessing a Russian
    pistol and ammunition, but the charges were dropped on Monday evening
    because of legal problems with the way his Port Moresby flat was
    searched and the pistol seized. 

    "On the advice of the public prosecutor the charges were dropped,"
    Chief of Police Prosecution Wee Kati told Reuters just before the
    scheduled start of Spicer's trial. 

    Spicer's US$36 million mission sparked the worst political crisis in
    Papua New Guinea since independence in 1975, with the army revolting
    and forcing the prime minister Sir Julius Chan to step aside pending an
    inquiry into the mercenary deal. 

    Rebel army officers threw the foreign soldiers out of the country, but
    detained Spicer, eventually handing him over to police to be charged
    with illegally possessing a firearm. 

    Political analysts in Papua New Guinea suggested at the time that the
    charges were a pretext to keep Spicer in the country in order for him
    to testify at the mercenary inquiry. 

    Spicer on Tuesday concluded his evidence and inquiry head Judge Warwick
    Andrew told him he was free to return home to London, but added he may
    be recalled to give further evidence. 

    However, Spicer's lawyer told Reuters that Spicer's passport, seized by
    the Boroko District Court at a pre-trial hearing on March 24, had gone
    missing.

    REUTER
7.1275IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4482
    RTw  08-Apr-97 01:33    

    Spanish language goes under the microscope

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Dan Trotta 

    ZACATECAS, Mexico, April 7 (Reuter) - The king and queen of Spain, two
    Nobel laureates and hundreds of experts assembled in this Mexican town
    on Monday to reassess the Spanish language after five centuries in the
    Americas. 

    In just five days, they aim to analyse, correct and celebrate a
    language that has become the primary tongue for 20 countries and, by
    the end of the century, an estimated 400 million people. 

    King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia of Spain, accompanied by Mexican
    President Ernesto Zedillo, inaugurated the First International
    Conference of the Spanish Language, which will focus on its usage in
    the media. 

    Colombian novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the 1982 Nobel prize winner,
    stole the show, pointing to the complexity of the language he said was
    poised for a global future. 

    "Consider that the verb 'to pass' has 54 meanings while in the Republic
    of Ecuador they have 105 names for the male sex organ," Garcia Marquez
    said. 

    "Things have so many names in so many languages that it is not easy
    knowing what to call any of it." 

    The novelist, a failed encyclopaedia salesman who sold 40 million
    copies of his 1967 masterpiece "One Hundred Years of Solitude," used
    "magic realism" made famous in his works to underline the language's
    lyricism and wit. 

    "How many times have we tried a cup of coffee that tastes of window,
    bread that tastes of a corner, a cherry that tastes of a kiss?" he
    asked. 

    Britain and the United States were once described as two countries
    separated by a common language. In Spanish, that can be multiplied
    tenfold as one country's harmless words for a fruit or insect can be
    another country's slap in the face. 

    And like any language, Spanish is under assault by poor usage in print,
    on the air or in the street. It is altered by foreign influences and
    whimsically made-up words. 

    If there was one conclusion reached on the first day, it was that the
    language had a bright future. 

    "We Spanish and Hispano-Americans are the owners and users of one of
    the four great languages of the near future, the others being English,
    Arabic and Chinese," said 1989 Nobel laureate Camilo Jose Cela of
    Spain. 

    Until the 16th Century, Spanish was used only in one country in Europe
    but was spread throughout the New World by the Spanish conquest,
    started in 1492. 

    Spanish is also the second language in the United States, where it is
    often transformed into "Spanglish," a linguistic dance between Spanish
    and English that is common near the Mexican border and among immigrants
    in big cities. 

    U.S. President Bill Clinton once said that he expected future
    presidents would be all but required to speak Spanish. 

    "Thanks to its variations, Spanish continues to be a universal
    language," said Mexican 1990 Nobel laureate Octavio Paz, whose
    videotaped message from Mexico City was played to the audience. Poor
    health prevented him from travelling to the colonial mining town of
    Zacatecas. 

    "The language belongs to everyone and to no one," Paz said. "Even
    though Spanish in all these countries has its own characteristics, its
    singularity in the end results in unity." 

    REUTER
7.1276IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4444
    RTw  08-Apr-97 00:32    

    Judge denies bail to British nanny in murder case

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Leslie Gevirtz 

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 7 (Reuter) - Bail was denied on Monday to a
    19-year-old British nanny who is charged with the murder of a
    9-month-old boy she was looking after in Cambridge near Boston. 

    Louise Woodward, who is accused of killing Matthew Eappen by severely
    shaking the infant and then striking his head against a hard surface,
    closed her eyes and put her head down as the judge ruled against bail. 

    "I think the Commonwealth (of Massachusetts) has met its burden of
    persuading me that bail is not appropriate at this time," Massachusetts
    Superior Court Judge Hiller Zobel said after hearing nearly an hour of
    argument from defence lawyer Andrew Good. 

    Woodward's parents, Susan and Gary, as well as Eappen's mother,
    Deborah, were sitting in the first row of the crowded courtroom when
    the ruling was announced. 

    Prosecutor Lynn Rooney told the judge that Woodward, who came to the
    United States in June to work as an au pair for a year, "could flee
    anywhere ... She has no reason to stay here." 

    Woodward, who faces up to life in prison, has pleaded not guilty to the
    charge. She submitted testimonials from her vicar, doctor, teacher and
    a member of Parliament in an effort to get bail.

    Her parents, who sighed when the judge made his ruling, had offered
    their home in Chester, England, as surety. "I finally am not inclined
    to permit bail under circumstances in which a piece of real estate in a
    foreign country would be mortgaged for the benefit of the Massachusetts
    authorities," Zobel said. 

    Woodward has been in custody since early February and is being kept at
    Massachusetts's only prison facility for women in Framingham, about 30
    miles (50 km) west of Boston. 

    REUTER
7.1277IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4484
    RTos 07-Apr-97 23:09    

    Northern Ireland Church Burns, Arson Blamed

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BELFAST (Reuter) - A Roman Catholic church was destroyed early Monday
    in the fifth suspected arson attack in a week against religious
    property in Northern Ireland. 

    "It's extremists that are responsible for this, there is no doubt,"
    Father Kieron MacOscar told reporters outside the blackened remains of
    the 226-year-old Mullavilly church at Tandragee, one of Northern
    Ireland's oldest. 

    The fires mark the start of the province's tense "marching season."
    Three of the damaged churches serve the Roman Catholic minority and two
    belong to the pro-British Protestant majority. 

    Police said Mullavilly church, in the border county of Armagh, was
    gutted by a mysterious blaze which started a few hours after midnight.
    They confirmed arson was suspected. 

    The head of Ireland's Protestant church, Archbishop Robin Eames,
    visited the church together with the Catholic primate of Ireland,
    Archbishop Sean Brady and voiced concern at a spate of what they feared
    were sectarian arson attacks. 

    "Once you attack a church, the centre of community life like that, you
    are bringing sectarianism to its lowest point and that is why I am very
    concerned about our future," he said. 

    The fires hit against a background of rising Northern Ireland tension
    caused by the guerrilla violence and the start of months of disputed
    pro-British parades by Protestant groups such as the 200-year-old
    Orange Order. 

    The Irish Republican Army (IRA) has been blamed for bomb scares which
    disrupted Britain's Grand National horse race at the weekend and has
    claimed responsibility for bomb warnings which brought British motorway
    traffic to a halt a few days before. 

    Violence by the IRA, which seeks an end to British rule of Northern
    Ireland, was blamed for an attack 10 days ago in which pro-British
    Loyalists broke an October 1994 truce and planted a bomb at the offices
    of the IRA's political arm, Sinn Fein. 

    The bomb was defused. But security sources expressed concern that it
    might spell the formal end of the ceasefire by the Loyalists, who want
    Northern Ireland to stay British. 

    Loyalists, so-called because of their allegiance to Britain, are
    furious at what they see as IRA attempts to force Northern Ireland on
    to Britain's May 1 election agenda and say it is aimed at getting Sinn
    Fein invited to Belfast peace talks. 

    Sinn Fein is currently barred from the negotiations because the IRA
    ended a 17-month truce in February last year with the first of a wave
    of attacks in Britain and Northern Ireland. 

    The marching season started on March 31 with a Belfast parade by
    Protestants which was voluntarily re-routed to avoid antagonising
    Catholics in a Belfast road and causing a re-run of violent incidents
    in the same parade the previous year. 

    The government, police and churches have appealed to the Orange Order
    to negotiate the routes of this year's parades to avoid inflaming
    passions, which boiled over last year in the worst civil unrest for
    decades. 

    But the Orange Order, which is involved in many of the parades, appears
    to be split between hard-liners who say they will not change
    centuries-old parades and moderates who fear more confrontation will
    cause only more violence. 

    Last year's violence was sparked by a police ban on a Protestant march
    from a church at Drumcree along the Catholic Gravaghy Road area of the
    southern town of Portadown. 

    Thousands of Protestants were locked in a tense stand-off with a huge
    police and army presence before allowing the march to go ahead, which
    caused riots by Catholics. 
   
    REUTER
7.1278IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4471
    RTos 07-Apr-97 23:07    

    U.S. Forces in Gulf on Heightened Alert

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (Reuter) - The U.S. military in the Persian
    Gulf went on heightened alert Monday with shore leave restricted and
    bars and clubs placed off limits amid threats of fresh attacks by
    Muslim radicals. 

    "Both the embassy (in Bahrain) and U.S. military continue to receive
    information about possible terrorist threats to U.S. military in the
    region, including Bahrain," a U.S. Navy spokesman said. 

    "As such U.S. naval forces ashore have enhanced security posture. This
    is done since we continually evaluate security measures based on a
    regional threat. We adapt and adjust our measures as necessary." 

    The spokesman said shore leave for the 12,000 U.S. sailors in the gulf
    was restricted and clubs, bars and restaurants on the island state of
    Bahrain, U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters, were placed off limits until
    further notice. 

    The U.S. embassy in the Bahraini capital of Manama issued a security
    alert on its hotline recommending that U.S. civilians also avoid those
    places. 

    The measures follow threats by Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden,
    considered by Washington a prime suspect in two bombings in Saudi
    Arabia which killed 24 Americans and injured more than 400 others in
    1995 and 1996. 

    A Persian Gulf security source said the alert was designed to prevent
    large groups of Americans from gathering in open areas but there was no
    thought of sending U.S. families home. 

    A Western official said there had been a series of reports of possible
    terrorist threats to U.S. military forces in the region, including
    Bahrain. 

    U.S. naval forces in the gulf comprise the aircraft carrier Theodore
    Roosevelt, cruisers, destroyers, submarines, logistics ships and
    pre-positioning equipment ships. 

    Bin Laden, branded by the U.S. State Department as one of the world's
    most significant sponsors of Islamic radical activities, has threatened
    to wage jihad (holy war) on Americans in the region, particularly in
    Saudi Arabia, homeland of Islam. 

    In an interview with Britain's Independent newspaper from his redoubt
    in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan last month, he warned Americans
    of a renewed onslaught against their forces in Saudi Arabia and said he
    had secured the support of thousands of Pakistanis for his campaign. 

    The U.S. embassies in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia routinely caution
    Americans about the need for vigilance. 

    The latest U.S. embassy message in the Saudi capital of Riyadh noted
    with deep concern an interview on British television in February "with
    well-known terrorist Osama bin Laden in which he not only threatened
    again the U.S. military in Saudi Arabia but also called for expulsion
    of American civilians." 

    Last June a huge truck bomb killed 19 U.S. servicemen and injured 400
    at a U.S. military apartment building in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. 

    In November 1995 a much smaller blast at a U.S. military training
    center in Riyadh killed five Americans and two Indians. 

    REUTER
7.1279IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4439
    AP 8-Apr-1997 0:12 EDT   REF5615

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Poll: Americans OK Campaign Reform

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Most Americans feel the campaign financing system
    needs fundamental modification or a complete overhaul, but few believe
    Congress or the president really plan to change it, the latest New York
    Times-CBS News poll says. 

    The survey also found President Clinton is maintaining a strong
    approval rating despite being dogged by accusations of improper
    campaign fund-raising tactics, but that the controversy has hurt Vice
    President Al Gore substantially. 

    Close to nine people in 10 surveyed said they felt a need for
    fundamental changes or a complete makeover in campaign fund-raising.
    However, only three in 10 believe the president is truly committed to
    such change, as he has said he is. 

    They doubt Congress even more, with only 23 percent of poll respondents
    professing to believe that Congress, which is preparing to hold
    hearings on the matter, truly wants to change the laws. 

    Meanwhile, poll respondents gave Clinton a 56 percent job approval
    rating, only 7 points below his personal high measured by CBS News
    right after January's inauguration. Respondents pointed to the
    president's handling of the economy as the reason for their strong
    support. 

    Gore, meanwhile, saw his approval rating shrink to 25 percent, a drop
    of almost 24 points in the last three months. The vice president has
    come under fire for soliciting donations in telephone calls from his
    White House office, and for his failure to clearly defend his behavior. 

    The poll was based on telephone interviews with 1,347 randomly selected
    adults nationwide between April 2 and 5. It has a sampling error of as
    much as plus or minus four percentage points. 
7.1280IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4473
    AP 8-Apr-1997 0:10 EDT   REF5610

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Simpson Tells Judge About Property

    By LINDA DEUTSCH

    AP Special Correspondent

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- O.J. Simpson has told a judge that he doesn't have
    his Heisman trophy, his Chevy Suburban and dozens of other items sought
    by the plaintiffs in his civil lawsuit, but he didn't say where they
    are. 

    In papers filed Friday and made public Monday, Simpson offered
    explanations of why most of the 108 items were not in his Brentwood
    home when Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies arrived to seize them
    March 28. 

    Simpson said some items are being held in trust for his children,
    Sydney and Justin; some were given to his ex-wife Marguerite as part of
    their divorce in 1978 and other things went to Nicole Brown Simpson as
    part of their 1992 divorce. 

    Simpson was acquitted of murdering Ms. Simpson and her friend Ronald
    Goldman but was recently held liable for damages in a civil trial. The
    families of Ms. Simpson and Goldman, who sued Simpson, were awarded
    $33.5 million by a civil court jury on Feb. 10 and began seizing his
    assets as soon as the judgment was signed. 

    Simpson, who says he is broke, agreed to turn over to the court stock
    certificates for his companies, O.J. Simpson Enterprises and Orenthal
    Productions and Pigskins Inc. 

    He declined to turn over his memberships to two ritzy country clubs
    because he said they are non-transferable and have no monetary value. 

    Simpson said most of the items requested were placed in trust for the
    children on March 10. He said the trust documents were filed with the
    court on March 26. 

    There were 108 separate entries in the response filed by his lawyers.
    All were referred to by numbers. 

    For instance, Simpson said of the Heisman Trophy: "I am not in
    possession of Item No. 3.18." He did not say where it is. 

    Plaintiff lawyer Peter Gelblum said the response is inadequate. 

    Simpson said he was not in possession of the Suburban or a serigraph of
    Simpson created by Andy Warhol. 

    Most of the luxury items on the list, such as diamond jewelry, fur
    coats and art objects, are "the property of Nicole Brown Simpson and
    subject to her estate," Simpson said. 

    Those include a collection of Lalique crystal figurines -- two swans,
    two cats, bluebirds, an owl, a bowl and several vases -- two Steuben
    glass hearts and an abstract paperweight. 

    The plaintiffs were expected to seek further explanations. 

    In another development, an alternate juror in Simpson's civil trial
    filed a lawsuit against his employer for wrongful discharge, claiming
    he was fired the day before the trial began. 

    Paul Chepikian said his employer, U.S. Pet Products, fired him when
    they found out he had been chosen for the Simpson panel. He had been a
    graphic designer with the company for 14 years. 

    Company vice president Peter Brotsis said Chepikian was let go due to
    downsizing. 
7.1281IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4429
    AP 7-Apr-1997 23:43 EDT   REF5563

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cars Slide, Crash in Human Waste

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- About 200 gallons of human waste spilled out of
    a truck and onto a busy interstate Monday, tying up traffic for hours. 

    One person suffered minor injuries and eight cars were damaged after
    the truck dropped part of a 22-ton cargo of waste on the Interstate 270
    outerbelt on the city's west side just before 6 a.m. 

    Police said the waste, being hauled by Fee Corp., was to be used as
    fertilizer on farm fields. 

    George Fee, president of the trucking company, said it was the first
    time since the company began trucking waste along the route five years
    ago that a spill had occurred. 

    Fee said he suspects a problem in the rig's hydraulic valve caused the
    spill. 

    The spill, which covered about a half-mile, backed rush-hour traffic up
    for miles while firefighters hosed off the three-lane highway. State
    highway crews were dumping sand. The road reopened at about 10 a.m. 

    The driver, whose name he would not release, has been placed on
    temporary leave in accordance with state transportation rules. 
7.1282IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4460
    AP 7-Apr-1997 18:36 EDT   REF5741

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Security Scanner Shows It All

    By ESTES THOMPSON

    Associated Press Writer

    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- The next generation of weapons detectors is
    deadly accurate, able to look through clothes to find guns, explosives
    and even syringes and drug vials that can be tucked into rolls of fat. 

    About the size of a voting booth, a machine manufactured by Nicolet
    Imaging Systems of San Diego goes beyond metal detectors to show any
    solid object. It is being tested at North Carolina's Central Prison and
    the federal courthouse in Los Angeles. 

    "It's a very low-level X-ray," Capt. Marshall Hudson, a correction
    officer said during a demonstration Monday. "It's going to show
    everybody has something on them, keys and pens. Things you can't
    identify are things you want to do a more thorough search on." 

    Hudson, who looked at the image of a fellow officer flashed on a video
    screen, said the $100,000 machine is capable of showing shin bones near
    the skin and even a person's private parts on the "uncloak mode." 

    While police groups are intrigued, civil libertarians are concerned
    because the same technology is being developed by other manufacturers
    into a hand-held model, which will enable police to detect a weapon
    hidden under someone's clothing up to 60 feet away. 

    A version could be ready for testing in 18 months and in use in four
    years. 

    "It becomes a question of how intrusive they are," said Mark
    Kappelhoff, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union,
    which questioned law enforcement's need to view the human anatomy. 

    The National Rifle Association also was concerned that the machines
    could hinder the right in some states to carry a concealed firearm. 

    "I think right now there are a lot more questions than there are
    answers," said NRA spokesman Chip Walker. 

    But officials who represent police officers disagreed. 

    "Anything that enhances public safety and officer safety, we're for,"
    said Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police,
    the nation's largest police group with 277,000 members. 

    Gerald Arenberg, spokesman for the National Association of Chiefs of
    Police, noted that a police officer is killed every 57 hours in the
    United States and that 189 cops are assaulted daily. 

    "I don't think any police officer in his right mind would say that's an
    invasion of privacy," Arenberg said of the devices. "Those kinds of
    statistics make the 600,000 sworn officers want everything they can
    get." 
7.1283IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4524
    AP 7-Apr-1997 20:26 EDT   REF5184

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cruise Ship Fire Cause Revealed

    FREEPORT, Bahamas (AP) -- A fire on the cruise ship Vistafjord that
    killed a waiter was caused by an electrical short circuit, the cruise
    line said Monday. 

    The blaze broke out Sunday as the ship sailed from Fort Lauderdale,
    Fla., for the island of Madeira off the coast of Portugal. The ship
    with 991 passengers and crew was diverted to the Bahamas. 

    Fire investigators determined there was a short circuit in equipment
    for the ship's laundry, said Cunard Line Ldt. spokesman Bill Spears.
    The German waiter was apparently overcome by smoke while checking a
    crew cabin. 

    Because of damage to the ship's laundry and minor smoke damage in some
    passenger areas, Cunard said it canceled the cruise and was flying the
    passengers home. They will get a refund and credit for another cruise. 

    On Feb. 11, a similar fire broke out in the same area of the ship. 
7.1284IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4572
    AP 7-Apr-1997 18:05 EDT   REF5719

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Notorious Criminal Heads for France

    By CHRISTOPHER BURNS

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- A man known as "The Serpent" for a slippery life of crime
    headed for France early Tuesday, saying he is ready to cast his
    criminal past aside and live a tranquil, secluded life -- after making
    a movie deal. 

    Charles Sobhraj, 52, allegedly killed 14 tourists in Thailand. He was
    born in Vietnam during French rule and claims French citizenship. 

    Freed from an Indian prison after serving 21 years, Sobhraj left New
    Delhi on an Air France plane early in the morning. He was to meet his
    French lawyer upon his arrival at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport, his
    Indian lawyer, Rajan Bakshi, said in New Delhi. 

    "He's a free man now. He's not wanted in any country," Bakshi said. 

    French attorney Jacques Verges could not be reached for comment. 

    Where Sobhraj lives in France is "top secret," said Yves Renier, a
    French actor-producer who plans to work with him on a book and film. 

    "He'll try to find a secluded spot and write and be tranquil," Renier
    said in a telephone interview. Where it is "depends on him." 

    Sobhraj was freed in February when the Indian government dropped
    charges against him and ordered him to leave the country immediately. 

    On Friday, the French Embassy in New Delhi supplied a paperless Sobhraj
    with a travel permit to travel to France after wrangling over his
    status. 

    "We have a strong presumption of his French nationality," Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Yves Doutriaux said Monday. He said only a judge
    could officially declare Sobhraj French after Sobhraj applies for a
    certificate of nationality. 

    Sobhraj earned the nickname "The Serpent" for his talent at disguise,
    escapes and media manipulation. 

    He was acquitted in India for the murder of two tourists, but jailed
    for theft. When his sentence was almost up in 1986, he broke out of
    jail and was rearrested. 

    He said he staged the escape to avoid extradition to Thailand, where he
    faced the death penalty on charges of killing 14 tourists. The
    extradition warrant expired two years ago. 

    Sobhraj admits to killing young tourists from Europe and the United
    States. But he says he has changed. 

    He recently told The Associated Press in New Delhi that he has
    reflected on his past, and deeply regretted certain aspects of his
    life. 

    In an interview broadcast Monday on Indian television, Sobhraj said he
    would feel like a stranger in France and would rather settle in India. 

    "I believe that my feelings, my emotions, my soul are here. I will be
    coming back," he said. The television network didn't say when its
    interview with Sobhraj was recorded. 

    Sobhraj said he would like to open a school for poor children in India,
    though it was not clear whether he will be allowed to return. 
7.1285IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4544
    AP 7-Apr-1997 15:30 EDT   REF5364

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bishops Review Pope's Trip

    SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) -- Despite a blizzard and extreme
    cold, Bosnia's Roman Catholic bishops and the Vatican nuncio reviewed
    preparations Monday for Pope John Paul II's weekend Mass at Sarajevo's
    biggest stadium. 

    Kosevo stadium will be ready for Sunday's open-air Mass despite the
    snow, high winds and rain storms of recent weeks, said Drago Lasic, the
    architect overseeing preparations. 

    The Mass is the main event in Pope John Paul II's two-day visit. 

    An altar is being built inside the stadium, where two large church
    bells and a huge cross will be hoisted. Yellow and white flowers -- the
    colors of the Vatican flag -- have been ordered from the Netherlands
    for the altar and the stadium, Lasic said. 

    Bosnia's four bishops and the papal nuncio, Francesco Monterisi, took
    the bad weather in stride. "The pope likes skiing, you know," Bishop
    Franjo Komarica joked. 

    Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic has stepped up security for the
    visit following a series of attacks on churches and mosques. 

    A Franciscan monastery in Kakanj, north of Sarajevo, was damaged Sunday
    by an explosion. Police are investigating, but Alexander Ivanko,
    spokesman for the U.N. international police, said their efforts were
    not satisfactory. 

    "We believe the local police should redouble their efforts to identify
    and arrest perpetrators of these crimes," Ivanko said. 

    Meanwhile, the pope held talks Monday with Polish President Aleksander
    Kwasniewski, a former communist who signed a liberalized abortion law
    that angered the pontiff. 

    Kwasniewski pledged to speed up passage of a long-delayed treaty with
    the church that has been a sore point in relations, Vatican spokesman
    Joaquin Navarro-Valls said. 
7.1286IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4579
    AP 7-Apr-1997 18:34 EDT   REF5740

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Girls Reach Puberty Earlier

    By BRENDA C. COLEMAN

    AP Medical Writer

    CHICAGO (AP) -- American girls reach puberty earlier than commonly
    believed, with nearly half of black girls and 15 percent of white ones
    beginning to develop sexually by age 8, a study indicates. 

    The study raises troubling questions about whether environmental
    estrogens, chemicals that mimic the female hormone estrogen, are
    bringing on puberty at an earlier age. 

    It also suggests that sex education should begin sooner than it often
    does, researchers said. 

    "I don't think parents, teachers or society in general have been really
    thinking of children that young -- second- and third-graders -- having
    to deal with puberty," said the study's lead author, Marcia E.
    Herman-Giddens of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 

    The research is in the April issue of the journal Pediatrics, published
    by the American Academy of Pediatrics. 

    Environmental estrogens occur from the breakdown of chemicals in
    products ranging from pesticides to plastic wrap. Real estrogen is used
    in some hair products, including pomades primarily marketed to blacks,
    said Herman-Giddens, an adjunct professor of maternal and child health.

    She said research is needed to know whether real estrogen in products
    and environmental estrogen can affect sexual development. 

    The study involved 17,000 girls ages 3 through 12. They were seen in 65
    pediatric practices around the country. About 1,600 of the girls, or
    9.6 percent, were black. 

    At age 8, 48.3 percent of black girls and 14.7 percent of white girls
    had begun developing breasts, pubic hair or both. Menstruation occurred
    at 12.16 years in blacks on average and at 12.88 years in whites. 

    The average age of menstruation for white girls has been unchanged for
    45 years, Herman-Giddens said. 

    For black girls, the average is about four months younger than it was
    30 years ago, when poor nutrition and poverty, which can delay puberty,
    afflicted more blacks, she said. "I think we may be seeing a catch-up,"
    Herman-Giddens said. 

    She acknowledged that her findings may have been skewed if a
    significant number of the girls were brought to their doctors because
    of concerns that they were developing too early sexually. 

    The study, and other research, suggest that blacks and whites have some
    inherent differences in sexual development. 

    Herman-Giddens said the findings also suggest that some girls who have
    been diagnosed with early puberty, and perhaps given drugs to delay it,
    may be developing normally. 

    She said medical textbooks typically suggest the age of sexual
    development is much later, based on decades-old statistics from England
    taken from a relatively small number of white girls who were mostly in
    foster care. 

    An expert not involved in the study called the work very important but
    said it will probably not change doctors' practices. 

    "We've always known that there was a range of development," said Dr.
    Marianne Felice, chief of adolescent medicine at the University of
    Maryland. 

    "It may vary by race, it may vary by nutritional status and it may also
    vary by ... how old the mothers were or how old the older sisters were
    when they hit the same landmarks in sexual characteristics." 
7.1287IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Tue Apr 08 1997 10:4558
    AP 7-Apr-1997 12:24 EDT   REF5440

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Orgasm-Producing Chemical Is Found

    NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP) -- Two researchers believe they have isolated
    a chemical that produces orgasms in women even if they have suffered
    spinal cord injuries. 

    The finding could lead one day to a pill that would give the same
    sensation as an orgasm and also might have use in treating pain, said
    Barry R. Komisaruk, a professor at Rutgers University. 

    His partner in the research was Rutgers professor Beverly Whipple, who
    in 1982 wrote the book "The G-Spot and Other Recent Discoveries About
    Human Sexualities." 

    Through experiments with lab rats, the researchers determined that the
    brain can receive signals of sexual response through a pathway other
    than the spinal cord. 

    Komisaruk found an alternate pathway through the vagus nerve, which
    goes directly from the cervix, through the abdomen and chest cavity,
    into the neck and to the brain stem. 

    The professors then studied 16 women paralyzed by spinal cord injuries,
    and found that three of them were able to have orgasms through sexual
    stimulation. 

    "Contrary to what people may think, we discovered that women in the
    study who were paralyzed and had no feeling below the breast area were,
    in fact, capable of having orgasm," Komisaruk said. 

    Those experiments helped lead to the isolation of the vasoactive
    intestinal peptide, which he believes is the neurotransmitter, or
    nervous system chemical messenger, in the body that causes the orgasm
    sensation in the brain. 

    That same chemical may also have strong pain-suppressing qualities
    rivaling morphine that one day may make it a natural source of pain
    relief, Komisaruk said. 

    Dr. John Bancroft, director of the Kinsey Institute for Research in
    Sex, Gender and Reproduction in Bloomington, Ind., said the vasoactive
    intestinal peptide is one of the chemical messengers called
    neuropeptides thought to have been involved in erection. 

    He said neuropeptides are complex, relatively unstable protein-like
    chains that can carry messages across areas of the brain, through the
    bloodstream or over nerves in the body. Because of their instability,
    Bancroft said it would be difficult to make a pill from a
    neuropepetide, but added that Komisaruk's research is generally sound. 

    "The idea an orgasm could be induced by taking a pill I would find
    unlikely, improbable," Bancroft said. "It's a little surprising that
    the vagus nerve should be involved, but then we're constantly being
    surprised." 
7.1288IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:40111
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EST

    AP 10-Apr-1997 1:02 EDT   REF5481

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    PLAINS FLOODING 

    HARWOOD, N.D. (AP) -- Severe weather has claimed the life of a pregnant
    woman and her 3-year-old daughter in Minnesota. The two survived a
    plunge into the flood-swollen Whiskey Creek only to die from exposure
    as they tried to walk for help. Elsewhere, crews used dynamite on ice
    jams clogging flood-swollen rivers in an attempt to drain backed-up
    water away from the Red River Valley before it rises even higher.
    Communities along the Minnesota-North Dakota state line wrestled with
    overflowing small rivers and prepared for the crest of the Red River
    itself. 
   
    COSBY SON 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The key witness in the roadside slaying of Bill
    Cosby's son has been unable to identify the suspect in a police lineup,
    a television station reports. The witness failed to identify Michael
    Markhasev during at least one lineup conducted sometime after his
    arrest March 12, KCAL-TV reported. Sources told the station the witness
    picked out other men in the lineup, but did not recognize the
    18-year-old Ukrainian emigre. Ennis Cosby, 27, was killed Jan. 16 as he
    was changing a tire at the side of a road. Markhasev has pleaded
    innocent to murder and attempted robbery charges. 
   
    KING-RIFLE 

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- A state appeals court will allow new tests on
    the rifle and bullet believed to have been used to kill Martin Luther
    King Jr. The decision keeps alive James Earl Ray's quest for a trial.
    Ray, now 69 and suffering from liver disease, originally pleaded guilty
    to killing King in 1968 and received a 99-year sentence. He has since
    maintained his innocence and wants the tests to prove the rifle in
    court custody is not the murder weapon. If that happens, he can ask the
    court for a hearing on his claim of innocence. 
   
    GULF-CIA 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The CIA concedes it did a poor job handling reports
    that could have warned U.S. troops against blowing up an Iraqi weapons
    storage site after the Persian Gulf War. The site was later found to
    have contained chemical weapons. "Intelligence support before, during
    and after the war should have been better," said Robert Walpole, the
    CIA's top official on Gulf War illness problems. 
   
    CHEMICAL WEAPONS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton's hopes of getting Senate
    ratification next week of a chemical weapons treaty have hit a snag.
    Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Jesse Helms says he plans more
    hearings on the 161-nation accord. Clinton has invited several senators
    to the White House for a private briefing on the pact, which takes
    effect April 29 with or without U.S. ratification. 
   
    ZAIRE-REBELS 

    KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) -- Zaire rebel leader Laurent Kabila has called
    for a three-day halt in his army's advance to give President Mobutu
    Sese Seko a chance to abdicate. Mobutu, fighting for his political
    life, has fired a popular prime minister who defied him. Kabila said
    his forces had all but seized control of the country's second-largest
    city, but that they would pause for Mobutu's response. Meanwhile, the
    United States has urged Mobutu to make way for a democratic government.
   
    LAWYER-INDICTED 

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- An Arkansas lawyer is accused of laundering
    $380,000 in drug money and funneling some of it to the Democratic
    National Committee and President Clinton's 1993 inauguration. Mark
    Cambiano pleaded innocent to 31 federal money-laundering and conspiracy
    counts involving cash from a methamphetamine ring. A U.S. attorney said
    the people who received contributions from Cambiano didn't know the
    donations were dirty. 
   
    SECURITY-INTERNET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Social Security Administration has decided to
    disable an Internet service that gave taxpayers access to their
    earnings and benefits records. Some lawmakers wanted that because of
    privacy concerns. The agency says it plans to conduct public forums
    over the next two months on whether new security measures are needed. 
   
    GALILEO-EUROPA 

    PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -- The Galileo space probe has photographed
    iceberg-like structures and sheer white patches on Jupiter's moon
    Europa, providing the strongest evidence yet of an ocean -- and perhaps
    life -- beneath its frozen surface. It's "the clearest evidence to date
    there is liquid water and melting close to the surface of Europa," said
    Torrence Johnson, the Galileo project scientist. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar traded at 127.08 yen early Thursday, up 0.42
    yen. The Nikkei gained 145.91 points to 17,849.28 points in early
    trading. In New York, the Dow industrials closed at 6,563.84, down
    45.32. 
   
    HAWKS-76ERS 

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The Atlanta Hawks used an NBA season-high 23
    steals to beat Philadelphia 116-101. The victory moves the Hawks into
    fourth place in the Eastern Conference, a half-game ahead of Detroit.
    76ers rookie Allen Iverson had 40 points for the second straight game. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1289IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4081
    RTw  09-Apr-97 16:11    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LUBUMBASHI, Zaire - Zairean rebels of Laurent Kabila entered the
    country's second city and mining capital Lubumbashi, witnesses said.

    KINSHASA - Security forces in Kinshasa used teargas to try to disperse
    supporters of Zaire's new prime minister, Etienne Tshisekedi, following
    the declaration of a nationwide state of emergency. 

    - - - - 

    HEBRON, West Bank - Israeli soldiers shot and wounded 31 Palestinians
    with rubber bullets in Hebron, where frustration at stalled Middle East
    peacemaking has boiled over into violence. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - North Korea has told the United States and South Korea it will
    respond next week to a proposal for peace talks amid expectations that
    near-famine will push it to accept the offer, albeit with strings
    attached. 

    - - - - 

    DUBAI - An Iraqi plane carrying 104 Moslem pilgrims to the haj
    pilgrimage in defiance of a United Nations air embargo on Baghdad
    landed at Jeddah airport in Saudi Arabia, airport sources and officials
    said. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin lashed out at his
    parliamentary opponents for a second day, anxious to show a firm hand
    before leaving for a spring holiday next week. 

    PARIS - Russian President Boris Yeltsin may come to Paris on May 27 to
    sign an accord establishing a new relationship between NATO and Russia,
    Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov said. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - Prime Minister Romano Prodi put his survival on the line in a
    desperate gambit to win parliamentary support for deployment of an
    Italian-led security force to Albania and save his unsteady government. 

    TIRANA - Albania's main opposition Socialist Party returned to
    parliament nearly a year after it abandoned its seats charging
    widespread election fraud. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - Hong Kong's future leader Tung Chee-hwa launched plans to
    curb political freedoms after China takes over the territory this year,
    incurring criticism from British colonial Governor Chris Patten. 

    - - - - 

    BRUSSELS - Belgian police and magistrates investigating a series of
    child abductions and murders were inhumane, inept, inefficient and ill
    trained, according to a leak of a parliamentary report. 

    - - - - 

    GENEVA - Two U.N. rights investigators, warning that the rule of law in
    Nigeria was on the verge of collapse, called on the military government
    to halt extra-judicial executions and arbitrary arrests by security
    forces. 

    - - - - 

    NEW DELHI - India and Pakistan held upbeat peace talks and agreed in a
    goodwill gesture to free several hundred fishermen held by the two
    countries. 

    NEW DELHI - India's ruling United Front coalition began talks with the
    rebellious Congress party to resolve an 11-day-old political crisis
    threatening the government's survival.  REUTER 
7.1290IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4041
    RTw  10-Apr-97 06:29    

    Hong Kong democrat slams Tung's curbs on freedoms

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    HONG KONG, April 10 (Reuter) - The leader of Hong Kong's democracy
    movement, Martin Lee, accused the territory's future leader Tung
    Chee-hwa on Thursday of siding with Beijing over plans to curb civil
    liberties after China takes over this year. 

    Lee, who is currently on a lobbying mission in the United States, also
    criticised the U.S. administration for not doing enough to help Hong
    Kong retain its freedoms and rights. 

    "Mr Tung has been siding with China on all these crucial and sensitive
    issues affecting the freedoms of Hong Kong people," Lee, head of the
    Democratic Party, told Hong Kong radio from Washington. 

    "He has never on any one of those occasions demonstrated to us that he
    is a defender of Hong Kong freedoms but on the contrary, he has done
    everything which happens to agree with the wishes of the Chinese
    government," Lee said. 

    Lee's comments came after Tung on Wednesday proposed measures to
    curtail protests and foreign funding for political parties in Hong Kong
    after the British colony of over 150 years reverts to China at midnight
    on June 30. 

    Tung's plan was widely expected after China's parliament resolved in
    late February that several existing Hong Kong laws protecting civil
    liberties and rights should be repealed or amended.

    Under the plans, societies and political parties would have to be
    registered and might be refused registration if they are known to have
    foreign ties to or receive funds from abroad. 

    People wishing to hold demonstrations would also need permission from
    police seven days in advance. 

    REUTER
7.1291IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4027
    RTw  10-Apr-97 06:06    

    Mad Cow, Bosnia blows to Europe -- MEP poll

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 9 (Reuter) - A majority of European members of parliament
    feel that the European Union's handling of Bosnia and the "Mad Cow"
    crisis over British beef dealt blows to its public image, according to
    a poll published on Wednesday. 

    The poll, conducted by MORI for the European newspaper, showed the beef
    crisis inflicted the most serious damage. Fifty-seven percent said it
    had diminished public perceptions of the European Union. 

    The EU imposed a worldwide ban on British beef last March after the
    British government admitted that a fatal brain disease could be
    contracted from eating infected beef. 

    A narrow majority of 51 percent felt that failure to resolve the Balkan
    crisis rebounded to the EU's detriment. 

    But there was some good news on the environment. Fifty-eight percent of
    the Strasbourg deputies said green issues had boosted support for
    Europe. 

    REUTER
7.1292IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4045
    RTw  10-Apr-97 01:53    

    Experimental drug fights arthritis in animal tests

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    NEW ORLEANS, April 9 (Reuter) - An experimental drug tested on rats
    shows potential for reversing arthritis, treating septic shock and
    staving off symptoms of diabetes, researchers said Wednesday. 

    Other compounds have shown promise in controlling arthritis, but this
    one, called mercaptoethylguanidine (MEG), seemed to reverse the painful
    chronic inflammation. 

    The results are based only on rat studies and it will be at least a few
    years before the doctors can know whether it is safe and effective in
    humans. 

    The animal data was reported by researchers from Cincinnati's
    Children's Hospital Medical Centre at scientific meetings here in New
    Orleans and in England. The University of California at Los Angeles has
    also been involved. 

    "I've never seen anything work like this. If this drug works in humans
    like we've seen in animals, it will be absolutely unique," said Dr.
    Csaba Szabo, a 29-year-old Hungarian-born researcher who is one of the
    lead scientists on the project. 

    MEG inhibits an enzyme that makes nitric oxide. When cells release
    nitric oxide, the toxic substance causes inflammation in arthritis,
    shock, diabetes and other disorders. The drug also neutralises other
    substances -- a toxin called peroxynitrite, and the fatty acids called
    prostaglandins that play a role in fever, headache, blood flow and
    tissue injury. 

    Researchers noted, however, that their findings so far are restricted
    to test tubes and a dozen lab rats, and compounds that look promising
    in rodents do not always work in people. 

    But the team was encouraged by the findings so far. The six arthritic
    rats given MEG all recovered, while the other six did not, and the
    cellular studies did not show any signs of potential dangerous side
    effects. 

    REUTER
7.1293IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4090
    RTw  09-Apr-97 19:38    

    Iraq defies U.N. with pilgrim plane in Saudi

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Rana Sabbagh 

    DUBAI, April 9 (Reuter) - Iraq flew 104 Moslem pilgrims to Saudi Arabia
    on Wednesday for the haj pilgrimage in an apparent attempt to use
    sensitive religious grounds to defy a United Nations air embargo. 

    Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef, in the first official Saudi
    reaction, said the Iraqi plane was allowed to enter the kingdom after
    authorities were told it carried Iraqi pilgrims. 

    It was escorted by two Saudi airforce jets from the minute it entered
    Saudi airspace from Jordan until it landed. 

    "When it became known that the aircraft had pilgrims on board it was
    allowed to enter and was accompanied by two Saudi aircraft until it
    touched down at Jeddah airport," he told a news conference in the holy
    city of Mecca. 

    He declined to say whether they had visas to enter the kingdom.

    It was the second pilgrim plane the kingdom has allowed to land this
    year in contravention of U.N. sanctions. 

    The U.N. last week rapped Libya for a March 29 flight to Saudi Arabia
    in defiance of U.N. sanctions connected with the 1988 bombing of a Pan
    Am airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland. 

    This was the third year in a row that Libya violated the sanctions by
    flying pilgrims to Jeddah. 

    Libya has in the past repeatedly asked other Arab countries to follow
    its lead. 

    Its unpredictable and outspoken leader Muammar Gaddafi has said keeping
    pilgrims out of Saudi Arabia would unleash a holy war with Western
    countries, an idea that carries potent weight in the volatile Middle
    East. 

    Diplomats in the kingdom say Saudi Arabia, as custodian of Islam's two
    holiest shrines, cannot be seen as denying any Moslem with a valid visa
    the right to perform the pilgrimage, one of the five pillars of Islam. 

    Saudi Arabia is a key U.S. ally but it also prides itself on its
    Islamic credentials as custodian of holy shrines that are sacred to
    millions of Moslems across the world. 

    It was not immediately clear if Iraq planned to fly more pilgrims to
    Saudi Arabia, Jeddah airport sources said. Up to two million Moslems,
    half of them from abroad, perform haj every year. 

    The U.N. imposed sanctions on Iraq following its 1990 invasion of
    Kuwait, which led Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab states to sever ties
    with Baghdad. 

    Since the break in ties, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have maintained a
    hawkish position on Iraq while some other Gulf Arab states have
    softened their line. 

    The Iraqi pilgrims, all over 50-years-old, were defiant when they left
    Baghdad. Sheikh Ibrahim Dirbaz said he was determined to reach Mecca or
    die a martyr on the way. 

    Others said they were sick and could not stand the hardship of the
    2,000 km (1,250 miles) land journey through Jordan to Saudi Arabia. Of
    the 104 pilgrims, 40 were women. 

    Iraqi Endowment and Religious Affairs Minister Abdul-Muneim Ahmed Saleh
    said sending the plane to Jeddah despite the ban was "a humanitarian
    endeavour and had no other purpose in mind..." 

    "We call on our brethren in the Islamic world to take note of this
    unfair embargo which infidel countries have imposed and in which Arab
    and Islamic states are taking part," Saleh said. 

    Some 1,000 Iraqi Moslems had arrived in Saudi Arabia by road on Tuesday
    for the haj, the first group from Iraq to perform the annual pilgrimage
    to Mecca since 1994. 

    The U.N. Security Council had rejected a request by Iraq to use its
    civil aircraft to fly this year's pilgrims to Mecca. It also turned
    down a plea by Baghdad to have part of its assets frozen abroad
    released for haj purposes

    REUTER
7.1294IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4039
    AP 10-Apr-1997 0:28 EDT   REF5466

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    TV: Witness Can't ID Cosby Suspect

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The key witness in the roadside slaying of Bill
    Cosby's son has been unable to identify the suspect in a police lineup,
    a television station reported Wednesday. 

    The witness failed to identify Michael Markhasev during at least one
    lineup conducted sometime after his arrest March 12, KCAL-TV reported.
    Sources told the station the witness picked out other men in the
    lineup, but did not recognize the 18-year-old Ukrainian emigre. 

    Police spokesman Officer Jason Lee would not comment on the report, nor
    would Sandi Gibbons, district attorney's spokeswoman. 

    One of Markhasev's defense lawyers, Darren Kavinoky, said he could not
    immediately comment on the report until he discussed it with
    co-counsel. 

    The witness reportedly was seated in her car waiting for 27-year-old
    Ennis Cosby to finish changing a tire when the suspect knocked on her
    window and told her to get out of the car. 

    She fled and returned to find the doctoral student fatally shot beside
    his Mercedes-Benz. Cosby was on his way to visit the woman when he got
    a flat tire and called her to illuminate the roadway while he changed
    it. 

    Sketch artists constructed a drawing of the suspect based on the
    woman's description, and Markhasev's mug shot appeared similar to the
    drawing. Police arrested him in connection with the Jan. 16 slaying
    based on several tips. 

    Markhasev has pleaded innocent to murder and attempted robbery charges
    in the slaying. Prosecutors also allege a special circumstance of
    murder during attempted robbery, which could allow the death penalty. 
7.1295IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4042
    AP 10-Apr-1997 0:19 EDT   REF5462

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pizza Hut Fined on Child Labor Laws

    By VERENA DOBNIK

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Labor Department has fined Pizza Hut $194,400 for
    allegedly letting teen-agers operate dangerous equipment like slicing
    machines and electric dough mixers at restaurants in the New York area. 

    Federal law prohibits anyone under 18 from operating the machines. 

    The violations involved 75 minors at 26 Pizza Huts in New York City and
    its northern suburbs from June to March, the government said Wednesday. 

    Rob Doughty, spokesman for Dallas-based Pizza Hut, said the company
    does not use slicers in its restaurants. 

    "I'm curious why they would say slicers because we don't have slicers
    in our units," Doughty said. "We dispute the facts and we are filing a
    letter of exception today and that will contest the allegations." 

    Bruce Sullivan, a Labor Department administrator in New York, said the
    violations occurred even though Pizza Hut had asked its young workers
    to sign an agreement indicating they knew they weren't allowed to touch
    the machines. 

    Pizza Hut was previously penalized for child-labor violations involving
    one restaurant in Pittsburgh and two in the New York area, he said. 

    On Tuesday, a jury in Seattle that dozens of Taco Bell restaurants --
    owned, like Pizza Hut, by PepsiCo -- violated state law by pressuring
    up to 13,000 workers to pick up trash, prepare food and perform other
    tasks without pay. Many of the workers were minors. 

    In South Carolina, 15 workers at Pizza Hut and Taco Bell restaurants
    have filed a lawsuit alleging they were not paid for all the hours they
    worked. 
7.1296IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4132
    AP 9-Apr-1997 23:43 EDT   REF5363

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Teacher's Ice Tea Spiked With LSD

    SAN DIEGO (AP) -- An eighth-grader was taken into custody Wednesday
    suspected of slipping LSD into his history teacher's ice tea. 

    John Duitsman was hospitalized Tuesday after feeling anxious and sick.
    He told authorities that someone might have contaminated the tea that
    he had on his desk. 

    "While being evaluated, he started to remember a particular class and
    comments students were making," said Tom Hall, police chief for San
    Diego City Schools. "Things started adding up." 

    Duitsman apparently ingested so little of the drug that he did not have
    hallucinations. He was recovering at home Wednesday and cooperating
    with the investigation. 

    The 13-year-old Challenger Middle School student, whose name was not
    released, was taken into custody for investigation of lacing the drink,
    Hall said. 

    Other students were also being questioned, although it was not clear
    whether there would be more arrests. Investigators also would like to
    know where the teen obtained the drug. 

    "We're not convinced this juvenile acted alone," Hall said. "We're
    going to continue talking to everybody to determine if anyone also was
    involved with this." 
7.1297IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4157
    AP 9-Apr-1997 23:33 EDT   REF5265

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Trial Opens Against Tobacco Giant

    By RON WORD

    Associated Press Writer

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Packages of cigarettes should carry a "skull
    and crossbones," an attorney for the family of a smoker who died of
    lung cancer said Wednesday to open a trial against R.J. Reynolds
    Tobacco Co. 

    The estate of the late Jean Connor claims Reynolds negligently kept the
    public in the dark about research showing its products are addictive
    and cause cancer. 

    "There was always misleading advertising about cigarettes suggesting
    they are not harmful," attorney Norwood "Woody" Wilner told jurors.
    "There's no evidence that Reynolds cared about its customers in any of
    their statements or documents." 

    But Reynolds attorney Paul Crist said Connor chose to smoke. 

    "There is only one issue in this case: whether someone who chose to
    smoke, despite 27 years of warnings . . . ought to be awarded money
    damages," Crist said. 

    The trial was expected to be the first to introduce the Liggett Group's
    recent confession that cigarettes are addictive and cause cancer, but
    lawyers said Wednesday they weren't sure if Liggett's statement would
    be introduced. 

    Connor began smoking when she was a teen-ager, when there were no
    warning labels on cigarettes. Her cancer was diagnosed in 1993, weeks
    after the bank manager quit smoking. She died in 1995 at age 49. 

    Her children are suing the nation's No. 1 cigarette maker, seeking
    punitive damages for the company's alleged role in her death. 

    The suit also says that Reynolds, maker of the Salem and Winston brands
    of cigarettes that Connor favored, manufactured a defective product
    that addicted her and then killed her. 

    "It's the double whammy of what's coming into your lungs to kill you
    and the fact that the nicotine is causing or contributing to your
    addictive use," Wilner said. 

    Crist argued that during the last 10 years she was a smoker, Connor
    smoked Benson & Hedges, which are not made by Reynolds. 

    Wilner won a $750,000 judgment last year against Brown & Williamson
    Tobacco Corp. for Grady Carter, another smoker who contracted lung
    cancer. The award is only the second won by a smoker against the
    industry. 
7.1298IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4175
    AP 9-Apr-1997 22:39 EDT   REF5103

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh Letter Blames FBI

    By MICHAEL FLEEMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- A reporter gave authorities a letter Wednesday from
    Timothy McVeigh blaming the FBI for the Branch Davidian deaths and
    comparing his plight in the Oklahoma City bombing to that of Richard
    Jewell. 

    "If you have trouble believing that the Justice Department are adept
    liars -- come to one of my pretrial hearings, to the trial itself, or
    ask Richard Jewell," McVeigh writes. 

    At the offices of the weekly Oklahoma Gazette in Oklahoma City, an FBI
    agent wearing rubber gloves placed the two-page handwritten letter into
    a plastic envelope. 

    "They just asked for it. They could have gone the subpoena route, but
    that would have been silly," said Gazette reporter Phil Bacharach, who
    interviewed McVeigh in prison and received the letter from him last
    November. 

    The newspaper made it public Tuesday during jury selection in McVeigh's
    bombing trial. Bacharach said he didn't reveal the letter earlier
    because McVeigh's views against the government are already well known. 

    Jury selection, meantime, continued Wednesday with eight prospects
    being questioned. Two of them were dismissed, one because he hadn't
    lived in the state long enough to qualify for jury service and another
    because of her strong views in favor of the death penalty. 

    Prosecutors have alleged McVeigh blew up the Oklahoma City federal
    building in 1995 in part as revenge for the government siege at the
    Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, two years earlier. 

    In the letter, dated "26 Nov 96," McVeigh writes in his
    leftward-slanting hand that the FBI caused the "slow, torturous" deaths
    of families in Waco, then dodged responsibility with the help of its
    own "wizards of propaganda." 

    Cult leader David Koresh and 80 of his followers died April 19, 1993,
    by fire or gunshots after the FBI started filling the compound with
    tear gas during a raid that ended a 51-day standoff. Davidians and
    their attorneys blame the government for starting the fire. FBI
    officials said the blaze was started by sect members. 

    McVeigh is particularly critical of former FBI special agent Bob Ricks,
    who was an FBI spokesman from the Waco scene and who was based in
    Oklahoma City at the time of the bombing -- although not in the federal
    building. Ricks now heads the Oklahoma state law enforcement agencies. 

    "At Waco, once the FBI blocked the Davidians abilities to communicate
    with the outside world, Bob Ricks could then step forward and mold the
    facts to fit the FBI's purposes," wrote McVeigh. 

    McVeigh says the FBI has launched a similar propaganda campaign against
    him. 

    "The idea is that once the FBI can control the flow of information,
    they can demonize their target," he writes. "In my case, I have been
    sealed away in federal prison and denied most visitation and free
    communication." 

    Later, he writes, "In both situations, as with Richard Jewell, you only
    hear one side of the story, and it is usually not truthful." 

    Jewell was the security guard initially identified by anonymous FBI
    sources as the top suspect in the Olympic park bombing. The FBI later
    publicly cleared Jewell and issued an apology. 
7.1299IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:41105
    AP 9-Apr-1997 21:30 EDT   REF5018

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Gov't Wiretap Scandal Stuns France

    By MATTHEW GLEDHILL

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- Wiretaps reportedly ordered by the late President
    Francois Mitterrand have sparked fierce political debate and caused the
    public to question France's powerful presidency. 

    New evidence indicates the Socialist president was personally
    responsible for wiretaps on journalists investigating the sinking of a
    Greenpeace ship and the existence of his illegitimate daughter. 

    At the center of the scandal is the defense secrets law, used by
    governments to prevent investigation of sensitive political affairs. A
    newspaper reported Wednesday that previous conservative governments
    also conducted wiretaps. 

    But Mitterrand's reported use of the anti-terrorist surveillance
    appears to have gone beyond the public's perception of national
    interest. 

    After rejecting three similar judicial requests, conservative Prime
    Minister Alain Juppe on Tuesday ordered a further examination of
    documents seized in February that provided details of the wiretapping. 

    The move came shortly before a poll was released indicating that 92
    percent of French people saw the wiretaps affair as a serious, or very
    serious, threat to democracy. 

    The poll was published in Thursday's L'Evenement du Jeudi Magazine and
    involved a group of about 820 people. Although no margin of error was
    given, such polls usually have a 2 or 3 point margin. 

    For the past few weeks, editorials in Le Monde and the left-leaning
    Liberation have targeted the "defense secrets" act. 

    The affair has also sparked heated political debate among leftist and
    conservative lawmakers. 

    "The president cannot be investigated except in the case of high
    treason, an infraction that is not defined by any text," conservative
    lawmaker Patrick Devedjian told Le Monde last Friday. "The president is
    therefore above the law." 

    Socialist leader Lionel Jospin has called for lifting the mantle of
    defense secrecy altogether. 

    "We have to end this monarchic secret in our country, no matter who is
    the president," Jospin said on Sunday. 

    But that comment drew dissent from within Socialist ranks. Former
    Socialist budget minister Michel Charasse attacked his party leader,
    saying "he is renouncing the meaning of the state." 

    Charasse said the wiretaps were justified by "security reasons." 

    Mitterrand's former office chief, Jean Glavany, told Europe-1 radio
    that phone taps were performed "morning, day and night" by previous
    presidents. 

    But Valery Giscard d'Estaing, Mitterrand's predecessor, "denied
    categorically" that claim. President Jacques Chirac, who succeeded
    Mitterrand in 1995, has remained silent on the matter. 

    Le Monde, a respected center-left daily, said last week that Mitterrand
    ordered wiretaps of Jean-Edern Hallier, who threatened to reveal the
    existence of the former-president's illegitimate daughter Mazarine in
    1984. 

    Mitterrand only publicly acknowledged his daughter shortly before his
    death from prostate cancer last year. 

    Conversations by Le Monde journalist Edwy Plenel, who helped uncover
    the role of the French secret service in the 1985 sinking of
    Greenpeace's "Rainbow Warrior" ship, were also listened to by the
    anti-terrorist team, Le Monde said. 

    Actress Carole Bouquet also had her phone tapped, although there has
    been no apparent political explanation to date, said Le Monde. 

    Mitterrand's handwriting was reportedly on the recently seized
    documents, which he signed "seen." 

    The wiretap scandal broke in the French media in 1993, though
    Mitterrand was not directly implicated at the time. 

    Investigations gained new life in February, when five metal trunks of
    documents detailing the wiretaps were seized in a garage rented by
    Christian Prouteau, a former Mitterrand aide. 

    One report Wednesday said the conservative government confiscated
    documents relating to the 1986-1988 government led by Chirac before the
    metal trunks were handed over to authorities. 

    The investigative weekly, Le Canard Enchaine, which helped reveal the
    original wiretapping affair, said the government does not want to admit
    taps took place while it was in power. 

    There was no immediate comment from the government. 
7.1300IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4184
    AP 9-Apr-1997 19:02 EDT   REF6009

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Italy OKs Troop Mission to Albania

    By DANIEL J. WAKIN

    Associated Press Writer

    ROME (AP) -- Italy gave the go-ahead Wednesday for its troops to lead
    an international mission to restive Albania, but not without a
    parliamentary fight that nearly brought down the government. 

    Premier Romano Prodi said the 6,000-strong force would begin its
    mission Monday, with Italy contributing about half the personnel. After
    Italy's vote, Spain deployed two ships carrying 325 soldiers from its
    southern coast. 

    French troops were already headed to Albania, and Greece -- Italy's
    rival for influence in the chaotic Balkan nation -- said it would send
    troops regardless of Italy's decision. 

    Romania, Austria, Denmark and Turkey also have pledged troops for the
    mission to protect the delivery of humanitarian aid to Albania, which
    has fallen into lawlessness amid protests over failing investment
    schemes and anti-government unrest. 

    Parliament's endorsement of the mission came 18 days after the United
    Nations gave its approval -- on the urgent request of Italy. 

    Italian lawmakers opposed to the deployment worried that anti-Italian
    sentiments in Albania would jeopardize troops, or they worried that
    Italy might be drawn into the violence. 

    Prodi relied on the center-right opposition to win endorsement for the
    Italian deployment, approved on a 503-85 vote in the Chamber of
    Deputies. 

    In exchange Prodi announced that the future of his year-old government
    was in the hands of President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro, who could bring
    down his government by asking for his resignation. 

    At a meeting immediately after the vote, the president asked Prodi to
    seek a declaration of support from Parliament. The premier's office
    said he would do so on Thursday. 

    The Communist Refoundation party -- an integral part of Prodi's
    governing majority -- refused to back the mission. 

    The government doesn't "have a majority to lead the country, let alone
    an international mission," said former Premier Silvio Berlusconi, the
    opposition leader. 

    During the debate, Prodi fruitlessly appealed to lawmakers to consider
    Italy's international image. 

    "Beware if the Italian Parliament appears uncertain, divided and
    insecure before the eyes of the world," he said. 

    The mission, Italy's first as commander of a multinational force since
    World War II, comes as the nation is trying to prove itself worthy in
    the European Union and gain recognition as an independent actor on the
    international stage. 

    Italy's performance in the Albanian mission "worries all the allies in
    the multinational force," Ramon de Miguel, Spain's secretary of state
    for foreign affairs, said in Madrid. 

    The Albanian crisis has caused 13,000 refugees to flee to Italy's
    southern shores. Tension between the two countries flared last month
    when an Albanian boat collided with an Italian warship and sank,
    killing several refugees. 

    More than 200 people have died in Albania and 1,000 injured since the
    unrest began in January. 

    Many Albanians blame President Sali Berisha and his government for the
    failed financial schemes. Berisha and some of his Democratic Party
    leaders have admitted receiving money from one scheme, but insist no
    laws were broken. 

    The opposition Socialists disagreed, demanding the resignation of both
    the government and the president. 
7.1301IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:41114
    AP 9-Apr-1997 22:12 EDT   REF5062

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Solar Shock Waves Photographed

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Dramatic pictures from a new satellite show a shock
    wave moving across the face of the sun just after a solar flare sent an
    immense bubble of superheated gas toward Earth at almost 2 million
    miles an hour. 

    Just a small eruption, scientists assured Wednesday -- worth noting
    only because it produced the first close-up photographs of a solar
    flare. 

    Its nothing-out-of-the-ordinary size isn't expected to disrupt regular
    radio, telephone, television or cable communications, they said. 

    Also, virtually no danger exists of power blackouts, added David Speich
    of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's space weather
    center in Boulder, Colo. 

    "The effects will be almost none," Speich said. Some international
    shortwave radio operators, he said, could experience brief moments of
    minor signal distortion. 

    Satellite operators were notified routinely, but officials said it
    would take a larger event to affect orbiting equipment, mostly shielded
    from all but the biggest solar flares. 

    Massive solar eruptions of the past have caused blackouts, cooked
    satellites and disrupted communications for hours. But by the sun's
    awesome standards, this week's eruption was barely a firecracker, NASA
    said. 

    As of 9:45 p.m. EDT, none of the flare had reached Earth, Speich said. 

    "It's expected anytime between now and 10 hours by now," he said. "If
    it doesn't reach us by that time, then it's missed us. It just didn't
    impact the Earth -- it went above us, beneath us or around us." 

    Scientists predict that any contact would be made by 8 a.m. EDT on
    Thursday, but won't be able to see anything unless it hits the planet. 

    "We don't see a thing because it's left the sun in a violent departure
    and has been traveling through space between the sun and the Earth
    during that time," Speich said. 

    For scientists, the excitement was that pictures taken by the space
    agency's SOHO satellite detected the wave moving across the sun's
    gaseous surface "like a tsunami tidal wave," NASA's chief scientist on
    the SOHO satellite, Art Poland, said. "That's the first time we have
    seen the shock wave." 

    Poland said he and his colleagues hesitated even to announce the flare
    because of its ordinary size, but he said the dramatic images from the
    new satellite led to the space agency's release of information. 

    Four similar flares have occurred this year, and the most recent
    differs only in that its eruption was directed more toward the Earth,
    that scientist said. Material from a solar explosion often speeds
    harmlessly out into space, away from Earth. 

    Earth's magnetic shield protects the planet against all but the largest
    solar flares, Speich said. 

    In March 1989, fallout from a solar flare caused the largest
    geomagnetic storm in 30 years. It knocked out a power grid in Quebec
    for nine hours. Parts of the power grid in the northeastern United
    States also experienced brief disruptions. 

    No satellites were damaged by that event, Speich said, but geomagnetic
    storms were blamed for failure of the GOES 8 weather satellite in 1994
    and of a telephone communications satellite last January. 

    High-energy electrons from a flare can send an electrical arc into a
    satellite's wiring, scrambling the computer or, rarely, damaging an
    electronic chip or a switch. Most satellites are designed to protect
    against this. 

    At COMSAT World Systems, which operates 24 communications satellites,
    engineers ordered up some protective commands. 

    COMSAT engineer Carl Jeffcoat said his satellites have withstood
    greater jolts than that threatened by the recent flare. 

    "At the moment, while certainly we're interested, I wouldn't say that
    we're concerned," he said. 

    Damaging flares are rare, more apt to happen during the active part of
    the sun's 11-year cycle. Within four years or so, that cycle will reach
    "solar max" and spew out scores of flares every day like the one that
    occurred this week, Speich said. 

    At solar max, he said, flares ten times bigger than the recent event
    will occur four to five times a day. Once every 24 to 48 hours, a flare
    will occur that is 100 times bigger. 

    Only a few ever affect the Earth, Speich said. 

    By earthly standards, any solar flare is gigantic. Billions of tons of
    charged hydrogen and helium, "stuff the sun is made of," suddenly erupt
    from the surface, said Speich. 

    Huge blobs of the material, held together by magnetic forces, streak
    into space at hypersonic speeds. If the material travels toward Earth,
    it can slam into the planet's magnetic field after two or three days
    and set it to vibrating. That can transfer energy to electric wiring,
    pipelines and satellites. It also sets off the auroras, such as the
    Northern Lights. 
7.1302IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4174
    AP 9-Apr-1997 19:56 EDT   REF6032

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Europa Ocean Theory Gets Boost

    By JANE E. ALLEN

    AP Science Writer

    PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -- The Galileo spacecraft has captured images of
    iceberg-like structures and smooth white patches on Jupiter's moon
    Europa, providing the strongest evidence yet that an ocean -- and
    perhaps life -- lie beneath its frozen surface. 

    Liquid water is an essential ingredient for life. So the pictures taken
    by the unmanned Galileo spacecraft during a Feb. 20 flyby have
    scientists more eager than ever to delve beneath the moon's icy shell. 

    "It looks as though we found the smoking gun that points at this
    sub-surface ocean," proclaimed Michael Carr, a geologist with the U.S.
    Geological Survey in Menlo Park. 

    The pictures, released Wednesday at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
    are the most detailed images Galileo has ever made of Europa. 

    "These are really mind-blowing pictures," said Richard Terrile, an
    astronomer at the JPL. "How often is an ocean discovered? ... There is
    very strong evidence that there is an ocean here." 

    The pictures of icy chunks scattered like pottery shards provide "the
    clearest evidence to date there is liquid water and melting close to
    the surface of Europa," said Torrence Johnson, the Galileo project
    scientist at JPL. But, Johnson cautioned, "we have no evidence directly
    bearing on life." 

    Carr said the icy blocks, each about 2 to 4 miles across and resembling
    Arctic icebergs, appeared to have drifted apart. "You can push them
    back together to reconstruct the original pattern," he said. 

    Their movement adds weight to scientists' notion that a warm watery or
    slushy layer underlies a frozen crust that could be anywhere from one
    to 60 miles thick. 

    In the 20-mile-by-25-mile Europa snapshot, the ice probably is slightly
    more than a mile thick, said Paul Geissler, a University of Arizona
    planetary scientist. 

    The ice surface is also relatively young, at about 1 million years,
    said Clark Chapman, a planetary scientist with the Southwest Research
    Institute in Boulder, Colo. 

    Asked how warm the ocean might be, oceanographer John Delaney of the
    University of Washington said that depends on how much salt and other
    chemicals might be dissolved in it. Salt lowers liquids' freezing
    temperature. 

    Delaney said the water on Europa probably is rich in salt and other
    dissolved chemicals from millennia of interaction with rocks and was
    spiked by incoming comets with the organic molecules necessary for
    life. 

    But asked if the watery soup could hold life, Terrile and said: "The
    water's probably bouillon, but we don't know if it's chicken soup." 

    While the news conference was taking place, an international group of
    scientists was meeting across town to discuss a proposed
    ice-penetrating robotic craft that might be able to explore Europa.
    They plan to test the cryobot first at Lake Vostok, a freshwater lake
    beneath the ice of Antarctica. 

    The 4.5-foot-long, 6-inch-diameter probe would carry a small tethered
    submersible vessel that would emerge when it sensed water and could
    radio back a chemical analysis of what it found. 
7.1303IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4176
    AP 9-Apr-1997 16:38 EDT   REF5523

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Researchers Seek AIDS Cell Blocker

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Researchers say they have found a way to genetically
    prevent the formation of a key protein that allows the AIDS virus to
    infect some cells, offering promise for a radically new treatment. 

    Recent studies have shown that the HIV virus must link with specific
    proteins on the surface of cells before it can infect the cell. These
    surface proteins are called receptors. 

    One of the receptors, CD4, has long been known. Studies last year
    showed that the virus must also link with one of two other cell
    receptors, CCR5 or CXCR4. 

    Generally, the virus uses the CCR5 receptor to invade cells early in
    the infection. After the virus mutates, it also uses CXCR4. 

    Scientists at the Naval Medical Research Institute in Bethesda, Md.
    announced this week that in laboratory experiments they are now able to
    prevent T-cells, the primary HIV target, from making the surface
    protein CCR5. This, in effect, shuts down the ability of the virus to
    infect the T-cells, said Dr. Carl H. June of the institute. 

    "We know that if you are born without the CCR5 gene, it is very hard to
    get infected with HIV," said June. "Our work shows that you can
    artificially induce this immunity by turning off the CCR5 gene in the
    nucleus of the cell." 

    A report on the study is to be published Friday in the journal Science. 

    T-cells play a key role in the immune system. When an infective
    organism is detected, the T-cells multiply and each new cell has on its
    surface two proteins, CD3 and CD28, said June. When these proteins are
    made, it signals the nucleus of the cell to also make CCR5. 

    In the new research, June said, his group has blocked the expression of
    CD3 and CD28. This, in turn, causes the cell to not make CCR5. 

    "If you bind (block) CD3 and CD28, that delivers a signal to the cell
    to turn off the CCR5," said June. And without CCR5, most strains of HIV
    will not become infective. 

    He said an experimental technique, which he declined to discuss, may be
    tried on patients soon. 

    June noted that about 10 percent of HIV patients become initially
    infected through the other cell membrane receptor, called CXCR4. He
    said his work "would unfortunately do nothing against that." 

    Other researchers also report in Science that they have found a protein
    that directly blocks the HIV virus from binding with the CCR5 receptor. 

    An international team of researchers says a protein called AOP-RANTES
    is able to keep HIV out of both T-cells and macrophages, another type
    of immune cell. 

    AOP-RANTES is a member of a family of proteins called chemokines that
    help to regulate white blood cells. They do this by attaching to
    specific sites on the cell surface. 

    In the Science study, researchers found in laboratory experiments that
    AOP-RANTES is able to fully occupy the CCR5 receptor. Once the receptor
    is occupied, it is like blocking a doorway -- the HIV is prevented from
    moving into and infecting the cell. 

    Dr. Timothy N.C. Wells of Glaxo Wellcome Research, a co-author of the
    study, said the findings "suggest an alternative treatment approach
    that could be used alongside current therapies." 
7.1304IJSAPL::ANDERSONAll that sheep tupping worked!Thu Apr 10 1997 11:4193
    AP 8-Apr-1997 17:26 EDT   REF5830

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cigarette Tax Bill Makes Waves

    By LAURA MECKLER

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- As pressure built elsewhere to expand health
    insurance for children, House Republicans signaled skepticism Tuesday
    while holding the year's first hearing on the issue. 

    "There is significant interest in making this a priority," said Rep.
    Bill Thomas, chairman of the House Ways and Means health subcommittee.
    "However the issue has generated significantly more interest than
    solutions." 

    Meanwhile, liberal Sen. Edward Kennedy and conservative Sen. Orrin
    Hatch introduced their plan to cover half the nation's 10 million
    uninsured children. They would nearly triple the federal cigarette tax,
    increasing it by 43 cents per pack, to subsidize the purchase of
    private insurance. 

    "All children deserve a healthy start in life," said Kennedy, D-Mass. 

    In the House, the drumbeat for "kiddie care" pounded on, as a group of
    Democrats called for a bill to pass out of committee by Mother's Day
    and onto the House floor by Father's Day. 

    "The time to act is now," said a letter to Thomas from Minority Leader
    Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., and 18 other Democrats. 

    In the Senate, Hatch emphasized that he and Kennedy labored to find a
    politically central solution. 

    "For the two of us to have reached a mutual agreement on the complexity
    and controversial nature of the children's health issue is testimony to
    our commitment in putting politics aside and helping those who cannot
    help themselves," said Hatch, R-Utah. 

    Since first announced last month, the bill has picked up support from a
    half-dozen moderate Republicans, including Sen. James Jeffords, R-Vt.,
    chairman of the Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee, which will
    consider a portion of the bill. 

    "We're optimistic that it will have broad support from all parts of the
    political spectrum," Kennedy said. 

    In the House, Thomas led this year's first congressional hearing on the
    issue, examining the complex issues surrounding expanded coverage. 

    "I believe the facts about uninsured children are much more complex
    than many have appreciated or understood," said Thomas, R-Calif. 

    For instance: If the subsidies are not generous enough, many families
    still can't or won't purchase insurance, said Linda T. Bilheimer of the
    Congressional Budget Office. She cited a study suggesting that even
    with a 60 percent subsidy, just one-fourth of uninsured working
    families would buy insurance. 

    But if subsidies are too generous, families might choose the government
    plan over one offered by an employer and costs will skyrocket, she
    said. Plus, employers might stop offering children's insurance if they
    know their employees will qualify for a state program. 

    Thomas also suggested that the government might want to require
    co-payments and deductibles, to make sure its plan was not more
    generous than what employers are offering. 

    Since the beginning of the year, Senate Democrats have said that
    covering uninsured children was a top priority, and President Clinton
    included a plan to cover up to half the children in his budget. 

    But Hatch was the first Republican to embrace the idea. He noted that
    his bill provides block grants -- a Republican favorite -- to states
    that help fund the program. And one-third of the higher tobacco tax
    would reduce the deficit by $10 billion over five years. 

    The other $20 billion would subsidize the cost of a comprehensive,
    standard insurance package for 5 million low- and moderate-income
    families. 

    The Hatch-Kennedy plan does not directly address 2 million uninsured
    children who live in families with higher incomes, suggesting instead
    that states set up programs to sell them insurance. Census data show
    that about 25 percent of families with uninsured children have incomes
    above $40,000 a year. 

    The plan also does not address the 3 million poorest uninsured children
    who are eligible for Medicaid but not enrolled. Kennedy said he hopes
    other efforts will bring more of these children into Medicaid.
7.1305IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:49105
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 11-Apr-1997 1:06 EDT   REF5344

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
   
    PLAINS FLOODING 

    FARGO, N.D. (AP) -- The director of the Federal Emergency Management
    Agency says the flooding in Minnesota and North Dakota is
    unprecedented. "I have never seen a blizzard that had been covered by
    water, and then it freezes. And the mess that it has caused -- it is
    just unbelievable," James Lee Witt said. Vice President Al Gore plans
    to tour the area Friday. The Red River is expected to crest at Fargo
    and Moorhead, Minn., by Friday at between 37 1/2 and 38 feet and remain
    that high for several days. But it will top off at up to 2 feet less
    than predicted. A faulty gauge was blamed for the discrepancy. 
   
    LINE-ITEM VETO 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The question of whether the line-item veto is
    constitutional may have to be decided by the Supreme Court. A federal
    judge has struck down the law allowing the president to veto specific
    items in bills passed by Congress. The judge said the 1996 Line-Item
    Veto Act went against the framers of the Constitution. The measure
    would have allowed the president, for the first time, to veto separate
    items in spending bills and certain limited tax provisions passed by
    Congress. Previously, the president could only veto entire bills. 
   
    ARTS SPENDING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- House Speaker Newt Gingrich says wealthy celebrities
    who come to Capitol Hill seeking federal spending on the arts should
    fork over the money themselves rather than burden taxpayers. Gingrich
    joined other Republican leaders at a news conference urging Congress to
    eliminate all funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. Gingrich
    dismayed some of his GOP colleagues last month when he met actor Alec
    Baldwin and other celebrities promoting the NEA. 
   
    CLINTON-SWEATSHOPS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A major manufacturer quit an anti-sweatshop task
    force of clothes-makers, unions and human rights advocates just days
    before President Clinton was expected to endorse the group's
    recommendations. The Warnaco Group pulled out of the coalition in
    disagreement with a plan to have independent monitors check working
    conditions at factories around the world. Companies that comply with
    the code will be able to put a label on their products assuring
    consumers it was not made in a sweatshop. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Prosecutors in the Oklahoma City bombing case have lined
    up about 100 witnesses to testify about telephone records that
    allegedly tie Timothy McVeigh to the Ryder truck, bomb components and
    other parts of the plot. The phone-record witnesses are among 327
    people on the prosecution's final witness list, which was made
    available to The Associated Press. Others include McVeigh's sister and
    several friends. 
   
    JONBENET-RAMSEY 

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- JonBenet Ramsey's mother has agreed to give
    investigators a fourth handwriting sample, a family spokeswoman said
    Thursday. Authorities investigating the 6-year-old beauty queen's death
    wouldn't say why they asked Patsy Ramsey for an additional sample.
    Police have obtained several handwriting samples from Ramsey family
    members and others in an attempt to determine who wrote a ransom note
    Mrs. Ramsey found in the family's home Dec. 26. 
   
    CONFEDERACY PROTEST 

    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- Saying Gov. George Allen is trying to "send us
    back to slavery," black leaders demanded his resignation for
    proclaiming April as Confederate History and Heritage Month. Allen last
    month urged residents to salute the state's "four-year struggle for
    independence and sovereign rights" during the Civil War. Many Civil War
    battles were fought in Virginia, and Richmond was the Confederacy's
    capital from 1861 until just before the war ended in April 1865. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar traded at 126.24 yen at midday Friday, up
    0.14. The Nikkei stood at 17,631.76 points, up 146.01. In New York, the
    Dow industrials closed at 6,540.05, down 23.79. 
   
    PISTONS-HEAT 

    MIAMI (AP) -- The Miami Heat beat Detroit 93-83, then clinched their
    first Atlantic Division championship when the New York Knicks lost to
    the Chicago Bulls, 105-103. The title assures Miami of the No. 2 seed
    in the Eastern Conference playoffs behind the Bulls. 
   
    IRABU 

    SAN DIEGO (AP) -- The Japanese commissioner's office has ruled that the
    San Diego Padres will have the negotiating rights to pitcher Hideki
    Irabu for two seasons, a baseball lawyer says. The Padres obtained
    Irabu's rights in a deal with his Japanese club in January. But the
    right-hander has refused to negotiate with them, insisting that he be
    traded to the New York Yankees. San Diego has received several strong
    offers for Irabu from other major league clubs, but things have been
    quiet since before opening day. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1306IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:51106
    RTw  11-Apr-97 04:43    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BONN - Relations between Tehran and Europe were in crisis after a
    German court accused Iran of ordering the killing of Kurdish dissidents
    in Berlin and indicated its highest leaders had sanctioned the attack. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States hailed a German court finding Iran's
    leaders ordered political killings in Berlin, seeing it as a victory in
    its effort to persuade Europe to take a tougher line with Tehran. 

    - - - - 

    LUBUMBASHI, Zaire - Laurent Kabila's rebels tightened the screws on
    Zaire's veteran strongman Mobutu Sese Seko, consolidating their hold on
    its economic heart and giving him three days to start talks on
    quitting. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - The vanguard of a multinational military force was heading to
    Albania as fresh violence erupted in the anarchic Balkan state after
    several days of relative calm. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israel grudgingly acknowledged PLO help in finding the body
    of a kidnapped soldier but said Palestinian authorities must still do
    more to combat Moslem militants before peace talks could restart. 

    - - - - 

    NEW DELHI - India's embattled coalition prepared to face a vote of
    confidence in parliament on Friday after talks to end a political
    crisis were deadlocked. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Europe returned to centre stage in Britain's election campaign
    as Prime Minister John Major attacked the opposition Labour Party's
    European policies but faced renewed divisions in his own party. 

    LONDON - The Conservative Party's hopes of a successful fightback in
    Britain's election battle were shaken by surveys suggesting it had made
    only modest dents in the opposition Labour Party's opinion-poll lead. 

    - - - - 

    HANOI - Vietnam welcomed the formal confirmation in Washington of a
    former prisoner of war, Douglas "Pete" Peterson as the first post-war
    United States ambassador to Hanoi. 

    - - - - 

    FARGO, North Dakota - Rescuers used helicopters and all-terrain
    vehicles on Thursday to carry thousands of people, some sobbing, from
    flooded homes as rivers swollen by rain and melting snow ravaged the
    U.S. northern plains. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Relatives of hostages held by Marxist guerrillas in the Japanese
    ambassador's home pleaded for faster efforts to win their release, but
    a top official said the government would "wait as long as it takes." 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - Former U.S. House Speaker Thomas Foley is expected to be
    appointed the new ambassador to Japan, Japanese media reported. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - North Korea demanded that South Korea apologise for an exchange
    of warning shots at their tense border shortly before U.S. Defence
    Secretary William Cohen visited the area on Thursday. 

    TOKYO - North Korean pilots are flying more missions than in the past
    two or three years, showing the country's war capability is still a
    threat despite economic collapse, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs
    of Staff General John Shalikashvili said on Friday. 

    - - - - 

    UNITED NATIONS - After a month-long rearguard action against new rules
    denying diplomats exemption from New York city parking fines, a U.N.
    committee bucked the issue up to the 185-nation General Assembly. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - A federal judge Thursday threw out a historic new law
    enabling the president to strip items from spending measures without
    vetoing a whole bill, declaring it to be unconstitutional. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Madeleine Albright named a new
    coordinator for U.S. policy toward Bosnia on Thursday and urged ethnic
    rivals there to intensify efforts to make their peace
    "self-sustaining." 

    - - - - 

    REUTER 
7.1307IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5151
    RTos 11-Apr-97 05:32    

    U.S. Says Drug-Resistant Salmonella Spreading

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    ATLANTA (Reuter) - One of the most common strains of salmonella is
    showing increasing signs of resistance to the antibiotics normally used
    to treat it, federal health officials said Thursday. 

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said
    salmonella typhimurium, which accounts for at least 24 percent of all
    reported salmonella cases, is growing increasingly drug-resistant. 

    The CDC said a rising proportion of salmonella typhimurium samples
    involve a strain usually resistant to five commonly used antibiotics --
    ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, sulfonamides and
    tetracycline. 

    "In the past six or seven years this subtype has grown from being about
    seven percent of all salmonella typhimurium isolates that we've tested
    to almost 40 percent," Dr. Jeremy Sobel of the CDC's Division of
    Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases said. 

    "It is definitely increasing in incidence," Sobel said. "It may be
    driving up the total number of illnesses." 

    The drug-resistant strain caused an outbreak of diarrheal illness among
    school children in Nebraska last year. The source of the infection has
    not been determined. 

    Unlike the most common type of salmonella, the drug- resistant strain
    has been linked to sick farm animals and eating contaminated meat. It
    has been transmitted from cattle and sheep to people and has also been
    found in cats, wild birds, rodents, foxes and badgers.

    In Britain, where the drug-resistant strain has been reported for more
    than a decade, 41 percent of people infected with the organism have
    required hospitalization and three percent have died. The more common
    form of salmonella, usually transmitted by eggs, causes far fewer
    deaths. 

    "This is a type of salmonella which appeared first in the United
    Kingdom in 1984 and it rapidly emerged and became the second
    most-common type of salmonella in the U.K.," Sobel said. 

    "The organism is acquiring even further resistance to antibiotics which
    are commonly used for treating salmonella and similar infections," he
    said. 

    REUTER
7.1308IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:51121
    RTw  11-Apr-97 04:39    

    FEATURE - Greenham Common nuclear base goes back ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Greenham Common nuclear base goes back to nature 

    By Jill Serjeant 

    NEWBURY, England, April 11 (Reuter) - Greenham Common, once the home of
    nuclear Cruise missiles threatening global destruction, is finally
    returning to nature. 

    Bulldozers are breaking up the concrete of the longest runway in Europe
    as a prelude to turning one of the West's most controversial airbases
    back into a windswept heath. 

    "It's the end of 50 years of the shadow that has been cast by military
    activity on Greenham Common and made it famous throughout Europe. It's
    over and now we are moving into the future," said Sir Peter Michael of
    the Greenham Common Trust, which has bought the former U.S. air base. 

    In the 1980s Greenham Common became a focus of anti-nuclear protest,
    with 50,000 people -- most of them women -- joining hands around the
    high wire fences on one heady weekend. 

    Singing, shouting and lacing the fence with flowers, the Greenham
    Common Women resisted arrest and eviction from their campsite for more
    than 10 years to campaign for the removal of the 96 U.S. Cruise
    missiles at the southern England airbase. 

    As the Cold War ended, the deadly missiles were removed and destroyed
    under the 1987 Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) and when the
    United States air force finally left the base five years ago, the birds
    and the butterflies moved back in. 

    RETURNING TO NATURE 

    The Greenham Common Trust -- a partnership between Newbury district
    council and a consortium of local businesses -- bought the 900 acre
    (360 hectacre) site for seven million pounds ($11.44 million) and plans
    to turn most of it back into the peaceful common land walked on by
    local people before World War Two. 

    "We will turn it back to what it was originally which was heathland.
    The strips of grass in between the runways are actually sites of
    special scientific interest because of the flora and insect life," said
    Newbury District Council spokesman Peter Gilmour. 

    "Because no-one went out on the runways apart from the bombers, it is
    largely undisturbed and therefore all sorts of wildlife grows there,"
    Gilmour said. 

    The former barracks and aircraft hangars are already being used as
    small business units and the old Liberty ballroom, still bearing the
    stars and stripes flag, is now a community and leisure centre. 

    Ground-nesting birds like lapwing are living on the deserted heath and
    there are signs that bats may now be nesting in the bunkers which once
    housed the Cruise missiles themselves. 

    The huge concrete missile silos must remain under the terms of the INF
    treaty which in theory allow the Russians to inspect the base at 48
    hours notice until the year 2006. 

    GREENHAM WOMEN STILL CAMPAIGNING 

    Although peace has come to Greenham Common after 50 years of life as a
    British and American air base, the women who helped bring it about are
    still shouting to those who would listen. 

    "It is no longer military land and I think that is a wonderful
    achievment. It says a lot for the endurance and perseverance and
    strength of this camp that we have outlasted all of that," said Katrina
    Howse, one of the stalwarts of what remains of the Greenham Women's
    Peace Camp. 

    Howse, who has been living outside the airbase since 1982, said the
    peace women had decided to stay at Greenham to campaign against
    Britain's Trident nuclear submarine weapons system. 

    The nuclear warheads for Trident are being made a few miles away from
    Greenham in the top secret Aldermaston centre. 

    "We could not justify doing all that work against 96 Cruise missiles
    when 400 Trident warheads are being made just eight miles down the
    road," said Howse, who has been to jail 19 times for non-violent
    anti-nuclear protests. 

    "The next couple of years is a race against time to stop Trident
    weapons being fired." 

    The collective of 10 women who live outside Greenham in a group of old
    caravans believe they have earned a place in history through their
    protests and they intend to stay. 

    "This camp has been here for 15 years through hell and high water. It
    is is known internationally. It means something to an awful lot of
    people," said Howse. 

    "It is not just a lifestyle choice. If you wanted to hang out with a
    group of women you could go anywhere." 

    Ironically the military has probably proved to be one of nature's best
    friends, protecting the Greenham Common from use as agricultural or
    housing land. 

    The unploughed land retains the flowers and plants of chalk grasslands
    and a 1990 survey by English Nature showed the common was home to many
    rare butteflies. 

    It will take about five years before heather creeps once more over the
    path of the old runways and obsolete fuel tanks and pipelines are
    removed along with the razor wire fences. 

    Then the plan is to allow ponies and cattle to graze on the common,
    marking the close of one of the most bitter chapters in Britain's
    nuclear history. 

    REUTER
7.1309IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5157
    RTw  11-Apr-97 03:53    

    U.S. judge censured for calling British law primitive

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Jeanne King 

    NEW YORK, April 10 (Reuter) - A judicial watchdog commission on
    Thursday censured a New York judge who criticised the British legal
    system in open court during the sentencing last year of a British woman
    who admitted killing her newborn baby. 

    The New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct in a determination
    made on April 2 and released on Thursday said New York State Supreme
    Court Justice Robert Hanophy made "undignified, discourteous and
    disparaging remarks" at the sentencing of Caroline Beale, who had
    pleaded guilty to manslaughter in a plea bargain agreement in
    connection with the death of her baby daughter. 

    During the sentencing, Hanophy blasted the woman's parents, and her
    father, Peter Beale of Chingford, Essex, in particular for calling the
    U.S. justice system "barbaric and uncivilized." 

    Beale's parents told reporters at an earlier hearing that their
    daughter's experience showed the United States was an uncivilized
    country with a "medieval" legal system. 

    Beale was charged with murder after her arrest at Kennedy International
    Airport in September 1994 when she was caught trying to smuggle her
    baby girl's corpse, hidden in plastic under her coat, onto a flight to
    London. She told police the child had been stillborn in a hotel room. 

    Hanophy at the sentencing referred to Beale's father as "Ralph Kramden
    - the guy with the big mouth." Kramden was a loud-mouth bus driver
    character played on television by the late actor Jackie Gleason. 

    The judge also said that remarks made by Beale's mother to reporters
    "got under my skin." 

    The Commission, which has censured 174 judges in the last 20 years,
    said Hanophy reacted "out of pique." 

    During the sentencing of Beale, Hanophy had also referred to the
    so-called "Guildford Four," alleged Irish Republican Army bombers
    jailed for a London bombing and then released many years later for
    wrongful conviction. The British "did everything to see that they
    remained in prison even though they knew or should have known that they
    didn't belong in there," Hanophy said. 

    The Commission said that Hanophy's remarks had no relevance to the
    crime for which Beale had been convicted. "His gratuitous and
    irrelevant reference to defendants from Northern Ireland who had been
    sentenced in British courts was mean-spirited and political in nature,"
    the Commission report said.

    REUTER
7.1310IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5139
    RTw  11-Apr-97 01:34    

    Newspaper challenges UK party leaders to debate

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 10 (Reuter) - The prospect of a televised head-to-head
    pre-election debate between British Prime Minister John Major and
    opposition leader Tony Blair was re-awakened on Friday when The Times
    newspaper challenged them to meet. 

    Times editor Peter Stothard wrote to the ruling Conservative and
    opposition Labour parties, inviting the two leaders to a debate on
    April 20 hosted by the newspaper and open to television companies. 

    "This challenge is intended to break the stalemate over a leaders'
    debate and to offer the two candidates for Prime Minister a chance to
    discuss their different visions for the future of Britain," the
    newspaper quoted Stothard as saying. 

    Negotiations between Britain's political parties and broadcasting
    networks over the staging of a televised debate ground to a halt in
    March. 

    Major accused Blair running away from a debate, while Labour said the
    Conservatives had been too inflexible. Paddy Ashdown, leader of
    Britain's third-largest party, the Liberal Democrats, threatened to go
    to court to ensure he was included in any debate, and some of Britain's
    smaller parties said they would take similar action. 

    But the Times said it had invited only Blair and Major to its proposed
    debate, as one of them would lead the country after the May 1 general
    election. 

    "The central issue has become one of trust and personal character," the
    Times said in an editorial. "Voters deserve to see these qualities
    tested directly before their eyes." 

    REUTER
7.1311IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5147
    RTw  11-Apr-97 01:30    

    Poll says UK Conservatives closing gap, but slowly

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, April 11 (Reuter) - The Conservative Party's hopes of a
    successful fightback in Britain's election battle were shaken on Friday
    by surveys suggesting it had made only modest dents in the opposition
    Labour Party's opinion-poll lead. 

    A Harris poll for The Independent newspaper gave the opposition Labour
    Party a 22-point lead compared with 24 points the previous week. 

    The newspaper said the poll suggested that a survey on Thursday which
    showed a large drop in Labour's lead was "more a statistical wobble
    than a political earthquake." 

    The Harris poll put Labour's support at 52 percent, unchanged from the
    week before. The Conservatives gained two points to 30 percent while
    the Liberal Democrats slipped two points to 12 percent. Harris said it
    interviewed 1,138 adults face-to-face in their homes between April 4-7
    for the survey. 

    The Financial Times said on Friday that a survey it had carried out
    with advertising agency FCB showed Labour support was "remaining firm,"
    and "hardening among people who were only recently classed as wavering
    voters." 

    The surveys followed a MORI poll for The Times on Thursday which showed
    a significant erosion of Labour's lead to 15 points from 27 the
    previous week. 

    Another opinion poll on Friday suggested that former trade minister
    Neil Hamilton, who is at the centre of a "cash for questions" scandal,
    would be defeated in his Tatton constituency by war reporter Martin
    Bell, who is standing as an anti-corruption candidate. 

    The MORI poll for the Sun newspaper said Bell would win 44 percent of
    the vote in a two-horse race, compared with 40 percent for Hamilton. 

    Meanwhile, a MORI survey for ITN suggested British voters were
    unimpressed with the election campaign. The poll found 70 percent of
    people said the election campaign had not helped them decide who to
    vote for, compared with 27 percent who said they had been influenced.

    REUTER
7.1312IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5130
    RTw  10-Apr-97 22:55    

    Amnesty says Iran has policy of killing dissidents

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 10 (Reuter) - Amnesty International said on Thursday a
    German court's verdict that Iran ordered the killings of Kurdish
    dissidents in Berlin was further evidence of a co-ordinated policy by
    the Iranian state to kill its opponents. 

    "For years, Iranian dissidents have been dying in circumstances
    suggesting they were killed by Iranian government agents," the
    London-based human rights organisation said in a statement. 

    "It is time for the Iranian authorities to live up to their
    international obligations to protect the right to life, and to end any
    such policy of extra-judicial execution." 

    Earlier, the European Union invited member states to withdraw their
    ambassadors from Iran after the German court's decision that the
    killing of four Kurdish leaders in 1992 had been ordered by Iran's
    highest leaders. 

    The verdict was the first time a European court had clearly attributed
    political responsibility for any of the assassinations of Iranian
    opposition figures abroad since the country's Islamic revolution in
    1979. 

    REUTER
7.1313IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5275
    RTw  10-Apr-97 22:47    

    IRA wounds police officer and douses truce hopes

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Martin Cowley 

    BELFAST, April 10 (Reuter) - A woman police officer was badly wounded
    in an IRA gun attack on Thursday that dashed hopes of an early truce by
    the republican guerrillas fighting British rule in Northern Ireland. 

    The Irish Republican Army, using a recognised codeword, telephoned a
    local newspaper in Londonderry later and admitted shooting the officer
    outside the city's courthouse. 

    Britain's Northern Ireland Secretary, Sir Patrick Mayhew, described the
    shooting as a "sickening attack." Irish Prime Minister John Bruton also
    condemned it, saying: "Any act of violence such as this makes political
    progress more difficult." 

    Hospital authorities said the policewoman, who was 46 and had three
    children, was seriously ill but stable with a chest wound. "She is at
    present receiving emergency treatment," Altnagelvin Hospital said in a
    statement. 

    The attack happened amid British and Irish media speculation that the
    IRA was considering a partial truce in its 28-year war which has
    escalated recently, provoking retaliation by pro-British "Loyalist"
    guerrillas. 

    Throughout the day the IRA's political arm Sinn Fein  poured cold water
    on reports that the guerrillas might announce a scaling down of
    hostilities to help it win seats in a May 1 election in Britain and
    Northern Ireland. 

    Irish officials said they had heard nothing to substantiate the
    rumours. 

    Fraught relations between the Irish government and Sinn Fein reached
    new depths on Wednesday when Bruton warned Catholics that voting for
    Sinn Fein was tantamount to voting for IRA violence. 

    Bruton and Britain's Prime Minister John Major are adamant that the IRA
    must abandon violence before Sinn Fein can get a place in multi-party
    talks on the province's future. The deadlocked talks were suspended to
    allow the parties to concentrate on the election campaign. 

    The policewoman was on duty at a security hut in the heart of the old
    walled city in a zone which is heavily protected by British forces
    following previous IRA attacks. 

    The attackers' vehicle was later abandoned at a gateway leading from
    city's 400 year old city ramparts to the Bogside, a Catholic Irish
    nationalist stronghold. 

    John Hume, head of the main moderate Catholic party, the Social
    Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) denounced the attack as "absolutely
    outrageous." 

    David Trimble, chief of the Protestant Ulster Unionist Party, said the
    IRA and Sinn Fein "have no interest in real peace," adding:"There is
    absolutely no sign that they are going to change." 

    The IRA have killed two soldiers in the province since last October and
    carried out a series of mortar and gun ambushes. It ditched a 17-month
    ceasefire in February 1996 with a string of bombs in English cities
    that killed two civilians and one of their own guerrillas. 

    Loyalist commanders insist their truce of October 1994 is still in
    force. However Protestant extremists have been blamed for trying to
    kill a Catholic near Belfast on Wednesday and for murdering a Catholic
    man there in March. 

    REUTER
7.1314IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5237
    AP 11-Apr-1997 0:17 EDT   REF5314

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Plane Passengers Find Crash Victims

    HILO, Hawaii (AP) -- Passengers on an Aloha Airlines flight helped
    locate two people floating in a raft Thursday after their twin-engine
    plane crashed in the Pacific. 

    Shortly after the Piper plane went down northeast of this Hawaiian
    island, Aloha Flight 404 from Honolulu to Hilo joined in the search and
    pilot Bob Bryant asked passengers to keep their eyes open for the
    plane. 

    "We circled a couple of times when I saw two persons on a life raft,"
    said passenger Ronie Cabison. 

    Five rows back, passenger Anthony Locricchio noticed green dye the
    pilot used to mark the site of the crash. 

    The Aloha jet remained in the search area 28 miles offshore for a half
    hour and did not leave until the Coast Guard arrived, said airline
    spokesman Tom Yoneyama. 

    The two people aboard the downed plane -- pilot Kenneth Landau, 28, of
    Alameda, Calif., and passenger, James I. Branch, 27, of Australia --
    suffered only minor injuries and refused medical treatment. 

    According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the two had taken off
    from Hilo bound for Hayward, Calif., when their plane began to
    experience engine failure. They turned back, but the plane was laden
    with fuel for the long trip and was too heavy to fly on one engine. 

    The two survivors were able to get out of the plane once it hit the
    water and then waited in a raft until they were rescued about 2 1/2
    hours later. 
7.1315IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:52117
    AP 10-Apr-1997 23:36 EDT   REF5236

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Jury Consultants Have Daunting Task

    By SANDY SHORE

    AP Business Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- On the pages of a John Grisham book, prospective jurors
    live in a fishbowl. 

    From the minute they are summoned, the candidates are put under a
    microscope -- they are followed and photographed, and their relatives
    and friends are pressured to influence their decision. 

    But the dirty deeds scripted in "The Runaway Jury," occur rarely, if
    ever, in real life. 

    On occasion, consultants say, they may send someone to drive by a
    prospective juror's home to check for bumper stickers or political
    signs posted in the yard in hopes of gaining more insight. 

    But many others shy away from such tactics. 

    "Heaven forbid. I did not go to college to get a Ph.D. to do a drive-by
    on somebody's house," said Lin Lilley, owner of Southwest Trial
    Consulting Inc. in Albuquerque, N.M. 

    As in many big trials, jury consultants are playing a pivotal role in
    the trial of Timothy McVeigh, accused in the Oklahoma City bombing that
    killed 168 people, including 19 children. 

    Both sides have hired consultants, and all are prohibited from
    discussing their work by a judge's gag order. 

    Seating the jury is a daunting task. The legal teams have to find
    people who were not shaken by images of bloodied children and bodies
    being pulled from the rubble and who aren't opposed to the death
    penalty. 

    "Who of us can't picture the firefighter holding the baby?" asked
    Denise DeLaRue, an Atlanta trial consultant. "To be able to get beyond
    the raw emotion of the case and look at it factually is almost an
    impossible task." 

    The jury consulting industry grew out of the social unrest in the 1960s
    and '70s when attorneys on high-profile cases, such as the Attica
    prison riot, hired professors of psychology and sociology to help them
    seat juries, said Ronald Matlon of the American Society of Trial
    Consultants. 

    "When it began, it was really doing statistical work for attorneys,"
    Matlon said. "Then it changed to ... in-court observations by a trial
    consultant to help them select a jury." 

    There were about a dozen professional trial consultants in the early
    1980s when the society was established. Today, it has about 450
    members, but there are countless others who also consult. Most were
    sole practitioners in the 1980s, but some full-scale businesses have
    been established in the '90s, Matlon said. 

    Most consultants have a background in psychology, sociology or
    communications, with some legal training. Their salaries range from $50
    to $350 an hour. 

    Trial consulting is a mix of psychology, body language and gut
    feelings. The goal is to seat jurors who are most favorable to your
    side, whether you are the prosecution or the defense. 

    "What I'm looking for are consistencies, how serious people are
    approaching the task. Not so much arms crossed, leaning forward...(but)
    changes. Do they do something different when the defense gets up," said
    Joseph Rice, president of Jury Research Institute, a consulting company
    based in Walnut Creek, Calif. 

    Typically, consultants are hired prior to trial to conduct research
    from surveys and to run mock trials, where the client's case is put
    before a group of people to ferret out weaknesses. 

    They also help with preparation of opening and closing arguments and
    assist in getting witnesses ready. 

    The amount of research done on prospective jurors is limited; often,
    attorneys do not get lists of jury candidates until shortly before a
    trial begins, DeLaRue said. 

    "Any jury investigation that I've been a part of first of all is
    extremely rare and, secondly, we make every precaution in the world to
    preserve the integrity of the pool," she said. 

    Larry Pozner, vice president of the National Association of Criminal
    Defense Lawyers, said trial consultants help attorneys focus on
    listening to jurors. 

    "I think it's another tool to help pick a fair jury," he said. "If you
    can get a juror to talk about what's on their mind, it helps to have a
    non-lawyer filter what it means." 

    However, Denver defense attorney Scott Robinson doesn't rely on trial
    consultants. 

    "I tell jurors I don't have the foggiest notion of what they're
    thinking. I tell them I just want to find out who is biased against my
    client," he said. 

    In the McVeigh case, the consultants have a much more difficult role
    than in other high-profile trials because the bombing rattled America's
    belief that it was insulated from terrorism, said Elissa Krauss, a
    senior trial consultant with the National Jury Project, a nationwide
    consulting service. 

    "I think it's complicated much further than Susan Smith or O.J.," she
    said. "It brings to bear the vulnerability people feel. The Oklahoma
    bombing touched everyone and made everyone feel, 'Oh, My God, it could
    be me or somebody I know.' " 
7.1316IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5228
    AP 10-Apr-1997 22:12 EDT   REF5064

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cold Hinders Search for Plane

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -- Wintry weather in Colorado's high country
    hindered the search Thursday for an Air Force pilot missing for more
    than a week. 

    High winds, low clouds and the prospect of more snow forced the Civil
    Air Patrol to suspend its search about noon Thursday around New York
    Mountain, where Capt. Craig Button and his A-10 Thunderbolt were last
    spotted on radar. 

    Button, 32, disappeared April 2 about 90 minutes after takeoff while
    flying last in a three-plane formation across southern Arizona. 

    Even if Button managed to survive a possible crash, staying alive in
    the snow and temperatures in the 20s would be a major challenge, said
    Maj. Frank Gose, a Civil Air Patrol pilot. 

    "It's going to be rough, the weather is really foul out there," Gose
    said. "It'll be tough to survive, but a person reasonably trained in
    survival, and in control of his faculties, certainly could survive and
    reasonably be alive." 

    "We have not given up hope that he is alive. We absolutely have not." 
7.1317IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5243
    AP 10-Apr-1997 21:34 EDT   REF6072

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ramsey Mom Gives 4th Sample

    By JENNIFER MEARS

    Associated Press Writer

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- JonBenet Ramsey's mother has agreed to give
    investigators a fourth handwriting sample, a family spokeswoman said
    Thursday. 

    Authorities investigating the 6-year-old beauty queen's death wouldn't
    say why they asked Patsy Ramsey for an additional sample. 

    "She has given us handwriting samples before. We have asked for
    additional examples," said Boulder District Attorney Alex Hunter. "All
    along the course of the investigation there have been many requests for
    handwriting from a number of different people." 

    Ramsey family spokeswoman Rachelle Zimmer said that the request for
    Patsy Ramsey's handwriting "was limited in scope" and she "immediately
    agreed to provide" it. 

    Police have obtained several handwriting samples from Ramsey family
    members and others in an attempt to determine who wrote a ransom note
    Mrs. Ramsey found in the family's home Dec. 26. 

    The 6-year-old former Little Miss Colorado was found beaten and
    strangled in the basement of the home about eight hours after the note
    was discovered. No suspects have been named and no arrests have been
    made in the case. 

    Mrs. Ramsey provided a third sample of her handwriting last month after
    police decided the first two submissions were suspect because Mrs.
    Ramsey was taking medication, police spokeswoman Leslie Aaholm said. 

    Handwriting experts have concluded father John Ramsey did not write the
    note demanding $118,000 for his daughter, but analysis has been
    inconclusive on three samples submitted by his wife, according to
    published reports. 
7.1318IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5276
    AP 10-Apr-1997 20:56 EDT   REF6046

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cancer Victim Testifies on Tape

    By RON WORD

    Associated Press Writer

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Testifying on videotape months before she
    died of lung cancer, a gaunt, frail Jean Connor said R.J. Reynolds' ads
    duped her into believing "good things happen to you when you smoke
    Salem." 

    The tape, showing the 97-pound woman with a wig covering patches of
    baldness from chemotherapy, was played Thursday in her family's lawsuit
    claiming the cigarettes she smoked for decades didn't warn of the
    dangers. 

    She said she liked the glamour of smoking, the fact that it helped keep
    weight off and the advertising. On tape, she was asked to read an
    advertisement from a 1968 issue of Life magazine. 

    "You can take Salem out of the country, but you can't take the country
    out of Salem," she read. "Wherever, whenever you light up, Salem gently
    softens every puff while you taste that country soft, country fresh.
    Take a puff, it's springtime." 

    Offering her own interpretation of the ad, she said: "That I'll enjoy
    it. ... It's pleasant, and good things happen to you when you smoke
    Salem." 

    Mrs. Connor's son, Joseph Marion, covered his face with his hands when
    his mother's image appeared on a big-screen TV. Jurors watched
    intently, but showed little emotion. 

    "By the time this goes to trial, I may not be alive," she said. "It's
    something you just don't know." 

    Five months after the April 25, 1995, tape-recorded deposition, Mrs.
    Connor died at the age of 49 after suffering nausea, diarrhea and
    ringing ears from two years of radiation and chemotherapy treatments. 

    The family's wrongful-death lawsuit blames the makers of Winston and
    Salem for causing her addiction to nicotine and for the cancer that
    killed her. 

    The company's lawyers have argued that Mrs. Conner made the decision to
    smoke, knew the dangers of the habit and knew it could be harmful. 

    On the tape, Mrs. Connor told attorneys she began smoking one or two
    cigarettes a day when she was 14 or 15. 

    "They made you a little dizzy when you first started smoking," she
    said. "They even made you feel really warm." 

    There were no warnings on cigarettes at the time. She eventually was
    smoking two to three packs a day. She started with Winstons and
    Marlboros, but switched to Salem a year later because she liked the
    menthol taste. 

    Mrs. Connor testified she continued to smoke despite the warnings that
    began appearing on cigarette packages in 1966. "I'm like everyone else.
    It will not happen to me," she said. 

    Mrs. Connor quit smoking in 1993, using a nicotine patch to help her
    kick her 33-year habit. "In my opinion, it was an addiction," she said.

    John F. Banzhaf III, a law professor at George Washington University
    and executive director of Action on Smoking and Health, said the
    deposition could have a profound effect on jurors. 

    "They saw somebody ... obviously in a very horrible situation, terminal
    situation, a great deal of suffering and anguish," he said. "It
    personalizes it. There's nothing like a picture." 
7.1319IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5267
    AP 10-Apr-1997 19:54 EDT   REF5960

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Probe: Small Hole Sunk Titanic

    By FRANK BAKER

    Associated Press Writer

    NARRAGANSETT, R.I. (AP) -- New findings indicate an iceberg sank the
    Titanic with six relatively small punctures -- not the popularly held
    theory of a 300-foot gash. 

    Shipwreck investigator Paul Matthias used high-tech sonar equipment to
    create images of the wreck. The total damage was less than 15 square
    feet -- about the size of a refrigerator -- but the pressure was
    tremendous and shot water into the ship so fast the crew was helpless,
    he said. 

    "It's disturbing that these small openings were spaced in such a way, a
    very unlucky way, to cause it to sink," said Matthias, president and
    founder of Polaris Imaging Inc. 

    The Titanic struck an iceberg during its maiden voyage on April 14,
    1912, and sank in 2 1/2 miles of water off the coast of Newfoundland,
    killing 1,523 passengers. When the wreck was discovered in 1985,
    explorers learned that the ship had broken into two parts that landed
    about a quarter-mile apart. 

    Later salvage missions brought up about 3,500 artifacts and video of
    the wreck, but could not confirm the extent of the damage because the
    bow is stuck in up to 50 feet of mud. 

    Matthias, part of an expedition assembled last August by the Discovery
    Channel and its French partner, Ellipse Programme, was the first to
    probe the wreck with sonar. 

    From a three-person submarine passing along the wreck, Matthias used an
    acoustic device known as a sub-bottom profiler to send sound waves into
    the muck and create photographlike images. 

    "Our expectation was we would be imaging this large gash, much like
    taking a knife to a soda can -- that kind of a tear," he said. "After
    the first series of passes it was obvious there was no gash and the job
    became to look at what was there." 

    He found six long, thin gashes across the starboard hull, none more
    than 4 square feet. 

    Bill Garzke, chairman of the Marine Forensics Panel of the Society of
    Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, was part of the expedition. He
    said Matthias' findings confirmed his hunch that there was no 300-foot
    gash. 

    "We wanted to put this myth to death, give it a proper burial, and I
    think we did," Garzke said. 

    Garzke said steel from the Titanic brought to the surface was found to
    vary in strength. In weaker areas, rivets popped and joints parted. 

    "We feel that when the iceberg slammed against the side of the ship ...
    the brittleness of the steel in that cold water contributed to the
    parting of the riveted seams," he said. 

    The Titanic was traveling at about 21 knots, and "if the ship had been
    going half as fast, she probably would have survived," he said. 
7.1320IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5268
    AP 10-Apr-1997 23:13 EDT   REF5174

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. Considers NYC Parking Flap

    By ROBERT H. REID

    Associated Press Writer

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- A U.N. committee voted Thursday to ask the
    General Assembly to consider whether New York City's attempt to crack
    down on diplomatic parking violations conflicts with international law.

    The Committee on Relations with the Host Country disregarded an
    objection by a U.S. envoy Victor Marrero, who said that having the
    185-member General Assembly consider such a trivial issue would "bring
    the organization into ridicule in the public eye." 

    But the committee said it would cancel its request for action if U.S.
    authorities work out a satisfactory compromise between the city and the
    U.N. legal office within seven days. 

    The vote was 10-1 with Britain abstaining. The United States cast the
    lone negative vote. 

    A New York City program that took effect April 1 puts U.N. delegates at
    risk of losing their diplomatic license plates and driving privileges
    if they fail to pay parking fines within a year. 

    In exchange, the city promised to provide more diplomatic parking
    spaces and establish a telephone hotline for complaints. 

    The new rule would not retroactively affect diplomats who reportedly
    have racked up hundreds of thousands of dollars in parking fines. 

    U.N. legal officer Hans Corell said the program may violate provisions
    of international law which shield diplomats from criminal and civil
    prosecution in the countries where they serve. 

    During a three-hour committee meeting, U.S. envoy Victor Marrero
    appealed for time, saying U.S. officials were working with the city and
    the U.N. legal office to find a solution acceptable to all. 

    He said it was preposterous for the United Nations to spend time
    discussing "diplomatic parking and diplomatic perks" instead of more
    important matters such as the civil war crisis in Zaire. 

    That brought a sharp rebuke from Zaire's acting ambassador, Lukabu
    Khabouji, who said Mayor Rudolph Giuliani should worry more about the
    safety of New Yorkers using the city's public transportation systems. 

    Considering "all the incidents that take place daily in the subways and
    the buses, I myself would not take the risk," Khabouji said. 

    At New York City Hall, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said the city was
    pressuring the State Department to uphold the enforcement plan despite
    criticism from diplomats. 

    "What they are doing here is intimidating the State Department, and the
    State Department shouldn't be intimidated," Giuliani said. 

    "All you need is just a little bit of negotiating skill to figure out
    your way through this, which is stand up to them, don't let them do
    this," the mayor added. "Let the diplomats who want to do this yell and
    scream, they'll get over it, and then we'll eventually have a sensible
    enforcement policy in which diplomats who get 14,000 tickets aren't
    allowed to get away with it." 
7.1321IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5343
    AP 10-Apr-1997 19:57 EDT   REF5964

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    High-Tech Stalker Haunts Family

    EMERYVILLE, Ontario (AP) -- Authorities say they're baffled by a
    high-tech harasser who has been tormenting an Ontario family for
    months, tinkering with their electricity and disrupting their phone
    calls. 

    Since December, the Tamai family's phone has been tapped, calls have
    been interrupted by strange voices and power to the home is sometimes
    cut off. The electronic intruder, who distorts his voice with the help
    of a computer, calls himself Sommy and has even been able to switch
    channels on the family's television. 

    This week, Debbie and Dwayne Tamai and their 15-year-old son decided to
    make their plight public, hoping to produce new leads and put more
    pressure on investigators to solve the case. 

    "It's probably falling in to what Sommy wants, but the only way to get
    the investigation going is to bring as much attention to it as
    possible," said the family's lawyer, Don Tait. 

    Ontario's attorney general, Bob Runciman, said he has been assured that
    police and telephone company officials are doing everything possible to
    catch Sommy. 

    Debbie Tamai received 32 calls from the media Tuesday, including one
    from the TV tabloid show Inside Edition. 

    "We wanted to go public so we could get some help for our problem, but
    we never expected this," she said. 

    The investigation has included extensive interviews with neighbors,
    friends and close scrutiny of the Tamai family. They've been cleared as
    suspects, and the house has been rewired three times. 

    Sommy's identity and method of infiltration has frustrated police
    specialists. Experts from the phone company, electric company and
    Canada's industry ministry have joined in the investigation, but
    without success. 
7.1322IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5361
    AP 10-Apr-1997 19:26 EDT   REF5928

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bucaram Seeks Asylum in Panama

    By CARLOS CISTERNAS

    Associated Press Writer

    QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Hours after Ecuador's top court put out a
    warrant for his arrest, deposed President Abdala Bucaram said from
    exile Thursday that he was seeking political asylum in Panama. 

    Supreme Court Chief Carlos Solorzano ordered the arrest of Bucaram --
    popularly known as "El Loco" for his antics -- and approved the
    freezing of his bank accounts Wednesday night. 

    But from Panama, where he fled days after Congress ousted him from the
    presidency, Bucaram on Thursday dismissed the arrest warrant as a
    "political process" by enemies who want to keep him out of Ecuador. 

    "They issue an arrest warrant so my return is impossible and they can
    keep running a dictatorship," he said. 

    Bucaram said he had asked Panama for political asylum "a few days ago,"
    but that he might return to Ecuador clandestinely, "at least to make
    their lives difficult." 

    Bucaram, who as mayor of Guayaquil in the 1980s twice went into
    self-imposed exile in Panama over fiscal mismanagement charges, vowed
    last week to return home by June and resume a life in politics. He has
    said he wants to run in presidential elections next year. 

    But his opponents in the government are working to keep him out of the
    country. 

    On Feb. 6, Congress ousted Bucaram for "mental incapacity," accusing
    him of corruption and embarrassing public behavior during his six
    months in power. 

    Although technically independent, the Supreme Court has sided with
    Bucaram's enemies. 

    In March, the court charged Bucaram and four aides -- who also have
    since fled the country -- in the alleged mishandling of more than $80
    million from the government's reserve fund. 

    The detention order indicates judicial authorities believe there is
    evidence of his guilt. Under Ecuadorean law, judges handle
    investigations into certain types of cases before they are moved to
    trial. 

    In his written order, Solorzano said he based his decision on a report
    by investigators from the comptroller's office on the handling of
    secret accounts during Bucaram's administration. Investigators found
    evidence of misappropriation for Bucaram's personal benefit. 

    Solorzano said Ecuador might ask for Bucaram's extradition, but that
    Panama does not have a tradition of extraditing political figures who
    have sought refuge there. 
7.1323IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5399
    AP 10-Apr-1997 18:28 EDT   REF5890

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cohen Predicts Demise of N. Korea

    By ROBERT BURNS

    Associated Press Writer

    PANMUNJOM, South Korea (AP) -- Defense Secretary William Cohen peered
    across the Demilitarized Zone on Thursday and predicted the demise of
    "decaying and dying" communist North Korea. Less than an hour earlier,
    North Korean soldiers had crossed into the South's sector, retreating
    only after guards fired warning shots. 

    The incident, which involved no American troops, was about 65 miles
    east of where Cohen and his entourage were, said Cmdr. Jeff Gradeck, a
    Cohen spokesman. 

    Later, over lunch with U.S. troops, Cohen suggested the long and costly
    struggle between the North and the U.S.-backed capitalist South soon
    will be over. 

    "We're very close to the finishing line, seeing a united and free
    Korea," Cohen told soldiers of the 2nd Infantry Division, among 37,000
    U.S. troops in Korea. 

    Interviewed later by American reporters, Cohen said he feels certain
    North Korea, whose economy is in shambles and whose people reportedly
    are starving, could not hold on much longer. He warned the collapse
    could be painful. 

    "It's inevitable that the North cannot sustain itself, that the regime
    will collapse in one form or another -- hopefully peacefully, perhaps
    violently," he said. "The end is in sight in terms of that regime." But
    he ventured that it's impossible to say whether the collapse will come
    after months or will take years to happen. 

    On a warm, sunny day at a final flash point of the Cold War, Cohen
    surveyed a bleak stretch of North Korea inside the Demilitarized Zone
    that has served as a buffer with the South since the Korean War was
    stopped in 1953. 

    From a rocky bluff on the South Korean side of the dividing line he
    could survey wide stretches of North Korean territory. He saw few signs
    of life. 

    On Friday Cohen was visiting U.S. Air Force troops at Osan Air Base
    south of Seoul before flying home to end a trip that began last
    Saturday in Hawaii. 

    Cohen said Thursday's shooting incident with the North Koreans showed
    it is "still a very tense, dangerous, unstable situation." He said it
    broke a recent pattern of calm along the heavily armed border but may
    prove to be only an isolated episode. 

    Accompanied by his wife, Janet Langhart Cohen, and Gen. John Tilelli
    Jr., commander of all U.S. forces in Korea, Cohen was driven to the
    foot of the Bridge of No Return, the cross-border span where prisoners
    were exchanged at the end of the Korean War. Nearby is a monument to
    two U.S. Army officers hacked to death with their own axes by North
    Korean soldiers in August 1976. 

    Several large-lettered propaganda signs were posted on the northern
    side of the border, one of which translated to "We Have a Better
    President." Another said "Follow the Way of the Leading Star," which a
    soldier told Cohen refers to the transition from President Kim Il Sung,
    who died in 1994, to his son, Kim Jong Il. Many believe the younger Kim
    will formally assume the title of president this summer. 

    Asked by a reporter what he had to say to the North Koreans looking at
    him through binoculars, Cohen replied: "If they can read my lips, I
    would hope they would see the futility of putting up signs that try to
    promote propaganda of a failed and failing system. 

    "They remain perhaps one of the few countries in the world today that
    still subscribe to a communist theology, an economic system, which is
    decaying and dying." 

    The defense chief made no explicit mention of the famine wracking North
    Korea. Later Thursday he met with President Kim Young-sam of South
    Korea on a range of security issues including coordinating food relief
    for the North. 

    On Wednesday Cohen said the South Koreans were "less than eager" to
    help relieve North Korea's two-year food crisis because they fear
    perpetuating the communist regime. 

    "The South Koreans have been somewhat cautious in this regard, to make
    sure we are not simply propping up a regime while innocent people
    continue to starve," he said. "It's a factor we'll have to look at" in
    gauging a U.S. response. 

    The North Korean food crisis reportedly is affecting even the Korean
    People's Army, although Tilelli told reporters accompanying Cohen that
    the army gets first call on the available food supplies. He
    acknowledged that the army has been weakened by the North's economic
    woes but insisted they remain a threat. 
7.1324IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5361
    AP 10-Apr-1997 17:55 EDT   REF5867

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    British Hunting Ban Praised

    By SUE LEEMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- Animal welfare groups rejoiced and hunters threatened
    legal action Thursday when one of Britain's largest landowners banned
    stag hunting, saying the sport is unduly stressful to the animals. 

    The National Trust's 40-member governing council voted unanimously to
    ban stag hunting on its 600,000 acres, council member Rodney Legg said. 

    The decision pointed up sharp divisions in Britain over hunting, which
    attracts some 240,000 enthusiasts, either on horseback or following the
    riders and dogs on foot. 

    "We believe this is a very big nail in the coffin of hunting," said
    Kevin Saunders of the League Against Cruel Sports. 

    "We're now calling upon all political parties to make their positions
    clear on this issue and ban all types of hunting, including fox and
    hare hunting." 

    Peter Davies, director-general of the Royal Society for the Prevention
    of Cruelty to Animals, said a ban "would reflect the views of the
    majority of the British public." 

    But Arnold Garvey, editor of the hunting magazine "Horse and Hound,"
    said hunters are likely to challenge the Trust's decision in court. 

    "I am sure hunting will go on," said Garvey, who rode out with the
    Devon and Somerset Stag Hounds in southwest England on Thursday. "I
    believe hunting ... is a natural cull. It is nothing to be ashamed of."

    The vote came a day after the release of a scientific study that
    concluded deer suffer extreme stress when chased for miles by packs of
    dogs and hunters on horseback. 

    The study, directed by animal behaviorist Patrick Bateson of Cambridge
    University and commissioned by the National Trust, drew no conclusions
    about foxes and hares, which also are hunted with dog packs. 

    Bateson said stalking deer and killing them with rifles was a better
    method of controlling deer populations. 

    "The hunting of red deer with hounds causes unnecessary suffering to
    the animals that is far beyond their natural expectations," said
    Charles Nunneley, chairman of the 102-year-old National Trust. 

    Sir Robin Dunn, 79, whose wife's family gave land to the National Trust
    on the basis that hunting would continue, said Thursday that he would
    seek another opinion on the Bateson report. 

    The ban could be fatal for the 90-year-old Quantock Staghounds, which
    hunts solely on Trust land in southwest England. "It appears it will
    mean the end of the hunt," spokesman Dennis White said. 
7.1325IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 11 1997 11:5323
    AP 10-Apr-1997 16:01 EDT   REF5036

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Zaire Smallpox-Like Virus Reported

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Ninety-two people in 12 villages in Zaire developed
    monkeypox in February in the largest known outbreak of the
    smallpox-like disease, the U.S. government said Thursday. 

    Three of the victims died of the disease. All were under 3. 

    Monkeypox, like smallpox, causes fever, breathing problems and a
    blistering rash. After smallpox was eradicated in 1980, Zaire's
    government stopped giving vaccinations that also had protected against
    monkeypox. 

    The virus is limited to the African rain forest and isn't likely to
    reach the United States, said Dr. Yvan Hutin of the Centers for Disease
    Control and Prevention. 

    The CDC said victims probably got sick from handling wild animals. Tree
    squirrels are commonly hunted, skinned and eaten in the rain forest. 
7.1326HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:29107
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 14-Apr-1997 1:04 EDT   REF5172

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    CAMPAIGN FINANCE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Janet Reno has approved a draft
    letter rejecting Republican demands for an independent counsel into
    Democratic fund raising, according to sources cited by the Los Angeles
    Times. Quoting unidentified sources close to Reno, the L.A. Times
    reports she is planning against an independent counsel on the advice of
    her career prosecutors. The independent counsel law requires evidence
    that senior executive branch officials are involved before the attorney
    general can move for a separate investigation. 
   
    CRIME 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Justice Department report finds that Americans
    experienced significantly fewer violent crimes in 1995 than in 1994.
    Rates for rape, robbery and assault were down by 12.4 percent. The
    broadest decline happened in the suburbs, where crime rates dropped in
    all areas of personal victimization, except rape and sexual assault.
    The Bureau of Justice Statistics says the decline is the largest since
    the bureau began taking its annual National Crime Victimization Survey
    24 years ago. 
   
    MISSING PLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- The Air Force launched its first ground search for
    a missing pilot and his warplane but found no signs of either after
    scouring three mountainous areas identified as possible crash sites. A
    five-member team used metal detectors and mountaineering gear in the
    search for Capt. Craig Button. The pilot and his A-10 carrying four
    500-pound bombs disappeared April 2 during a training exercise out of
    Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, Ariz. 
   
    WELFARE-CASELOADS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- New statistics show the number of people on welfare
    nationwide is down. Statistics released last week show reductions in
    caseloads of 20 percent nationally over the last three years. Some
    states had a drop of 40-plus percent. That means states will be able to
    pass out their welfare money among fewer people. And they'll face less
    pressure to get recipients into jobs. The strong economy may be partly
    responsible for why the rolls are shrinking. 
   
    TODDLER KILLED 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A 2-year-old girl sitting in a car with her parents
    was shot to death when they got caught in a gunbattle between rival
    gangs, police said. Priscilla Gutierrez was sitting in the car as her
    parents dropped off a friend in South Los Angeles when the shooting
    erupted Saturday. She was shot in the torso and died at a nearby
    hospital. 
   
    PLAINS-FLOODING 

    HENDRUM, Minn. (AP) -- The floodwaters are dropping slowly in parts of
    the northern Plains. But it'll be a while before life gets back to
    normal. The small towns along the border of Minnesota and North Dakota
    are now coping with the crest of the Red River. Flooding alone was bad
    enough, but a freak series of circumstances such as a record snowfall,
    a quick thaw, a spring blizzard with blistering cold and even more
    snow, and the table-top terrain, exacerbated the calamity. 
   
    STRAWBERRY WORKERS UNION 

    WATSONVILLE, Calif. (AP) -- Thousands of United Farm Workers union
    members and supporters from around the nation marched to demand better
    pay and working conditions for California's 20,000 strawberry pickers.
    The event kicked off the second year of the union's ambitious attempt
    to organize the state's strawberry industry, which produces 80 percent
    of the nation's crop. The Rev. Jesse Jackson, UFW co-founder Dolores
    Huerta and AFL-CIO president John Sweeney joined Rodriguez near the
    head of the 2 1/2-mile march. Police said up to 17,000 people joined
    the march. 
   
    ZAIRE 

    GOMA, Zaire (AP) -- Zairian rebels have resumed their offensive to
    force President Mobutu Sese Seko from power. Sunday was the deadline
    set by the rebels for Mobutu to resign. After a three-day pause to give
    Mobutu a chance to step down, the rebels have resumed their efforts to
    take the capital. A top aide to rebel leader Laurent Kabila says they
    have decided not to give Mobutu another chance. He says Mobutu needs to
    leave the country, then a cease-fire can be negotiated. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar fell against the yen early Monday as signs of
    strong U.S. economic growth brought back worries about inflation. Stock
    prices fell. The dollar was changing hands at 125.96 yen in early
    trading, down 0.05 yen from late Friday in Tokyo. It settled at 126.03
    yen in New York Friday. 
   
    MASTERS 

    AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- Golf prodigy Tiger Woods has brought a revolution
    to the Masters. The 21-year-old shot the lowest score ever in the
    tournament, won by the biggest margin, and became the first black to
    win a major tournament. He shot an 18-under-par 270. Veteran Tom Kite
    was a distant second, finishing the tournament at six-under-par. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
                                  
7.1327HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:2952
    World News

    Reuters World News Highlights 

    KINSHASA - Fear gripped the Zaire capital as rebels said they were
    resuming their offensive in a final push to topple President Mobutu
    Sese Seko. Residents scrambled to stock up, sending prices soaring in
    city markets and a handful of shops that opened before a potentially
    violent anti-Mobutu protest shutdown of the city planned for
    Monday. 


    DUBAI - Hundreds of thousands of angry Iranians called for Germany's
    downfall and Iran said it would recall its envoys in a tit-for-tat row
    with Europe over German accusations it ordered political killings. 


    BONN - Bonn made clear it would seek to avoid stoking a row with Iran
    over a court ruling that Tehran ordered political killings in Germany,
    despite a march on its embassy by hundreds of thousands of
    Iranians. 

    SARAJEVO - Pope John Paul II left Sarajevo after calling on Bosnians to
    forsake the nationalist hatred that fuelled a devastating war. 

    ZAGREB - The United Nations announced that voting by former rebel Serbs
    in Croatia's elections would be extended into Monday after technical
    problems delayed the opening of polling stations. The elections for
    municipal and county authorities are intended partly to convince Serbs
    in east Slavonia they will be safe when the former rebel enclave
    returns to Zagreb's rule. 

    ADDIS ABABA - Grenade attacks on a hotel and a chic Italian restaurant
    in the Ethiopian capital killed a waitress and wounded 42 people,
    including four Britons and a French couple, diplomats and state radio
    reported. 

    NEW DELHI - India's ousted United Front coalition said it was willing
    to consider a demand by its rival Congress party to replace its leader,
    caretaker Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda, as prospects of early polls
    loomed. 

    TIRANA - Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, feted with a hero's
    welcome in Albania, said a multinational security force that will
    deploy en masse Tuesday could help Europe's poorest nation restore law
    and order. 

    JERUSALEM - A Palestinian woman crossing into the Israeli-occupied West
    Bank from Jordan shot and wounded two Israelis and an Arab man as
    Middle East peace moves remained deadlocked. 

    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
7.1328HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:2942
    RTw  14-Apr-97 07:00    

    Poll indicates HK's Tung losing public support

    HONG KONG, April 14 (Reuter) - Results of a poll published on Monday
    suggested that the popularity of Hong Kong's future leader Tung
    Chee-hwa has dipped over his proposed curbs on civil rights. 

    A telephone survey commissioned by the South China Morning Post showed
    Tung had lost some public support after his office last week issued a
    plan to curb the right to demonstrate and ban foreign funding of Hong
    Kong political groups. 

    Tung's government-in-waiting takes over from the British colonial
    administration on July 1, when China resumes sovereignty over the
    territory. 

    More than 45 percent of 586 respondents said in the latest poll that
    they had "less trust" in Tung safeguarding Hong Kong's interests than
    when he was appointed as leader-designate by a China-backed committee
    in December. 

    This compared to 30.2 percent when the same question was asked in
    February. Some 30.8 percent said in the latest poll their trust in Tung
    had risen, compared with 34.7 in February. 

    The newspaper did not give a margin of error in the new poll, taken
    between Tuesday and Friday last week. 

    The poll was the second indication in as many days of Tung's falling
    popularity. On Sunday, a poll in the Chinese-language daily Ming Pao
    produced similar results. 

    The findings came after Tung's office made proposals to cut back civil
    liberties by amending two key laws. 

    The plan provoked heavy criticism from Britain and the United States
    and opposition from local political groups, social organisations and
    the current Hong Kong government. 

    REUTER
          
7.1329HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3069
    RTw  14-Apr-97 05:58    

    Japan says North Korean missiles may be in place

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    TOKYO, April 14 (Reuter) - Japanese Foreign Minister Yukihiko Ikeda
    said on Monday that North Korea may have deployed ballistic missiles
    capable of hitting most targets in Japan. 

    Ikeda, speaking at a special parliamentary committee discussing U.S.
    military bases, said there were unconfirmed reports that North Korea
    had deployed some of its Rodong-1 ballistic missiles. 

    "It is not that we confirmed this," Ikeda said, "but there are reports
    that (North Korea) has developed missiles with a range of more than
    1,000 km (625 miles). There are certain reports that some of them have
    been deployed." 

    It was the first time for a Japanese government official to comment
    publicly on the possibility that North Korea may have completed
    development of the Rodong-1 missiles and deployed some of them -- one
    of Japan's biggest security concerns. 

    Ikeda refused to reveal the source of his information. 

    In its "Military Balance 1996-1997," published in October 1996, the
    London-based Institute of International Strategic Studies (IISS) said
    North Korea was moving to deploy the Rodong-1 missiles in late 1996 or
    early 1997. 

    In May 1993, North Korea shocked Japan by test-firing the Rodong-1 into
    the Sea of Japan just off its coast. 

    North Korea's ballistic missile programme, and accusations that it may
    be secretly developing nuclear weapons, have raised security concerns
    in Japan, South Korea and the United States. 

    However, North Korea has accepted a U.S. initiative to scrap its
    graphite-based nuclear plants in favour of light-water reactors to be
    supplied by a U.S.-led consortium that are less suitable for producing
    weapons-grade plutonium. 

    North Korea has denied trying to develop nuclear weapons but has
    insisted it has the right to develop and deploy missiles. North Korea
    has not reported that it has deployed any of the Rodong-1 missiles. 

    Ikeda was speaking at a session of parliament's Special Security
    Committee discussing a controversial law to allow the government to
    extend leases on private land expropriated for U.S. military bases. 

    Ikeda also said famine-stricken North Korea continued to strengthen its
    armed forces and that the country's leadership had been suffering from
    some internal struggles. 

    "Such struggles, however, have not been serious enough to topple Kim
    Jong-il's hierarchy," Ikeda said. 

    Kim Jong-il, supreme commander of North Korea's 1.1-million-strong
    military, is the country's de facto leader, but he has yet to be
    formally confirmed in two key posts held by his father Kim Il-sung
    until his death in 1994 -- general secretary of the ruling Workers'
    Party and state president. 

    Korea watchers believe Kim Jong-il, 54, is likely to formally assume
    the posts this July, on the third anniversary of his father's death. 

    REUTER
          
7.1330HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3168
    RTw  14-Apr-97 03:31    

    Albania gears up for troops after Prodi visit

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Jude Webber  
    
    TIRANA, April 14 (Reuter) - Albanians, after giving a rousing reception
    to Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, awaited an eight-nation
    security force charged with helping to steer their shattered Balkan
    state back to normality. 

    Advance units of the force were already in place and military
    commanders, moving the long-awaited Italian-led mission into top gear,
    were due to meet in Rome Monday to finalise details of its role. 

    Pjeter Arbnori, the speaker of Albania's parliament, said the force
    would not act as a "referee" between the government and defiant rebel
    councils who control much of the south. 

    "This force is not coming to conquer Albania but to distribute
    multinational aid and they will defend themselves in case they are
    attacked by armed bands or individuals," he said on state television
    late Sunday. 

    Arbnori's words echoed assurances from Prodi, who pledged on a visit to
    Albania that Italy would not interfere in politics but would seek to
    help to rebuild the state and pave the way for elections. 

    Italy has said the U.N.-backed force of 6,000 men will leave Albania
    within one month of elections which the government has promised to hold
    by the end of June. 

    At least 10,000 people, many waving flags and flowers, feted Prodi in
    the southern port of Vlore, cradle of an insurrection that cost up to
    300 lives and swept Albania to the brink of anarchy last month. 

    Popular rage boiled over after the collapse of dubious savings schemes
    swallowed the life savings of thousands of Albanians. Southerners,
    among the hardest-hit, blamed President Sali Berisha for the chaos. 

    Main contingents of the security force were due to start arriving at
    the port of Durres, 25 miles west of Tirana, Tuesday after advance
    units secured the capital's airport and sea links. 

    Prodi said the operation, whose codename "Alba" means dawn in Italian,
    could help Albania to start afresh. "This could be the dawn in the
    history of Albania, the rebirth of Albania," he said. 

    The meeting of military commanders in Rome will assign troops from
    Italy, France, Greece, Romania, Turkey, Spain, Austria and Denmark to
    duties and locations across Albania, where they can ensure that aid is
    distributed safely. 

    Albania's Foreign Minister, Arjan Starova, planned to attend the
    meeting, state-run television said. 

    The World Food Programme, the United Nations food aid agency, said 400
    metric tons of flour and beans were due in Durres Tuesday and would be
    sent out immediately, even if troops had not arrived. 

    The television also said Finance Minister Arben Malaj had gone to
    London to meet International Monetary Fund and World Bank
    representatives for talks on other assistance. 

    REUTER
          
7.1331HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3170
    RTw  13-Apr-97 20:21    

    Anti-EU crusaders rally in London

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Andrew Marshall 

    LONDON, April 13 (Reuter) - Thousands of anti-Brussels crusaders
    rallied under the banner of billionaire Sir James Goldsmith's
    Referendum Party on Sunday to demand Britain's withdrawal from the
    European Union. 

    To a standing ovation from the self-styled "rabble army" of Referendum
    Party supporters, Goldsmith fired up his troops ahead of the May 1
    general election with a speech in London's Alexandra Palace denouncing
    European integration. 

    "The issue is whether Britain remains an independent and free nation or
    whether it becomes a province of a bureaucratic, federal superstate,"
    he declared, to cries of "Never" from the crowd. 

    "The politicians have no right to give away without our consent the
    freedoms that have been fought for for generations." 

    The party said 10,000 people attended the rally. As speaker after
    speaker denounced the bureacrats in Brussels, thousands of mainly
    elderly supporters waved red, white and blue British flags and white
    Referendum Party banners. 

    They sprang to their feet to sing the chorus of the party's
    specially-composed anthem, "Let the people decide." 

    Goldsmith, whose pet political projects have ranged from trade to the
    environment, said he had no ambitions of high office for himself but
    simply wanted the people to have their say. 

    The party, formed last year and largely funded by Goldsmith, says its
    sole purpose is to secure a referendum on whether Britain stays in the
    EU. 

    Both the ruling Conservative and opposition Labour parties say they
    will hold a referendum on joining a single currency, but Goldsmith
    wants a poll on EU membership itself. 

    "The Referendum Party seeks no power for itself. The only power it
    seeks is for you to be able to decide. Once a referendum has been held,
    our party will dissolve," he said. 

    But there was no doubting how his supporters would vote in such a
    plebiscite. 

    "In this century a million Britons have given their lives so that our
    islands should remain free from German domination. Did they die for
    nothing, I ask?" said Sir George Gardiner, the party's first and only
    member of parliament after defecting from the Conservatives last month. 

    "They fought and died to preserve the birthright of every Briton and
    you will never find me selling that birthright," he told the crowd. 

    Opinion polls suggest the Referendum Party will get around two percent
    of the vote in the election, but it could affect the result by taking
    votes from the Conservatives in marginal seats. 

    "This government has betrayed the nation and it has betrayed the
    democratic process. It will be therefore be punished on May 1,"
    Goldsmith said. 

    REUTER 
           
7.1332HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3167
    RTw  13-Apr-97 19:26    

    Blair pledges to give up negative poll campaigning

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Gerrard Raven 

    MILTON KEYNES, England, April 13 (Reuter) - Tony Blair on Sunday vowed
    to give up negative campaigning in the run-up to the May 1 election,
    when he hopes to become Britain's first Labour prime minister since
    1979. 

    "People deserve a better election campaign than the tit-for-tat
    election campaign they are getting," Blair said in a speech at Milton
    Keynes, central England. 

    Aides denied Blair's new emphasis signalled that attacks by the ruling
    Conservatives on him last week had hit home, denting Labour's huge
    opinion poll lead. 

    One poll in the Sunday Times showed Labour had fallen four points in a
    week to 48 percent support. Two others gave Labour a 16 point lead over
    the Conservatives compared with figures above 20 percent when the
    campaign began three weeks ago. 

    The Conservatives last week attacked Blair for what they claimed were
    u-turns on key policies, such as Labour's new-found willingness to
    consider privatisation of some industries such as Britain's air traffic
    control system. 

    A senior Blair aide, Alistair Campbell, said Labour had never believed
    it was 20 points ahead. 

    He said voters were becoming bored with a campaign in which they
    constantly saw politicians slinging abuse at each other, blaming the
    Conservatives for never talking about their own policy plans. 

    "The more relentlessly negative they become, the more positive we will
    get," Campbell, Blair's chief press officer and "spin doctor" said. 

    Blair unveiled new campaign advertising slogans which made no mention
    of his political opponents. 

    They emphasise Labour's key commitments -- "Income tax rates will not
    rise," "Class sizes will be smaller," "NHS (health) waiting lists will
    be shorter,," "More jobs for young people" and "Young offenders will be
    punished." 

    Blair hopes to keep up the momentum this week with keynote speeches on
    education, health and the party's claim to be aiming for a "one nation
    Britain." 

    Aides say the speeches will aim to emphasise that although Blair has
    moved his party to the centre, jettisoning many traditional socialist
    beliefs, a Labour government would mean a more caring administration. 

    "When people say to me You have betrayed the Labour Party through
    change', I say not to change is a betrayal," he said. 

    He said traditional Labour policies were no longer appropriate given
    the nature of the global market and called for "an enlightened view of
    society which recognises that we do best as individuals in a decent
    society." 

    REUTER
          
7.1333HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3286
    AP 13-Apr-1997 22:41 EDT   REF5678

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bombing Trial Move Questioned

    By PAUL QUEARY

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- They remember rescuers running from the Oklahoma City
    rubble, carrying bloodied babies in their arms. 

    They remember their first glimpse of a suspect, a stone-faced Timothy
    McVeigh in crew cut and orange jail jumpsuit, being marched past news
    cameras. 

    They remember accounts of McVeigh's purported confession. 

    The recollections of prospective jurors raise the question whether
    moving McVeigh's trial 600 miles to the judge's home courthouse in
    Denver accomplished his intent: sidestepping the intense pretrial media
    attention in Oklahoma to give the defendant a fairer trial. 

    The move by U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch largely cleared the
    prospective jury pool of relatives, friends and acquaintances of the
    168 people killed and the hundreds more who were injured. 

    "There's a hardly a person in Oklahoma that doesn't know someone
    affected by the bombing. There is considerable less knowledge and
    considerable less emotion in those jurors in Colorado," said Irven Box,
    a prominent Oklahoma City defense attorney who is following the trial. 

    But did the change of venue solve the problem of what Matsch called the
    demonization of McVeigh by the Oklahoma media? 

    Prosecutors and defense attorneys declined to comment, citing the
    judge's gag order, but most legal experts following the trial say
    moving the case worked. 

    "Generally they just haven't paid attention, and that's what Matsch was
    counting on," said Andrew Cohen, a Denver trial attorney. 

    Although Denver reporters have covered the case closely for more than a
    year, most of the jury pool has exhibited a knowledge gap. They
    remember the bombing's immediate aftermath and recent news stories
    about McVeigh's purported confessions, but almost all said they'd paid
    little attention to stories about the ongoing investigation. 

    "A lot of the jurors, even though they know about the case, they don't
    even know the amount of deaths," Box said. 

    At the very least, moving the trial got McVeigh into a state less
    inclined to sentence people to die. He could face the death penalty if
    convicted on federal murder and conspiracy charges in the April 19,
    1995, bombing that destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. 

    "There are only five people on death row in the whole state of
    Colorado," Box said. "We have small counties in Oklahoma with more than
    that." 

    Monday begins the third week of jury selection. So far, 62 prospective
    jurors have been questioned. Legal arguments to remove jurors are being
    held behind closed doors and dismissals have not been announced. The
    pool will eventually be whittled down to 12 jurors and six alternates. 

    About a quarter of jurors questioned thus far have expressed some
    reservations about the death penalty. 

    "I think it levels the playing field to have folks that don't
    necessarily have revenge on their minds," Cohen said. 

    And those who recalled the confession stories published in The Dallas
    Morning News and on Playboy's Internet site were dubious about their
    accuracy. Defense attorneys have denounced the reports. 

    In Oklahoma, Box said, "I think people want to believe the worst about
    McVeigh." 

    However, David Clark, a professor of law at the University of Tulsa and
    an expert on pretrial maneuvering, said the venue change marked a
    victory for the defense at the expense of victims' families. 

    "I would probably say that you could find 12 jurors here just as easily
    as you could in Colorado," Clark said. 
                                           
7.1334HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3280
    AP 13-Apr-1997 22:09 EDT   REF5660

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ground Searches Fail To Find Pilot

    By RICH SASKAL

    Associated Press Writer

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- The Air Force launched its first ground search for
    a missing pilot and his warplane on Sunday but found no signs of either
    after scouring three mountainous areas identified as possible crash
    sites. 

    "I'm sorry to report we didn't find anything," Lt. Gen. Frank Campbell
    said after a five-member team used metal detectors and mountaineering
    gear to search for Capt. Craig Button. 

    The three sites in the New York Mountain range were searched because
    U-2 radar photos identified two as possible crash sites and a
    backcountry hiker with a metal detector got a reading in the third. 

    Two were ruled out -- one was just heavy snow, the other had metal that
    appeared to be old mining equipment, Campbell said. 

    Searchers may return to the third site Monday if the weather is good,
    he said. The crew couldn't finish searching it because helicopters that
    lowered them into the area were running out of fuel and because of
    avalanche danger. 

    "We had a couple people sink up to their armpits," said mountaineering
    expert Tim Reinholtz. "Our time constraints were really a problem." 

    Earlier, the Air Force discounted two other possible crash sites based
    on aerial views. One turned out to be a steep rock face, the other is a
    known area for junk metal. 

    As the ground crew searched the snow, 10 airplanes and 10 Army
    helicopters also looked for Button. 

    Button, 32, and his A-10 carrying four 500-pound bombs disappeared
    April 2 during a training exercise out of Davis-Monthan Air Force Base
    in Tucson, Ariz. 

    Rugged terrain and avalanche danger have made search efforts difficult. 

    The U-2 photos helped narrow the search area to several sites within a
    476-square-mile region. The photos show abnormal shapes under the snow
    that could be parts of the engines, which authorities say are likely to
    have survived a crash, or just rocks. 

    "These are leads, things that can't be explained away as a natural
    phenomena," Campbell said. "That's what we're going to investigate." 

    The search shifted to Colorado three days after Button disappeared when
    faint radar signals were detected in the central Rocky Mountains. 

    Radar data and witness accounts indicate Button consciously broke away
    from his three-plane training formation over Arizona and flew to
    Colorado. Air Force officials previously suggested Button could have
    become incapacitated and put the plane on autopilot. 

    Campbell said investigators plan to re-interview people who reported
    hearing booming noises in the Vail area on the day Button disappeared.
    Other witnesses have said they saw dark clouds that could have been
    smoke. 

    While authorities say they don't know what motivated Button to fly to
    Colorado, neighbors in Fort Clark, Texas, said he was a patriotic pilot
    who enjoyed listening to Mozart and reading World War II flying
    histories. 

    Button's landlords, Ben and Rozetta Pingenot, said Button wrote them a
    letter three days before he disappeared, saying how much he was
    enjoying flying the A-10. 

    "Maybe, it's what Mark Twain said about every man being a moon and has
    a dark side he doesn't let anyone see," Ben Pingenot told Newsweek.
                                                                       
7.1335HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3393
    AP 13-Apr-1997 21:40 EDT   REF5646

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Police Shooting Rocks Charlotte

    By PAUL NOWELL

    Associated Press Writer

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- It is supposed to be a shining example of the
    "New South," a city proud of decisions years ago to desegregate its
    schools and elect a black mayor. 

    But Charlotte is reeling from the death of Carolyn Sue Boetticher, a
    black woman killed by police less than a week ago. It was the second
    time in six months that an unarmed black was killed by white officers. 

    "Why does this regretful thing continue to go on in the city of
    Charlotte?" asked Rev. Willie Simpson, who lives in the area where the
    shooting occurred. "We have a problem with our police officers. Are
    they caught up in racism? How can a man who is white get out of that
    car and not get shot?" 

    Boetticher was a passenger in a stolen car that drove through a police
    checkpoint in a crime-ridden part of town Tuesday night. Two officers
    opened fire after the driver, Robert Lundy Sr., sped through the
    checkpoint and swerved at police. Lundy, 55, who is white, escaped
    injury and was arrested. 

    When police got to the car, they found a mortally wounded Boetticher.
    Of the 22 shots fired, 20 hit the car; the 48-year-old passenger had
    been hit in the neck. Neither she nor Lundy was armed. 

    "That just sounds a bit ridiculous. Not 22 times," said Elizabeth
    Lewis, 32, as she picked up her two young children at a friend's home
    200 feet from the scene of the shooting. "This really scares me because
    I have to drive alone a lot of the time." 

    Police said the officers fired in self defense, and there has been no
    violence following the shooting. But the incident threatens to shake
    Charlotte's reputation as a progressive city that resolves its
    problems. 

    North Carolina's largest city with some 400,000 residents, Charlotte
    was among the first in the South to desegregate its schools in the
    early 1970s. In the late 1980s, Harvey Gantt was elected as the city's
    first black mayor. 

    The shooting has rekindled passions that stirred in 1993 when Officer
    Mark Farmer, who is white, shot and killed black motorist Windy
    Thompson, 32. Farmer was exonerated after investigations by local
    authorities and the U.S. Justice Department; the city recently settled
    a lawsuit with Thompson's family for $500,000. 

    Just five months ago, another white officer, Michael Marlow, fatally
    shot black motorist James Cooper, 19. Marlow said he fired five shots
    after Cooper reached into his car, saying, "I have something." 

    Inside the car was Cooper's 4-year-old daughter. Internal and criminal
    investigations cleared Marlow, but an FBI civil rights investigation
    continues. 

    Mayor Pat McCrory said he believes any divisions will be healed. 

    "I'm fully confident Charlotte can work things out," he said, adding
    that the city's murder rate has dropped considerably in the last
    several years. 

    Tuesday's shooting is under investigation by local prosecutors, the FBI
    and by the police department itself. 

    "Why were 14 rounds shot into the back of the car? We're asking that
    question now," Deputy Police Chief Bob Schurmeier said Friday. "We
    can't give you a definitive answer." 

    That didn't settle the nerves of Bridgette Williams. 

    "Being black and female, I'm so frightened to be pulled over by a
    police officer," she said. "Things are going to get worse." 

    And James Houston, a black minister, told police: "We all know that
    they (investigators) are going to find that the shooting was justified.
    All this coming together is not working. I fear for my life." 

    After a meeting of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Community Relations
    Committee, Houston said blacks believe things are worse than they have
    been in years. 

    "Charlotte's always been known as a city that works on its problems,"
    he said. "I believe our humility is letting us be taken advantage of.
    Why is it getting this way?" 
                                 
7.1336HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3339
    AP 13-Apr-1997 19:59 EDT   REF5568

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man's Home Hit by 3 Burglaries

    SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -- Bill Farrell has a message for burglars who
    have struck his home three times in the past four months. 

    "QUIT ROBBING ME," says a 3-by-4-foot sign on his front lawn. "ALL
    GONE." 

    They've taken his computer, a couple of VCRs, tools, watches and other
    property, worth about $20,000 in all. A brawny Rottweiler didn't scare
    away the burglars -- the dog was stolen too. 

    Somebody even made off with the business card of a police officer who
    investigated one of the first burglaries. 

    Hence, the sign. 

    "Maybe it'll do some good, if (burglars) can read," said Farrell, 51.
    "It was the only thing I could think of doing -- just let 'em know
    there's really nothing left to steal." 

    Police have no suspects, but Farrell said he thinks gang members in the
    neighborhood may be responsible. 

    Farrell has started sleeping with a gun, takes his remaining VCR with
    him when he goes out and rents a storage unit to stash other items. 

    "I'm afraid to leave my house, because I never know what I'm going to
    come home to. You don't know what these guys are going to do." 

    He's also installed bars over his windows and is putting in steel
    doors, new locks and motion-activated lights. 

    "All you can do is move or live in a prison," Farrell said. 
                                                                
7.1337HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3358
    AP 13-Apr-1997 18:51 EDT   REF5503

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Aryan Nations Leader Arrested

    COEUR d'ALENE, Idaho (AP) -- The leader of the Aryan Nations movement
    was arrested here during an anti-racism meeting designed to celebrate
    north Idaho's civil-rights record. 

    Richard Butler, pastor of the Aryan Nations church in Hayden Lake, was
    arrested for trespassing after trying to hand out white-separatist
    literature to people arriving at the hotel where the Saturday meeting
    was taking place. 

    Butler and eight other protesters had been warned by Coeur d'Alene
    police not to walk onto the hotel's parking lot, which is private
    property. 

    The Aryans stood on a public sidewalk but when Butler stepped into the
    parking lot to hand out a brochure, he was handcuffed and taken to
    Kootenai County Jail and cited for trespassing. Butler later posted
    $150 bail and was released. 

    Saturday's meeting at the Coeur d'Alene Inn was attended by more than
    350 people. It included testimonials from minority speakers, business
    leaders, politicians and citizen activists. 

    Sponsored by the Northwest Coalition Against Malicious Harassment and
    the Kootenai County Task Force on Human Relations, it was designed to
    raise awareness of the problems posed by groups that promote bigotry. 

    "I hope it gets individuals energized to move in a lot of directions,
    to get new support and new participation for human rights," said Bill
    Wassmuth, executive director of the coalition. 

    Bob Potter, director of the county's business recruitment program Jobs
    Plus, told the audience about his stalled negotiations with a Japanese
    company interested in locating a 60-employee manufacturing plant here.
    The owners said they feared for the safety of their Japanese employees. 

    "It bothers me that I might not even get the chance to counter that
    perception," Potter said. 

    All week, callers to an Aryan phone hot line heard a strident attack of
    the gathering and its organizers. 

    One of the targets of the attack was tourism magnate Duane Hagadone,
    who had called for an "image summit" to address the perception that
    north Idaho is a haven for racists. 

    Potter hoped the gathering would "jump start" a faltering campaign that
    10 years ago led Coeur d'Alene to win a national award for race
    relations. 

    "When you look at our history, there was a massive effort here," Potter
    said. "I think we need to get that going again." 
                                                     
7.1338HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3426
    AP 13-Apr-1997 17:54 EDT   REF5102

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Counterfeit Bills Traced to Teen

    BAY CITY, Mich. (AP) -- Authorities traced counterfeit $10 bills to the
    home of a 15-year-old boy, who allegedly had been using his computer to
    print the phony bills. 

    The teen-ager, whose name was not released, admitted the
    counterfeiting, said police Lt. Chris Rupp. 

    Officers found discarded practice counterfeit bills in a wastebasket
    during a search Friday, The Bay City Times reported Sunday. The boy and
    some friends apparently scanned the image of a $10 bill into his
    computer and printed copies. 

    The teen-ager allegedly talked to classmates at Bay City Central High
    School about the phony bills after businesses and consumers were warned
    about fake $10 bills. 

    "Apparently, this lad couldn't keep his lips closed and they were
    flapping all over the place in school, where he told people he was the
    one involved in the counterfeiting," Rupp said. 
                                                    
7.1339HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3424
    AP 13-Apr-1997 16:02 EDT   REF5415

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ukraine Diplomat Is Cited

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A diplomat from Ukraine was cited for allegedly
    driving under the influence of alcohol following a three-car accident,
    a Secret Service spokesman said Sunday. 

    Olesy Yarotskiy, 45, a counselor at the embassy, failed sobriety tests
    Saturday night after she struck a vehicle, which in turn hit the
    vehicle ahead of it, said Secret Service spokesman Arnette Heintze. 

    There were no injuries in the Northwest Washington collision. 

    Because Yarotskiy is a diplomat, she is exempt from prosecution. The
    State Department intends to ask Ukrainian officials to waive
    Yarotskiy's diplomatic immunity, said spokeswoman Phyllis Young. 

    Saturday's incident marks the third time this year that a diplomat from
    a former Soviet republic was cited in a traffic accident on district
    streets. 
             
7.1340HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3428
    AP 13-Apr-1997 13:17 EDT   REF5331

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Poll: Many Say Smoking Addictive

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The overwhelming majority of Americans believe smoking
    is addictive, and most of them believe the tobacco company executives
    share that belief, according to a Harris Poll. 

    According to the poll being released Monday, 90 percent of the public
    believes smoking causes cancers. Among smokers, 79 percent also believe
    that, it said. 

    The nationwide poll of 1,006 adults was conducted by telephone by Louis
    Harris and Associates Inc. during March 26-April 1. The results have a
    margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. 

    The pollsters found that 95 percent of the public, including 92 percent
    of the smokers, believe smoking is addictive. 

    And 92 percent, including 88 percent of smokers, believe the tobacco
    company executives also think their product is addictive. 

    However, the poll found that 40 percent agreed that tobacco is a legal
    product and the companies should be allowed to sell and advertise their
    products as they wish. 
                           
7.1341HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3538
    AP 13-Apr-1997 23:35 EDT   REF5698

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Can't Probe N. Korea Defector

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korea will not allow U.S. intelligence
    agents to join in the initial interrogation of a high ranking North
    Korean defector, a government official said Monday. 

    But the government may allow U.S. and Japanese officials to interview
    Hwang Jang Yop after South Korea finishes with him, the Foreign
    Ministry official said. 

    During a visit to Seoul last week, U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen
    asked that American officials be allowed to jointly interrogate Hwang
    with South Korean officials. 

    "Participation of U.S. officials in the investigation involves
    sensitive diplomatic and security issues," the Foreign Ministry
    official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

    Hwang, 74, a member of North Korea's top decision-making body, the
    Central Committee of the ruling Workers' Party, sought asylum in
    Seoul's consulate in Beijing on Feb. 12. 

    After a five-week diplomatic standoff, China allowed him to leave for
    the Philippines March 18 on his way to South Korea. The defector is
    expected to arrive in Seoul later this week. 

    Hwang, who once served as a tutor of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il,
    is seen as an information bonanza for a world eager to learn more about
    the North's secretive communist government. 

    Hwang is the highest-ranking North Korean official ever to defect to
    South Korea since the division of the peninsula into the communist
    North and the capitalist South in 1945. 
                                            
7.1342HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:35135
    AP 13-Apr-1997 12:02 EDT   REF5077

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Campus May Be Monkey Cloning Center

    By WILLIAM McCALL

    Associated Press Writer

    HILLSBORO, Ore. (AP) -- Thousands of monkeys play and fight, chase one
    another and chatter away inside eight corrals in the rolling hills of
    suburban Portland. 

    The Oregon Regional Primate Research Center must rely on the walled
    corrals, each about the size of a football field, to build communities
    of monkeys for experiments. 

    But the arrival of Dolly, the cloned sheep in Scotland, and monkey
    twins cloned from embryos at the center could make monkey corrals
    obsolete. 

    If cloning technology proves practical, the center could produce
    monkeys on demand, or tailor them for specific experiments. 

    "It is within the realm of possibility that the primate center here
    could subcontract cloning work, or a biotechnology company could work
    in collaboration with the primate center," said Don Wolf, lead
    researcher on the monkey cloning project. 

    Producing monkeys that are genetically identical in every respect would
    allow scientists to speed up experiments on new drugs or medical
    treatments. 

    "The immediate practical benefit is that it reduces the number of
    animals required for research. It could have a huge impact on the cost
    of research using nonhuman primates, which is frightfully expensive,"
    Wolf said. 

    In addition, research on the basic biochemistry that makes cloning work
    could lead to ways to unlock the secrets of cell regeneration, allowing
    victims of spinal injuries to regrow nerve cells, or reverse
    degeneration in the eye caused by various diseases, such as diabetes. 

    "It could be possible for paralyzed people to walk again, for blind
    people to see again," said Ronald Green, director of the Ethics
    Institute at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. 

    Wolf, a medical biochemist, created a media stir recently at the
    250-acre primate center, hidden among trees in a valley better known
    for sprouting big computer-company campuses. 

    Wolf's announcement that he had cloned two monkeys from embryos brought
    more than 70 requests for interviews by media from 16 countries. After
    the publicity and a brief protest by animal rights activists, work has
    returned to normal at the center. 

    There was a basic difference between the results in Scotland and here. 

    In the Scottish experiment, Dolly the sheep was created by cloning a
    mature, highly specialized adult cell taken from the udder of another
    sheep that already was six years old. 

    At the primate center here, the rhesus monkey twins -- Neti and Ditto
    -- were created by cloning an egg cell just before it began to expand
    and specialize and develop into a living creature. 

    Every cell in the body of every living creature has all the DNA it
    needs to create an exact duplicate of itself. But most of that DNA gets
    switched off as an animal grows and the cells specialize into the
    brain, the heart, skin and bone. 

    There was no way of working backward, of forcing the DNA to switch on
    every gene and start over to create an identical copy of itself, until
    Scottish embryologist Ian Wilmut cloned Dolly. 

    "This is quite a powerful tool," said Richard Stouffer, a biochemist
    and Wolf's research partner. "I think it's the future of primate
    research. I don't think this place will ever be the same." 

    The Oregon experiments were an outgrowth of Wolf's work on in-vitro
    fertilization at Oregon Health Sciences University, the state's medical
    school, and the primate center. 

    The center, one of seven scattered across the country, has been
    providing monkeys for research since Congress established the regional
    system nearly 40 years ago. 

    Now its director, Susan Smith, hopes public attention to cloning will
    build interest in biological research by the National Institutes of
    Health, similar to the way the lunar landing program built support for
    NASA. 

    "Events like this capture the public imagination," Smith said. 

    Still, researchers are wary about public reaction after President
    Clinton ordered a ban on federal funds for human cloning research. 

    "Clinton's response is a bit of a knee-jerk response," Wolf said. "It's
    certainly appropriate to begin starting a dialogue on cloning
    technology, but cloning a human being is still a long, long way away." 

    But it may be difficult to overcome a public perception about cloning
    already colored by frightening books and movies, such as "Jurassic
    Park," said Green, the Dartmouth ethicist. 

    "The public has a lot of science fiction in its head, and it is
    fiction," he said. 

    ------ 

    Facts about the Oregon Regional Primate Research Center: 

    -- Formally dedicated in 1962 as one of seven U.S. centers in the
    Regional Primate Research Centers Program established by Congress in
    1959. 

    -- 250-acre campus has eight monkey corrals about the size of football
    fields or larger. 

    -- Four veterinarians and 44 laboratory animal support staff, including
    specialists in psychological well-being, care for four species of 2,200
    nonhuman primates. 

    -- Facilities supported by the National Center for Research Resources
    of the National Institutes of Health, with scientific projects
    supported primarily by NIH grants. 

    -- Affiliated with Oregon Health Sciences University. Most of the staff
    of 50 scientists have faculty appointments at the OHSU School of
    Medicine, with support staff of about 130. 

    -- Research focuses on reproductive biology and behavior, neurobiology,
    and pathobiology and immunology. 
                                     
7.1343HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 14 1997 11:3691
    AP 13-Apr-1997 12:02 EDT   REF5101

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Internet: Risky Area for Advice

    By IRA DREYFUSS

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Using the Internet as an exercise adviser can give
    you tips from a world-renowned physician or a famous trainer. 

    Or a snake oil salesman or an eccentric stranger. 

    The Internet has no quality control, so separating the good information
    from the bad is up to you. 

    "Information on the Internet is subject to the same rules and
    regulations as conversation at a bar," said Dr. George D. Lundberg,
    editor of The Journal of the American Medical Association. "It may be
    very valid; it may be utter trash." 

    JAMA will run an editorial in its April 16 edition on standards for
    information on websites. 

    The AMA has its own website (www.ama-assn.org). So it's not that
    Lundberg thinks net usage is necessarily bad for your health. But he
    and other experts caution that the Internet makes it easy for anyone to
    offer an opinion, wise or otherwise. 

    "The Internet is the world's largest vanity press," Lundberg said. 

    A nice layout may not mean good content; glittering Websites don't
    always deliver gold, said Mary Jo Deering, director of health
    communications and telehealth for the U.S. Department of Health and
    Human Services. "Some people make the opposite assumption; if it's
    glitzy, it's probably selling something," she said. 

    Users need to show the same skepticism on the Internet that they would
    on other consumer matters. 

    "The biggest thing is, 'Who's putting it on?"' said Dr. Dave Jenkinson
    of the University of Pittsburgh. "If someone is coming up with a
    position, do they have the research to back it up, and is the research
    credible?" 

    Jenkinson runs two Internet operations. One is a Website that is still
    in testing; the other is a listserv, which is a text-based bulletin
    board on which researchers and others interested in sports medicine
    exchange ideas. 

    Sports medicine clinics and professional organizations can be good
    sources, Jenkinson said. They are more likely to rely on research to
    back their positions, and their material may well bear the names of
    well-known authorities, he said. 

    He gave as examples his Website and another operated by New Zealand's
    sports medicine society, with the address www.sportsci.org. 

    And the federal government is organizing its own Web-based material to
    make it easier to search, Deering said. Www.healthfinder.gov will be
    launched April 15, and will offer links to more than 800 consumer
    health websites, including more than 300 federal sites. 

    Websites operated by a company may also offer good material, said
    Jenkinson, who gave a Gatorade site (www.gssiweb.com) as an example.
    But he was generally leery of sites touting food supplements, calling
    them "the biggest areas of hokum right now." 

    And even though a Website itself may be good, its links to other sites
    may get a user into questionable material, the experts said. "If you
    get blasted off to a different site, it's hard to tell," Jenkinson
    said. 

    That's why the AMA's site links only to noncommercial sites that the
    organization knows and trusts, Lundberg said. "We are very careful
    about where we let people click off our site to go to," he said. The
    AMA does not want to jeopardize the trust users put in its judgment, he
    said: "It is in effect an implied warranty." 

    But the Internet is more than a huge encyclopedia. You can get services
    such as customized exercise plans, if you tell these sites your age,
    weight and goals. Although this may be good for people with no
    particular medical problems, they have limitations, the experts said. 

    The programs deliver a false sense of reliability, because they are
    based only on the information you provided, not a look at your body,
    Deering said. Someone who can evaluate you in person might come up with
    a better plan, she said. 
                             
7.1344HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:31113
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 15-Apr-1997 1:06 EDT   REF5040

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
   
    WHITEWATER-McDOUGAL 

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- James McDougal says he "got sick and tired of
    lying for" President Clinton. McDougal, who was sentenced to three
    years in prison in exchange for cooperating with Whitewater
    prosecutors, tells NBC he was trying to protect his former business
    partner. McDougal now insists Clinton was present for a 1986 meeting
    during which a $300,000 illegal loan was discussed. Clinton had
    testified that he had nothing to do with the loan and was not present
    for the meeting. McDougal could have gotten up to 84 years in prison
    for 18 felony counts. 
   
    CAMPAIGN-FINANCE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Janet Reno says there's no
    specific, credible evidence that any White House official committed a
    federal crime in connection with campaign fund-raising. She has
    rejected Republican calls for an independent counsel to investigate the
    fund-raising and maintained that career prosecutors can handle the
    probe. The White House was low-key but obviously pleased with Reno's
    decision. Republicans in Congress reacted angrily with Senate Majority
    Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., calling Reno's decision "inexcusable." 
   
    KACZYNSKI TRIAL 

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Defense allegations that false pretenses
    were used to obtain a warrant to search mail-bombing suspect Theodore
    Kaczynski's Montana cabin are without merit, prosecutors say in court
    papers. Prosecutors urged the judge to reject a defense motion seeking
    to suppress evidence seized in the search. That evidence is expected to
    be central to the prosecution's case. Kaczynski faces a 10-count
    federal indictment in connection with explosions that left two people
    dead. The case was dubbed "Unabom" by the FBI. 
   
    MISSING WARPLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- The search for a pilot who disappeared with an
    A-10 Thunderbolt jet almost two weeks ago is over for another night.
    The pilot could have bailed out over the Rocky Mountains, the Air Force
    said, but there remains a possibility that Capt. Craig Button is still
    with the downed plane. Ground searchers were knee-deep in snow as they
    continued to scour the mountains southwest of Vail, Colo. 
   
    ARMY-SEX 

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- In the first trial in the Aberdeen
    sex scandal, two Army trainees testified that their drill sergeant
    raped them in his office. Staff Sgt. Delmar Simpson, 32, is accused of
    raping six women. It's the most serious case to emerge from the Army's
    investigation into sexual misconduct at the weapons-testing center. One
    woman said she had heard that Simpson and another sergeant had a
    competition to see who could have sex with the most women. The
    Washington Post reports that investigators suspect three drill
    sergeants from a different battalion also may have been involved in the
    competition for sex. 
   
    IRAQ-OIL DEAL 

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Iraq has signed a huge oil contract with Russia
    for the development of an oil field in southern Iraq. The Iraqi News
    Agency reports that the West Qurna field is expected to produce at a
    rate of up to 600,000 barrels a day, or 4.4 billion barrels over 23
    years. Iraq remains under U.N. Security Council sanctions for its 1990
    invasion of Kuwait. The sanctions bar Iraq from selling oil, its
    economic mainstay, and currently ban all imports except for
    humanitarian necessities. 
   
    GM-EARNINGS 

    DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors, boosted by its biggest profits in North
    America in 13 years, reported a somewhat surprising 76 percent increase
    in first-quarter earnings. Though GM's worldwide sales were down
    slightly in the January-March period, the world's largest automaker
    benefited from reduced material costs and improved productivity. 
   
    INTEL 

    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Intel, lifted by demand for its
    microprocessors, said its first-quarter profit more than doubled,
    exceeding most expectations. Intel, the world's largest maker of
    computer chips, earned $1.98 billion, or $2.20 a share. Revenue rose 39
    percent to $6.45 billion. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar bought 126.55 yen in early trading, up 0.11
    yen. The Nikkei rose 201.82 points to 17,894.29 points. In New York,
    the Dow closed at 6,451.90, up 60.21. The Nasdaq closed at 1,216.41, up
    9.51. 
   
    BULLETS-76ERS 

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Allen Iverson scored 40 points, giving him an NBA
    rookie record five straight games with at least 40, but the Washington
    Bullets defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 131-110. With the victory, the
    Bullets took a one-game lead over Cleveland in the race for the eighth
    and final playoff spot in the East. 
   
    KNICKS-PACERS 

    INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- The Indiana Pacers avoided being eliminated from
    the playoff race as Dale Davis had 23 points and 18 rebounds in a
    110-107 overtime victory over the New York Knicks. Patrick Ewing was
    ejected for picking up two technical fouls after being whistled for his
    sixth personal foul early in overtime. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1345HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3296
    RTw  15-Apr-97 04:34    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - A campaign to topple Zaire's long-serving President Mobutu
    Sese Seko is expected to gather steam on Tuesday with street protests
    by students. After shutting down the capital with a widely-observed
    stay-at-home order on Monday, Mobutu's opponents want to show they, not
    the cancer-stricken president, are in control. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - More than 1,000 Italian, French and Spanish troops were on
    their way to Albania on Tuesday, preparing to land from sea and air in
    a nation racked by armed anarchy. The main landing force of foreign
    soldiers was due to begin arriving at dawn in the port city of Durres,
    where 450 French troops were set to disembark at 6 a.m. (0400 GMT)
    followed by another 350 Italian and 250 Spanish soldiers. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The United States announced it was sending special envoy
    Dennis Ross back to the Middle East this week for talks with Israeli
    and Palestinian leaders on reviving the stalled peace process. U.S.
    officials said Ross would leave on Tuesday evening and return by the
    weekend after talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
    Palestinian President Yasser Arafat. 

    - - - - 

    LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas - President Bill Clinton's former Whitewater
    business partner James McDougal was sentenced to three years in prison
    after making a deal that could spell trouble for the White House.
    McDougal, 56, had faced up to 81 years in prison for his conviction
    last May on 18 counts of fraud and conspiracy, but got off lightly
    because of his full cooperation with Whitewater independent prosecutor
    Kenneth Starr. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The United States set a date for talks with North Korea on
    missile sales and promised an announcement on new food aid for
    Pyongyang before Wednesday's critical meeting on proposed peace talks. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - NATO and Russia are to hold highly sensitive talks on Tuesday
    on establishing a new modus vivendi in post-Cold War Europe. Moscow,
    which stepped up its tough rhetoric on Monday in a now-familar
    negotiating tactic, will host NATO Secretary General Javier Solana for
    three hours of intense negotiations in the Russian capital. 

    - - - - 

    BRISBANE -Australia's foreign minister Alexander Downer said the
    government would discuss the future of a A$950 million (US$737 million)
    line of credit to Iran after a German court linked the Islamic state to
    terrorism. Australia has already withdrawn its ambassador to Iran for
    consultations. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - Chinese and Russian defence ministers have hailed increasing
    trust and friendship in ties between the two neighbours, who were once
    bitter socialist rivals, China's Xinhua news agency reported. 

    - - - - 

    TAICHUNG, Taiwan - Taiwan took delivery of the first two of 150 F-16
    fighter planes bought from the United States to strengthen its air
    defences, the defence ministry said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Hong Kong democracy campaigner Martin Lee reaffirmed
    support for continued Most Favoured Nation trade status for China and
    urged U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to visit the British
    colony as it reverts to Beijing's control. 

    - - - - 

    SAN DIEGO - Dinners of pasta and tomato sauce served with green tea and
    lemon could be a defence against cancer, new research suggests. Four
    separate studies being presented at the annual meeting of the American
    Association for Cancer Research suggest that all those foods have
    cancer-fighting properties. 

    - - - - 

    SAN FRANCISCO - A bullet-riddled shirt worn by legendary outlaw Clyde
    Barrow, of "Bonnie and Clyde" fame, when he was shot dead by police in
    1934 sold for $85,000, smashing auction house estimates. 

    REUTER
7.1346HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:33104
    RTw  15-Apr-97 07:09    

    Odds and Ends

    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Elections draw little interest in remote British islands 

    EDINBURGH - The most remote community in the British Isles will not
    vote in the May 1 general election, as none of the 29 adults on the
    Atlantic islands of St Kilda have bothered to sign up to the electoral
    register. 

    This saves Western Isles council the expense of a polling station in
    the islands, 110 miles (175 km) west of the Scottish mainland, and the
    5,000 pound ($8,000) cost of a helicopter to fly ballot boxes to and
    fro. 

    Council officials said the inhabitants of the island were simply not
    interested enough in the election to register. 

    "Fortunately, nobody has registered," said one. "It's a bit of a
    relief." 

    Twenty-two of the 29 run a missile-tracking station. Six study sheep
    and the other is warden of a bird sanctuary. 

    Western Isles is a marginal constituency where the Scottish National
    Party candidate, popular Gaelic singer Anne Lorne Gillies, is fighting
    to oust Labour member Calum MacDonald. 

    - - - - 

    Indian finance minister fumes after car impounded 

    NEW DELHI - After losing his job in a confidence vote, India's
    caretaker Finance Minister P. Chidambaram nearly lost his car on Monday
    when it was towed away by police for illegal parking. 

    The Press Trust of India (PTI) quoted an angry Chidambaram as seeking
    action against those responsible for the incident in which his personal
    car was seized by police at the airport in Madras, capital of his home
    state Tamil Nadu. 

    PTI said a livid Chidambaram walked to the airport police station where
    the car was impounded, and police gave it back. 

    Chidambaram's Tamil Maanila Congress party rules the state in a
    coalition with the regional Dravid Munetra Kazhagam party. Both are
    members of the United Front alliance's federal government that was
    toppled in a confidence vote on Friday. 

    - - - - 

    Cyprus lions seek home away from the wild life 

    NICOSIA - Wanted: Good homes for seven lions, too tame to return to the
    wild. 

    Officials at Cyprus's Limassol zoo on Monday said the resident family
    of felines had become too large for the facilities available.

    "There are 11 lions and we are willing to give away seven," said
    Lambros Lambrou, director of the zoo run by the local town council in
    Limassol, a sprawling port city on Cyprus's southern coast. 

    "We are not trying to get rid of them, we want to ensure that they go
    somewhere where they will survive," he told Reuters. 

    However, no other zoo in the region has responded to the offer.

    And it is unlikely that the lions, nine of them born in captivity in
    Cyprus, could be returned to the wild because they are too tame. 

    "Apparently other zoos have their own lions because they have not
    responded but we will continue to try," he said. 

    - - - - 

    New York cabbie finds famed tenor's music 

    NEW YORK - A New York City cab driver has come to the rescue of opera
    singer Placido Domingo, even though he never heard of the famed tenor. 

    Kobina Wood discovered a briefcase with sheet music as he cleaned out
    his cab after his Saturday night shift, police said in the New York
    Post on Monday. 

    The briefcase contained an envelope with the name Domingo, music to
    Wagner's "Die Walkure" and a book of prayers. 

    The cabdriver notified police, and Mayor Rudolph Giuliani personally
    returned the briefcase to Domingo on Sunday. 

    The cabdriver, who moved to New York City from Ghana in 1992, told the
    newspaper he liked opera but had never heard of Domingo. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER
          
7.1347HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3352
    RTw  15-Apr-97 07:01    

    Lachlan Murdoch, 25, takes News helm in Australia

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    SYDNEY, April 15 (Reuter) - Media magnate Rupert Murdoch announced on
    Tuesday that his 25-year-old son, Lachlan, was to take over Murdoch's
    extensive business and media interests in his native Australia. 

    In a statement from Los Angeles, the News Corp Ltd chief executive said
    Lachlan Murdoch would take over from veteran aide Ken Cowley as head of
    News Ltd -- News Corp's Australian subsidiary, which dominates the
    country's newspaper market and also has interests in pay television. 

    The decision to promote Lachlan, already News Ltd's managing director,
    will put a spotlight on 66-year-old Rupert Murdoch's own succession. 

    But the news had no immediate effect on News Ltd shares. 

    Rupert Murdoch said News Ltd executive chairman Cowley, 62, had decided
    to retire at the end of June, a decision Murdoch regretfully accepted. 

    Cowley joined News Ltd 33 years ago and helped Murdoch, now a U.S.
    citizen, launch The Australian national newspaper. 

    Cowley would remain a director of News Corp and continue as chairman of
    Ansett International and Ansett New Zealand, as well as director of
    some other listed firms controlled by News Corp. 

    "As managing director of News Ltd, Mr Lachlan Murdoch will assume
    overall responsibility for our Australian operations," Murdoch said. 

    Lachlan, the elder of Rupert Murdoch's two sons, was appointed managing
    director of the Australian operations on September 23 last year and
    joined the board of the parent company News Corp on October 29. 

    Media analysts have speculated in the last year or so that either
    Lachlan or his elder sister Elisabeth would eventually take control of
    the international media firm once their father chose to stand aside. 

    Elisabeth is now an executive with News Corp affiliate British Sky
    Broadcasting Plc in London. 

    Paying tribute to Cowley, Murdoch said he had acted as mentor to many
    executives who had risen through News Corp ranks. 

    "I know that they share my great respect, admiration and gratitude to
    him, and look forward to continuing to draw upon his expertise," he
    said.

    REUTER
7.1348HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3370
    RTos 15-Apr-97 05:03    

    Studies Show Pasta May Prevent Cancer

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    SAN DIEGO (Reuter) - A dinner of pasta and tomato sauce served with
    green tea and lemon could be a defense against cancer, new research
    suggests. 

    Four separate studies being presented at the annual meeting of the
    American Association for Cancer Research here suggest that all those
    foods have cancer-fighting properties. 

    In one study, researchers at Harlem Hospital Center/Columbia University
    looked at blood concentrations of lycopene, an antioxidant found in
    tomatoes and grapefruit. 

    They found patients with lung cancer had significantly lower than
    normal levels of lycopene. Even when looking just at smokers, those
    with the lowest levels of lycopene were four times as likely to get
    lung cancer than those with the highest concentrations, the study
    showed. 

    "We concluded from our findings that low intake of lycopene may be a
    risk factor for lung cancer, especially for smokers," said principal
    investgator in the study, Dr. Jean Ford. 

    Another study, which was conducted in Italy, examined the effect
    varying levels of pasta intake had on rats. 

    Rats were treated with a cancer causing agent and then divided into
    four dietary groups. The incidence of intestinal tumors in the rats fed
    a diet of pasta was 30.8 percent, compared with 63.2 percent with those
    fed a sucrose-concentrated diet, 45.8 percent with those fed bolus and
    36.8 percent with those fed glucose. 

    The third study, at the University of Western Ontario in London, found
    that nomilin, a compound in citrus fruits, inhibited the proliferation
    of breast cancer cells. Researchers said the results were not
    necessarily conclusive but should merit further study into the role of
    citrus as an anti-cancer agent. 

    Green tea was added to the anti-cancer recipe because of past studies
    showing it protects against esophageal and stomach cancer, and a new
    study being released at the conference in San Diego showing it may also
    protect against skin cancer. 

    In that study, mice were treated with agents that increase the risk of
    skin cancer, and then some of them were treated with a topical
    application of green tea. The tea significantly tempered the increase
    in skin thickness and growth of lesions. Adding the green tea to the
    water the mice drank also was found to protect them against
    sunlight-induced skin damage. 

    In a different study presented Monday at the American Chemical Society
    conference in San Francisco, another researcher said fresh-brewed
    coffee may also contain anti-oxidants that can help fight cancer and
    heart disease. 

    Takayuki Shibamoto, a professor of environmental toxicology at the
    University of California at Davis, near Sacramento, said the brewing
    process produced "healthful" antioxidants for both caffeinated and
    decaffeinated coffee. 

    Shibamoto cautioned coffee drinkers against increasing their
    consumption of coffee based on the results of his study, however,
    saying further research was needed. 

    REUTER
7.1349HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:34103
    RTw  15-Apr-97 04:46    

    FEATURE-Kiss and tell book stirs storm

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Arthur Spiegelman 

    NEW YORK, April 15 (Reuter) - Sometimes a kiss is not just a kiss. For
    writer Kathryn Harrison it was the start of an incestuous affair with
    her father and the cause of a brutal literary controversy over whether
    she should have kissed and told. 

    Beyond Harrison's personal plight, her numb, trance-like book "The
    Kiss" has propelled a cadre of cranky critics to charge that American
    literature is being "Ophrahized" by greedy publishers. They say too
    much of what is being printed is a variant of TV talk show true
    confession, from books like Claire Bloom's tale of how terrible it was
    to live with Philip Roth to books with titles like "Drinking: A Love
    Story." 

    But publishers say they are not at fault. Blame the writers. 

    "You can't believe the books we are seeing," said one leading editor
    who asked that her name not be used because she might have to bid on
    some new version of "Mommie Dearest" or other tell-all tale against her
    better artistic judgment. 

    "We call them early midlife crisis memoirs by unknown people who tell
    of brushes with heroin, anorexia, bulemia, death, life, bad breath, bad
    parents, bad sex, bad karma, UFOs -- you name it. Mostly they are sob
    stories by yuppies." 

    Critic James Wolcott calls the trend shopping "one's pain in plain
    sight" and is among those who wonder where it will all end. 

    But the memoirs sell and sometimes they win high praise or, as in
    Harrison's case, divide the publishing world into bitter armed camps. 

    MAKING ST. AUGUSTINE BLUSH 

    And it is not just yuppies writing confessions that might make St.
    Augustine, the first great literary confessor, blush. 

    Last week, the Pulitzer Prize for biography went to "Angela's Ashes"
    about one man's growing up poor, Catholic and miserable in Ireland,
    which, as its 66-year-old author notes in his first line, is about the
    worst thing a person can do. 

    It was the third time a memoir had won the Pulitzer although, with so
    many being published today, some people are wondering if they should
    have a category all their own. 

    For Washington Post critic Jonathan Yardley enough is enough is enough.
    "The Kiss" was "within the tiny world of such literary culture as we
    still can claim ... the logical if thoroughly distasteful culmination
    of a process that has made exhibitionistic narcissism the coin of the
    realm," he wrote. 

    "We have a process of regression that marches steadily downhill from
    'Ulysses' to 'Portnoy's Complaint' to 'The Kiss."' 

    Harrison is not amused. She says she only wishes her self-esteem was
    high enough that she could be counted among the ranks of narcissists.
    "I used to look in mirrors to see if I was there," she said in a recent
    interview. 

    She says she wrote "The Kiss" to exorcise the most devastating
    experience of her life -- her affair with her father, which started
    when she was 20 and lasted several years. Growing up as the daughter of
    a mentally ill woman, she had seen her father only three times until
    she was 20. 

    Then he shows up for a visit and she takes him to the airport where he
    gives her a goodbye kiss. The kiss starts innocently and then escalates
    until, the author writes, it becomes "wet, insistent, exploring." 

    TABOOS COME TUMBLING DOWN 

    That's the moment when anything goes and the timbers marked taboo start
    crashing down. 

    Now, as her book nestles comfortably on the bestseller list, Harrison
    says she never expected to be accused of subverting American
    literature. 

    "It wasn't as if I expected to write a book that would be embraced but
    I expected censure for the act (of incest), not for having written the
    book. People think I should have had the good sense not to have talked
    about that. Sometimes, when you tell the truth, you are punished," she
    said. 

    "One of the things I have been accused of is cynicism -- that I
    understood what readers and publishers want. In truth, I am quite naive
    and think that a lot of the attacks on the book have revealed truth
    about how cynical our culture is. It is not possible to intend to
    capitalise on an experience like this. I know who I am and why I wrote
    the book," she added. 

    "I am not the cyncial, manipulative woman who wanted to jump on the
    talk show circuit." 

    REUTER
7.1350HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3474
    RTw  15-Apr-97 03:14    

    'Bonnie & Clyde' relics raise $188,000 at auction

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Adam Entous 

    SAN FRANCISCO, April 14 (Reuter) - A bullet-riddled shirt worn by
    legendary outlaw Clyde Barrow, of "Bonnie and Clyde" fame, when he was
    shot dead by police in 1934 sold for $85,000 on Monday, smashing
    auction house estimates. 

    The gruesome relic was the highlight as collectors and business
    executives paid nearly $188,000, about three times the estimate, for 11
    items associated with Barrow and Bonnie Parker, who staged a spree of
    bank robberies and killings across the United States in the 1930s. 

    Bidders at the Butterfield & Butterfield auction house in San Francisco
    competed for guns and a pocket watch once owned by Barrow as well as a
    letter and snapshots from the Barrow family photo album. 

    Other bids were called in by telephone from across the United States
    and from as far away as Britain and France. 

    "It far exceeded our expectations," Levi Morgan, a spokesman for the
    auction house, said of the sale prices. 

    The "death shirt," which sold for $85,000, had been expected to fetch
    $35,000 to $45,000. 

    An Elgin pocket watch that was in Barrow's possession when he died sold
    for $20,700. They had been estimated at a value of $2,000 to $3,000,
    the auction house said. 

    A Winchester model 1892 saddle ring carbine that once belonged to
    Barrow sold for $27,600, compared to an estimate of $3,000 to $4,000.
    Five police photos relating to Bonnie and Clyde, estimated at a value
    of $200 to $300, sold for $2,875. 

    Barrow's 1911 semi-automatic pistol sold for $16,100, well over the
    estimate of $1,500 to $2,500, while a belt and beaded necklace made in
    prison by Clyde for his sister fetched $4,312 after being estimated at
    $1,000 to $1,500, the auction house said. 

    A Nevada casino operator said it paid more than $100,000 for Barrow's
    "death shirt" and several other items. Primadonna Resorts Inc., which
    operates Whiskey Pete's casino in Primm, Nevada, south of Las Vegas,
    plans to display the items with the 1934 Ford in which Bonnie and Clyde
    were shot dead. The casino bought the Ford in 1988 for $250,000. 

    "It was just a great match to the death car," Aaron Cohen, a spokesman
    for Primadonna Resorts, said of the shirt. 

    Young lovers Parker and Barrow, joined by other gang members, went on a
    2 1/2 year spree of murders and bank robberies across the Southwest and
    Midwest before being killed in a police ambush near Gibsland,
    Louisiana, in May 1934. 

    The gang killed at least 12 law enforcement officers during their reign
    of terror, but their memory has been romanticized by a string of books
    and movies. 

    The film "Bonnie and Clyde," starring Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway
    and directed by Arthur Penn, won two Oscars in 1967. It featured a
    slow-motion depiction of their death that stirred controversy because
    of its violence. 

    Barrow's personal items were sold by his sister Marie, who said she
    would like to use some of the proceeds to bury him with Parker.
    Parker's mother refused to grant her daughter's wish to be buried with
    Barrow, and the two were buried in separate Dallas cemeteries. 

    REUTER
7.1351HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3468
    RTw  15-Apr-97 00:53    

    Battle for Britain becomes election slanging match

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Majendie 

    LONDON, April 15 (Reuter) - The Battle for Britain has turned into a
    slanging match, with political leaders resorting to increasingly bitter
    personal attacks in the campaign for the May 1 election. 

    Labour leader Tony Blair, the photogenic centrist dubbed "Phoney Tony"
    by the ruling Conservatives, had vowed on Sunday to avoid negative
    campaigning in his bid to end 18 years in opposition for his party. 

    But he was stung into an angry retort on Monday when Prime Minister
    John Major, trying to land the Conservatives their fifth election
    victory in a row, mocked Blair's choice of school for his son. 

    Major, trailing Blair by 18 percentage points in the latest poll in the
    Daily Telgraph on Tuesday, said the Labour leader's education manifesto
    was "a shameless contract with hypocrisy." 

    Blair sends one of his sons to a school that has opted out of local
    authority control -- even though Labour was originally opposed to
    allowing schools to do that. 

    "What he wants for his own children, he doesn't want for yours. What he
    has for his children, he wants to take away from yours," Major said on
    the campaign trail on Monday. 

    That jibe clearly infuriated Blair, who said of Conservative attacks:
    "They are negative. They are nasty. They are personalised."

    Labour's foreign affairs spokesman Robin Cook complained: "Politicians
    should be fighting this election on policies, not with their opponents'
    children." 

    Blair and Major also traded blows over who would most effectively
    defend Britain in the European Union. 

    Both threatened to block reforms in Europe unless foreign trawlers are
    prevented from plundering British fishing grounds. 

    "We don't want vacuous sabre-rattling. We are perfectly prepared to
    take a very tough line on this indeed," said Blair after Major adopted
    an equally unbending stance. 

    The ruling Conservatives traditionally bill themselves as fervent
    patriots. But Labour has sought to steal some of that ground with one
    of the most potent symbols of tenacity -- the British bulldog. 

    For its first television advertisement campaign, Labour hired Fitz the
    bulldog, who lies down tired and listless until hearing the thrusting
    young Blair talk about how he has transformed Labour, dumping much of
    its socialist dogma. 

    Labour campaign manager Peter Mandelson said: "It is an animal with a
    strong sense of history and tradition. But like Britain today, it is
    tired and without direction." 

    The Conservatives mocked Labour's choice of the bulldog, associated
    with the wartime spirit of resistance embodied by Winston Churchill, a
    Conservative. "It ought to be a poodle," one official snorted
    derisively. 

    REUTER
7.1352HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3462
    RTw  14-Apr-97 23:46    

    British bases in Cyprus up security after protest

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    NICOSIA, April 14 (Reuter) - British military bases in Cyprus tightened
    security on Monday night after angry Greek Cypriots stormed a base
    police station and freed two detainees, witnesses said. 

    Fifty British soldiers were sworn in as special constables after a
    group of enraged Greek Cypriots burst into a police compound in the
    Episkopi base on the southern coast and released two men detained on
    Monday morning, a spokesman for the base said. 

    The demonstrators, who included women and small children, failed to
    spring two other Cypriots being held in another wing of the compound. 

    Five Greek Cypriots were arrested in later incidents outside the
    Episkopi police station, Sean Tully, a spokesman for the British bases
    on the Mediterranean island, told Reuters. 

    "There are soldiers at the scene. They have been enlisted to assist the
    police force as special constables but they are definitely not armed,"
    he said, adding that police had primacy in the operation. 

    Television reporters said crowds were gathering in the base areas, but
    base spokesmen said later that all had dispersed by midnight. 

    British soldiers set up a roadblock on the main road linking the port
    city of Limassol to the western coastal resort of Paphos. Episkopi lies
    half way between the two towns. 

    Reports that demonstrators had stolen two military vehicles could not
    be confirmed. 

    The extraordinary standoff started when base police detained a Greek
    Cypriot early on Monday on charges of building illegally at Trachoni, a
    village within British bases territory close to Episkopi. 

    Britain has retained two military bases in Cyprus since independence in
    1960. It enjoys sovereign rights on both, but more and more Cypriots
    are questioning their jurisdiction. 

    Several Greek Cypriots were arrested by the bases police when they
    tried to stop the arrest, locals said. 

    Some demonstrators accused base officers of clubbing them with batons
    during the arrests and in the violence. 

    "I examined one man who had a concussion and a head injury caused by a
    blunt instrument," local doctor Takis Aristidou told Reuters. "He told
    me he had been beaten by the bases police." 

    It was the second time in a month that protests have targetted the
    British military presence on the island. In March demonstrators pelted
    another police compound at Dhekelia, in the island's southeast,
    demanding the release of a teenager held there for traffic violations. 

    The teenager was granted clemency and released a few days later. 

    REUTER
7.1353HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3529
    AP 15-Apr-1997 1:33 EDT   REF5239

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Duchess of York's Column Debuts

    NEW YORK (AP) -- From royal family member to diet-program spokeswoman
    to newspaper columnist, the Duchess of York's career path took another
    turn today with the debut of her syndicated column. 

    The former Sarah Ferguson's maiden column for The New York Times
    Syndicate includes her observations on the nation of Argentina. 

    "Argentina is my second home," Fergie writes. "My mother still lives
    there. A part of me -- perhaps the best part -- resides there as well."

    The divorced mother of two also muses on Chivilcoy, the birthplace of
    former Argentine first lady Eva Peron, and Madonna's portrayal of Peron
    in the film "Evita." 

    "So when the movie ended, and Madonna stood up, I was teary-eyed. I was
    crying for Argentina," Fergie writes. 

    The ex-wife of Britain's Prince Andrew has a two-year deal to do the
    column, which will reach 2,000 papers worldwide. 

    In addition to her autobiography, which came out last fall, she has
    written several children's books. She also is a spokeswoman for Weight
    Watchers. 
7.1354HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3538
    AP 15-Apr-1997 0:22 EDT   REF5881

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    State Broke Law by Hogtying Inmates

    By BOB ANEZ

    Associated Press Writer

    HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- Hogtying five naked, shackled inmates after a
    deadly prison riot in 1991 was an unprecedented violation of the
    Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment, a federal judge
    ruled Monday. 

    "This hogtying episode clearly violated contemporary standards of
    decency," U.S. District Charles Lovell said in finding eight state
    officials liable in dozens of lawsuits filed against the state. 

    John Maynard, a lawyer for five of the defendants, said he hasn't
    decided whether to appeal. The state had said the restraints were
    necessary to prevent a second riot and that a court should not
    second-guess its decision. 

    But Lovell wrote, "Simply put, hogtying the plaintiffs and leaving them
    naked in the bare cells for hours at a time strongly evidences an
    intent to punish and to inflict pain." 

    The Sept. 21, 1991, riot killed five inmates at the Montana State
    Prison in Deer Lodge. Eighteen days later, five prisoners suspected of
    trying to incite a second riot were stripped naked, hogtied with
    handcuffs and chains and made to lie naked on bare concrete floors or
    on metal bunks without mattresses, Lovell said. 

    The inmates were left there for 24 hours, and one inmate was restrained
    for about 43 hours. Another was released after six hours when he
    hyperventilated and vomited, but put back in restraints after he got
    treatment, Lovell said. 
7.1355HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:35100
    AP 14-Apr-1997 23:55 EDT   REF5873

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    2 Army Trainees Accuse Sgt. of Rape

    By BART JANSEN

    Associated Press Writer

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- In the first trial to come out of
    the Aberdeen sex scandal, two Army trainees testified Monday that their
    drill sergeant raped them in his office. 

    A 21-year-old private said she was returning to her barracks from the
    bathroom when Staff Sgt. Delmar Simpson ordered her into his office,
    pushed her onto a couch, pulled off her shorts and raped her. 

    "I begged him to stop," the private said. "He was laying on top of me.
    There wasn't a whole lot I could do." 

    She said she did not report it because she didn't want anyone to know.
    And she said she had heard that Simpson and Sgt. 1st Class Tony Cross,
    33, had a competition to see who could have sex with the most women. 

    "I didn't want to be on his list, either," the private told prosecutor
    Capt. David Thomas, saying she felt "dirty, gross" after he attacked
    her. "He and drill Sgt. Cross had a thing going to see who could get
    more women." 

    Investigators suspect three drill sergeants from a different battalion
    also may have been involved in the competition for sex, The Washington
    Post reported in Tuesday's editions, citing defense attorneys and a
    sworn statement. 

    The second witness, a 22-year-old specialist with the National Guard,
    said Simpson pushed her onto a bed in his office and raped her when she
    went to confront him about his criticism about her uniform and nail
    polish. 

    "He was laying on top of me. I couldn't go anywhere," the woman said.
    "I didn't know what he was going to do because he was so mean." 

    Simpson, 32, is accused of raping six women in the most serious case to
    emerge from the Army's investigation into sexual misconduct at the
    weapons-testing center 30 miles northeast of Baltimore. 

    It is also the most racially and politically charged case. 

    All 12 of the Aberdeen soldiers charged so far are black, while most of
    the alleged victims are white. The National Association for the
    Advancement of Colored People has accused the Army of targeting black
    drill sergeants, while five white female recruits have said
    investigators unsuccessfully pressured them to accuse their black
    superiors of rape. 

    Army officials have denied race was a factor in their investigation.

    The two trainees who accused Simpson of rape on Monday are white. A
    third woman who testified that he forcibly kissed her is black. All
    three alleged attacks occurred in 1995. 

    Simpson, who is married, has already pleaded guilty to having
    consensual sex with 11 trainees in violation of an Army rule
    prohibiting personal relationships between supervisors and
    subordinates. 

    But he said he is innocent of rape, as well as other charges of
    forcibly sodomizing, punching, grabbing or threatening trainees. 

    The offenses he has admitted carry a maximum of 32 years in prison. A
    single rape conviction could mean life imprisonment. 

    One earlier Aberdeen court-martial was settled without a trial. Capt.
    Derrick Robertson pleaded guilty last week to adultery, consensual
    sodomy and other charges. He will be discharged after serving four
    months in prison. 

    Under questioning from Simpson's attorney, Frank J. Spinner, the two
    Army trainees acknowledged they didn't report the alleged attacks. They
    also admitted they had no bruises and were not choked, punched or
    threatened by Simpson. 

    A third woman, a 22-year-old specialist, testified Monday that Simpson
    called her to his office to tell her she was "an attractive young lady"
    and forcibly kissed her in her barracks a month later. 

    "Basically, I was in shock. I wasn't offended," the woman said. 

    Army Secretary Togo West said last month he will ask the Army inspector
    general to review the outcome of the criminal cases at Aberdeen. 

    The scandal has also prompted a call for a worldwide review of the
    Army's policy on sexual harassment. 

    Defense attorneys have argued that high-ranking Army officials,
    including West, prejudiced Simpson's case by declaring their "zero
    tolerance" for sexual misconduct when the scandal broke in November.
    The lawyers said those comments led Army brass to bring unreasonably
    serious charges against Simpson. 
7.1356HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3560
    AP 14-Apr-1997 23:34 EDT   REF5866

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fla. Names Doctors With Bad Records

    By JACKIE HALLIFAX

    Associated Press Writer

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -- For the first time, Floridians can find the
    names of doctors with disciplinary problems or multiple malpractice
    claims in a single report. 

    The report was released Monday, despite concerns by the Florida Medical
    Association that patients might misinterpret the information. 

    Florida is the second state to compile this much information about
    doctors' records, said Doug Cook, director of the Agency for Health
    Care Administration. Massachusetts released medical profiles in
    November. 

    The Florida Report on Physician Discipline and Malpractice lists 949
    doctors who either were disciplined through the state medical board in
    the last five years or paid three claims to patients who sued for
    malpractice. 

    That's about 2 percent of the state's nearly 43,000 doctors. 

    Pat McEachern, who was left partly paralyzed after her artery was cut
    during a diagnostic test five years ago, said doctors' records should
    be open to their patients. 

    "People should know -- not a little bit more -- but a lot more about
    their doctors," the 54-year-old Tampa woman said. 

    But Dr. Robert J. Rogers, a Winter Park general practitioner, said he
    objects to the list because it lumps all doctors together whether they
    have committed large or small infractions. 

    Rogers, in practice for more than 40 years, was disciplined in 1992 and
    fined $2,500 for prescribing a controlled drug with a lapsed Drug
    Enforcement Agency registration number. He said the lapse was
    unintentional and his registration was renewed. 

    "I think it's a lousy deal," said Rogers, 72. "This is supposed to be a
    private concern between me and the Board of Medical Examiners. ... It's
    not a criminal proceeding." 

    All the information has been available previously, but it would have
    taken phone calls to a health agency or the state insurance department,
    or maybe a trip to a courthouse. 

    Residents now will be able to peruse the list from home, via computer
    on the World Wide Web. Or they can buy a copy for $10. 

    Cook said patients should use the information to help select a doctor. 

    "We hope this will be the first step in doctor shopping," he said. "The
    more information we can provide consumers the better."
7.1357HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3551
    AP 14-Apr-1997 23:23 EDT   REF5860

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Gingrich Demands Principal's Ouster

    By JANELLE CARTER

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Mayor Marion Barry defended the principal of a city
    school where nine fourth-graders allegedly engaged in sex acts while
    left unsupervised. But the schools chief executive said the principal
    and the teacher were both negligent and will be disciplined. 

    Schools Chief Executive Julius W. Becton Jr. declined to specify the
    disciplinary action until the two men had been notified, while Barry
    said Monday the teacher who left the children alone should be fired,
    not the principal. 

    "The teacher has been derelict in his responsibility and ought to be
    fired," Barry said. "They have put him on administrative leave for two
    days ... but eventually he ought to be fired." 

    The incident occurred a week ago when Charles Mayo, a teacher at Martha
    H. Winston Educational Center, sent a girl and two boys into an
    adjacent "timeout" room for being disruptive. Six other students also
    got into the room, officials said. 

    The students began playing a game that led to sexual activity and at
    some point they locked the door, according to officials. 

    Ronald Parker, principal of the Martha H. Winston Educational Center,
    has told reporters he concluded from his own investigation that the
    students were "experimenting sexually" and that the activities were
    consensual. 

    Barry said after meeting with Parker on Monday that the incident was
    reprehensible but that Parker should not be blamed. 

    Gingrich, R-Ga., commenting on "Fox News Sunday," deplored "the idea of
    having a principal who doesn't understand: No sex in fourth grade,
    period." Gingrich said the principal should be fired. 

    Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., said, "The principal is
    saying, 'Well, we can't do anything because it's consensual.'
    consensual? For 9-year-olds? I mean, something is not right here." 

    Some parents disputed the principal's conclusion that the sex was
    consensual, saying their daughters were threatened and forced to
    disrobe. 
7.1358HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:36103
    AP 15-Apr-1997 1:16 EDT   REF5205

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pacific Islands Market Millennium

    By ROBERT KEITH-REID

    Associated Press Writer

    SUVA, Fiji (AP) -- The islands of the mid-Pacific will have some extra
    fun celebrating the new millennium. 

    This region straddling the International Date Line will be the first to
    ring in 2000 -- and the last to ring out 1999. 

    The island groups see either of those possibilities as a fine peg for a
    tourism campaign. And in an effort to head off cutthroat marketing
    tactics, 12 nations have agreed to work together to promote the region
    as the prime vacation destination of the new century. 

    Worries about each nation working against the other had grown following
    Kiribati's decision last year to unilaterally move its part of the
    International Date Line east, which would put it first into 2000. 

    But now, working through the Tourism Council of the South Pacific, the
    islands are negotiating with a U.S. event promoter to use the region as
    the anchor for global television coverage of 1999 New Year's Eve
    celebrations. 

    Half the countries are just west of the date line and will be the first
    to welcome the arrival of 2000. Those east of the line will be the last
    to bid farewell to 1999. 

    And they could do it all over again a year later, for those sticklers
    who argue that the millennium doesn't actually start until the dawn of
    Jan. 1, 2001. 

    The Tourism Council of the South Pacific nations and Pacific airlines
    have formed the Millennium Consortium to get promotion that the mostly
    poor, small and increasingly tourism-dependent islands can't afford
    individually. 

    "We have the beginning and the end in our part of the world," said
    Francis Mortimer, the consortium's coordinator and Pacific Islands
    market development manager for Air New Zealand, one of the airline
    partners. 

    He said that as 1999 is succeeded by 2000 in time zones around the
    world, the American TV promoter will cover those celebrations and
    switch back to the Pacific island locations at hourly intervals. 

    "This allows for some massive merchandising opportunities and eight
    major advertisers are already interested," he said. 

    About 800,000 tourists visited the islands in 1996, the tourism council
    says. 

    Hotels in Tonga, Western Samoa, Fiji and the Cook Islands are already
    fully booked by European, American and other international jet-setters
    who plan to celebrate the 1999 New Year's Eve west of the line in Fiji
    or Tonga and then fly east to do it again in Samoa or the Cooks. 

    Until last year, Kiribati would have been both the first and last
    nation to hail the new millennium and usher out the old, because the
    International Date Line ran down the 180 degree longitude line,
    bisecting its atolls sprinkled over 2,500 miles east to west. 

    When the government decided last year to move the date line east in its
    part of the Pacific, it said it was an administrative convenience so
    one part of the country wouldn't be on a weekend holiday while the
    other was at work. 

    There is no international agency or protocol for changing the line, so
    Kiribati was free to move it. In theory, any other islands farther east
    of Kiribati could do the same thing to be No. 1 in the millennium
    sweepstakes. 

    Kiribati officials denied their goal was to get the jump in the
    millennium race, but the effect of moving the line was to make its
    Carolines group of about 20 uninhabited islands the first to see in
    2000 -- almost. 

    Britain's Old Royal Observatory in Greenwich says the millennium will
    arrive first at the Balleny Islands off Antarctica -- 2 hours, 2
    minutes earlier than the Carolines. But it's so much easier to promote
    the tourism values of the balmy Carolines than the frigid Ballenys. 

    Meanwhile, the New Zealand-based Millennium Adventure Co. is promoting
    the millennium's "first light" to be seen from the slopes of Mount
    Hakepa on Pitt Island, just east of the date line. 

    On the east coast of New Zealand's North Island, the city of Gisborne
    is organizing a festival and billing itself as the "First City in the
    World to See the Sun." 

    So far, Fiji has resisted the temptation to market itself as a major
    millennium destination. But its Taveuni Island offers a unique
    opportunity, as the only island bisected by the 180 degree line of
    longitude, which was regarded as the date line before the line was
    rejigged in the 20th century to avoid bisecting several Pacific island
    groups. Revelers on Taveuni will be able to claim to have one foot in
    each millennium by straddling the 180-degree line. 
7.1359HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3636
    AP 14-Apr-1997 22:06 EDT   REF5817

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S. Africa Subpoenas Apartheid Foes

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) -- South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation
    Commission has subpoenaed opponents of apartheid for the first time,
    signaling its intention to investigate both sides in the apartheid
    struggle. 

    African National Congress official Robert McBride was one of the two
    people who received subpoenas last week to appear before the commission
    on April 21. 

    McBride was an ANC guerrilla convicted of setting off a bomb that
    killed three whites in a bar in 1985. He was released from prison in
    1992 under an amnesty negotiated by the ANC and the then-governing
    National Party. 

    The ANC came to power in the nation's first all-race election in 1994,
    and the Truth Commission was established in December 1995 to
    investigate apartheid-era crimes and grant amnesty to people who fully
    confess political crimes. 

    So far, most of the commission's work has involved crimes by government
    security forces during apartheid, though the panel has devoted hearings
    to crimes by anti-apartheid groups. 

    The National Party, now an opposition group, has complained that the
    commission -- led by retired Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, a Nobel
    Peace Prize winner -- has been biased in favor of apartheid opponents. 

    Tutu has denied the claims, and the subpoenas for McBride and ANC
    colleague Greta Appelgren for information on the bar bombing appeared
    likely to quiet the complaints. 
7.1360HLSW01::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 15 1997 11:3628
    AP 14-Apr-1997 21:36 EDT   REF5798

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Injured Girl Crawls To Find Help

    MONTAGUE, Prince Edward Island (AP) -- A teen-ager who broke her back
    in a car accident crawled 330 feet -- house-to-house and across a
    highway -- to get help for herself and her two injured friends. 

    The girl was a passenger in a car that smashed into a guard rail Sunday
    on Prince Edward Island in northern Canada. The car flipped repeatedly,
    injuring all three people inside. 

    The girl made her way to one house only to find nobody home. She then
    crawled across a highway, over a church parking lot and up the driveway
    of another house, where she finally found help. 

    "She's a hero in my mind," said Constable Derek Smith of the Royal
    Canadian Mounted Police 

    The other girl suffered broken ribs and other injuries and was on life
    support. Authorities would not release the name of either girl, but
    said both were younger than 18. 

    The driver, a 19-year-old man who suffered minor injuries, was found
    wandering woods near the crash site. Smith said that was common
    behavior for trauma victims. 
7.1361IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:01105
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 16-Apr-1997 2:04 EDT   REF5992

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
   
    TAX DAY 

    The midnight tax deadline was not without some mirth. In Boston, five
    Republican congressmen re-enacted the Boston Tea Party by tossing the
    tax code into Boston Harbor. And in Annapolis, people lined up in a
    post office to dunk Uncle Sam in a blue tub of water by throwing a ball
    at the target. Also Tuesday, the House failed to pass a proposed
    Constitutional amendment which would make it harder for Congress to
    raise taxes. 
   
    ROBINSON-TRIBUTE 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson's No. 42 will be
    retired, acting baseball commissioner Bud Selig announced during a
    ceremony marking the 50 years since Robinson integrated baseball.
    Gameplay between the New York Mets and Los Angeles Dodgers was halted
    midway at Shea Stadium for the ceremony. Robinson's widow, Rachel
    Robinson, and President Clinton were also on hand for the ceremony.
    Robinson played for the old Brooklyn Dodgers. 
   
    McVEIGH-FBI 

    DENVER (AP) -- A federal report criticizing the FBI's handling of
    evidence in the Oklahoma City bombing upset prosecutors, who hope to
    keep the jury at Timothy McVeigh's trial from ever hearing about it.
    They removed tainted FBI scientists from the witness list. In the
    500-page Justice Department inspector general report, a top FBI expert
    is criticized for making invalid conclusions about the size and nature
    of the bomb. FBI crime lab agents produced flawed testimony in some
    major cases, but did not commit perjury or fabricate evidence, the
    Justice Department inspector general said. 
   
    HELICOPTER CRASH 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A corporate helicopter with four people aboard crashed
    into the East River off Manhattan seconds after takeoff Tuesday,
    killing one person and critically injuring at least one other. Two
    pilots and two passengers were on board. The chopper was owned by
    Colgate-Palmolive Co. Killed in the crash was passenger Craig Tate of
    New Canaan, Conn. The cause of the crash is unknown. 
   
    RUSSIA SPACE STATION 

    MOSCOW (AP) -- The Russian-American crew aboard the aging Mir space
    station has fixed a broken oxygen generator but continues to search for
    a leak in the station's cooling system. The cosmonauts used parts
    recently delivered by a cargo spaceship to repair one of the station's
    two oxygen generators, which broke down last month. The Mir, an
    11-year-old station designed to last only five years, has experienced a
    number of serious malfunctions. 
   
    MISSING WARPLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- Stumped in the search for a missing Air Force jet,
    officials say they plan to re-interview people who reported seeing a
    crash. More than 200 search flights across the Rockies southwest of
    Vail have turned up no sign of the $9 million A-10 Thunderbolt, the
    four bombs it was carrying or Capt. Craig Button, who veered off an
    Arizona training flight April 2. 
   
    PANDAS MATING 

    SAN DIEGO (AP) -- The San Diego Zoo's pair of giant pandas have been
    taken off public exhibit for eight to ten days to allow them to
    concentrate on making babies. Panda bear Bai Yun is showing signs of
    going into heat, a once-a-year event for the extremely endangered
    animals. Her hormone level is rising, and she's increasingly using
    urine to establish territory. Fewer than 1,000 giant pandas exist in
    the wild, all in China. San Diego has its pandas on a 12-year loan. 
   
    MEDICAL MARIJUANA 

    PHOENIX (AP) -- Saying they must protect the public, lawmakers have
    passed a bill setting aside a voter-approved law that allows medical
    uses for marijuana. Doctors in Arizona cannot write prescriptions for
    marijuana unless the Food and Drug Administration give the go-ahead,
    the bill says. Gov. Fife Symington has been pushing for the bill and
    plans to sign it, his spokesman said. The voter initiative, approved
    2-1 in November, has not yet taken effect. Sam Vagenas, a key backer of
    Proposition 200, said the bill shows blatant disregard for voters. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar edged higher against the yen early Wednesday
    in Japan. The Nikkei gained 40.91 to 17,974.50. In New York, the Dow
    industrial average rallied to its second biggest point gain ever. It
    gained 135.26 to close at 6,587.16. The Nasdaq was at 1,212.88, down
    3.53. 
   
    ANGELS-YANKEES 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Jim Leyritz's fourth hit of the game, a two-run double
    with two outs in the ninth inning, lifted the Anaheim Angels to a 6-5
    victory and handed the New York Yankees their third straight loss.
    Leyritz, who homered earlier, doubled off Mariano Rivera (0-1) and made
    a winner of Shigetoshi Hasegawa (1-1). Pinch-hitter Jack Howell's one
    out single started the Angels' rally in the ninth. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1362IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0182
    RTw  16-Apr-97 04:34    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBAI - Fire, starting from a cooking gas cylinder and fanned by high
    winds as it raced through a vast sea of tents, killed 217 Moslem
    pilgrims near the holy city of Mecca and injured 1,290. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - Beijing rejoiced after sinking a resolution in the United
    Nations to censure its human rights record and urged the West to draw a
    lesson from its seventh straight failure to criticise China. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Concern mounted over prospect of bloodshed and anarchy in
    Zaire's sprawling capital as rebels advanced on Kinshasa.

    - - - - 

    VALLETTA - The gulf between Palestinians and Israelis appeared as wide
    as ever after intensive European efforts to get the two sides to talk
    in Malta. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - The U.N. World Food Programme geared up to unload biggest food
    aid shipment to Albania since a multinational security mission was
    launched to the chaotic Balkan state. 

    - - - - 

    ANNAPOLIS, Maryland - U.S. Secretary of State Albright announced plans
    to visit Hong Kong when the British colony reverts to Chinese rule on
    July 1. 

    UNITED NATIONS - Martin Lee, a leading Hong Kong democracy leader, said
    the West was morally obliged to tell China it was curbing freedoms in
    Hong Kong in contravention of its 1984 agreement with Britain. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - On the eve of a crucial meeting with North Korea, the
    United States announced $15 million in additional food aid to feed
    children in the famine-threatened Stalinist country. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Prime Minister John Major pinned his re-election hopes on
    fresh official figures showing the British economy was in good shape
    but a new rift opened in his ruling Conservative Party over Europe. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - FBI's crime laboratories provided flawed evidence in some
    major cases, including the Oklahoma City and World Trade Centre
    bombings, a Justice Department report said. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - As an Irish flag flew defiantly close to a British army base,
    Sinn Fein strategist Martin McGuinness sought votes in a key Northern
    Ireland election seat and blamed London for the collapse of the
    province's peace hopes. 

    - - - - 

    BRUSSELS - A parliamentary report into bungled investigations of
    Belgium's child abduction, abuse and murder scandal put the government
    on the spot, warning it that legal basis of state is under threat. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The Senate passed a bill that would require the government
    to build a facility in Nevada to store thousands of tons of nuclear
    waste from power plants until it has a permanent underground dump
    ready. 

    REUTER 
7.1363IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0233
    RTw  16-Apr-97 07:46    

    Cambodia airline refuses to fly exiled prince

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    PHNOM PENH, April 16 (Reuter) - Cambodia's national airline said on
    Wednesday it would refuse to fly home exiled Prince Norodom Sirivudh,
    who is accused of plotting to kill the country's co-Premier Hun Sen. 

    "We have given firm instructions to decline any boarding of His
    Highness Prince Sirivudh," the Royal Air Cambodge chairman, Vichit Ith,
    told Reuters, adding that the decision was taken out of consideration
    for the safety of the passengers. 

    Sirivudh, former foreign minister and half brother of King Norodom
    Sihanouk, had planned to fly home on Tuesday despite warnings of
    trouble if he returned but Hong Kong airline Dragonair refused to let
    him board their flight to Phnom Penh. 

    The prince told Reuters in the British colony on Wednesday that he was
    still trying to book a Thursday flight to the Cambodian capital on
    Thursday but he was not hopeful. 

    Sirivudh went into exile in December 1995 after being held for a month
    on charges of involvement in an alleged plot against the life of Hun
    Sen. 

    The prince, who was sentenced in absentia to 10 years imprisonment, has
    denied the charges and said he wanted to return to seek justice and was
    willing to spend time in jail or under house arrest. 

    REUTER 
7.1364IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:02119
    RTw  16-Apr-97 04:43    

    FEATURE-Theatre critics turned directors told to ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE-Theatre critics turned directors told to keep night jobs 

    By Jill Serjeant 

    LONDON, April 16 (Reuter) - Actor Valentine Pelka said it was like
    being shipwrecked on a desert island. And for once, the theatre critics
    agreed. 

    In an unusual experiment designed to cool the age-old animosity between
    actors and critics, four British theatre reviewers have crossed the
    footlights to direct a play and subjected their efforts to the mercy of
    their erstwhile victims. 

    "It has been a fairly monumental struggle. I doubt very much whether
    the four involved will want to do it again," said Ben Chamberlain,
    spokesman for the "Critics up for Review" season. 

    The idea of pitting the so-called "luvvies" of the theatre world
    against the men with the poison pens was dreamed up by theatre producer
    Lawrence Elman after a heated argument with Evening Standard critic
    Nicholas De Jongh. 

    Director Michael Bogdanov later weighed in with a ferocious newspaper
    attack on critics as "vicious, vituperative, vitriolic and toadying." 

    So it was a brave quartet of reviewers that turned up at London's
    fringe Battersea Arts Centre four weeks ago to start rehearsals of
    their own chosen plays with a cast of professional actors and
    designers. 

    De Jongh, directing a Jean Anouilh play, said it was one of the most
    awful ordeals of his life. 

    "It felt at times like a long stroll on a narrow tightrope with fear of
    being laughed at whenever I tumbled," he said. "Every critic should go
    through the fire of the experience." 

    The cast concurred. "We are a tribe on a desert island. He has got
    shipwrecked," said Valentine Pelka bluntly. 

    "It has been very interesting finding out how little critics know about
    getting a play on. On the whole, it has been a terrifying experience,"
    agreed actress Faith Brook. 

    KEEP YOUR NIGHT JOBS, CRITICS TOLD 

    The eminent cast of directors who swopped roles to review the results
    advised the critics not to give up their night jobs. 

    Stephen Daldry, director of London's experimental Royal Court theatre,
    conceded that De Jongh had "acquitted himself with credit."

    But in a sarcastic prelude relished by many an actor savaged by a bad
    review, Daldry confessed he was a terrible critic who had done
    everything wrong. 

    "I turned up on time and forgot to complain about my seat. I sat in the
    middle of a row and forgot to scribble furiously...I did not rush out
    of the auditorium at the curtain call pretending I had an urgent
    deadline to meet," he wrote. 

    Guardian newspaper critic Michael Billington had a similar baptism of
    fire. 

    "Michael Billington started his rehearsal in an absolute shambles of a
    room...and he thought 'My God this is impossible. We can't possibly
    rehearse in here.' But that's where artists who are developing have to
    work," said BAC director Tom Morris. 

    Playwright Mark Ravenhill described Billington's staging of a short
    Strindberg play as "pedestrian" and said the director struggled to keep
    up when his Harold Pinter production entered murky waters. 

    Former National Theatre chief Sir Peter Hall initially entered into the
    project with gusto. 

    But he soon had misgivings after other critics dismissed the venture as
    amateurish and struggling actors attacked it for diverting much-needed
    funds away from real theatre. 

    "I thought it would be fun -- a sort of world turned upside down
    experiment that might raise awareness and get space for the theatre,"
    Hall wrote in his review of Times critic Jeremy Kingston's production
    of a little-known Michael Tremblay piece. 

    But Hall regretfully did not like the play itself and gave Kingston
    only five out of 10. 

    "I would advise Mr Kingston not to give up his night job. And I'm sure
    he will give the same advice to me. It honestly wasn't worth all the
    effort," he wrote. 

    De Jongh said the experience had changed his outlook and made him more
    willing "to tap the milk of human kindness a little more frequently." 

    But the theatre world was mostly unmoved. 

    Bogdanov welcomed the fact that critics had been given a glimpse behind
    the curtains but said he had not changed his low opinion of them. 

    "My feeling about English theatre critics is exactly the same. They
    don't, a lot of them, have very much knowledge of what goes into the
    making a production," he said. 

    The Royal Court's Daldry resisted the temptation to wreak revenge but
    questioned whether the project was not merely "an exercise in parasitic
    media claptrap." 

    "Perhaps we should condemn this event as an obscenity given the
    difficulty genuine emerging directors have in getting their work
    resourced and seen," Daldry wrote.

    REUTER
7.1365IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:02143
    RTw  16-Apr-97 04:16    

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Election last chance for Labour and two-party system 

    By Robert Woodward 

    LONDON, April 16 (Reuter) - Behind the confident smiles, slick
    presentation and bravado of Britain's "New" Labour Party lies an
    unspoken fear that if it loses the May 1 election opposition will be
    its fate for ever. 

    "This really is their last chance, it's make or break time," said David
    Denver, senior lecturer in politics at Lancaster University. "I think
    it (defeat) would be such a shock it could destroy the party." 

    Defeat would not only shatter Labour and perhaps trigger a permanent
    split between the modernisers and left-wingers. It would also have a
    fundamental effect on British politics, effectively spelling the end of
    the two-party system. 

    "It would mean that the whole model on which democracy in this country
    is predicated -- that each party has a shot at government -- would be
    undermined," said Denver. 

    Tony Blair's task of taking Labour to victory has been compared to
    carrying a fragile piece of china across a crowded room. 

    Very few in the Labour Party, in opposition since 1979, will openly
    discuss the post-election future if May 2 dawns with John Major still
    in residence at 10, Downing Street. 

    But Labour member of parliament Clare Short summed up the silent
    concerns when she wrote to her constituents in late 1995. "Clearly if
    Labour were to fail to win in 1997 we would cease to be a credible
    party of national power." 

    Party officials address the possibility of defeat only obliquely,
    warning voters of the fundamental dangers of a fifth successive
    Conservative victory for the country's future. Blair says a fifth term
    "does not bear thinking about." 

    Short is among those now keeping quiet about their unease over Blair's
    ditching of left-wing ideals in favour of policies that often clone the
    Conservative approach. 

    ALL HOPES ON VICTORY 

    But Blair knows his restructuring of the party will only be seen as a
    winning gamble if victory is achieved at the election. 

    "If we blow this opportunity we blow our place in history, it's as
    simple as that. We have no intention of doing that, we have not come
    this far to do that," he said this month. 

    The overwhelming majority of the party agrees that power is everything,
    winning the election paramount and therefore silence among those who
    dissent from the new party line is essential. 

    "We don't want another day like Friday, 10 April, 1992. The day we woke
    in horror to the prospect of five more years of Tory (Conservative)
    government," Labour's deputy leader John Prescott said last year during
    a plea for party unity. 

    But if the election is lost, all hell could break loose as the Left
    vents its fury on the modernisers. "I wonder how many have faced up to
    it (the possibility), it would be a political disaster for Labour,"
    Denver said. "If they lose from here I can see the party splitting
    fairly decisively." 

    Labour's move to the right was started by Blair's predecessor Neil
    Kinnock, but voters could not bring themselves to hand power to Labour
    in 1992. Analysts said Major's shock victory then placed a question
    mark over the two-party system. 

    "It may be that the 1992 election was a signal that the long historical
    era in which the two major parties in Britain alternated reasonably
    frequently in office had finally come to an end," Anthony King,
    professor of politics at Essex University wrote in a review of the 1992
    election. 

    "The pendulum seemed to have stopped swinging." Labour became the first
    major party since World War Two to fail to poll as much as 40 percent
    of the vote in six consecutive elections. 

    The Conservatives have been in government for around 75 percent of the
    period from 1918 to 1997 and the present period of unbroken rule is the
    longest by a single party since 1832. 

    This has persuaded many analysts to change their description of the
    political system from "two-party" to "dominant party." Others prefer to
    say Britain now has a natural party of government and a natural party
    of opposition. 

    LABOUR DEFEAT WOULD CHANGE POLITICAL LANDCAPE - ANALYSTS 

    Whatever their view, most analysts believe a Labour defeat would
    fundamentally change the political landscape. Lord Jenkins, a former
    Labour cabinet minister, believes it would "fatally undermine the
    assumptions of the British constitution." 

    "If the Conservatives were to win again, it would confirm that British
    democracy is a sham -- that we live in effect in a one-party state,"
    said the left-leaning Observer newspaper. 

    Analysts outside the pro-Conservative circle believe a record fifth
    successive victory could lead many Britons to feel disenfranchised and
    turn away from political involvement. 

    In the last four elections, the Conservatives have not topped 45
    percent of the votes cast. 

    Nationalists in Scotland, where 74 percent of voters did not vote
    Conservative in 1992, have said they would no longer look to the ballot
    box to achieve their demands for greater autonomy. 

    One government minister has spoken of the "real prospect" of civil
    unrest if the Conservatives win again. 

    "It would be very difficult to stop the country drifting into a form of
    extreme right-wing politics, which would accentuate all the existing
    social and economic problems," Blair said. 

    Some analysts agree. They point to the accusations of political,
    financial and sexual "sleaze" that have dogged Major's government since
    1992 as clear signs that the Conservatives already believe they are
    untouchable. 

    "You can't have a system where one party wins all the time. as was
    shown in Japan. It leads to corruption, arrogance, and the alienation
    of minorities," says Denver. Labour says that the Conservative
    government could become increasingly authoritarian, contemptuous of
    democracy and out of touch. Power would become self-justifying.
    "Already we see a government so used to power that they no longer can
    tell the dividing line between the national interest and party
    advantage. They have centralised power in their own hands," says
    Labour's foreign affairs spokesman Robin Cook. 

    Labour thus believes it would not only be good for the party but also
    for the country for Blair to win on May 

    REUTER
7.1366IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0281
    RTw  15-Apr-97 20:44    

    Albania says pyramid schemes worth half of GDP

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Ashley Seager 

    LONDON, April 15 (Reuter) - Albanian finance minister Arben Malaj on
    Tuesday said "pyramid" savings schemes, the recent collapse of which
    sparked country-wide violence, were worth about half the impoverished
    country's national income. 

    Gross domestic product in the country of 3.2 million people was $2.3
    billion in 1996, he said, adding that the pyramid schemes had probably
    attracted $1-1.2 billion. 

    "Our most important problem is the presence of these schemes. They are
    under control of a parliamentary committee but there is no accurate
    system of calculating their value. But it is probably $1-1.2 billion,"
    Malaj said at the annual meeting of the European Bank for
    Reconstruction and Development. 

    About 300 people have died in months of violence since the collapse of
    the get-rich-quick pyramid schemes which wiped out the life savings of
    many ordinary people. 

    "Pyramid schemes are the most serious obstacle to a modern banking
    system because they are a most unfair competitor to banks. They are
    also the cause of a lot of social tension," Malaj said. "We are
    determined to stop them." 

    Edmond Leka, head of economic aid and development for Albania's council
    of ministers, said the orgy of violence which had swept through the
    country had blown the economy off its course of robust growth. 

    "All estimates are of course very preliminary but we think GDP will
    fall by between three and seven percent this year." 

    The implementation of market-oriented reforms in the wake of the
    collapse of communism in the early 1990s had led to gross domestic
    product (GDP) growth of around 10 percent a year in 1993 to 1995 and
    5.5 percent in 1996, Malaj said. 

    Economists have warned that Albania, already one of Europe's poorest
    countries, risks lurching from political to economic crisis if it does
    not quickly restore order. 

    Malaj hoped the social unrest would diminish in the wake of elections
    scheduled for June. This should allow international bodies and
    investors to resume projects in Albania which have been scaled down or
    suspended as a result of the fighting. 

    He called for a meeting with donors and international investors as soon
    as possible in a bid to kick-start an economy throttled by months of
    anarchy. 

    He said he had held recent meetings with the International Monetary
    Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. 

    "We have it confirmed from Italy that it will invite donors, possible
    donors and others to an international conference," he said, but did not
    specify the likely timing of the meeting. 

    An Italian-led multinational force, 6,000 strong, began deploying in
    Albania on Tuesday to protect aid convoys. 

    But Malaj said there were signs that normal civic life was returning to
    the country. "Soon Albania will be an attractive country for
    investors." 

    The government would give priority to encouraging foreign investment in
    the oil and gas sector, chromium mining, tourism, textiles, agriculture
    and infrastructure, he said. 

    Private foreign investment reached $95 million at the end of last year
    from $45 million three years earlier, Malaj said, adding Albania had
    enjoyed good support from international investors since it embarked on
    the path of reform in 199

    REUTER
7.1367IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0263
    RTos 15-Apr-97 18:11    

    Study: Girls Dieting For Popularity

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON (Reuter) - Playmates and mothers are joining forces to make
    girls as young as nine go on diets in a bid for popularity, British
    researchers said Tuesday. 

    Two studies presented to the Third London International Conference on
    Eating Disorders showed that girls who are just a little heavier than
    their peers are much less popular -- and their mothers may be
    encouraging them to diet to remedy this. 

    Andrew Hill of the University of Leeds medical school and Robert
    Phillips of St Lukes Hospital in Huddersfield surveyed 314 nine- and
    10-year-old girls and found their suspicions about playground
    prejudices were true. 

    "It's the heavier girls who are least popular," Hill said. 

    Although none of the girls was clinically obese, and most did not even
    look fat, the heavier they were, the more likely they were to be on a
    diet. "They are heavier and they feel heavier and they don't like it,"
    Hill said. 

    Hill and Phillips questioned the girls at length about whether they
    thought they were popular. "One of the questions was which girls in
    your class would you most like to play with at break-time?'," Phillips
    said. Perception corresponded to reality, they said. The girls who were
    heavier and who dieted were indeed less popular. 

    "Children are extremely aware of their place in the social world,"
    Phillips said in an interview before the conference, sponsored by the
    Great Ormond Street Hospital. 

    "You get a picture of some social isolation. They don't feel
    attractive...in a culture which is invites increasing attractiveness by
    controlling size and weight," Hill added. 

    They turned to the solution offered by media and, perhaps, their
    mothers -- dieting. 

    He said studies were showing similar patterns across countries like
    Britain, the United States and Australia. 

    A second study showed mothers could play a role in their childrens'
    dieting. Mothers who dieted and were concerned about their weight also
    urged daughters whom they saw as fat to diet. Hill said the parents,
    acutely aware of society's bias against obesity, probably just wanted
    what was best for their daughters. "They know it will benefit them in
    the long run." 

    But he said children's body shapes could change radically in puberty
    and adolescence and dieting was not good for them. 

    Experts at the conference said the findings, combined with many others,
    showed that self-esteem was at the root of problems like anorexia, in
    which mostly young women starve themselves, and bulimia, when sufferers
    binge and then vomit. 

    REUTER
7.1368IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0281
    RTw  15-Apr-97 14:14    

    Consumers spot folly in fat-reduced food -experts

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, April 15 (Reuter) - Consumers in the developed world are
    increasingly demanding fat-free foods but are starting to reject these
    if they don't help people lose weight, experts told a London conference
    on Tuesday. 

    Michael Lindley, founder of Lintech, a British consultancy on new
    products, said U.S. buyers were starting to show their disappointment
    at the tills. 

    "The percentage of customers who report buying reduced-fat or low-fat
    products dropped almost five percent in 1996; Nabisco's market-leading
    SnackWells brand sales fell by over 30 percent in the first part of
    1996," he told the conference, organised by IBC. 

    This was in part because fat-free does not mean low-calorie, he said --
    and people noticed when they stepped on the scales. 

    U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics show that the percentage of
    Americans who are overweight had risen from 22 to 30 percent, with
    average weight up five kg (11 pounds). 

    Products that wanted to make it in the marketplace would have to be
    tasty, low fat and low-calorie, Lindley said. "In a sense, Darwinian
    evolutionary theory will prevail and only the 'fittest' reduced-fat
    foods will survive." 

    Bruce Silverglade, director of legal affairs at the centre for Science
    in the Public Interest, said the 1990 U.S. Nutrition Labelling and
    Education Act, requiring all food products to carry a breakdown of fat,
    calories and other nutritional information, had helped generate new
    faith in "healthy" food. 

    Silverglade said that despite the evident disappoihtment of consumers,
    companies had introducdd more than 2,000 new low or reduced-fat
    products were introduced in 1996. 

    "The demand for lower-fat foods, for example, has led ice cream
    manufacturers such as Haagen-Dazs and Ben & Jerry's to introduce new
    fat-free products," he said. 

    "Planter's has introduced a new reduced-fat peanut. There are also
    dozens of low-fat peanut butters, hot dogs, cheeses, cookies and salad
    dressings now on the market." 

    He concluded: "The implications for food marketers are clear -- dietary
    patterns are changing, consumers around the world are increasingly
    saying they care about nutrition and they want the food industry to
    respond to their concerns." 

    Europe was still a growing market, Lindley said. 

    "The many different fat-reduced snack products in the market today are
    a powerful testament to consumer demand in Europe for fat-reduced
    foods," he said. 

    That could be good news for Olestra, Procter & Gamble's chemically
    synthesised fat-replacement product, which has not yet been approved
    for use in Europe. 

    "It would not be surprising to see Olestra-containing products
    appearing on our supermarket shelves very soon after regulatory
    approval here," he said. 

    He said Procter & Gamble had re-formulated Olestra so it was now partly
    solid at body temperature -- getting around the highly publicised
    problem of anal leakage'. 

    Raisio's Benecol, a cholesterol-lowering margarine made from pine
    sterols, was another possible hit. Now available only in Finland,
    licenses are being sought for Sweden, elsewhere in Europe and the
    United States. 

    REUTER
7.1369IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0231
    AP 16-Apr-1997 0:49 EDT   REF5939

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    School Sex Results in Suspensions

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Both the principal and a teacher at a school where
    unsupervised fourth-graders engaged in sexual acts have been put on
    administrative leave. 

    Loretta Hardge, a spokeswoman for schools Chief Executive Julius
    Becton, said Tuesday that Ronald Parker, principal of the Martha H.
    Winston Educational Center, will remain on leave while administrators
    review how he handled the aftermath of the April 7 incident. 

    Charles Mayo, the teacher in charge of the students involved, already
    had been placed on administrative leave. 

    Becton said he will not announce disciplinary measures against Parker
    and Mayo until they have been given a chance to respond to accusations
    against them. Mayor Marion Barry has defended the principal but said
    the teacher should be fired. 

    The incident occurred after Mayo sent a girl and two boys into an
    adjacent "timeout" room for being disruptive. Six other students also
    got into the room, officials said. 

    Parker concluded from his own investigation that the students were
    "experimenting sexually" and that the activities were consensual. Some
    parents disputed that assessment, saying their daughters had been
    threatened and forced to disrobe. 
7.1370IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0253
    AP 16-Apr-1997 0:08 EDT   REF5522

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FBI Report Knocks Unabomber Case

    By JOHN HOWARD

    Associated Press Writer

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- A Justice Department report on the FBI crime
    lab is critical of a key scientist's work on the Unabomber
    investigation, and urges a review of his results before the defendant's
    trial. 

    The investigation concluded that concerns about the work of laboratory
    examiner Terry Rudolph "appear, in several instances, to be
    well-founded," the department's inspector general said Tuesday. 

    Inspector General Michael Bromwich concluded in his report that
    Rudolph's work on a number of Unabomber explosions was flawed, poorly
    documented and incomplete, including the Dec. 11, 1985, blast at a
    Sacramento computer rental store that killed a store owner. 

    "As a result, we concluded that a qualified explosives examiner should
    review all of Rudolph's work on UNABOM before it is used further in the
    case," the Justice Department said. 

    Robert Cleary, lead prosecutor in the Unabomber case, told the
    inspector general he did not plan to rely on any evidence processed by
    Rudolph and would use information from other experts and outside labs. 

    Rudolph has an unlisted telephone number and could not be reached for
    comment. Attorney General Janet Reno said Tuesday that the lab was
    still "capable of performing its mission." 

    Theodore Kaczynski, 54, a former Berkeley math professor, faces a
    10-count federal indictment in connection with four Unabomber
    explosions that killed two people and injured two others. He could face
    the death penalty if convicted; his trial is scheduled to begin Nov.
    12. 

    He also been indicted in New Jersey in a fatal bombing there. He has
    pleaded innocent to all charges. 

    The case involves thousands of pages of documents, a myriad of items
    seized from Kaczynski's Montana cabin, a timetable stretching nearly
    two decades and detailed DNA analyses. 

    Federal defender Quin Denvir, Kaczynski's court-appointed lawyer, said
    he was would not speculate "what the impact would be." 

    "We'll see if it has any relationship to the case at all," he said. 
7.1371IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0271
    AP 15-Apr-1997 21:48 EDT   REF5280

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Privates Testify in Sex Case

    By BART JANSEN

    Associated Press Writer

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- A female private testified Tuesday
    that Staff Sgt. Delmar Simpson kissed her once uninvited and asked to
    have sex with her and her roommate at the same time. 

    On another occasion, the 21-year-old woman said Simpson "flung her"
    from her top bunkbed to her roommate's floor-level bed and sat down
    between them. 

    "He put his arms around us and said 'It's so nice to be in bed with
    both of you,"' she said. "I was pretty shocked." 

    But she conceded to a defense lawyer that she was giggling at the time
    and said her roommate laughed. 

    Two other female privates testified Tuesday. 

    A 21-year-old specialist said Simpson cornered her in his office and
    tried to kiss her, but that she resisted his advances and left. And
    another specialist said Simpson twice offered her oral sex. "It made me
    sick to my stomach," she told prosecutor Capt. Theresa Gallagher. 

    Simpson's trial is the first stemming from the Army's investigation
    into a sex scandal at the Aberdeen weapons-testing and training center
    30 miles northeast of Baltimore. After that scandal came to light in
    November, the Army began an investigation of sexual misconduct at bases
    around the world. 

    The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has
    accused the Army of targeting black drill sergeants in the case -- all
    12 Aberdeen soldiers charged so far are black and most of the alleged
    victims are white. 

    Five other white female recruits have said investigators unsuccessfully
    pressured them to accuse their black superiors of rape. 

    Army officials have denied race was a factor in their investigation. 

    Earlier in the day, a 21-year-old private under cross-examination was
    confronted with a statement she gave investigators last year saying
    Simpson summoned her to his barracks office in 1995 before lights out,
    pulled her shorts completely off and raped her. 

    On the stand Monday, she testified Simpson ordered her to his office
    after lights out, pulled her shorts down and raped her. 

    Noting the differences, Brady handed the private the investigative
    statement and asked: "It's not true, is it?" 

    "Not that part. No, sir," she replied. 

    Brady also noted that the woman faced a possible "other than honorable"
    discharge in an unrelated case of being absent without leave, or AWOL.
    The private denied that anyone offered her leniency in exchange for her
    testimony against Simpson. 

    It was not clear Tuesday if the Army will pursue the charge; calls to
    Aberdeen spokesman John Yaquiant were not answered. 

    Simpson is charged with 58 crimes, including 19 rape counts involving
    six women from his former company. He could be sentenced to life in
    prison for a rape conviction. 
7.1372IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0255
    AP 15-Apr-1997 21:20 EDT   REF5241

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ramsey Mom's Handwriting Probed

    By JENNIFER MEARS

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Three days after she submitted a fourth handwriting
    sample, the mother of slain 6-year-old beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey was
    asked Tuesday to provide a fifth one. 

    Boulder District Attorney Alex Hunter would not elaborate on why a
    fifth sample was requested. 

    "Some others have been asked for more than one, but I don't want to go
    into it more than that," he said. 

    Police spokeswoman Leslie Aaholm said reasons for the additional sample
    from Patsy Ramsey were outlined in their request to Ramsey lawyers. "I
    would guarantee they are not being whimsical in this request," she
    said. 

    Lawyers for the Ramsey family "are considering the appropriateness of
    the request," said Rachelle Zimmer, a family spokeswoman said. 

    JonBenet was found strangled in the basement of the family's home on
    Dec. 26, eight hours after Mrs. Ramsey found a ransom note demanding
    $118,000 for the return of her daughter. 

    Authorities are studying the writing samples to try to determine who
    wrote the note. Handwriting experts have concluded that JonBenet's
    father, John Ramsey, did not write it, according to published reports. 

    Mrs. Ramsey immediately agreed to supply the fourth handwriting sample
    when asked last week. She provided a left-handed sample during a nearly
    two-hour session with authorities Saturday, The Denver Post reported.
    Mrs. Ramsey is right-handed. 

    The fifth sample will be provided "under the same circumstances, if
    it's granted," Hunter said. 

    Mrs. Ramsey provided a third handwriting sample last month after police
    decided the first two submissions were suspect because she was taking
    medication, Aaholm said earlier. 

    Christopher Mueller, a law professor at the University of Colorado
    specializing in evidence, said, "They must believe that there is some
    possibility that (Mrs. Ramsey) authored the note, but disguised her
    handwriting in some way." 

    "If they checked every conceivable way that she could have authored
    something they will reach a more clear-cut conclusion," he said. 
7.1373IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0396
    AP 15-Apr-1997 18:36 EDT   REF5978

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Late Author Dorris Faced Sex Probe

    By KATHARINE WEBSTER

    Associated Press Writer

    CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- Award-winning author Michael Dorris was facing a
    child sex-abuse investigation in Minneapolis when he committed suicide
    last week. 

    Minneapolis police would not give details of the allegations, and
    Jennifer Fling, spokeswoman for the Hennepin County attorney's office,
    said the police file would become public after the case is closed,
    probably within a week. Closing a case is routine when a suspect dies. 

    The 52-year-old writer was found dead Friday in a Concord motel room,
    where he had checked in under an assumed name. Police said he took
    over-the-counter sleeping pills, drank vodka and suffocated himself
    with a plastic bag, leaving a note that said he would be "peaceful at
    last." 

    A close friend said the allegations were false and said Dorris
    committed suicide because he hoped to head off a "feeding frenzy" by
    law enforcement officials and the media. 

    The day he learned of the accusations, "He called me and said, 'My life
    is over,"' Douglas Foster, former editor of Mother Jones magazine, said
    in a telephone interview from Berkeley, Calif. 

    "He didn't know how to fight (the allegations) without making things
    worse," Foster said. "And he had a realistic idea that no matter how
    baseless the allegations were, they were going to have a strong
    negative effect on his family and his work," Foster said. 

    Dorris' attorney, Douglas A. Kelley, cautioned that Dorris had not been
    charged with a crime. 

    "To speculate on any wrongdoing by Mr. Dorris is cruel and
    inappropriate, bringing only added sorrow to a family that has suffered
    a terrible loss," he said in Minneapolis. 

    Dorris' estranged wife, novelist and poet Louise Erdrich, would not
    discuss the child-sex allegations. The couple had been separated for
    about a year. 

    "Michael did a huge amount of good in the world. He also suffered from
    severe depressions," she told the Star Tribune in Minneapolis. "I hope
    in his way he helps people understand that it's important to get help
    and have hope." 

    Dorris, a professor on leave from Dartmouth College, wrote several
    acclaimed novels and won a 1989 National Book Critics Circle Award for
    "The Broken Cord," his account of his adopted son's struggle with fetal
    alcohol syndrome. 

    In 1971, he became one of the first single men allowed to adopt a
    child. He went on to adopt two more, and later had three children with
    Erdrich. 

    Dorris, who was part American Indian, founded Dartmouth's Native
    American Studies department in 1972 and headed it until 1985. Many of
    his books dealt with Indian themes. 

    "The Broken Cord" was an account of his son Abel's struggles to perform
    the most basic tasks because of the brain damage caused by his Sioux
    mother's drinking. Colleagues said he did more than anyone to expose
    the lasting damage to children when their mothers drink during
    pregnancy. 

    Police said Dorris had made a suicide attempt at his home in Cornish on
    March 29. 

    That time, he called a friend in California and told him he had
    "started the kit," apparently referring to the combination of pills,
    alcohol and suffocation, and the friend called state police, said
    Cornish Police Chief Joe Osgood. 

    Dorris was taken to a hospital, where his stomach was pumped and he was
    kept under observation. Several days later, he was admitted to a
    Vermont mental health center. On Thursday, he left the center, rented a
    car and drove to Concord, and checked into the motel where he committed
    suicide. 

    Dorris' use of pills, vodka and suffocation bore a resemblance to last
    month's mass suicide by 39 Heaven's Gate cult members who believed they
    were going to be taken on board a spaceship trailing the Hale-Bopp
    Comet. 

    "What we're finally going to get out of the 39 who joined Hale-Bopp is
    how to do ourselves in," said Martin Cruz Smith, author of the Russian
    detective novels "Red Square" and "Gorky Park" and a friend of Dorris.

7.1374IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:03118
    AP 16-Apr-1997 0:33 EDT   REF5669

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fire Ravages Mideast Pilgrim Camp

    MINA, Saudi Arabia (AP) -- Fires driven by high winds tore through a
    sprawling, overcrowded tent city Tuesday, trapping and killing pilgrims
    gathered for a sacred Islamic ritual. The official death toll was 217,
    but witnesses said at least 300 died. 

    Saudi Arabia said more than 1,290 pilgrims were injured in the fire,
    which witnesses blamed on exploding canisters of cooking gas. 

    "We are facing a chaotic situation here," M.H. Ansari, the Indian
    ambassador, was quoted as saying by Press Trust of India. 

    He said 100 Indians were killed in the fire. Most of the other victims
    were believed to be Pakistanis and Bangladeshis, many of them elderly,
    witnesses told The Associated Press. Some were trampled to death as
    pilgrims fled the fire. 

    "Men panicked and ran in every direction," said an Indian pilgrim who
    spoke to the AP by telephone and identified himself only as Irfan. 

    Three hundred fire engines helped battle the blaze, and helicopters
    dropped loads of water, witnesses said. The fire was brought under
    control in about three hours. 

    Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims were stranded after the fire
    destroyed an estimated 70,000 tents, which they use for shelter in the
    final days of the Hajj. Civil defense forces from Mecca and nearby
    Jiddah and Taif rushed to the scene, handing out tents and supplies. 

    Prince Majid bin Abdul Aziz, the royal family's representative in
    Mecca, ordered that new tents be provided to all pilgrims affected by
    the fire, Saudi television reported. 

    King Fahd, the Saudi monarch, expressed his sorrow for the victims and
    their relatives and friends. "I ask that God gives them patience to
    cope," he was quoted by the Saudi Press Agency as saying. 

    In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed "great
    sadness" over the pilgrims' deaths. 

    President Clinton was "deeply saddened" by the tragedy. "I have sent
    condolences to King Fahd on behalf of the American people, and extend
    our deepest sympathy to the families of those who were killed or
    injured in the fire," he said. 

    The fire erupted shortly before noon as Muslims gathered for the hajj,
    or pilgrimage, and were beginning to move to Mount Arafat, where the
    Prophet Mohammed delivered his final sermon in the seventh century.

    There, 2 million Muslims will stand together in prayer Wednesday in the
    climax of the pilgrimage to the Muslim holy sites. 

    The hajj has been the scene of several recent tragedies, including the
    deaths of 1,426 people in a 1990 stampede. 

    Less than an hour before the fire began Tuesday, security forces had
    thrown up a cordon around the entire plain, closing it to new arrivals
    to stop further overcrowding, witnesses said. 

    The fire was started by exploding gas cylinders, which pilgrims use for
    cooking in the tents, they said. 

    Fanned by winds of nearly 40 mph, it swept across the plain and quickly
    spread chaos through the camp, crammed with row after row of white
    tents. 

    The injured were carried away on stretchers and in people's arms, while
    others wearing white robes for the pilgrimage fled along smoke-filled
    alleys between the tents. 

    Witnesses said they had seen hundreds of bodies. Saudi newspaper
    reporters who visited the site said at least 300 had died, most of them
    trampled underfoot in the pandemonium. 

    Hours later, a cloud of smoke still hung over the encampment. 

    By Tuesday afternoon, as temperatures soared to 104 degrees, the desert
    plain was a scene of devastation. Pilgrims wandered amid the smoldering
    remains of tents, searching for relatives and friends. 

    Cleanup operations were launched quickly, with workers sweeping away
    the charred remains of hundreds of air conditioners, mattresses and
    burned pages of the Koran, Islam's holy book. 

    Pakistan set up a 24-hour emergency number to field calls from
    relatives. 

    Every Muslim who can afford it must perform the pilgrimage once in a
    lifetime. Every year, the hajj brings together one of the largest
    groups of people in a single place anywhere in the world. 

    Saudi Arabia has spent billions of dollars in upgrading hajj facilities
    to ensure the comfort and safety of the pilgrims. It takes deep pride
    in its ability to maintain order during the huge gathering and has
    created a special cabinet portfolio for running hajj affairs. 

    But the ritual has often been overshadowed by tragedies and
    disturbances stemming from political rivalries. 

    Two years ago, a fire started by a gas stove in Mina destroyed scores
    of tents, but no casualties were reported. 

    In 1994, 270 pilgrims, most of them Indonesian, were killed in a
    stampede as worshipers surged toward a cavern for the symbolic ritual
    of "stoning the devil." 

    In 1987, 402 people, mostly Iranian pilgrims, were killed and 649
    wounded in Mecca when Saudi security forces clashed with Iranians
    staging anti-U.S. demonstrations. 

    Iranians insist on holding the demonstrations every year, defying a
    Saudi ban. Iran said it had staged the protest Sunday in Mecca. There
    were no reports of violence. 
7.1375IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0353
    AP 15-Apr-1997 22:55 EDT   REF5348

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mir Gets Fix, But Not Out of Woods

    By NATASHA ALOVA

    Associated Press Writer

    MOSCOW (AP) -- The Russian-American crew aboard the aging Mir space
    station has fixed a broken oxygen generator but continued to search
    Tuesday for a leak in the station's cooling system. 

    The cosmonauts used parts recently delivered by a cargo spaceship to
    repair one of the station's two oxygen generators, which broke down
    last month, Russian Space Mission Control spokesman Valery Lyndin told
    The Associated Press on Tuesday. 

    The Mir, an 11-year-old station designed to last only five years, has
    experienced a number of serious malfunctions: In addition to the oxygen
    generator failure, there was a fire in February and the cooling system
    leak. 

    The cosmonauts have been searching for several days for the leak, which
    caused the main living module to overheat to about 97 degrees last
    week. The temperature since has stabilized at an almost-normal 82
    degrees. 

    Lyndin said locating the leak is difficult. 

    "Imagine loops that go all round behind the walls of the module --
    that's where the cooling liquid is leaking from. It's like finding one
    spot inside your living room walls." 

    Two cosmonauts, Vasily Tsibliev and Alexander Lazutkin, and NASA
    astronaut Jerry Linenger did the repairs without interrupting scheduled
    experiments, Lyndin said. 

    Linenger, the fourth American to live on Mir, arrived in January aboard
    the space shuttle Atlantis, which is supposed to return for him in
    mid-May. 

    The two cosmonauts will remain in orbit until Aug. 5, six weeks longer
    than originally planned, because of a shortage of Russian booster
    rockets to launch the station's next crew. 

    The Mir, presently the world's only manned space station, is to be
    replaced by a Russian-American space station. 

    Russia has delayed a critical piece of the new station because of the
    costs, but President Boris Yeltsin promised last week that funding
    would be resumed. 
7.1376IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0390
    AP 15-Apr-1997 15:02 EDT   REF5487

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Belgium Report Condemns Police

    By RAF CASERT

    Associated Press Writer

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- Police blunders, inaction and perhaps even
    complicity with suspects allowed known child sex-offenders to kidnap
    and kill at least five girls, according to a parliamentary commission
    that called Tuesday for an overhaul of Belgium's justice system. 

    In its 310-page report, the commission said police were negligent, and
    that proper investigative work could have saved at least some of the
    girls. A half-dozen girls remain missing and are among the cases that
    have outraged Belgians as the extent of bungling has emerged. 

    "If the investigation had been properly carried out, then the children
    may well have been alive now," commission member Nathalie de T'Serclaes
    said. 

    Among the lengthy list of police and judicial blunders: Twice searching
    a cellar -- and hearing girls' voices -- but not realizing children
    were imprisoned there; accepting a key suspect's explanation that he
    was putting a new drainage system in his cellar, not building a
    dungeon; failing to heed a warning from the suspect's mother that her
    son may have been involved, and treating the missing girls' parents as
    annoyances. 

    The commission uncovered so much disturbing evidence that its mandate
    has been extended until September to further investigate whether
    suspects received official protection. 

    "The commission can only conclude that there are indications of
    possible protection" of suspects including convicted child-rapist Marc
    Dutroux, it said in the report. 

    Last August, Dutroux led police to 8-year-old Julie Lejeune's body and
    the bodies of three other girls who had disappeared about a year
    earlier. Two other kidnap victims were found alive in a dungeon Dutroux
    dug at his home. 

    Out on parole, he allegedly kept Julie and her friend, Melissa Russo,
    also 8, for months before they starved to death in the dungeon.
    Dutroux, 39, is jailed and awaiting trial. The date has not been set. 

    Last month, police arrested Patrick Derochette, a 33-year-old mechanic
    and also a known child-abuser. He has admitted to murdering the fifth
    girl, whose body was found in the garage where he worked. 

    The 15-member commission has investigated authorities involved with the
    cases, which began in August 1992, questioning police, magistrates and
    the victims' parents. 

    The conclusions presented Tuesday included calls for an improved police
    command structure and a streamlining of the various police and gendarme
    agencies. These changes, it said, would provide more efficiency and
    prevent breakdowns in communication between investigative branches. 

    With Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene listening to the conclusions being
    read in the assembly, the commission scolded politicians for not doing
    enough to ensure a proper justice system. 

    "The commission can only conclude that politics has had insufficient
    attention for justice," the commission said in the report. 

    The commission, which includes representatives of all of Belgium's
    major parties, unanimously approved recommendations to make the
    improvements outlined in its report. 

    "I will only be happy when the recommendations become law," said
    chairman Marc Verwilghen. The full parliament was expected to debate
    them Thursday and Friday. 

    Justice Minister Stefaan De Clerck said he will follow the commission's
    recommendations. 

    For Belgians, the conclusions provided affirmation that their
    frustration was justified. It peaked last year when a tide of protests
    culminated in an Oct. 20 rally where more than a quarter-million people
    took to the streets of Brussels to demand drastic changes to the
    justice system. 

    "What the commission has done is make public what we have been saying
    since the disappearance of our children," said Jean-Denis Lejeune,
    Julie's father. "It's clear there are people in the police and justice
    departments who are not worthy of working there." 
7.1377IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0336
    AP 15-Apr-1997 16:50 EDT   REF5673

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Web Site Helps Sort Out Health Care

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A new Internet site is up and running to help
    consumers sort through health information in cyberspace. 

    The site connects users with more than 550 Web sites created by the
    government and nonprofit organizations and answers frequently asked
    questions about 20 prominent health topics. 

    The site should aid consumers, who are taking an increasingly active
    role in their health care, Vice President Al Gore said in a statement
    Tuesday. "More and more, they are turning to the Internet to get the
    health-related information they need." 

    The information will arm patients with knowledge of use when decisions
    are being made, promoters said. 

    "Under managed care, patients and their families must take more
    responsibility and participate more actively in decision-making about
    prevention and treatment," a fact sheet said. 

    A search function points users to information ranging from AIDS and
    adoption to smoking and substance abuse. For instance, the section on
    AIDS explains how HIV is transmitted. The section on breast cancer
    lists treatment options and explains how clinical trials operate. 

    Users can also be linked to online discussion groups on a variety of
    topics. 

    ------ 

    The Internet address is http://www.healthfinder.gov 
7.1378IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 16 1997 12:0374
    AP 15-Apr-1997 16:44 EDT   REF5661

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Placebo Effect Can Last

    By JANET McCONNAUGHEY

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The placebo effect is not just a one-shot or even a
    20-pill phenomenon: The brain's power to make us feel better can last
    for years. 

    A study found that flour pills used to test a drug for enlarged
    prostates were so effective that some men wanted to keep taking them
    after the two-year test was over -- even though their condition, by at
    least one measure, was worse. 

    Doctors have long recognized that many patients feel better just
    knowing they are being treated. Because of this "placebo effect," drugs
    are routinely tested against placebos, which look like medicine but
    contain no medically active ingredients. Test subjects taking placebos
    don't know it. 

    The new study, conducted at 28 centers in Canada, involved 613 patients
    who were given either the Merck & Co. drug finasteride or a placebo. 

    "One of the things we noted was that the patients ... were continuing
    to do very well on placebo," said Dr. J. Curtis Nickel, a professor of
    urology at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, and lead author of
    the study. "Some didn't want to stop taking the pills." 

    So he and other doctors took a look at the 303 men who had been given
    flour pills. It wasn't just that they felt better; they really were
    doing better. While an enlarged prostate can cause weak urine flow, the
    men's urine truly flowed faster into a computerized meter. 

    However, while the finasteride-treated prostates shrank more than 21
    percent, the placebo prostates grew an average of 8.4 percent. 

    "That's remarkable. It did not really change the direction of the
    disease. It just changed one of those indicators," said William Jarvis,
    who has tracked placebos for 25 years as a professor of preventive
    medicine at Loma Linda University and president of the National Council
    Against Health Fraud. 

    Nickel released the findings Tuesday at a meeting of the American
    Urological Association. 

    Nickel said men with normal or small prostate glands did much better on
    placebos than those with larger glands. Since finasteride shrinks the
    prostate, it works best in men with large prostates to begin with, he
    said. 

    He said he now is willing to prescribe herbal extracts for patients who
    insist on treatment but whose symptoms don't seem serious enough to him
    to require expensive drugs. 

    "I never before believed in prescribing things I didn't believe
    worked," he said. "Now I have proof that -- particularly in this
    disease -- these type extracts, homeopathic extracts, really do work.
    And they work for a long time and in a majority of patients." 

    Jarvis disagreed over herbal extracts. 

    "I think the public already has more faith in them than they should
    have. It's an industry that is essentially not meeting the standards of
    consumer protection that people have come to expect from medicine," he
    said. 

    But he said he would support prescribing flour pills, but that became
    impractical when Medicare stopped paying for placebos about 15 years
    ago. 
7.1379IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:32108
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 17-Apr-1997 1:05 EDT   REF5866

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, April 17, 1997
   
    GINGRICH-ETHICS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- GOP sources say House Speaker Newt Gingrich has
    decided to pay his entire $300,000 ethics penalty from personal funds
    and will take out a loan to do so. Gingrich is expected to discuss his
    decision at a closed-door meeting with fellow Republican lawmakers
    Thursday, then make a public statement. Tapping campaign funds or
    soliciting donations from supporters would be legal, but several
    Republicans told Gingrich he risked a career-ending controversy if he
    didn't make the payment from personal funds. 
   
    TOBACCO SETTLEMENT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The two biggest U.S. tobacco firms seem willing to cut
    their legal losses for up to $300 billion and reduce ads -- if the
    government backs off its threat to regulate nicotine. It was disclosed
    Wednesday that RJR Nabisco and Philip Morris are in early talks with
    the attorneys general of eight states in hopes of winning blanket
    protection from lawsuits over smoking-related health problems. 
   
    FAMILY-SLAIN 

    VISTA, Calif. (AP) -- A 16-year-old Nevada boy accused of killing five
    members of his family last year and setting fires to cover it up has
    changed his plea to guilty. Joshua Jenkins' trial had been scheduled to
    begin Thursday, but a judge will now decide whether Joshua Jenkins was
    sane at the time of the killings. Jenkins was 15 when he was accused of
    killing his adoptive parents and his grandparents by hitting them in
    the head with a hammer and stabbing them. The next day, he allegedly
    took his 10-year-old sister to buy an ax and killed her with it. 
   
    KOREA-TALKS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The United States and South Korea report "encouraging
    progress" in talks with North Korea, but say they received no firm
    commitment to accept an offer of four-power negotiations to establish
    peace on the Korean peninsula. The three sides agreed to continue talks
    Friday. They hope the North Koreans will accept an offer made one year
    ago, for negotiations to formally end the state of war that has existed
    since the 1950-53 Korean War. China would join those negotiations. 
   
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has
    rejected a proposal from U.S. mediator Dennis Ross to halt a
    controversial housing project for Jews in east Jerusalem. Netanyahu
    said Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat must first prove that he is
    fighting terrorism seriously, radio reports said. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- The judge in the Oklahoma City bombing trial has
    extended his gag order beyond jury selection, barring participants from
    commenting publicly throughout the case against Timothy McVeigh. The
    decree from U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch puts into writing a
    warning he had given to attorneys before jury selection began on March
    31. The judge said he was worried members of the jury pool, although
    warned that media accounts may be inaccurate, could still give credence
    to reports of official statements. 
   
    MISSING WARPLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- The Air Force is checking all 140 potential
    landing spots in the Southwest in the search for a missing warplane and
    its pilot. So far, more than 600 hours of flight time and $700,000 have
    been spent in the search for Capt. Craig Button and his A-10
    Thunderbolt, which apparently veered away from an Arizona training
    mission on April 2. 
   
    OBIT-AZCARRAGA 

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Emilio "The Tiger" Azcarraga Milmo, Mexico's top TV
    tycoon, died after a long illness. He was 66. The giant Televisa chain,
    which he headed for decades, said Azcarraga died in Miami. Azcarraga
    retired in March as president and chairman of the $1.45 billion media
    empire, Grupo Televisa SA. 
   
    APPLE 

    CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) -- Apple Computer says it lost $708 million in
    the January-March quarter as it set aside huge amounts to pay for
    layoffs and its purchase of Next Software. The loss amounts to $5.64 a
    share. Revenue also dropped 27 percent to $1.6 billion from $2.2
    billion. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was lower against the yen in early trading
    Thursday, while Tokyo stocks edged up. The Nikkei rose 6.90 to
    18,038.10. In New York, the Dow closed up 92.71 to 6,679.87. 
   
    PACERS-BULLETS 

    LANDOVER, Md. (AP) -- The Washington Bullets ended Indiana's seven-year
    NBA playoff run and enhanced their own chances of qualifying for
    postseason play by beating the Pacers 103-90. Rod Strickland had a
    season-high 34 points and 13 assists for the Bullets, who maintained a
    one-game lead over the Cleveland Cavaliers. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1380IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3268
    RTw  17-Apr-97 04:09    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    JERUSALEM - Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fought for his
    political life in the face of police accusations he broke the law.
    Television stations sent shockwaves through the country with the news
    that police wanted him charged in an influence-peddling scandal. The
    news was certain to hamper efforts by U.S. Middle East envoy Dennis
    Ross to save Israel-PLO peacemaking -- even though Ross himself said
    the affair was none of his business. 

    - - - - 

    CAPE TOWN - Zairean rebel leader Laurent Kabila, who held talks with
    South Africa's peacemaker President Nelson Mandela on Wednesday, could
    soon meet the man he is trying to topple, President Mobutu Sese Seko.
    Sources close to the talks said representatives of Mobutu were in Cape
    Town as well but it was not clear if they would meet Kabila. U.N. envoy
    Mohamed Sahnoun is also in the city. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - U.S. tobacco executives are negotiating for the first time
    with state attorneys general on a possible settlement of massive
    litigation against the industry involving hundreds of billions of
    dollars, several attorneys general said. They said the first round of
    talks, which began about two weeks ago, ended Wednesday in Virginia. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - The first ship to sail directly from China to Taiwan in 48
    years is expected to make the historic trip on Friday, the South China
    Morning Post reported. Quoting shipping sources, it said the container
    vessel Sheng Da, owned by China's Xiamen Harvest Shipping Co, would
    make the first trip. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - Blue-chip stocks rallied for a third day in a row amid
    reports tobacco companies are negotiating a settlement of massive
    lawsuits against the industry. The Dow Jones industrial average ended
    up 92.71 points, or 1.41 percent, at 6,679.87. With the gain, the Dow
    index has recovered 288 points, or more than 40 percent, of the nearly
    700-point plunge between March 11 and April 11. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - With just two weeks left before Britain's election, Prime
    Minister John Major is failing to make headway in opinion polls and is
    finding his toughest battleground is in his own Conservative Party. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - International mediator Franz Vranitzky cancelled a trip to
    rebel-held southern Albania and turned his attention to question marks
    hanging over the elections promised in June. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - U.S. and Korean officials held inconclusive talks on
    bringing Pyongyang into peace negotiations with arch-rival Seoul, but
    all sides reported progress and said they hoped to settle the issue on
    Friday. 

    REUTER 
7.1381IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3243
    RTw  17-Apr-97 07:45    

    Spring comes sooner in North, study finds

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, April 16 (Reuter) - Spring is arriving a week earlier in the
    northern hemisphere and the "greenhouse effect" is probably
    responsible, scientists reported on Wednesday. 

    Ranga Myneni of Boston University and colleagues said satellite
    observations showed plants in northern climes had started their
    springtime spurt of growth seven days earlier than they used to between
    1981 and 1991. 

    "The regions exhibiting the greatest increase lie between 45 degrees N
    and 70 degrees N, where marked warming has occurred in the spring time
    due to an early disappearance of snow," they wrote in a report in the
    science journal Nature. 

    This is north of a line running roughly through Boston, Bordeaux in
    France and Vladivostock. 

    "Central Europe, southern Russia, and a broad region near Lake Baikal
    in Siberia are most affected," they wrote. 

    Scandinavia, northern China and northeastern Siberia were also
    affected, as well as a swathe from Alaska to the Great Lakes and up to
    Labrador in Canada. 

    "The winter and spring warming of the interior of the continents of
    Asia and North America in the 1980s may be the result of natural causes
    not yet explained, but its timing is consistent with an enhanced
    greenhouse effect caused by build-up of...gases in the atmosphere,"
    they wrote. 

    Scientists have long blamed the over-production of greenhouse gases
    such as carbon dioxide for a steady rise in temperatures on the Earth's
    surface in recent decades. The gases are so-called because they trap
    heat close to the Earth instead of letting it radiate into the outer
    atmosphere. 

    REUTER
7.1382IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3234
    RTw  17-Apr-97 06:50    

    Missing link shows snakes evolved from sea monster

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, April 16 (Reuter) - Snakes may actually be distantly descended
    from giant sea monsters that died out with the other dinosaurs,
    scientists said on Wednesday. 

    They said a 97-million-year-old lizard whose bones were found in Israel
    may actually be one of the earliest snakes, and said they had
    "surprising and compelling" evidence that the nearest relative of
    snakes were marine mosasauroids-- big swimming sea-lizards. 

    Michael Caldwell, a palaeontologist at the Field Museum in Chicago and
    Michael Lee of the University of Sydney, joined forces to take a second
    look at Pachyrhachis problematicus, whose fossils had been identified
    as belonging to an early lizard. 

    It actually looked more like a snake that still had tiny hind legs,
    they decided. Nicholas Fraser of the Virginia Museum of Natural
    History, commenting on the report, noted that some modern boas still
    have vestigial hindlegs. 

    Other features of the Israeli fossil indicated it was a snake, not a
    lizard, Caldwell and Lee said. "Pachyrhachis has a small, narrow,
    lightly built skull showing most derived features of modern snakes." 

    They said careful study of the skeleton showed resemblances to marine
    mosasauroids, which they said could be, among lizards, the "nearest
    relatives (ancestors) of snakes." 

    REUTER
7.1383IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3257
    RTw  17-Apr-97 04:51    

    Scientists see breakthrough in gamma ray mystery

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, April 16 (Reuter) - Astronomers said on Wednesday they may have
    solved a mystery that has baffled them for more than 20 years -- where
    do bursts of gamma rays come from? 

    Reporting in the science journal Nature, they said they had actually
    seen, for the first time, a flash of light to match the invisible gamma
    radiation -- which should help them nail down just where the intriguing
    outbursts of short wave radiation are coming from. 

    Jan van Paradijs of the University of Alabama and a team of
    international colleagues said it could have come from an explosive
    collision between two neutron stars at the far end of the universe. If
    this is so, the explosion would be the brightest in the universe.

    Paradijs's group first saw the burst using a satellite especially made
    to watch for gamma rays. They were able to turn standard telescopes to
    the appropriate part of space in time. 

    They saw a blur in the sky -- a "transient and fading optical source."
    It lasted for a month before it faded out. 

    Gamma-ray bursts are noticed daily, but since one was first observed in
    1973, no one has known what they were. Theories about their origin have
    abounded -- from neutron stars to the warp drives of alien space craft. 

    "This could be a turning point in gamma-ray burst astronomy," Van
    Paradijs's group wrote. 

    They said the launch a year ago of an Italian-Dutch X-ray satellite,
    BeppoSAX, made the observation possible. The satellite tracks down
    x-rays associated with gamma-ray bursts, helping to pinpoint the
    source. 

    Astronomers at the internationally run Isaac Newton Group of telescopes
    on the Canary island of La Palma turned them onto that bit of space --
    and saw the fading blur. 

    They are now analysing the new data to determine whether the gamma-rays
    come from within the Earth's own Milky Way galaxy or from near the edge
    of the universe. 

    "If it is indeed a distant galaxy...gamma ray bursts are confirmed as
    the brightest objects in the universe," Bohdan Paczynski of Princeton
    University and Ralph Wijers of Cambridge University said in a
    commentary in Nature. 

    They said it could come from the collision of two neutron stars --
    releasing as much energy in a few seconds as the sun does in a billion
    years. 

    REUTER
7.1384IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:32119
    RTw  17-Apr-97 04:16    

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - UK's Labour scraps vote-losing foreign, defence ideas 

    By David Ljunggren 

    LONDON, April 17 (Reuter) - Anyone wanting to write an essay on "how to
    lose votes in a British election" should look at the opposition Labour
    party's foreign and defence policy from 1979 to 1992. 

    During that period Labour stumbled to four consecutive election defeats
    on the back of such principles as scrapping Britain's nuclear weapons,
    abandoning the arms race and leaving the European Union. 

    These played into the hands of the ruling Conservatives, who had little
    trouble portraying Labour as naive socialists ready to sell out the
    country at the first opportunity. 

    The new-look Labour of Tony Blair, determined not to lay itself open to
    similar attacks, has ditched many of the party's cherished tenets and
    adopted a stance much closer to that of the Conservatives. 

    Labour is now committed to keeping Trident nuclear missiles, boosting
    the arms defence industry, using foreign embassies to boost trade and
    ensuring Britain does not join what it calls "a European federalist
    superstate." 

    "The Conservatives are hopelessly divided and incapable of promoting
    Britain's interests abroad. I want people to be proud of Britain's
    position in the world," is the message from Labour's foreign affairs
    spokesman Robin Cook. 

    LABOUR MUST HIT GROUND RUNNING IF IT WINS ELECTION 

    If Labour wins the May 1 election it must hit the ground running
    because within a year Britain will chair summits of the Commonwealth
    and the Group of Seven leading economic nations. 

    It will also have a six-month stint as European Union president as
    preparations for monetary union reach a climax. 

    Labour has made great play of Conservative splits over policy towards
    Europe but the opposition itself is sounding more bearish about
    relations with the EU and whether it would sign up to a single European
    currency. 

    But Cook says he is determined to mend fences after years of
    Conservative hostility that he says has betrayed Britain's national
    interests. 

    Labour will sign the EU's Social Chapter, which regulates workers'
    rights, and drop a Conservative threat to veto the entire process
    governing change in the EU unless Britain is excepted from rules on the
    maximum working week. 

    But Labour would retain veto rights over key areas of national
    interest, such as foreign and security policy, immigration, decisions
    over budget and treaty changes. 

    Other Labour plans for Europe include calling for freer competition,
    new budget priorities and action against fraud, as well as shifting
    spending away from the exhorbitantly expensive Common Agricultural
    Policy. 

    LABOUR SAYS TRADE MUST BE FOREIGN POLICY PRIORITY 

    Away from Europe, Cook has said consistently that Labour would make
    trade rather than ideology the main priority of its foreign policy and
    he plans to appoint ambassadors from the business world to countries
    with big trade opportunities. 

    But the party also promises to conduct foreign policy with a clean
    conscience and to keep the focus on human rights. 

    It backs the idea of a Europe-wide code of conduct on arms sales,
    saying Britain has the right to maintain its competitive edge in the
    arms market but must also accept responsibility to ensure the market is
    properly regulated. 

    Labour promises to play a leading role in reforming the United Nations
    as well as the Commonwealth, which is spilt over the question of
    whether and how to punish Nigeria for alleged abuses of human rights. 

    Although the Conservatives predict Labour will tear itself apart over
    Europe, political commentators say the party could in fact find itself
    in deeper trouble over defence. 

    Labour has promised to conduct a full-scale review of Britain's defence
    needs within six months of taking power but denies accusations that
    this will be a smoke-screen for further cuts in arms spending. 

    CRITICS SAY LABOUR COULD FACE BIG DEFENCE PROBLEMS 

    Critics ask how Labour could cut costs while maintaining Britain's
    current defence commitments in Europe and the Falkland Islands,
    deepening cooperation with NATO and continuing to subsidise the defence
    industry. Some senior Labour officials are privately said to favour
    withdrawing British troops and armour from Germany, saying the end of
    the Cold War makes their presence irrelevant. 

    But a future Labour government would not want to do anything which
    could imperil its status as a world power, as the party's defence
    spokesman David Clark has made clear. 

    "Trident is not negotiable. NATO membership is not negotiable. The
    permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council is not
    negotiable," he told reporters. 

    "If we have a seat on the Security Council, we must accept a bigger
    than average role in peacekeeping. Any commitment we may either reduce
    or cut out must be one that our NATO allies do...and can cover." 

    Some commentators predict a showdown between Labour leaders and
    commanders of the armed forces, who say deep defence cuts over the last
    decade have stretched resources to breaking point.

    REUTER
7.1385IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3278
    RTw  17-Apr-97 02:40    

    Mad dogs and English politicians

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Mylrea 

    MONMOUTH, Wales, April 17 (Reuter) - Never, goes the old theatrical
    warning, perform with children or animals. 

    On the political stage there's no choice. 

    Even in the high-tech age of the Internet, satellite link-ups and
    electronic cameras, kissing babies is a must. 

    On a two-day, 400 miles (700 km) campaign trip through England and
    Wales, parents thrust their children at the man many believe will be --
    and polls tip as -- the next prime minister. 

    Tony Blair does his duty, cuddling and kissing -- even if one baby
    repays him by dribbling on the party's glossy manifesto and another
    interrupts an earnest speech with loud gurgles. 

    Animals have also become a running theme in Blair's campaign to oust
    Prime Minister John Major and his Conservatives. 

    Men in chicken suits chase Blair, a stunt by his Conservative rivals
    trying to goad Blair into a televised debate, sparking copycat
    appearances by men in bear, rabbit and even rhinoceros outfits with
    slightly more opaque motives. 

    On the principle that what cannot be defeated should be studiously
    copied, Blair's strategists have followed the animal theme, making a
    bulldog -- a traditional symbol for British patriots -- the star of a
    television broadcast to woo voters. 

    Kissing babies and co-starring with Fitz the bulldog are just two of
    the means Labour's slick communications team are using to reach its end
    -- to oust Prime Minister John Major and get a radically overhauled
    party Labour into government. 

    The team's success, mirrored in polls which give Labour a commanding
    lead, have provoked Major to resort to bitter attacks on Blair, his
    "hypocrisy" and his "Stalinist" leadership style. 

    Blair, for the first time this week openly hinting at his confidence of
    a May 1 election victory, has responded by taking the high moral
    ground, stressing he will fight the election on values rather than
    personal attacks. 

    In a high-minded speech in a cinema overlooking Southampton harbour, 80
    miles (130 km) south of London, Blair on Wednesday set out his "Seven
    Pillars of a Decent Society." 

    But his press aides or spindoctors -- who during the campaign have
    become media stars in their own right -- discovered they are becoming
    victims of their own success. 

    Blair's vision of a caring society founded on a base of mutual
    opportunity and responsibility was edged off national news bulletins by
    the Labour leader's own soundbite attacking the Conservative party's
    bitter splits on Europe. 

    It was a carefully delivered soundbite delivered in an off-the-cuff
    manner as he rushed into the cinema... and then repeated for the
    television cameras five minutes later after aides decided the sound
    quality was not good enough. 

    Blair's speech may have been edged out, but at least it forced Major
    onto the defensive. And the soundbite? 

    When it comes to political attacks, it had to be animals. 

    The Conservatives, said Blair, were "fighting like ferrets in a sack"
    and showing the "leadership qualities of lemmings." 

    REUTER
7.1386IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3382
    RTw  16-Apr-97 21:51    

    UN legal counsel approves new parking proposal

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Evelyn Leopold 

    UNITED NATIONS, April 16 (Reuter) - The United Nations' legal counsel
    has approved the latest U.S. State Department compromise plan on the
    seemingly intractable issue of parking tickets for diplomats, a
    spokesman said on Wednesday. 

    But whether the plan to resolve the dispute, which has already turned
    into a public relations disaster for the United Nations, will be
    acceptable to New York City is uncertain. 

    The plan backs off from Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's new regulations, which
    went into effect on April 1, to remove the special license plates of
    diplomats who routinely ignore parking tickets and other violations. 

    Instead, for each diplomat with unpaid tickets, the State Department's
    proposal would provide one fewer license plate for the mission
    involved. 

    Spokesman Juan Carlos Brandt said U.N. legal counsel Hans Corell was
    shown a set of revised rules. "My understanding is that in his opinion
    he did not see in that document anything that may be construed as a
    violation of international law." 

    Bill Richardson, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said he had
    set up a meeting with Giuliani to review the procedures again after
    speaking to him on Tuesday evening at the gala tribute to baseball
    player Jackie Robinson. 

    "We should be able to resolve this issue," he said. "Everyone should
    stay calm and collected." 

    The issue has become a source of friction in the uneasy relationship
    between the United Nations and New Yorkers, angered over what they
    regard as diplomatic "scofflaws" who escape paying fines. City
    officials claim diplomats ignored 134,281 tickets last year, each
    costing a minimum of $55. 

    A U.N. committee last week referred the matter to the 185-member
    General Assembly unless a compromise could be found, holding the world
    body, in the eyes of many of its officials, up to ridicule for
    escalating the dispute. 

    Giuliani, who is running for re-election, tweaked the controversy
    further by saying the United Nations could leave town and the city
    would earn taxes on its valuable real estate on Manhattan's East River.
    Current estimates are that New York gets about $3 billion annually from
    goods and services and personnel associated with the United Nations. 

    Sensing a good fight, city police, according to numerous diplomats,
    stepped up issuing tickets, including several for diplomatic cars
    parked legally in reserved spots. 

    U.N. officials themselves, most of whom do not qualify for diplomatic
    license plates, have been fairly silent. Secretary-General Kofi Annan,
    who does not own a car, has been out of the country almost since the
    dispute erupted. 

    Corell, in response to Giuliani's original plan, ruled that parts of
    the programme violate international law on diplomatic immunity and
    privileges as well as the 1947 treaty that governs the U.S. obligations
    as host to the world body. 

    The dispute, born over frustrations of finding a parking space in
    Manhattan, broke into the open in December when a Russian and a Belarus
    diplomat scuffled with police officers trying to ticket their car. 

    Among the diplomats, Britain has criticised the committee dealing with
    relations with the United States, although its envoys note that the
    Giuliani plan could have been refined to fit international law. 

    "We have more important things to get on with," said British Ambassador
    Sir John Weston last week. "And we need the public confidence of all
    our members, and in particular the United States."

    REUTER
7.1387IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3344
    AP 17-Apr-1997 0:48 EDT   REF5861

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rabbi: Dissolve Israel's Rabbinate

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A leading Conservative rabbi has called for the
    dissolution of Israel's chief rabbinate, a state institution controlled
    by Orthodox rabbis that oversees marriages, divorces and conversions. 

    Rabbi Ismar Schorsch, chancellor of Jewish Theological Seminary in New
    York City, is also urging an end to financial support for groups
    fighting recognition of non-Orthodox movements in Israel. 

    He made his appeal in an address last week and a letter mailed
    Wednesday to about 2,000 Conservative rabbis and major Jewish groups,
    prompted by the Union of Orthodox Rabbis' position last month that
    Conservative and Reform branches of Judaism were "not Judaism." 

    The Orthodox rabbis also urged Jews to avoid non-Orthodox synagogues,
    and suggested Conservative and Reform rabbis were teaching heresy. 

    Orthodox rabbis were given control of religious decisions in Israel by
    its founders. But in 1995, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled that
    Orthodox conversions were not required for an Israeli to be registered
    as a Jews. The ruling opened the door to a greater role for
    non-Orthodox rabbis. 

    Schorsch told The New York Times in Thursday's editions that if the
    chief rabbinate were dissolved, the Israeli government would accept a
    marriage presided over by any rabbi there. 

    "It would mean that the state would be a Jewish state," he told the
    paper. "It would no longer be an Orthodox state." 

    Rabbi David Hollander, of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis, told the Times
    that Schorsch' letter was "a terrible, shocking groundless indictment." 

    Schorsch found an ally in Rabbi Eric Yoffie, president of the Union of
    American Hebrew Congregations, Reform Judaism's synagogue umbrella
    group. 

    Yoffie said removing the chief rabbinate is a good thing, and Orthodox
    Judaism would do better in Israel in a "free market" setting. 
7.1388IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3347
    AP 16-Apr-1997 23:26 EDT   REF5834

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Dorris Police Record May Be Sealed

    By LAURA BAENEN

    Associated Press Writer

    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The estranged wife of Michael Dorris, the
    award-winning author who committed suicide, asked a judge Wednesday to
    seal the record of police who investigated him on a child sex abuse
    allegation. 

    District Judge Dolores Orey was expected to rule in a day or two on the
    request from novelist and poet Louise Erdrich for a temporary
    restraining order to prevent the release of the records. 

    Police this week confirmed reports that the department was looking into
    allegations of abuse of one or more children at the time of Dorris'
    death last week in a New Hampshire motel room. Dorris won a National
    Book Critics Circle Award, for his account of his adopted son Abel's
    struggle with fetal alcohol syndrome 

    Normally, when the subject of an investigation dies before any charges
    are filed, the case is closed and police records become public. But
    Minnesota's law allows the files to be sealed in some cases, and
    attorneys for the family argued that the Dorris matter was such a case.

    Ms. Erdich's attorney Jay Quam said the order was needed "to prevent
    irreparable harm. If there's any disclosure that's damaging, we might
    as well go home." 

    The Boston Globe reported Wednesday that the allegations involved one
    of the couple's three young daughters. Dorris also had three children
    he adopted before their marriage, one of whom died several years ago. 

    The newspaper said Dorris' Minneapolis home was searched after Ms.
    Erdrich told a health-care professional that one of their daughters
    claimed that Dorris had sexually assaulted her. 

    The 52-year-old Dorris was found dead Friday in a Concord, N.H., motel
    room, where he had checked in under an assumed name. Police said he
    took over-the-counter sleeping pills, drank vodka and suffocated
    himself with a plastic bag, leaving a note that said he would be
    "peaceful at last." 
7.1389IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3344
    AP 16-Apr-1997 22:34 EDT   REF5807

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Blood Clot Killed Tenn. 'Coma Man'

    By MICHELLE WILLIAMS

    Associated Press Writer

    CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) -- A brain-damaged, paralyzed policeman who
    last year briefly emerged from his comalike state died from a blood
    clot in his lung, a medical examiner said Wednesday. 

    Gary Dockery's paralysis increased his risk of getting blood clots,
    Hamilton County Medical Examiner Frank King said. The clot formed in
    Dockery's leg and traveled to his lung, an autopsy showed. 

    Dockery, 43, died Tuesday, a year after he stunned family and doctors
    by talking for the first time since being shot point-blank in 1988. 

    He was shot by a drunken man angry at police for reprimanding him for
    making noise that bothered his neighbors. 

    Dockery fell into a stupor and stayed in a comalike state for 7 1/2
    years. Then, on Feb. 11, 1996, he stirred and started talking. For
    several hours, he delighted relatives with unbridled conversation,
    recalling camping trips, his green Jeep, the names of his horses. He
    told his young sons he loved them. 

    Doctors couldn't explain it, and tests were inconclusive. And although
    Dockery later grew more alert and was able to speak short phrases, he
    returned largely to silence. 

    With Dockery's death, the shooting can be ruled a homicide. Samuel
    Frank Downey, the man who shot Dockery, cannot be tried for murder
    because he's already been convicted, a district attorney said. 

    However, Dockery's death will be considered when Downey becomes
    eligible for parole next year, Hamilton County District Attorney Bill
    Cox said. 

    In 1989, Downey was convicted of felonious assault with intent to
    commit murder. He was sentenced to 37 years in prison. 
7.1390IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3321
    AP 16-Apr-1997 22:25 EDT   REF5784

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Airport To Be Named After Bush

    HOUSTON (AP) -- Three weeks ago he jumped out of a plane. Now former
    President Bush has an airport named after him. 

    City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to rename Houston
    Intercontinental Airport after Bush. But the official abbreviation for
    the George Bush Intercontinental Airport-Houston will continue to be
    IAH. 

    Bush and his wife, Barbara, settled in Houston after they moved out of
    the White House in 1993. Fulfilling a wartime promise to himself, Bush
    made his second parachute jump March 26 over the Arizona desert. 

    Houston Intercontinental Airport opened in June 1969. Its international
    terminal is named in memory of Mickey Leland, the Democratic
    congressman from Texas who was killed in a 1989 plane crash in Africa.
7.1391IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3392
    AP 16-Apr-1997 21:19 EDT   REF5375

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Army Trainee: I Felt Like Puppet

    By BART JANSEN

    Associated Press Writer

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- A 23-year-old soldier testified
    Wednesday that her drill sergeant repeatedly summoned her and raped her
    nine times, controlling her as if she were a puppet on a string. 

    The woman, testifying at the court-martial of Staff Sgt. Delmar
    Simpson, said she did not report him out of "pride and embarrassment." 

    "People looked on him like a demi-god," she said of Simpson. "I saw the
    evil. ... He is a devil with angel wings." 

    But defense attorneys attacked her credibility, questioning why she
    failed to report any of the alleged attacks and why she described nine
    incidents when Simpson is charged with eight counts of rape. 

    Frank J. Spinner, a civilian defense lawyer, suggested that other
    soldiers will testify that the female soldier told them the sex was
    consensual. 

    "It was never consensual," she said. 

    The trial is the first to emerge from an Army sex scandal at Aberdeen
    that prompted a militarywide investigation of sexual misconduct. 

    Of the 12 Aberdeen soldiers charged with criminal sexual misconduct,
    Simpson, 32, is accused of the most serious offenses. He is charged
    with raping six women under his command. 

    The Army specialist who testified Wednesday was a trainee at the time
    of the alleged rapes, which she said took place between September and
    December 1995 in Simpson's office, empty barracks rooms and his
    off-base apartment. 

    "I felt like I was a puppet and I had strings attached to me in a
    marionette way telling me what I should do," she said. 

    She said the most disturbing attack was when Simpson ordered her to his
    office after morning formation, took off her uniform and raped her.

    "I felt even worse than any of the other times because I was in my
    uniform," she said. "That was something to me and he was stripping me
    of it." 

    As the only woman in her training class at Aberdeen, she lived in a
    different barracks from her Bravo Company colleagues. Her room was in
    the same building where Simpson's office was located. 

    The attacks began in her first weeks at the base, as she searched for a
    lamp in a storage room, she said. 

    Simpson cornered her in the room and locked the door, she said. He then
    pulled off her shorts as she struggled with both hands to keep them on,
    she said. He pushed her onto a bed, held her hands above her head with
    one hand while he opened a condom with his free hand and teeth, and
    raped her, she said. 

    "How did it feel?" prosecutor Capt. Theresa Gallagher asked. 

    The soldier paused for half a minute. "It hurt," she said. 

    On other occasions, Simpson would order her to his office and rape her
    on his bed in an adjoining room, on blankets on the floor or on a
    chair, she testified. Later, he brought her to his apartment twice for
    sex and she stayed overnight, she said. 

    She did not report any of the incidents because she did not want other
    soldiers to think badly of her. She perceived Simpson as well-liked by
    other trainees and sergeants: "Like he was flawless." 

    Simpson is charged with 58 crimes in all. He could get life in prison
    for a single rape conviction. 

    Also Wednesday, Rodney Phillips, a former National Guard private from
    Ohio, appeared to corroborate the soldier's testimony that Simpson
    repeatedly punched her. 

    Phillips said he was a passenger in the back seat of van and saw
    Simpson's arm move in a punching motion eight to 10 times toward the
    seat where the soldier was sitting. He heard three slaps of flesh on
    flesh and heard her say, "Ow, stop it drill sergeant." 

    He said he was reluctant to report it because he worried about
    retaliation from other soldiers and did not see the physical contact. 
7.1392IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3323
    AP 16-Apr-1997 19:52 EDT   REF5165

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Simpson Sued Over Equipment Rental

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- O.J. Simpson is being sued by a company that claims
    he owes $59,000 for rented audio-visual equipment used at his criminal
    trial. 

    Forensic Technologies International Corp. said it provided gear to help
    Simpson present his visual aids during the trial at which he was
    acquitted of the deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole, and her friend, Ronald
    Goldman. 

    The Annapolis, Md., company sued Simpson on Tuesday in Los Angeles
    Superior Court for alleged breach of contract, seeking $59,004, plus
    interest. 

    Phillip Baker, a Simpson civil attorney, said through his secretary
    Wednesday that he didn't have any comment on the lawsuit and referred
    calls to co-counsel Daniel Leonard. Leonard did not return a phone call
    left at his Boston office. 
7.1393IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3365
    AP 16-Apr-1997 19:22 EDT   REF5780

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ohio To Use Internet Filters

    By JOHN McCARTHY

    Associated Press Writer

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- The state will use filtering software at public
    libraries to keep children from accessing Internet sites that may be
    considered obscene, Ohio's library computer network said Wednesday. 

    The move is a response to complaints about children using the World
    Wide Web to view pornographic material on library computers, the Ohio
    Public Library Information Network said. 

    But the American Civil Liberties Union said it would challenge the
    decision. 

    OPLIN is a state agency in charge of establishing Internet hookups at
    Ohio's 700 public libraries. The board approved the filtering policy at
    its monthly meeting on Friday. 

    "The resolution approved by the OPLIN board strikes a balance between
    the need to provide access to these resources and our desire to protect
    children from potentially harmful material," OPLIN executive Tony
    Yankus said in a news release. 

    The agency will review software options and present a recommendation to
    Gov. George Voinovich and legislative leaders by May 1 for inclusion in
    the state budget. 

    Such software is designed to limit access to Internet sites that may be
    harmful to children. 

    However, critics claim that in addition to blocking access to sites
    featuring women's breasts, for instance, the software also blocks
    access to such items as chicken-breast recipes and information about
    breast cancer. 

    ACLU-Ohio will go to court to try to keep the decision from reaching
    Ohio's libraries, said Christine Link, the group's executive director.
    The ACLU believes the available software deletes too much material. 

    "There is no software on market that can target pornography and leave
    legitimate material alone," Ms. Link said. 

    "We're very disappointed that OPLIN has acquiesced to public pressure." 

    She said the ACLU will file a lawsuit once the budget language becomes
    law. The budget is due for passage by June 30. 

    The dispute began after six boys were found looking at pornographic
    images while browsing the Internet at the Medina County District
    Library. 

    Parents groups responded by lobbying the Legislature and local
    libraries to restrict children's access to the Internet at libraries. 

    The Medina library developed a policy in February that allows the staff
    to ask patrons to stop looking at Internet sites if they contain
    "inappropriate material." If patrons refuse, staff can ask them to
    leave or call police to have them escorted from the library. 
7.1394IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3345
    AP 17-Apr-1997 1:08 EDT   REF5868

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S.Korea Ex-Leaders Get Prison Terms

    By SANG-HUN CHOE

    Associated Press Writer

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- The Supreme Court upheld a lower court
    ruling Thursday and sentenced two former presidents to long prison
    terms for leading a 1979 coup and the subsequent massacre of
    pro-democracy protesters. 

    The ruling closed a chapter in South Korea's effort to come to terms
    with its coup-wracked past. The campaign has been led by President Kim
    Young-sam, the country's first civilian leader in 32 years. 

    In a ruling by all 13 justices, the highest South Korean court ordered
    Chun Doo-hwan, president from 1980 to 1987, to spend the rest of his
    life in prison. 

    The court also sentenced Chun's successor, Roh Tae-woo, to 17 years in
    prison. 

    The court also ordered Chun and Roh to pay $250 million and $300
    million in fine, respectively -- the same amounts they were found to
    have received in bribes from businessmen while in office. 

    The court issued the ruling in the form of rejecting appeals by the two
    ex-army generals. 

    In an appellate court ruling in December, Chun had his death sentence
    and Roh had his 22 1/2 years imprisonment reduced to life and 17 years.
    The court had said their contribution to South Korea's rapid economic
    development in the 1980s mitigated the crimes. 

    There was no immediate response from the two ex-army generals. By
    Korean legal proceedings, the two did not attend the session. 

    The Supreme Court decision is expected to stir up a heated debate over
    whether the two deserve amnesty. Even before the ruling, there were
    reports that President Kim may free them under a special amnesty before
    he steps down next February. 
7.1395IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3342
    AP 17-Apr-1997 1:06 EDT   REF5867

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    4 Dead, 18 Hurt in Canada Explosion

    QUESNEL, British Columbia (AP) -- A massive explosion ripped apart a
    small building in this western Canadian town Wednesday, killing four
    people and injuring 18 others. 

    A fire broke out after the explosion in the old brick building that
    housed a thrift shop and a sports card shop. By evening, rescuers were
    using heavy machinery to remove the rubble in hopes of finding four
    missing people. 

    "It was a tremendous boom," said Vic Spooner, 30, who lives nearby. 

    He and his brother Phil, a volunteer firefighter, pulled several people
    from the rubble before the flames became too strong, including a woman
    buried under a collapsed wall. 

    The cause of the explosion was believed to be a natural gas leak, but
    police said they were still investigating. 

    Quesnel, a town of 8,000, is located 250 miles north of Vancouver in
    British Columbia, Canada's most western province. 

    "I looked around and saw the roof lifting off the rest of the building
    and then falling," said Matt Williamson, who was 50 yards down the
    street when the explosion occurred. 

    He said the front of the building was blown across the street, other
    walls collapsed and a car was flipped over. 

    At least four of the injured were in serious condition and would be
    transferred to hospitals in Vancouver or Prince George, said Ken Last,
    administrator of the nearby G.R. Baker Memorial Hospital. 

    Shelley Driscoll, 32, noted that a gas station's fuel tanks were
    located just a few hundred feet away from the site of the blast. 

    "It could have been way worse," she said. 
7.1396IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 17 1997 11:3444
    AP 16-Apr-1997 19:13 EDT   REF5775

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Netanyahu's Options If Indicted

    By The Associated Press

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's options under Israeli
    electoral law if he is indicted, according to Professor Uriel Reichman,
    former dean of the law faculty at Tel Aviv University. Reichman was a
    key lobbyist and author of the new electoral law: 
   
    ------

    MUST NETANYAHU STEP DOWN?  No. Under Israel's law on the direct
    election of the prime minister, there is no explicit requirement that
    the prime minister step down if indicted -- or even convicted. 
   
    ------

    CAN THE PRIME MINISTER BE REMOVED FROM OFFICE?  Yes, in three ways: 

    1. By a majority of 61 out of 120 Knesset members, in which case new
    elections are held within 60 days for both premier and parliament --
    meaning the lawmakers must be prepared to sacrifice their own positions
    as well as the premier's. 

    2. By a special majority of 80 out of 120 members, in which case the
    Knesset serves out its full four-year term and only elections for a new
    prime minister are held. 

    3. If a prime minister has been convicted of a crime that "carries with
    it disgrace" -- such as fraud and breach of trust, the infractions
    attributed to Netanyahu -- he can be impeached without dissolving the
    Knesset by a simple majority of 61. 
   
    ------

    WHAT IF NETANYAHU QUITS? 

    If Netanyahu resigns, elections will be held within 60 days for the
    prime minister only; the Knesset would serve out its term, through
    2000.
7.1397IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:01110
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 21-Apr-1997 1:05 EDT   REF5234

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    ISRAEL SCANDAL 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu escaped indictment
    in an influence-peddling scandal, with prosecutors saying they lacked
    evidence to try him on charges of fraud and breach of trust. But
    Netanyahu still faces a political crisis as coalition allies threaten
    to bolt his government. Netanyahu vowed to clean up the process of
    wheeling and dealing that surrounds the appointment of officials. 
   
    MISSING WARPLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- While searchers in a helicopter believe they may
    have found the wreckage of a missing bomb-laden warplane, high winds
    have prevented a ground crew from trying to reach the site. A crew may
    be sent to the area Monday. The plane has been missing since April 2,
    when Capt. Craig Button, 32, took off from a Tucson, Ariz., base on a
    routine training mission and veered north, heading to Colorado. The
    wreckage was spotted on New York Mountain, a 12,500-foot peak in the
    Rocky Mountains. 
   
    PLAINS FLOODING 

    GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) -- Firefighters have brought the blaze that
    destroyed six downtown buildings under control. But no one has figured
    out how to do the same with the Red River. More than 70 percent of
    Grand Forks is under water, and the river continues to rise. It's
    expected to crest at 54 feet for about a week. Flood stage is 28 feet.
    Most of the 50,000 residents had evacuated. 
   
    HERMAN NOMINATION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton has criticized Senate Republicans
    for bottling up his nomination of Alexis Herman as Secretary of Labor
    in a dispute over a pro-labor executive order he plans to issue. In an
    evening speech to a United Auto Workers political conference, Clinton
    said he is within his authority to issue the order requiring federal
    agencies to adopt construction contract procedures that tend to favor
    unionized companies over non-union contractors. Senate Majority Leader
    Trent Lott said last week Herman's nomination would not be brought to a
    floor vote until the White House responded to concerns about the order. 
   
    GOP-RENO 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Senate committee intends to put Attorney General
    Janet Reno under oath to explain why she decided not to seek an
    independent counsel to investigate Democratic campaign fund raising.
    Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said Reno will appear before the panel April
    30 -- unless she appoints an independent counsel before then. Justice
    Department spokeswoman Carole Florman said Reno is "always willing to
    speak to Congress, on or off the record, about her decisions." 
   
    FED VACANCIES 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Financial consultant Roger Ferguson is President
    Clinton's second pick to round out the Federal Reserve Board, anonymous
    White House officials say. A formal announcement will not be made until
    a final screening process is completed. Ferguson has done considerable
    consulting in the banking industry, but the Harvard-trained lawyer is
    not a banker as the banking industry had hoped for. If confirmed by the
    Senate, Ferguson, would be the only black on the seven-member panel. 
   
    TOBACCO DEPOSITIONS 

    MIAMI (AP) -- A month after the Liggett Group admitted that smoking
    causes cancer and is addictive, executives of the nation's top four
    tobacco companies still say tobacco doesn't kill. In a deposition
    quoted by The Miami Herald, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco president Andrew
    Schindler said he doesn't believe tobacco is deadly or conclusively
    linked to any illness. 
   
    KOREA TALKS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. and South Korean efforts to convince North Korea
    to join peace negotiations appear stalled, according to an anonymous
    U.S. official. Washington and Seoul are reportedly waiting to hear
    whether North Korea will accept an invitation to attend peace talks
    aimed at forging a new security arrangement. U.S. officials refused to
    identify the remaining obstacles. But in Seoul, Yonhap Television
    reported that discussions have focused on North Korea's demand for the
    United States and South Korea to pledge massive food aid as a condition
    for the talks. 
   
    JAPAN MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading at 125.72 yen early Monday, down
    0.32. The Nikkei rose 109.31 points to 18,461.45. 
   
    NBA PLAYOFFS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Bullets are in the playoffs and the Cavaliers
    aren't. The playoffs will begin Thursday night with Charlotte at New
    York, Orlando at Miami, the Los Angeles Clippers at Utah and Minnesota
    at Houston. Friday's first-round games are Washington at Chicago,
    Portland at the L.A. Lakers, Detroit at Atlanta and Phoenix at Seattle.
   
    NFL DRAFT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The 1997 NFL Draft is over as 240 college players were
    selected over two days. The draft began with the St. Louis Rams taking
    offensive tackle Orlando Pace. Sunday's highlight was the New Orleans
    Saints selecting Danny Wuerffel, the Heisman Trophy winning quarterback
    from Florida. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1398IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0181
    RTw  20-Apr-97 20:04    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    NEW DELHI - Inder Kumar Gujral was named India's prime minister, ending
    a three-week political crisis that had rocked financial markets and
    paralysed the government. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israeli prosecutors decided not to charge Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu in a corruption scandal, saying police
    recommendations to indict him were based on insufficient evidence. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Election fever gripped France as speculation mounted that
    conservative President Jacques Chirac would announce a snap general
    election on Monday to clear the decks in the drive for a single
    European currency. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - The business community in Zaire's capital Kinshasa made
    preparations in case a rapid rebel advance cut the city's main supply
    route. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - Wearing what looked like a bullet-proof vest, North Korean
    defector Hwang Jang-yop arrived in South Korea amid intense security
    and declared his mission was to stop Pyongyang from launching a war. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - With almost all results counted from Bulgaria's parliamentary
    election, the reformist Union of Democratic Forces was set for a
    comfortable majority enabling it to push through tough but vital
    economic reforms. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - Saboteurs damaged Hong Kong's showpiece Tsing-Ma bridge,
    the world's longest road-rail suspension link, barely a week before
    British ex-premier Margaret Thatcher was set to declare it open, police
    said. 

    - - - - 

    BONN - German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel appealed for calm in
    Germany and other European states after a diplomatic row sparked by a
    Berlin court verdict that said Iran had ordered assassinations.

    - - - - 

    MONAGHAN, Ireland - The IRA's political wing Sinn Fein challenged the
    winner of British elections on May 1 to lift a ban on its entry to
    Northern Ireland peace talks and negotiate a lasting settlement. 

    - - - - 

    BURGAJET, Albania - Albania's long-exiled King Leka launched a campaign
    to restore the monarchy in the violence-stricken Balkan nation with a
    triumphant journey to his ancestral village. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Election rivals locked horns over Britain's role in Europe,
    with opposition Labour leader Tony Blair saying "civil war" had broken
    out in the ruling Conservative party over how much sovereignty should
    be conceded to Brussels. 

    - - - - 

    MARJAYOUN, Lebanon - Israeli warplanes attacked suspected guerrilla
    targets in south Lebanon, hours after two members of an Israeli-backed
    militia were killed in bomb explosions. 

    REUTER 
7.1399IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0130
    RTw  21-Apr-97 00:38    

    Bomb scare briefly closes London motorway

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, April 20 (Reuter) - Part of London's M25 orbital motorway was
    briefly closed in a security alert on Sunday evening while police
    investigated a suspect package. 

    Police said no bomb was found and the closed section of the M25
    southeast of the capital was reopened to traffic. 

    The alert followed Irish Republican Army bomb explosions and scares on
    Friday which severely disrupted road and rail links in northern
    England. 

    The IRA detonated two bombs and created rail and motorway chaos in
    headline-grabbing attacks in northern England. 

    Friday's attacks appeared to be the latest attempt by the guerrillas,
    who are opposed to British rule in Northern Ireland, to disrupt
    Britain's election campaign. 

    There were small explosions at railway stations in Doncaster and Leeds
    in northern England. Police said they carried out a controlled
    explosion on a package they suspected could be a bomb at Stoke station
    in the northwest. 

    REUTER
7.1400IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0142
    RTos 20-Apr-97 19:24    

    Saboteurs Damage Key Hong Kong Bridge

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    HONG KONG (Reuter) - Saboteurs damaged Hong Kong's showpiece Tsing-Ma
    bridge, the world's longest road-rail suspension link, barely a week
    before British ex-premier Margaret Thatcher was set to declare it open,
    police said on Sunday. 

    A police spokesman said cables along the emergency tunnel under the
    road level of the two-tier bridge had been deliberately cut in 32
    places and investigators had classified the case as criminal damage. 

    He said the damage was reported Friday and police had received no
    reports of injuries. 

    Thatcher, who signed the 1984 treaty by which Britain agreed to return
    the wealthy colony of six million people to China at midnight on June
    30, 1997, was due to cut the ribbon next Sunday and declare the bridge
    to Hong Kong's ambitious new airport open. 

    "The Tsing-Ma contractors are now hastening to complete the repairs," a
    police spokesman said by telephone. He said forensic tests were being
    carried out on the damaged equipment but declined to elaborate further. 

    Commercial flights are due to start in mid-1998, only a few months
    behind the original schedule drawn up in 1989. 

    The $20-billion airport and port development, the world s largest
    infrastructure project, became a political football in the final years
    of colonial rule of Hong Kong when Sino-British relations deteriorated
    in the wake of China's bloody 1989 Tiananmen crackdown on pro-democracy
    demonstrators. 

    China accused Britain of squandering the territory's vast wealth on an
    unnecessarily extravagant structure. 

    Despite the London-Beijing chill, the Hong Kong government simply got
    on with building the technologically advanced new airport on reclaimed
    land linked to Hong Kong proper by the Tsing-Ma bridge.
7.1401IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0226
    RTw  20-Apr-97 16:06    

    Gay activists storm Archbishop's London palace

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 20 (Reuter) - Demonstrators scaled the walls of the
    Archbishop of Canterbury's London palace on Sunday to protest at what
    they said was his homophobic attitude to gay priests. 

    Waving banners saying "Stop Crucifying Queers," they confronted a
    startled Dr George Carey, the leader of the Anglican Church, who was
    meeting 16 bishops from around the world at Lambeth Palace. 

    The protestors, led by Peter Tatchell of the Outrage Group, said they
    objected to Carey ruling out any role in the Church of England for
    clergy in homosexual relationships. 

    Tatchell seized Carey's arm to grab his attention and brief scuffles
    ensued, eye-witnesses said. 

    But the protesters left peacefully after Carey told them: "I find your
    manner offensive. That is enough. I'd like you to leave my grounds."
    Police were not called.

    REUTER
7.1402IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0299
    RTos 20-Apr-97 13:57    

    Gas-to-Oil Conversion Would Jolt Energy Sector

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - The economics of the energy industry could be
    dramatically altered if new technology to convert natural gas into oil
    proves economic. 

    At least three companies -- Exxon Corp., South Africa's Sasol Ltd and a
    small U.S. firm, Syntroleum Corp -- believe they have overcome the
    obstacles to make gas-into-oil a commercial proposition. 

    James Ball, managing partner of Gas Strategies in London, said
    converting gas into oil could be "an exciting alternative route for
    commercializing natural gas" although he noted that previous attempts
    have not proved economic. 

    A report by New York investment bank Salomon Brothers was even more
    enthusiastic, saying the commercial production of oil from gas would be
    "truly revolutionary," as it would result in the opening up of vast
    numbers of gas fields that  are currently considered too far from
    consuming centers to be economically viable. 

    "The implication of this new technology is mindboggling. 

    William S. Pintz said in a report published by the East-West Center in
    Hawaii that the latest technological advances could lead to the
    exploitation of gas deposits amounting to about half of the world's
    5,000 trillion cubic feet of proven reserves that are currently
    "stranded" or uneconomic. 

    The main advantage of oil over gas is that it is cheaper to transport.
    It does not have to be placed under high pressure in pipelines or
    cooled to extremely low temperatures if transported by tanker. 

    In addition, oil products created from gas are potentially cleaner than
    conventional oil as they do not contain any sulphur. 

    The end-products are refinery feedstock or so-called middle
    distillates, such as kerosene and diesel, for which world demand is
    rising fast. 

    The idea of converting natural gas into oil is far from new, having
    been invented by German scientists in the 1920s, but until now the
    so-called Fischer-Tropsch process has been extremely expensive. 

    South Africa is the only country that produces "synfuels" or synthetic
    fuels on a large scale, having been forced to do so when the country
    was under an international oil embargo due to its apartheid policies. 

    But the process depended on heavy state subsidies and South Africa's
    synfuels industry was expected to die a natural death now the country
    is no longer subject to sanctions. 

    However, after producing "synfuels" from coal for 40 years, Sasol has
    for the last four years been producing oil from gas commercially, with
    output now running at 2,500 barrels per day. 

    Both Sasol and Exxon say they have made technical advances that make
    the process economically viable, and both companies have been holding
    talks with Qatar on producing oil from gas in the Gulf state, which has
    some of the world's biggest gas reserves. 

    Sasol envisages output of 20,000 barrels a day in Qatar, while a Qatar
    General Petroleum Corp. official said the Exxon project would use 1
    billion cubic feet per day to produce about 100,000 barrels a day of
    oil. 

    Qatari Energy Minister Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah put the cost of
    the project at $1.2 billion and said in February that a memorandum of
    understanding would be signed soon. 

    This project would be in addition to plans for Qatar to export 12
    million tons per year of liquefied natural gas by the year 2000. 

    In addition, Tulsa, Okla.-based Syntroleum has developed its own
    technology to produce oil from gas, which, like Exxon's and Sasol's, is
    based on the 70-year-old Fischer-Tropsch process. 

    Syntroleum says its version of the Fischer-Tropsch process can produce
    oil from gas at an oil price of below $20 a barrel and at a capital
    cost of $12,000 to $27,000 per barrel of daily capacity. 

    Salomon Brothers said that at the lower end of this range, gas-to-oil
    "would be highly competitive with current grass roots refinery capital
    costs," and that LNG projects had a capital cost of $30,000 to $40,000
    per barrel-day of capacity. 

    Syntroleum says its process is economical on a small scale, and that
    only 2 percent of the world's gas fields outside North America are
    suitable for a large, 50,000 barrel a day gas-to-oil plant. 

    "At plant capacities as small as 5,000 bpd, the Syntroleum Process
    offers a potential solution for almost 40 percent of the world's gas
    fields, which hold over 95 percent of the world's natural gas. 

    REUTER
7.1403IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0231
    RTw  20-Apr-97 10:00    

    Three teams of IRA gunmen sent to UK - paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 20 (Reuter) - The Irish Republican Army has sent three
    teams of gunmen to Britain to target top politicians in the runup to
    the May 1 election, the Sunday Times newspaper said. 

    The paper, citing security sources, said top intelligence officers have
    issued warnings to senior Conservative members of parliament, former
    Northern Ireland ministers and associates of former prime minister
    Margaret Thatcher. 

    The IRA, battling to oust Britain from Northern Ireland, has sought to
    propel the issue onto the election agenda with a string of bombs and
    alerts that have paralysed the country's rail and motorway networks. 

    The guerrillas also forced the postponement of the Grand National, the
    world's most famous steeplechase, with a bomb alert. 

    The security sources said nine IRA gunmen have gone missing from their
    homes in Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic, a classic
    intelligence signal they may now be "on active service." 

    Former Northern Ireland secretary Peter Brooke and minister Michael
    Mates are among those who have been warned to be vigilant, the sources
    said. 

    REUTER
7.1404IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0244
    AP 21-Apr-1997 0:47 EDT   REF5214

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Boy Killed in Roller Coaster Crash

    TULSA, Okla. (AP) -- A 14-year-old boy was thrown from an amusement
    park ride and killed Sunday when a roller coaster car slipped backwards
    and slammed into the car behind it. Two other teens were critically
    injured. 

    A car on The Wildcat ride at Bell's Amusement Park was being pulled to
    the top when, just before reaching the crest, it slid down the coaster
    track and collided with another car, said Harry Baker, assistant fire
    chief. 

    Eyewitnesses said the 14-year-old boy who died was in the front car,
    and was ejected, hitting his head on one of the ride's metal bars. 

    Two 14-year-old boys were in serious condition late Sunday at St.
    Francis Hospital, spokeswoman Lisa Ingram said. A father, two of his
    daughters and another young girl who was a family friend were treated
    at another hospital. 

    The ride operates on a metal track and uses single cars holding four
    people each. It is about four stories tall at its highest point. 

    "I heard a funny noise and looked up and the front car was coming
    backward," said Kurt Vitense, who was on the ride platform. "I couldn't
    tell if the people in the car even knew what was going on, but they hit
    awfully hard." 

    The park, jammed with visitors enjoying a 25-cents-a-ride promotion,
    remained open after the accident. 

    Robert Bell III, Bell's president and general manager, said the Wildcat
    ride has been at the park since 1974. 

    Bell said there had never been a fatal accident in the 47 years the
    park's been open. 

    "My family and I are deeply upset and shocked by this tragedy," he
    said. "We are committed to conducting our operation with the highest
    level of safety." 
7.1405IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0248
    AP 21-Apr-1997 0:36 EDT   REF5206

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cyber-Stalking Was Teen Prank

    EMERYVILLE, Ontario (AP) -- A 15-year-old boy has admitted he is the
    "cyber stalker" who invaded his family's home in widely reported case
    of electronic harassment. 

    Billy Tamai confessed to starting a teen prank that spiraled out of
    control after a four-hour interrogation by police on Saturday. 

    His mother, Debbie Tamai, issued a statement Sunday apologizing for the
    actions of her son, who was able to elude investigators, Bell Canada,
    Ontario Hydro and even an espionage team hired by two television
    networks. 

    "He's my son, I don't know how I didn't know," she said tearfully. "I
    must have been blind... I feel so stupid. So sorry." 

    The electronic stalker, known as "Sommy," began haunting the
    custom-built home near Windsor, Ontario, in December. He tapped into
    the family's phone lines, interrupting conversations with burps and
    babble. Lights and appliances would randomly turn on and off. 

    The family recently put their house up for sale to escape him. 

    "It started off as a joke with his friends and just got so out of hand
    that he didn't know how to stop it and was afraid to come forward and
    tell us in fear of us disowning him," his parents said in their
    statement. 

    Provincial police said the teen would not be charged. 

    "After going through the evidence gathered and the interviews, we
    concluded that charges would re-victimize the family," said Sgt. Doug
    Babbitt. 

    Billy's uncle, Gary Smith, said the teen was an average high school
    student who has never been in serious trouble before. 

    A two-day sweep last week by a team of intelligence and security
    experts loaded with high-tech gizmos failed to reveal Sommy's methods.
    The team was brought in by Dateline NBC and the Discovery Channel. 

    Emeryville is a small town on the shore of Lake St. Clair, 20 miles
    east of Detroit. 
7.1406IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0295
    AP 20-Apr-1997 21:42 EDT   REF5648

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Legislators Learn To Use E-Mail

    By LEN IWANSKI

    Associated Press Writer

    HELENA (AP) -- When state Rep. Kim Gillan wants to communicate with
    constituents, rather than pick up the phone or put pen to paper she'll
    often log on to the Internet. 

    The Democratic lawmaker from Billings is a business consultant and one
    of a handful of Montana legislators who actively use the e-mail and
    research capabilities of the Internet, the network that links computers
    all over the world. 

    "I would say I average five to six e-mail messages per day; typically
    over the weekend I can get up to 30 if I've asked for input on a
    particular bill," Gillan said in a recent interview conducted by
    e-mail. 

    Gillan said she found her e-mail capability particularly helpful when
    the House was debating bills that deal with prisons and corrections. 

    "I have several active and retired police or FBI persons in my
    district. It was great to e-mail them questions in the evening and then
    in the a.m., before going into session, I could check the responses." 

    A legislative directory published by US West Communications lists
    Internet e-mail addresses for 18 of the 150 legislators -- 14 in the
    House and four in the Senate -- although the one listed for Rep. Chase
    Hibbard, R-Helena, is wrong and doesn't work, he told The Associated
    Press. 

    Sen. Don Hargrove, R-Belgrade, represents Senate District 16, which is
    reflected in his America Online user name, DonHSD16. 

    E-mail would be a handy tool for communicating with his constituents,
    he said, "but not too many use it." 

    "I use the Internet extensively, especially to find current related
    news from other states, research situations that are proposed for
    Montana but already in place in other states," said Rep. Matt Denny,
    R-Missoula, who works in the computer industry. 

    Denny said he regularly uses e-mail to communicate with legislators in
    other states and with interest groups and research institutes such as
    the Free Congress Foundation. 

    Rep Bob Keenan, R-Bigfork, calls the Internet "an incredible research
    tool," which he uses to research newspaper and magazine articles that
    relate to issues before the Montana Legislature. 

    "I can't help but find humor in the approach people use in trying to
    present a situation as specific to Montana, when a few minutes on the
    Internet finds that to be folly," Keenan said. 

    One group not highly visible in e-mail is lobbyists. Denny believes
    this is because there are so few legislators reachable by e-mail that
    it wouldn't be worth the lobbyists' time. Another explanation might be
    that lobbyists prefer face-to-face dealings. 

    Hargrove said he has had some e-mail from the Montana Education
    Association and from people in the state university system. 

    "I have received two kinds of e-mail from citizens," Denny said, "a
    limited amount from folks in the district, and a limited amount from
    others around the state who 'blast' to the list of legislators" by
    sending a message simultaneously to the e-mail addresses of those
    lawmakers who have one. 

    Gillan has developed her own mailing list of about 100 names of people
    and organizations who regularly get an update from her on what's
    happening at the Capitol and her views on pending legislation. 

    "I began gathering e-mail addresses right after the election," she
    said. "And I know that several folks forward the e-mails to friends in
    and beyond my district." 

    Some people outside her district send her questions via e-mail after
    becoming frustrated when their own representative fails to respond to
    their paper mail or phone calls, Gillan said. She tries to answer any
    such queries. 

    Gillan said she finds another advantage in using the Internet: In
    communicating directly with constituents, she said, she can bypass what
    she believes to be biased and incomplete reporting in some of the news
    coverage of the Legislature. 

    "My people have e-mailed me to complain about the news coverage.
    Typically they want copies of the bill so they can tell what it
    actually does," Gillan said. 
7.1407IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0286
    AP 20-Apr-1997 18:32 EDT   REF5515

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report: Tobacco Execs Deny Danger

    MIAMI (AP) -- A month after the Liggett Group admitted that smoking
    causes cancer and is addictive, executives of the nation's top four
    tobacco companies still say tobacco doesn't kill, a newspaper reported
    Sunday. 

    In private depositions given last week, the exeuctives clung to
    long-held industry dogma, according to transcripts and videotapes
    obtained by The Miami Herald. They were questioned by Stanley
    Rosenblatt, a Florida lawyer who has filed two class-action lawsuits. 

    Rosenblatt talked to James Morgan, president of Philip Morris, Andrew
    Schindler, president of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, Nick Brookes, chief
    executive of Brown & Williamson, and Alexander Spears, chairman of
    Lorillard Tobacco Co. 

    The depositions were lengthy, often acrimonious and sometimes personal. 

    Spears' father, a heavy smoker, died of lung cancer. Schindler's
    father, who smoked three packs a day, had circulation problems and died
    from a stroke. 

    "The doctor told him ... 'You can either stop smoking or I can cut off
    your hands and feet some day,"' Schindler said. 

    Nevertheless, Schindler said he doesn't believe tobacco is deadly or
    conclusively linked to any illness. He does not believe tobacco is any
    more addictive than coffee or carrots. 

    "Carrot addiction?" the lawyer asked. 

    "Yes," Schindler answered. "There was British research on carrots." 

    Schindler smokes a pack and a half a day. His wife smokes a pack a day.
    She tried to quit once. He tried to quit twice. 

    Spears said he quit smoking in 1977, though he still has an occasional
    cigarette. He said he stopped because he had a heart attack -- "a
    unique health reason." 

    Morgan said he began smoking as a college freshman and still smokes
    three packs a week. He has quit three times, never for more than a
    year. The last time was in 1987, after he suffered a collapsed lung. 

    On March 20, Liggett, maker of L&Ms and Chesterfields, settled 22 state
    lawsuits by agreeing to label its cigarettes addictive and admitting
    cigarettes are targeted to teen-agers and cause cancer. 

    Despite the settlement, thousands of scientific studies and newly
    released damning documents from their own companies, the executives
    said they still don't believe that tobacco is addictive or can kill. 

    "You don't agree that tobacco use causes any human tragedies, do you?"
    Spears was asked. 

    "No, I do not," he said. 

    A jury considering an unrelated tobacco suit in Jacksonville last week
    saw internal company documents from 1953 indicating that Schindler's
    firm has known of a link between tobacco and cancer for nearly half a
    century. 

    Rosenblatt showed the same document to Schindler, who was unimpressed. 

    He and other executives testified repeatedly that, as far as they are
    concerned, smoking is nothing more than a "risk factor" for cancer and
    other diseases. 

    "My view is that cigarette smoking is a risk factor for those diseases
    and it may cause those diseases," Schindler said. "I do not know if it
    does or doesn't in that sense. I believe that maybe it's a risk
    factor." 

    Morgan said cigarette smoking "may possibly cause cancer." 

    Rosenblatt expressed some surprise over the nature of the testimony.

    "It's really extraordinary that, in April of 1997, these CEOs --
    without any sense of embarrassment -- are adhering to a totally
    repudiated party line," he said. "It's an insult to the American
    people." 
7.1408IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0284
    AP 20-Apr-1997 12:02 EDT   REF5240

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    X-Rays Spot Cosmic Explosion Site

    By MATT CRENSON

    AP Science Editor

    A new satellite may finally give astronomers the means to figure out
    what is causing the mysterious cosmic explosions that space-based
    instruments have detected for a quarter century. 

    Since military satellites first discovered them in the 1960s,
    scientists have detected more than 2,000 gamma ray bursts. Yet they
    know almost nothing about why distant spots in the sky suddenly light
    up with high-energy gamma rays, only to fade to black in a few seconds
    or minutes. 

    The main obstacle has been logistical. After a burst lights up the sky,
    astronomers can't turn the world's most powerful telescopes on the spot
    fast enough. By the time the telescopes are aligned, whatever made the
    burst has faded to invisibility. 

    That all changed Feb. 28, when the Italian-Dutch satellite BeppoSAX
    spotted a gamma ray burst in the constellation Orion. 

    Within eight hours the satellite had trained its own X-ray telescope on
    the spot where the gamma rays appeared and saw a fading fireball right
    where the burst had been. In subequent weeks, the Hubble Space
    Telescope and several powerful earthbound telescopes also set their
    sights on the spot. 

    What they saw there looked like a fading fireball in a far-off galaxy,
    a team of 31 astronomers wrote in the April 17 issue of the journal
    Nature. 

    "Now we finally have something we can study," said Gerald Fishman, one
    of the authors of the Nature paper. "It's probably one of the biggest
    developments to happen in gamma ray burst research in the last 20
    years." 

    BeppoSAX will have to catch more gamma ray bursts before it can help
    figure out where the gamma ray bursts come from and what is making
    them. But astronomers are optimistic, because on April 2 the satellite
    measured X-rays in the aftermath of yet another burst. 

    "The next burst which comes up I'm sure will be very well observed,"
    said Bohdan Paczynski, an astrophysicist at Princeton University. "This
    is really a major breakthrough from BeppoSAX." 

    Launched in 1996, the satellite was designed in part to determine the
    locations of gamma rays bursts as quickly as possible and notify
    astronomers on the ground. The satellite simply scans part of the sky
    for gamma ray bursts, and when it sees one it sends a message to
    astronomers around the world saying "Look over there." 

    The authors of the Nature paper responded to BeppoSAX on Feb. 28 by
    turning two telescopes in the Canary Islands on the spot indicated by
    BeppoSAX. The telescopes made out both the fading fireball and a faint
    blurry object that may be a galaxy, as did the Hubble Space Telescope
    and other ground-based instruments. 

    "We see a fuzzy nebulosity right next to or adjoining the optical
    transient, but it's hard to say that it's actually a galaxy," said
    Fishman, a research scientist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in
    Huntsville, Ala. 

    Though previous satellites have done the same thing as BeppoSAX, they
    have been either too slow or too imprecise to be useful, Paczynski
    said. BeppoSAX can lead astronomers to gamma ray burst remnants because
    it combines speed and precision in a single package. 

    If the gamma ray bursts do come from distant galaxies, as the BeppoSAX
    observation suggests, that invalidates the large number of gamma ray
    burst theories that require sources within the Milky Way, said Martin
    Rees, Britain's Astronomer Royal and a professor at Cambridge
    University. 

    But at this stage, it's too early to tell. 

    "My feeling is we have to wait for another one to be sure," Rees said.

7.1409IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:02110
    AP 21-Apr-1997 1:44 EDT   REF5254

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Scots May Get Own Parliament

    By MAUREEN JOHNSON

    Associated Press Writer

    STIRLING, Scotland (AP) -- After nearly 300 years of union with
    England, Christine Holden thinks it's about time the Scots "had a wee
    say in our own affairs." 

    They'll probably get it after national elections May 1. 

    The front-running Labor Party promises to give Scotland its own
    parliament, a move that embattled Conservative Prime Minister John
    Major warns will be the first step toward shattering the United Kingdom
    of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. 

    Mrs. Holden, a shopkeeper in Cambusbarron, a picturesque village on a
    hill overlooking estates of local lairds, or landowners, has no big
    quarrel with Michael Forsyth, Stirling's high-profile Conservative
    Party legislator. 

    "What I don't like is that just about everything that is done is
    Scotland needs permission from England," she says. 

    That sentiment adds a dimension to the election in Scotland. 

    For English voters, the choice is between the Conservatives and Tony
    Blair's "New Labor," the once-socialist Labor Party that has shifted to
    the center on tax and spending issues, blurring the differences between
    the two. 

    But on Britain's unwritten constitution, the mass of law and custom
    that defines the nation and Scotland's role in it, the gulf between
    Conservatives and Laborites is enormous. Labor would strip the
    hereditary aristocracy of voting powers in the House of Lords and allow
    regional legislatures in Scotland and Wales. 

    Labor's main competition in Scotland, in fact, is the leftist Scottish
    National Party, which wants nothing less than full independence. 

    Labor would give the 129-member Scottish parliament sole authority over
    education, health and legal affairs. Wales, which unlike Scotland
    doesn't have separate legal and school systems from England's, would
    get a less powerful assembly. 

    In addition, in the fall, the 5 million Scots would get to vote on
    whether the Scottish parliament gets tax-raising powers. The
    Conservatives campaign against the whole idea by deriding the "Tartan
    Tax" that would be added to the taxes Scots already pay. 

    The Conservatives contend Scotland has strong representation in the
    Cabinet from the secretary of state for Scotland -- a post held by
    Forsyth, 44. 

    A forceful politician, he is one of just 10 Conservatives -- compared
    with Labor's 49 -- among the 72 legislators from Scottish districts in
    the 651-member House of Commons. 

    As Scots' disenchantment with the Conservatives has grown -- in the
    mid-1950s the Conservatives held a majority of Scottish districts --
    Forsyth's 14-year hold on Stirling has withered. 

    He hung on by just 703 votes in the 1992 national election, getting 40
    percent of the vote to Labor's 38.5 percent and 13.7 percent for a
    Scottish nationalist. 

    On this knife-edge hangs a district which, legend holds, is the key to
    controlling Scotland. The town is dominated by an ancient castle and a
    220-foot monument commemorating William Wallace's defeat of the English
    army at Stirling Bridge in 1297. 

    The district is mainly middle class, running from the eastern edge of
    Loch Lomond though The Trossachs, prime tourist country. Unemployment
    is low, the land breath-taking, and Edinburgh is just 35 miles away. In
    England, Stirling would be a Conservative shoo-in. 

    But Scotland is different. While English voters gave the Conservatives
    four straight victories and 18 years in government, Labor swept most of
    Scotland. Now Stirling is within reach. 

    Forsyth, working the town center on a sunny afternoon, trails a posse
    of Conservative activists wearing badges depicting him against a Union
    Jack, the British flag. His slogan is "British and Proud." 

    "Vote for Scotland, vote Labor!" a young man with two-toned hair shouts
    as Forsyth moves on after some exchanges about jobs. 

    In St. Ninian's, a pleasant-looking public housing project, Labor
    candidate Anne McQuire gets a friendly welcome. The grumbles are about
    the state-run National Health Service, heating allowances and pensions.
    No one asks about a Scottish parliament. 

    Polls indicate Scottish nationalism is strongest among the young. 

    "I would rather things were done from London," says Frances Fisher, 71.
    "We're a small country and we can't afford all this devolution
    business." 

    But she's voting Labor anyway to get the Tories out, although she
    regards a Scottish parliament as a bunch of free-loading local
    politicians in the making. 

    Mrs. McQuire says most Scots expect some sort of local power. 

    "It underpins every aspect of politics," she says. 
7.1410IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0289
    AP 20-Apr-1997 13:32 EDT   REF5347

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Korea Defector in S. Korea

    By SANG-HUN CHOE

    Associated Press Writer

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- The highest-ranking North Korean ever to
    defect arrived Sunday in South Korea, declaring the communist system he
    helped build has failed and warning that the increasingly poor and
    hungry country may resort to war. 

    Hwang Jang Yop, a former confidante of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il,
    flew in from the Philippines, ending a 67-day odyssey to reach South
    Korea and bringing an information bonanza on the secretive Pyongyang
    government. 

    Hwang, 74, said he defected to his homeland's enemy to tell the world
    that North Korea could start war while its people "went without clothes
    and were starving." 

    "Once vaunted as a socialist paradise, North Korea has now turned into
    an international beggar," Hwang said. "Its economy is sliding into
    overall paralysis. (People) have long since lost all hope" in the
    system. 

    "North Korea now seems to believe that as the only way out, it must use
    its formidable armed forces it had built up for decades," he said. "I
    came here to spend the rest of my life doing what I can to stop a war
    breaking out." 

    A former secretary of North Korea's highest decision-making body, the
    Central Committee of the Workers party, Hwang is the highest ranking
    North Korean defector since the division of Korea in 1945. He headed
    the prestigious Kim Il Sung University, served three times as chairman
    of the parliament, the Supreme People's Assembly, and once tutored Kim
    Jong Il. 

    He and an aide fled to South Korea's consulate in Beijing on Feb. 12 on
    their way home from an international seminar in Japan. 

    After a five-week diplomatic standoff, China asked the Philippines to
    let them stop over to avoid a symbolic slap at North Korea, China's
    longtime political ally, that a direct trip to Seoul would have caused.
    They flew to Manila on March 18. 

    Pyongyang initially accused Seoul of kidnapping Hwang and threatened
    unspecified retaliation. It later announced that it decided to banish
    him. 

    Seoul's Agency for National Security Planning called the defection "a
    great shock to the North Korean leadership because he was the very man
    who created the North's guiding ideology of juche (self-reliance)."

    South Korea planned to debrief Hwang and has indicated it then would be
    willing to share with the United States and Japan what he knows about
    some of North Korea's secrets, perhaps including its program to develop
    atomic bombs. 

    Defense Secretary William Cohen, in an interview Sunday with NBC TV's
    "Meet the Press," said he was assured during a recent trip to Seoul
    that U.S. officials would be able to question Hwang "to find out more
    about what's in the hearts and minds of the Korean leadership." 

    The importance of Hwang's defection was underscored by South Korea's
    reaction. National TV stations cut into regular programing to broadcast
    live Hwang's arrival and brief statement. The air force went on higher
    alert. Thousands of police stood guard and rerouted traffic for Hwang's
    motorcade. 

    South Korean officials said Hwang will stay in a safe house for a few
    weeks. 

    They predicted his arrival would not seriously endangered efforts by
    Seoul and Washington to persuade North Korea to enter talks -- along
    with China -- on ending the state of war on the peninsula. The 1950-53
    Korean War ended in a shaky truce, not a peace treaty. 

    North Korea had been expected to give a formal answer to the peace
    proposal Friday in New York, but said it needed more time. Seoul
    officials predicted North Korea eventually would accept the offer,
    which could attract badly needed international food aid. 

    Widespread hunger in North Korea may turn into famine this spring
    because of poor management of agriculture and two years of severe
    flooding. International charities were appealing for aid. 
7.1411IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0240
    AP 20-Apr-1997 13:01 EDT   REF5314

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Surgeons Operate on Saddam's Son

    By WAIEL FALEH

    Associated Press Writer

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Saddam Hussein's eldest son underwent surgery
    Sunday to remove at least one bullet lodged near his spine in an
    assassination attempt in December, government officials said. 

    A French and German medical team operated on 33-year-old Odai Hussein,
    the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. They said his
    condition appeared stable, but refused to give further details. 

    Odai, who had been widely believed to be Saddam's heir apparent, was
    shot about 10 times while waiting alone in his car in an upscale
    Baghdad suburb on Dec. 12. 

    Iraqi dissidents have said at least one bullet was lodged near Odai's
    spine and that French and Iraqi doctors have hesitated to operate,
    fearing surgery might leave him completely paralyzed. But Odai asked
    the doctors to operate anyway, they said. 

    Iraqi dissidents and Arab diplomats had said earlier Sunday in Amman,
    Jordan, that preparations were being made for Odai's surgery. 

    Two unidentified German surgeons had arrived in Baghdad to assist in
    the operation, said Mohammed Nassar, a spokesman for the Amman-based
    Iraqi National Accord. German Embassy officials were not available for
    comment. 

    Three opposition groups, including the Iranian-backed Al-Dawa Party,
    have claimed responsibility for the attack on Odai. 

    Odai has said 13 or 14 attempts have been made on his life. He blames
    Iran for the last one. 
7.1412IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 21 1997 12:0221
    AP 20-Apr-1997 10:56 EDT   REF5086

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Surgery May Improve Vision

    UNDATED (AP) -- Folks who are nearsighted may soon have an alternative
    to glasses, contacts and laser surgery to correct their vision. 

    Tiny, transparent rings implanted into the cornea are currently being
    tested. 

    The plastic rings are slightly thicker than a contact lens and are
    designed to be permanent. But they can be removed if better, cheaper
    procedures are developed or if wearers don't like them. 

    Tests are under way at ten health centers pending Food and Drug
    Administration approval. 

    The rings could help about 20 million adults who have mild
    nearsightedness. 
7.1413IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:24108
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 22-Apr-1997 1:07 EDT   REF5550

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
   
    WHITEWATER-McDOUGAL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Suggesting that both of the Clintons are lying,
    their convicted former Whitewater partner said Monday he perjured
    himself at his own criminal trial to protect the couple. Appearing on
    CNN's "Larry King Live," James McDougal said he had a conversation with
    then-Arkansas Gov. Clinton and Little Rock municipal judge David Hale
    in 1986, with Clinton urging Hale to make a loan to McDougal's wife,
    Susan. The president has denied attending such a meeting. McDougal also
    said ex-Justice Department official Webster Hubbell can answer many
    Whitewater questions. 
   
    BURMA SANCTIONS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department is expected Tuesday to announce
    sanctions limiting U.S. investments in Burma, an administration
    official says. The president believes the action fulfills last year's
    law authorizing sanctions under certain conditions and might stimulate
    pressure by other countries, an administration official told The New
    York Times. In February, Burmese Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu
    Kyi appealed for international sanctions, citing human rights abuses.
    Japan and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations have warned
    against unilateral sanctions. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- The judge and attorneys have finished questioning
    prospective jurors in the Oklahoma bombing trial. The final panel of 12
    jurors and six alternates was tentatively scheduled to be picked
    Tuesday after U.S. District judge Richard Matsch hears some pending
    motions. The judge was considering selecting an anonymous panel to hear
    the case against Timothy McVeigh. If convicted, McVeigh faces the death
    penalty on murder and conspiracy charges in the April 19, 1995, bombing
    that killed 168 people. 
   
    MISSING WARPLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- Wind-driven snow kept an Air Force recovery team
    from dangling over a steep Rocky Mountain slope to examine the
    suspected crash site of a missing warplane. Gray metal shards
    discovered on the slope are believed to be the A-10 wreckage. The
    weather was expected to improve Tuesday. The plane and its pilot
    vanished April 2. 
   
    CLINTON-FLOODS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton will take a firsthand look at the
    flooding in Grand Forks, N.D., and meet with refugees who have fled the
    inundated city. Water from the swollen Red River covers 75 percent of
    the city. One block of downtown Grand Forks was gutted by fire and
    streets are swamped with 5 feet of water. City officials are making
    plans to string a hose up to nine miles across the prairie to bring in
    clean water so people could at least wash their hands. 
   
    MEDICAL MARIJUANA 

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The medical marijuana battle resumes as federal
    agents raided a supplier, seizing 331 marijuana plants. The DEA raided
    the Flower Therapy club, which opened just before the passage of
    Proposition 215. The measure legalized the cultivation and distribution
    of marijuana for treatment of the nausea and pain experienced by
    seriously ill people with AIDS, cancer and other diseases. A Drug
    Enforcement Administration spokesman said the club was raided because
    its activities are illegal under federal law, which prohibits marijuana
    cultivation. 
   
    IRAQ PILGRIMS 

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Saddam Hussein has ordered his helicopters into
    the U.S.-patrolled no-fly zone, saying he intends to fly home weary
    Iraqi pilgrims returning from Mecca. Oil prices rose because of worries
    about possible disruptions in oil supplies if the United States
    retaliated. The State Department said Iraq should have gone to the
    United Nations to seek an exemption to travel through the no-fly zone. 
   
    ISRAEL-SCANDAL 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Benjamin Netanyahu is trying to shore up his
    government and his reputation after escaping prosecution in an
    influence-peddling scandal. Opposition leaders, however, demanded he
    resign and face trial. The opposition asked Israel's Supreme Court to
    overrule prosecutors' decision not to charge Netanyahu for his role in
    a political ally's short-lived appointment as attorney general. The
    prosecutors said they lacked the evidence to charge him with fraud and
    breach of trust. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar is trading at 125.34 yen early Tuesday, up
    0.04. The Nikkei slipped 2.41 points to 18,549.25. On Wall Street, the
    Dow fell 43.34 to 6,660.21. 
   
    HOCKEY PLAYOFFS 

    PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Eric Lindros, John LeClair and Mikael Renberg scored
    during a 40-shot flurry in the first two periods and the Philadelphia
    Flyers left the Pittsburgh Penguins on the brink of playoff elimination
    by winning 5-3. In another playoff game, Buffalo lost goalie Dominik
    Hasek to a sprained knee but took a 2-1 series lead with a 3-2 victory
    over Ottawa. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1414IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2476
    RTw  22-Apr-97 04:21    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    NEW YORK - South Korea's top negotiators in the proposed four-way peace
    talks said they were flying back to Seoul after they and U.S. officials
    failed to persuade North Korea to join the talks.

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Zaire's government vowed its beleaguered army will never
    surrender the capital Kinshasa to advancing rebels and called on
    residents to be prepared for resistance. Emergency rule Prime Minister
    General Likulia Bolongo called on foreigners and Zaireans in the city
    of over five million people to remain calm as a rebel attack loomed. 

    In LUBUMBASHI, Zairean rebels said 400 Chinese troops had flown into
    the capital Kinshasa to bolster the regime of President Mobutu Sese
    Seko. But in BEIJING, China dismissed the reports as groundless. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - President Jacques Chirac has taken a gamble that may make or
    break his presidency by calling a snap parliamentary election he says
    is needed to revitalise France for the introduction of a single
    European currency. Opposition parties blasted the early poll as a ploy
    to pave the way for a new bout of fiscal austerity while hiding the
    failings of the centre-right government behind a rushed campaign. 

    - - - - 

    NEW DELHI - India's new prime minister, Inder Kumar Gujral, faces a
    vote of confidence on Tuesday at the head of a centre-left coalition
    that changed its leader to win back a former ally. The United Front
    announced a new coordination committee with the Congress party, which
    triggered a political crisis on March 30 by withdrawing vital support
    to then prime minister H.D. Deve Gowda. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Chinese President Jiang Zemin starts a five-day visit to
    Russia on Tuesday aimed at building ties between two giants which view
    each other as key strategic partners in the next century. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - The opposition Labour Party has accused European Commission
    President Jacques Santer of making an ill-judged intervention in
    Britain's election campaign with his spirited attack on Eurosceptic
    "doom merchants." But his blunt message proved an electoral godsend for
    Prime Minister John Major, whose party has been shaken by divisions
    over Europe and grown fearful of intervention by Brussels and erosion
    of national sovereignty. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Palestinians have expressed hope that Israeli Prime
    Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will concentrate on pulling Middle East
    peacemaking out of its crisis now that he has survived a corruption
    scandal. 

    - - - - 

    MANILA - Former Philippine president Diosdado Macapagal, who served
    from 1961 to 1965 until he lost his reelection bid to the late
    Ferdinand Marcos, died of illness in a Manila hospital. He was 86. 

    - - - - 

    LOS ANGELES - Action movie star Arnold Schwarzenegger, who underwent
    heart surgery last week to replace a heart valve, is recovering and
    expects to leave the hospital this week, his publicist said. 

    REUTER 
7.1415IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2497
    RTw  22-Apr-97 06:01    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Mexican prisoners use conjugal visits to dig tunnel 

    GUADALAJARA, Mexico - Authorities in Ciudad Guzman in Jalisco state
    said they discovered some of their 70 prisoners were using conjugal
    visits to try and dig their way out of jail. 

    "It was in the area of conjugal visits," Alfonso Ramirez, secretary of
    the city government, told Reuters. "There was a small refrigerator and
    they were underneath that digging, but they had only gone about two
    metres (yards) down." 

    "They were scratching up against a retaining wall shared by a bank,
    Ramirez said. "So we suppose that they were trying to go to the bank." 

    - - - - 

    Canadian boy admits cyber terrorism of his family 

    EMERYVILLE, Ontario - A 15-year-old Canadian boy has admitted he was
    responsible for months of notorious high-tech pranks that terrorised
    his own family, police said. 

    Police said they have decided against charging the boy in the case that
    puzzled technology experts and attracted media attention both in Canada
    and the United States. 

    "We've provided the family with some counselling avenues, but
    ultimately it's up to them what to do with Billy," Sgt. Doug Babbitt of
    the Ontario Provincial Police said. 

    Babbitt said the family was interviewed on Saturday and presented with
    police suspicions the harassment was an inside job. The boy then
    identified himself as the stalker, he said. 

    Debbie Tamai, mother of the son the media dubbed "Cyber Punk," on
    Sunday apologised for Billy's actions in a statement. 

    Since January, authorities have been hunting for "Sommy" -- the name
    adopted by the boy who tapped into the Tamai family's telephone and
    electrical systems. 

    Police said he disguised his voice electronically and cut into phone
    conversations by simply using an extension in his bedroom. He had
    eluded two full-time officers and as many as eight policemen assigned
    to the case at one time. 

    - - - - 

    Colombian tree-planting one for the record books 

    BOGOTA - More than 10,000 trees were planted in a single minute on a
    hill overlooking Colombia's southwest city of Cali in a ceremony that
    should win a place in the record books. 

    Bogota's El Espectador newspaper said a total of 10,720 trees were
    planted on the hill, previously adorned with just three austere
    crosses, during Sunday's ceremony organised by a local ecological
    group. Holes were dug in advance of the ceremony, allowing the trees to
    be planted simultaneously in the record-breaking minute, the daily
    said. 

    "It was the world's biggest planting in a minute," the newspaper said,
    adding that Guinness Book of Records was sure to record the event. 

    - - - - 

    Russian firm wins order to fly elephants to Africa 

    MOSCOW - A Russian airline has won an order to export elephants to
    Uganda later this year, a company official said. 

    Marina Samokhvalova, cargo manager of TransCharter, said the firm had
    been chosen by British-based Aircraft Management Services to transport
    four to six elephants from St Petersburg zoo to the Ugandan capital
    Kampala. 

    She said the elephants would be used in the making of a BBC documentary
    film. 

    Samokhvalova did not say why the British Broadcasting Corporation had
    decided to send elephants from Russia to an African country. 

    The elephants will be transported in containers on an Antonov An-124
    jet in September, she said. 

    REUTER
7.1416IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2577
    RTos 22-Apr-97 05:34    

    Bomb Threats Disrupt London

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - London was hit by massive disruption  Monday after
    suspected IRA bomb threats closed five railway stations and three
    international airports. 

    Road, train and air travel came to a virtual standstill for more than
    three hours in the morning rush, turning some streets into eerie
    deserts and others into bumper-to-bumper jams. 

    Traffic on roads and highways into Europe's largest city tailed back
    for miles. Travel organizations said it was the worst disruption they
    could remember. Key sections of the "Tube" underground railway were
    also shut for several hours. 

    "West London and central London are closed," said a Royal Automobile
    Club spokesman. "This is some of the worst traffic chaos that we have
    seen in London for many years, if ever." 

    Politicians swiftly blamed the Irish Republican Army, which has used
    similar tactics in northern England several times in the past month in
    an effort to keep Northern Ireland on the agenda during the campaign
    for a May 1 parliamentary election. 

    "These are despicable actions and I condemn them unreservedly ... It
    has all the indications of IRA activities," said British Home Secretary
    Michael Howard. 

    Police evacuated mainline stations at King's Cross, Charing Cross,
    Paddington and St. Pancras and the busy Baker Street underground
    station after receiving a series of coded warnings that bombs had been
    left there. 

    No bombs were found and most of the stations were reopened by noon.
    Surrounding roads were closed during the search, turning parts of the
    bustling heart of the capital into peaceful oases. 

    "You can almost hear a pin drop in Trafalgar Square," said one BBC
    reporter. "Everything is deathly calm." 

    Passengers were left sitting on planes for seven hours on the runway at
    Gatwick and Luton airports and Heathrow's international Terminal 3 was
    partially evacuated. At Gatwick, airport staff were trying to find a
    vacant hangar to house some of the 8,000 passengers stranded by the
    warnings. 

    The airports re-opened later but many flights were still disrupted. 

    The London bomb warnings appeared to form part of a campaign by the IRA
    to cause huge disruption in mainland Britain and win maximum publicity
    at virtually no cost. 

    Earlier this month the Grand National steeplechase -- one of Britain's
    biggest sporting events -- was abandoned because of an IRA telephone
    call to the racecourse minutes before the start. 

    Prime Minister John Major expressed contempt for the IRA and its
    political wing Sinn Fein, who want an end to British rule of Northern
    Ireland. 

    But he said the authorities had no alternative but to act on the
    threatening telephone calls. 

    "It is essential to take these warnings seriously. The IRA have
    murdered in the past. They will not hesitate to murder again if they
    thought it was in their interests to do so," Major told a news
    conference. 

    Sinn Fein was excluded from peace talks on a political solution to
    Northern Ireland peace because of IRA violence and the talks have been
    suspended during the election campaign. 

    REUTER
7.1417IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2593
    RTw  22-Apr-97 04:12    

    FEATURE-Canadian film of sex and death causes stir

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Jeffrey Hodgson 

    TORONTO, April 22 (Reuter) - The morbid tale of one woman's love for
    human remains has turned a small Canadian film into a runaway success
    story. 

    "Kissed," the story of a young necrophile who takes a funeral home job
    to pursue her passion, is garnering critical praise rare for a film of
    its kind. Shot on a shoestring budget, the independently made feature
    became a film festival favourite before it landed a coveted U.S.
    distribution deal. 

    Critics have raved, including the powerful TV team of Gene Siskel and
    Roger Ebert, who gave it "two thumbs up" ahead of its U.S. release last
    week. Hollywood has also taken notice, with director Lynne Stopkewich
    and star Molly Parker fielding offers from major studios. 

    "The shocking thing is how widely it has been embraced," the 33-year
    old Vancouver-based director said. "I never imagined that we'd have
    such mainstream acceptance." 

    "Kissed," based on Barbara Gowdy's short story "We So Seldom Look on
    Love," tells the story of a woman obsessed with death. It traces her
    adult sexual longing for corpses to her childhood fixation on dead
    animals. 

    It was the strength and unapologetic nature of the main character,
    Sandra Larson, that compelled Stopkewich to make a film from the story,
    she said, citing surrealist director David Lynch as a major influence. 

    "I'm really interested in provocative cinema and films that take you
    somewhere you haven't been before," she said. "I feel like my job as
    filmmaker is to take the rock, turn it over and see what's underneath." 

    NUDITY AS WELL AS DEATH 

    "Kissed" is provocative, including full frontal nudity, a lesson on
    embalming and vivid depictions of Parker entwined with corpses. Parker
    concedes she had qualms about taking the role but in the end the part
    was too rich to pass up. 

    "I thought it would be an incredible challenge to bring this character
    to life in a way that made people want to understand why she did the
    things she does," the 24-year old Parker said. 

    Given its subject matter and nationality, "Kissed" has drawn
    comparisons to Canadian director David Cronenberg's "Crash," a film
    about a group of people erotically obsessed with car crashes. But
    unlike "Crash," which sparked calls for censorship in Britain and
    Argentina, "Kissed" has attracted surprisingly little controversy. 

    "There's nothing that disturbing or offensive about 'Kissed.' What's
    miraculous about the film and what makes it a success is how tender,
    delicate and tasteful it is, considering that its heroine is a
    necrophile," Brian Johnson, film critic for Canadian newsweekly
    Maclean's, wrote. 

    Johnson said "Kissed" was typical of recent Canadian films such as
    "Crash" and Atom Egoyan's "Exotica" in that it explored inviduals
    alienated from normal society. He said that was not surprising as
    moviemaking in Canada was something of a fringe industry. 

    Indeed, to get the initial production of "Kissed" started, Stopkewich
    borrowed heavily on her 16 credit cards and got a loan from her
    parents. Grants from various government agencies helped finish the
    movie, which cost less than $715,000 to make. But the critical success
    of "Kissed" could soon transfer into financial success for Stopkewich
    and Parker. 

    SEX, DEATH PAYS 

    Both have signed with the William Morris agency and have received
    numerous scripts. Stopkewich has been in discussions with Warner
    Brothers, Miramax and 20th Century Fox. 

    In the near term, Stopkewich, who has been on the road for most of this
    year promoting the movie, plans to begin work on a new project, which
    she will not discuss in detail. She also plans to sneak into a public
    screening of her film to see how a mainstream audience reacts. 

    "I would tell (audiences) to probably forget everything they've read
    about it and just go into the movie with an open mind," she said. "If
    they're willing to put aside their preconceived ideas of how the film
    is going deal with the material then they might be pleasantly
    surprised." 

    REUTER
7.1418IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:25132
    RTw  22-Apr-97 03:24    

    FEATURE - Gay and homophobe fight it out in UK ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Gay and homophobe fight it out in UK election 

    By Helen Smith 

    EXETER, England, April 22 (Reuter) - Silky brown hair flying in the
    breeze and gleaming smile at the ready, Ben Bradshaw dashes across the
    road to where an elderly lady is waiting. 

    "I've been looking at the photos of your handsome face and thinking 'oh
    I'd love to meet him,"' she tells him, beaming toothlessly. 

    Bradshaw kisses her on the cheek. 

    He could be film star Hugh Grant's better-looking brother. In fact
    Bradshaw is the Labour Party's candidate for Exeter in western England
    for the May 1 British election and he and his Conservative rival,
    Adrian Young, have become quite famous. 

    Bradshaw is one of Britain's few openly gay politicians. Young is a
    devout Christian and virulently homophobic. 

    Young has described homosexuality as a "sterile, God-forsaken,
    disease-ridden occupation" and he has extreme views on other subjects
    too. 

    The 49-year-old doctor believes women should be stay-at-home mothers,
    that female members of parliament are orphaning their children and that
    single mothers should be stigmatised. 

    "If you let attractive women into the workforce they'll be wooed.
    They're fair game for anyone who wants to have a go at them...and the
    marauding male assumes women are there for the asking," he once told an
    interviewer. 

    Exeter is a key marginal constituency which the ruling Conservatives
    won with a majority of just over 3,000 at the 1992 election. Labour is
    strong favourite to win the May 1 election, ending 18 years in
    opposition. 

    MISJUDGING THE MOOD IN A KEY MARGINAL 

    The Conservatives clearly hoped at the start of the campaign that
    Bradshaw's sexuality would work in their favour in Exeter, which is
    usually regarded as rather traditionalist. 

    But they appear to have misjudged the city's tolerance. It is Young, it
    seems, not Bradshaw, who causes most offence. "We can't have that
    Adrian Young -- what on earth were they thinking of, choosing him?" a
    middle-aged woman tells Bradshaw. She had previously voted Liberal
    Democrat but will now support Labour, she says. 

    Labour's red and yellow campaign stickers and placards adorn homes
    across the Exeter. Bradshaw is greeted like a visiting celebrity,
    reducing elderly women to giggles and blushes and eliciting warm
    handshakes from many, though not all, men. 

    Bradshaw is hard to miss. Standing taller than the rest of his
    enthusiastic canvassing team, he has a smooth, unseasonal tan and is
    dressed with studied, casual elegance. 

    He is also determinedly chummy. At one doorstep, he begs puffs on the
    cigarette of bleached blonde young mother who says she will vote Labour
    because it has pledged to introduce a minimum wage. 

    She tells Bradshaw that her husband earns 3.19 pounds ($5.19) an hour
    and has six children to support. 

    "That's scandalous, Its like the third world," says Bradshaw, a former
    BBC journalist, before dashing on to the next doorstep. Nobody mentions
    Bradshaw's sexuality. 

    CONTRASTS 

    In another part of the city, Young is getting a less enthusiastic
    reception. 

    He is shorter and shabbier than Bradshaw. Most of his canvassers are
    older than his rival's and their pace around the streets is leisurely
    by comparison. 

    The Conservatives have a shiny new campaign bus which tours the city
    with a loudhailer denouncing Bradshaw as an interloper imposed by
    Labour's London headquarters. 

    Knocking on doors, Young finds several elderly people who assure him
    that they have always voted Conservative and will do so again. "I
    admire your family values at least," says one woman. 

    But at one house, a younger woman shuts the door in his face saying
    angrily :"I don't want to hear anything you have to say." 

    A man washing his car avoids Young's eye and tells him firmly that he
    won't be voting Conservative because "they've all got their snouts in
    the trough" -- a reference to allegations of influence-peddling in the
    ruling party. 

    Greeted with this kind of hostility, Young has become much more
    circumspect in his remarks. 

    "The only thing I will say about Ben Bradshaw is that he has nothing in
    common with the people of Exeter," Young says when asked for his
    opinion of his opponent. 

    "In some constituencies you could put up a monkey and it would get
    elected," he adds, sounding resigned to defeat in a seat that has been
    held by a Conservative since 1970. 

    He is clearly irked by the prevalence of Labour campaign posters in
    voters' windows. 

    "I hope Labour is going to put in a proper account of posters and so
    on," he says, to no-one in particular. "He means keeping to their
    election budget," whispers one of his team. 

    To be assured of victory, Bradshaw needs to win over Liberal Democrat
    voters and his campaign literature has a bar graph of the last election
    result to demonstrate how easily the Conservatives could be defeated
    now. 

    "Don't you want to get the Tories (Conservatives) out?" Bradshaw
    appeals to voters wavering between Labour and the Liberal Democrats. 

    And, for at least the few moments after he has left their doorstep, the
    latest targets of his charm seems convinced that they do. 

    REUTER
7.1419IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2527
    RTw  21-Apr-97 22:48    

    Labour at 47 percent in Scottish opinion poll

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    EDINBURGH, April 21 (Reuter) - Britain's opposition Labour Party jumped
    five points in a week to 47 percent among Scottish voters as ruling
    Conservatives and other main parties lost ground in a new opinion poll. 

    Conservatives slipped back one point to 18 percent, the Scottish
    National Party (SNP) were down two to 21 percent and Liberal Democrats
    lost four to 11 percent in an ICM poll being published in the Scotsman
    newspaper on Tuesday. 

    The random telephone survey of 1,000 voters was carried out from April
    18-20. 

    On this level of support, Labour would win 55 of Scotland's 72 seats in
    parliament in the May 1 general election. 

    Three key members of Prime Minister John Major's cabinet -- Foreign
    Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, Scottish Secretary Michael Forsyth and
    President of the Board of Trade Ian Lang -- would lose their seats, as
    would some junior ministers. 

    REUTER
7.1420IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2564
    RTos 21-Apr-97 20:28    

    Chocolate Carrots Lure Kids to Eat Vegetables

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Chocolate-flavored carrots, pizza-flavored corn and
    baked-bean flavored peas -- cancer researchers admit they sound less
    than appetizing to adults but hope they can lure children into eating
    their vegetables. 

    The Cancer Research Campaign joined forces with British frozen-food
    chain Iceland on Monday to launch a new range of frozen vegetables
    aimed at children. 

    "These products are designed for children. Adults in the main are not
    thrilled with them," Malcolm Walker, chairman and chief executive of
    Iceland, told a news conference. 

    But Gordon McVie, chairman of the Cancer Research Campaign, said the
    charity was willing to try anything after a survey earlier this year
    showed many British children were eating hardly any fruit or vegetables
    at all. 

    One-third of all cancers are due to poor diet, McVie said. British
    cancer charities have adopted the U.S. government health message that
    people should eat at least five servings of fruit and vegetables a day. 

    McVie said he came up with the idea when shopping. He saw aisles loaded
    down with flavoured crisps (potato chips). Although spiced up with "a
    disgusting range of tastes," the children liked -- and bought -- them. 

    He said he spoke to Walker about the possibilities. "We had an
    impromptu discussion on whether we could do something constructive
    rather than preaching from the pulpit thou shalt eat they veg'," McVie
    said. 

    "I suppose the first hurdle is to get children to eat any vegetables,"
    he said. "This for me is an experiment in changing behavior
    patterns...I think it is worth a shot." 

    He said education programmes urging people to eat their vegetables had
    not worked. "Children are thumbing their noses at the official
    approaches...and they are choosing not to eat fruit and vegetables." 

    Walker said it was a good opportunity for Iceland. 

    "We expect to sell these products in great quantities. We have
    manufactured tonnes of the stuff," he said. 

    The company tested a number of different taste combinations of five to
    13-year-olds and came up with chocolate-flavored carrots, cheese and
    onion-flavored cauliflower, pizza-flavored corn and baked-bean-flavored
    peas. 

    "We wouldn't be launching it if children didn't like it," he said. And
    the children had been fairly sensible, he added. 

    "Crazy things like bubblegum-flavored broccoli were knocked out by the
    children straight away." 

    They will sell for $1.60 for a 1-pound bag.

    REUTER
7.1421IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2535
    AP 22-Apr-1997 0:23 EDT   REF5495

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Simpson Damages Award Defended

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Nicole Brown Simpson's father said Monday that O.J.
    Simpson should not be granted a new civil trial for the wrongful death
    of his daughter, defending the $33.5 million award as "justifiable." 

    Simpson asked for the retrial on April 4, claiming jurors tried to
    destroy him financially with their judgment against him for the
    slayings of his ex-wife and Ronald Goldman. The jury was swayed by
    "passion and prejudice," he said. 

    In court papers filed Monday, Lou Brown responded that the "flagrancy
    of the misconduct" merited the $25 million punitive award against
    Simpson. Simpson was also was ordered to pay $8.5 million in
    compensatory damages to Goldman's parents. 

    "Without question, the defendant's conduct in the present case is the
    most reprehensible and seriously criminal that our laws and society
    contemplate," Brown's response states. 

    Simpson contended he is unable to pay anything close to what he has
    been assessed. He filed a motion Friday seeking to exempt his
    retirement plans, saying they are exempt under federal and state law. 

    But Brown's papers state that Simpson "has and will continue to have
    substantial sources of income, amounting to millions of dollars, for
    many years in the future." 

    Goldman's father, Fred, has also filed papers opposing Simpson's
    request for a new trial. A hearing on Simpson's request is scheduled
    for April 28. 
7.1422IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2585
    AP 21-Apr-1997 23:15 EDT   REF5038

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Oklahoma Jury Questioning Finished

    By MICHAEL FLEEMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- The judge and attorneys finished questioning prospective
    jurors Monday in the Oklahoma bombing trial after a laborious 16-day
    process. 

    The final panel of 12 jurors and six alternates was tentatively
    scheduled to be picked Tuesday after U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch
    hears some pending motions. The judge was considering selecting an
    anonymous panel to hear the case against Timothy McVeigh. 

    "Every day closer to having this process completed feels like a gift,
    not only for myself but my family and co-workers," said psychologist
    Paul Heath, who was injured in the bombing. He watched a closed-circuit
    telecast of the Denver courtroom in Oklahoma City with other survivors
    and victims' relatives on Monday. 

    "Everyone is relieved," said John Taylor, whose daughter was killed in
    the bombing. "Now it's our turn at bat." 

    A total of 99 people -- from unemployed contractors to a wealthy
    businessman -- have been brought in for questioning since March 31. Six
    were dismissed in open court and an unknown number were excused after
    private sessions between the judge and attorneys. 

    Nearly every prospective juror questioned expressed some degree of
    willingness to impose the death penalty against McVeigh if he is found
    guilty of committing the worst act of terrorism on U.S. soil. McVeigh
    faces murder and conspiracy charges in the April 19, 1995, bombing that
    killed 168 people. 

    Most of the jury pool is white, well-educated and has ties to the
    military. They said they believed in God, family and the justice
    system, but distrusted big government and the news media. 

    They recounted vivid memories of the Oklahoma City bombing and rescue
    effort, but few knew much about the evidence against McVeigh or any of
    the details of the pretrial procedures. 

    Although the exact number of those in the approved pool was kept
    secret, a minimum of 64 candidates had to be approved to allow for the
    23 peremptory challenges granted to each side -- 20 for the jury and
    three for the alternates. 

    Matsch was considering a secretive, paper-shuffling system for the
    peremptory challenges by attorneys on Tuesday, according to sources,
    speaking on condition of anonymity. Court officials have refused to
    comment on court matters, citing the judge's sweeping gag order. 

    Usually, peremptory challenges -- in which attorneys may excuse jurors
    without stating a cause -- are done in full view in open court. 

    Under the secret system, it would be impossible to tell who actually
    was seated on the jury. Also, the judge has arranged for jurors to sit
    behind a large wall blocking them from the media -- but not from the
    public section of the courtroom. 

    In response, a coalition of media organizations hired First Amendment
    lawyer Kelli Sager, who gained national prominence during the O.J.
    Simpson trial, to review the judge's procedures for possible legal
    action. 

    Juror questioning wrapped up Monday with seven people brought into
    court. 

    Among those questioned was a woman who said she struggled to determine
    her feelings about the death penalty. 

    An administrative assistant with a hospital background, the woman said
    she always considered herself a "proponent of the death penalty" --
    until she got her summons in the McVeigh trial. 

    "I had many sleepless nights over it because I never thought that it
    would be my decision," she said. 

    She said she feels she could still recommend execution under "certain
    circumstances." 
7.1423IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2575
    AP 21-Apr-1997 22:41 EDT   REF5789

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Teens Fire on Pizza Delivery Men

    By DAVID WILKISON

    Associated Press Writer

    FRANKLIN, N.J. (AP) -- Two teen-agers "looking for a victim" lured two
    pizza delivery men to an abandoned house and killed them in a random
    spray of bullets, blood and pizza, authorities said Monday. 

    The 18- and 17-year-old boys are accused of phoning four pizza parlors
    before they found one that would deliver to the remote, rural house. 

    When the delivery men drove up Saturday night and lowered the car
    window to hand out the pizza, the teens ambushed them, police said. 

    "I don't know what they had on their minds," said Police Chief Pete
    Vahaly, who is more used to responding to domestic violence and
    shoplifting complaints in this usually quiet northwestern New Jersey
    town of about 5,000 people. 

    Said Sussex County prosecutor Dennis O'Leary: "They were looking for a
    victim." 

    After the men were shot in their car, they were dragged out, placed
    face down on the ground and shot in the head, said Bill Geffken, chief
    of detectives for the Sussex County prosecutor's office. 

    Those last shots were like "an execution," Geffken said, although he
    added it was likely both victims were already dead. 

    O'Leary said the younger suspect may have known one of the victims, but
    that was coincidence and not a reason for the shootings. 

    Georgio Gallara, 24, who owned Tony's Pizza and Pasta in neighboring
    Hardyston, and his employee, Jeremy Giordano, 22, were killed. At least
    eight shots were fired. 

    Police were called to the abandoned house by somebody who saw their car
    and thought there had been an accident. 

    The teen-agers were arrested early Monday at their homes after calls to
    pizza parlors were traced to a phone booth outside a doughnut shop,
    where witnesses remembered seeing them, Geffken said. 

    At one of the other pizza shops, manager Tim Kiester said the caller
    had trouble answering routine questions about his address and phone
    number. Kiester said he had a "gut feeling" something was wrong and
    told his employee not to make the delivery. 

    The 18-year-old, Thomas J. Koskovich was charged with two counts of
    murder and weapons violations. The 17-year-old was held on juvenile
    charges. Both pleaded innocent Monday and remained in custody. 

    The juvenile's attorney entered his plea for him while the youth stood
    silent, his head bowed. 

    His mother, grandmother, sister and other relatives sat sobbing in the
    courtroom, as did more than a dozen relatives of the two victims,
    including Gallara's fiancee. 

    None would talk to reporters. 

    Koskovich, looking nervous and dazed, also said nothing at his court
    appearance. 

    O'Leary said robbery wasn't a motive. 

    "It's usually the case that even in horrible murders there is a more
    definable reason than there seems to be in this case," he said. "That's
    chilling." 
7.1424IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2682
    AP 21-Apr-1997 17:28 EDT   REF5094

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Russia Jewels Stuck in Museum Vault

    By LAURA MYERS

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The imperial Romanov jewels were stuck in a museum
    vault Monday, hostage to a dispute between Moscow and organizers of the
    $100 million traveling exhibit meant to showcase friendly Russian-U.S.
    relations. 

    "No one has come to blows outside of the Corcoran Gallery," State
    Department spokesman Nicholas Burns said in reporting the only good
    news in the contract battle. 

    Instead, the nearly weeklong standoff continued a few blocks from the
    White House with Russian Embassy drivers outside the gallery blocking a
    tractor-trailer carrying the costume and art portions of the exhibit. 

    As heavy rain pounded on the trailer, feelings were running so high
    that an agreement to let it wait outside the Russian Embassy instead of
    blocking the street fell apart. 

    "We just don't know when the truck is going to move," said an
    exasperated Jan Rothschild, Corcoran spokeswoman. "We thought they had
    an agreement, but it didn't happen. We're back to stalemate." 

    Attorneys for the Russian Embassy and the American-Russian Cultural
    Cooperation Foundation, which claims a contract right to exhibit the
    treasures in several U.S. cities, met as the State Department remained
    on the sidelines offering "suggestions," but not acting as a mediator. 

    "This is not an issue of war and peace. It's not an issue of life or
    death," Burns said. "It's the issue of the fate of an art exhibit." He
    added, however, "We think contracts ought to be preserved." 

    Former congressman James Symington, chairman of the foundation, which
    promotes U.S.-Russian ties, said the nonprofit group has a clear
    contract with the Russian government to run the exhibit, which closed
    in Washington April 13. 

    Its next stop is supposed to be the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston,
    from May 11 to July 20, then Memphis and San Diego. Talks were under
    way for other stops, including New York. 

    "It's our fervent hope that the highest levels of authority in the
    Russia government will appreciate the enormous importance of going
    forward with this marvelous exhibit," Symington said Monday. "It will
    not only reap financial returns, but it will achieve heaps of good
    will." 

    But the Russian Embassy declared that the foundation violated several
    terms of the contract, including specifications for high-security cases
    for the imperial jewels. 

    "The position of the Russian Federation remains unchanged," the embassy
    said in a two-page statement. "The exhibition must be immediately and
    unconditionally returned into the possession of the Russian
    Federation." 

    The Russian Embassy said the foundation failed to establish a joint
    committee to manage the exhibition and prevented the Russians from
    "participating in establishing and concluding contracts" with American
    museums that planned to show the jewels. 

    Symington said he believes the profit motive is behind the sudden
    Russian effort to end the exhibition; the Russian government tried and
    failed to cut its own deals with museums, including the one in Houston.

    The foundation has spent more than $1 million to cover initial outlays
    for the show and had expected to "pull into the black" with revenues
    after the third or fourth stop, Symington said. 

    "Money seems to be the problem," he said. "To curtail this at this
    point, everybody will be left broke. If it goes forward, everybody
    wins." 

    The Romanovs ruled Russia from 1613 to 1917. 
7.1425IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2627
    AP 21-Apr-1997 17:23 EDT   REF5082

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Air Force Plane Crashes in Ga.

    PEARSON, Ga. (AP) -- An Air Force pilot parachuted to safety before his
    F-16 fighter crashed into a remote south Georgia swamp Monday. 

    The plane went down about 20 miles north of Moody Air Force Base in
    south Georgia's largely rural Atkinson County, said Airman 1st Class
    Terrance Townsend, a spokesman for the base. 

    The pilot, 1st Lt. Joseph C. Thomas, appeared to be in good condition,
    Townsend said. He was picked up by loggers and treated at the base
    hospital. 

    The cause of the crash wasn't known. The single-seat warplane was en
    route to the Grand Bay Bombing Range, 10 miles north of the base, for a
    training mission, Townsend said. 

    It was the third military crash in Georgia in the past week. 

    Two people were killed Wednesday when their RC-12N spy plane crashed on
    Ossabaw Island near Savannah. On Thursday, the pilot of an A-10
    Thunderbolt ejected safely before his plane crashed near Nahunta in
    southeast Georgia. 
7.1426IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2679
    AP 22-Apr-1997 0:16 EDT   REF5464

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ireland Retail Baron Testifies

    DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -- Ireland's supermarket baron testified Monday he
    paid former Prime Minister Charles Haughey more than $2 million. 

    Ben Dunne told Judge Brian McCracken, head of a government-ordered
    investigation into Dunne's secret payments to politicians, that he gave
    Haughey $1.7 million via third parties and several foreign bank
    accounts in 1987. 

    Dunne said he also paid Haughey three more checks for $342,000 pounds
    in 1989, for which Haughey personally thanked him. 

    Prime Minister John Bruton's government reluctantly ordered the inquiry
    after a private investigation into Dunne's largess was leaked to a
    Dublin newspaper in December. The investigation, which opened Monday,
    is expected to last at least two weeks. 

    Dunne said he made several checks out to an Irish banker who lived in
    the Cayman Islands "for reasons of confidentiality," but the money
    reached Haughey. He said the contact began when business friends of
    Haughey solicited him, saying they each should offer Haughey about
    $250,000 each. 

    "I remember saying that I thought Mr. Haughey was making a huge mistake
    in trying to get six or seven people together," Dunne said, explaining
    why he chose instead to pay the entire amount himself. "I remember
    saying, 'Christ picked 12 apostles -- and one of them crucified him'!" 

    Dunne, famous in Ireland for his philanthropy, was ousted in 1993 as
    chairman of Dunnes Stores, a family-owned chain that sells half of the
    groceries in this country of 3.5 million. 

    Haughey led a succession of Irish governments in 1981-83, and again
    from 1987 until his ouster as Fianna Fail party leader in 1992, when he
    admitted authorizing taps on two journalists' phones during a
    government scandal. 

    Haughey had no comment Monday. Last week he issued a written statement
    to the McCracken inquiry denying he received any money from Dunne. 

    But Dennis McCullough, senior lawyer in the investigation, said Monday
    there was a long paper trail linking Dunne to Haughey. 

    The newspaper leak prompted Bruton's well-regarded minister for
    transport, Michael Lowry, to resign after he was identified as
    receiving more than $320,000 from Dunne for an addition to his
    Tipperary mansion. 

    McCullough said Monday that Dunne paid Lowry more than that, including
    money for paintings and a custom-made bed for his home. 

    But behind the Lowry revelations swirled the rumor that Haughey -- who
    survived a succession of scandals in his extraordinary political career
    -- was Dunne's No. 1 recipient. 

    It might help explain Haughey's millionaire's lifestyle today. He
    throws lavish parties at Gandon, his Georgian mansion in rural County
    Kildare, has a yacht and often flies by private helicopter to an island
    off the west coast of Ireland he also owns. 

    Last weekend, Fianna Fail sought to distance itself from Haughey at the
    party's annual conference. The new leader Bertie Ahern, considered a
    protege of Haughey, did not name his mentor but emphasized there was
    "no place in our party" for lawmakers who accept secret payments "no
    matter how eminent the person involved." 

    Dunne fell from corporate grace after he was arrested in Miami in 1992
    in the company of a prostitute and a mound of cocaine. 

    His sister and arch-rival, Margaret Heffernan, took control of Dunnes
    Stores the following year. As part of a fight over how much he should
    be paid to be bought out, she commissioned Price Waterhouse to document
    his charitable contributions to hundreds of influential Irish people,
    Haughey and Lowry among them. 
7.1427IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2633
    AP 21-Apr-1997 22:43 EDT   REF5790

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Dog's Death Linked to Brit Dog Food

    OSLO, Norway (AP) -- Dog lovers in Norway are nervous over reports that
    a golden retriever's death looks similar to "mad-cow disease." 

    Norway's TV2 reported that an autopsy of the 11-year-old dog showed
    changes in the brain consistent with those seen in the brains of cows
    who die of the disease. 

    The disease, formally known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is
    similar to the fatal Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. 

    Last year, the European Union ordered a halt to exports of beef from
    Britain, where the disease had infected many cattle, after scientists
    said humans might contract Creutzfeldt-Jakob from eating infected beef.

    If the dog contracted the brain ailment, it probably was through dog
    food in the late 1980s, national animal health board director Eivind
    Liven told the national news agency NTB. 

    Almost all dog and cat food in Norway is imported, mainly from England,
    and before 1994 there was no quality-control inspection. 

    British and Irish news media have reported research showing that
    spongiform encephalopathy affects a variety of other species, including
    sheep, goats, cats, hamsters, mules, mice, elk and minks. 

    There are suspicions in Britain that sheep may have contracted the
    brain disease by eating tainted beef. 
7.1428IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 11:2675
    AP 21-Apr-1997 20:20 EDT   REF5747

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FDA: Anti-Obesity Drug Appears Safe

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Food and Drug Administration said Monday it
    continues to monitor the cases of patients experiencing side effects
    while taking the anti-obesity drug Redux, but says thus far there have
    been no unexpected findings. 

    "The data to date regarding Redux do not raise any red flags," said
    agency spokesman Don McLearn. 

    The agency's comment came after The Associated Press reported Friday
    that many scientists question why the government has let Redux sell so
    long without having the manufacturer, Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, study
    a possible brain-damaging side effect. The FDA approved Redux for sale
    a year ago, and that study is expected to begin soon, the agency says. 

    The AP also reported Friday that some critics fear the potent drug is
    being inappropriately prescribed to many Americans, including those not
    severely overweight. 

    The FDA said Monday that it had provided incorrect information to the
    AP about one specific case cited in the story, the death of a woman who
    had been prescribed Redux. 

    The woman weighed 220 pounds, not 120 pounds as it had said earlier,
    the FDA said. The agency also disclosed Monday, based on further
    information provided by Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, that the woman also
    had been taking an anti-anxiety drug. 

    A local coroners' inquest determined she had very high levels of that
    anti-anxiety drug in her body when she died, and ruled the death was a
    homicide, not an accidental death or suicide. Local and state officials
    continue to investigate the death and no criminal charges have been
    filed. 

    The company that developed Redux, Interneuron Pharmaceuticals Inc., and
    Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories reiterated on Monday their position that
    scientific evidence has shown Redux to be safe when used as
    recommended. 

    Initial data collected about patients reveal "no evidence indicating a
    higher-than-expected occurrence of adverse events related to the
    central nervous system," the companies said in a joint statement. 

    The FDA examines all reports of adverse reactions among patients taking
    prescription drugs, such as Redux. 

    To date, it has received notification of 18 deaths of patients who had
    been taking Redux, including three suicides, and is examining all those
    cases, said McLearn, the agency spokesman. 

    The FDA said that, based on information collected thus far, it had not
    noted any side-effect patterns inconsistent with what its scientific
    advisers expected when the agency approved Redux. 

    The FDA insists that only the severely obese try Redux, because its
    users have 23 times the average risk of a rare but often fatal lung
    ailment called primary pulmonary hypertension. 

    Yet, recent side-effect reports sent to the agency listed weights for
    just 27 of 51 patients -- and 14 were below the government weight
    guidelines for use of the drug, the FDA says. 

    In addition, the FDA approved Redux on the condition that Wyeth-Ayerst
    study whether the drug damages the human brain cells that produce
    serotonin. Previous studies in mice, rats, monkeys and baboons show
    that high doses destroy those cells -- raising fears of side effects
    such as depression if the same thing happens to people. 

    The study of effects on human brain cells is expected to start soon,
    the FDA says. 
7.1429IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 18:12129
    Brussels gatecrashes election

    By George Jones and Toby Helm 

    JAQUES Santer, President of the European Commission, stepped into the
    British election campaign last night with a warning that there could be
    no stopping further EU integration.

    He attacked Euro-sceptics as "doom merchants" - drawing criticism from
    both the Conservatives and Labour for his intervention. Mr Santer said
    no one could seriously suggest turning back the clock. "We have only
    one option: to move on."

    With the Tories increasingly convinced that Europe is a vote-winner, Mr
    Major seized on Mr Santer's comments as fresh evidence that further
    steps towards a federal Europe were on the agenda at the European Union
    summit in Amsterdam in June.

    Mr Major re-wrote his campaign speech last night to include an
    assurance that if he went to the summit he would keep his "feet on the
    brakes".

    "Mr Blair would go to Amsterdam and put his foot on the accelerator to
    a federal Europe," he said. Malcolm Rifkind, the Foreign Secretary,
    said Mr Santer's remarks bore out the Prime Minister's warning that
    Amsterdam would be a "crucial, historic conference".

    Labour distanced itself from Mr Santer, accusing him of being "foolish"
    for departing from normal diplomatic protocol and intervening in the UK
    election. "The British people are perfectly capable of making up their
    own minds about the issues in the election without interventions from
    outside," said a Labour spokesman.

    There was clear concern in the Labour leadership that Mr Santer's
    remarks would play into Tory hands at a time when candidates report
    that the issue of the European single currency has begun to feature on
    the doorsteps.

    The "rolling" Gallup poll for The Telegraph showed Labour's reduced
    lead at 16 points for the second day. Tory strategists claim their
    private polls put the lead in single figures, largely because the
    public is getting the message that the Conservatives are the
    anti-single currency party.

    Labour appears to have been wrong-footed by the Tories' decision to
    make the running on Europe despite their own internal divisions on the
    issue. Europe again crowded out other election topics, including
    Labour's attempt to criticise the Government's handling of the BSE
    crisis and Tory plans to give greater independence to state schools and
    create more grammar schools.

    Mr Major sought to make a virtue of being honest about Conservative
    problems over Europe, which have been highlighted by 233 candidates
    coming out against a single currency in defiance of the Government's
    "negotiate and decide" policy.

    He said the "honest heart of the Conservative Party" beat in tune with
    the heart of the British nation in saying "yes" to co-operation in
    Europe but "no" to compulsion and an integrationist Europe where
    matters like defence and foreign affairs were taken away from
    Parliament.

    He contrasted the way the Tories were having an argument in the open
    with the "Stalinist" approach of the Labour leadership, which sought to
    sweep its divisions under the carpet.

    Mr Santer's dramatic entry into the election debate came in a speech to
    journalists in Amsterdam. Although he never once referred directly to
    Britain, it was clear that he was venting his frustration over the
    increasingly Euro-sceptic tone of the election campaign. Recently, Mr
    Blair has been forced to match much of Mr Major's rhetoric in order not
    to be outflanked.

    Mr Santer complained that too many people were bashing Europe and
    overlooking its achievements. "I hear voices which seem intent on
    demeaning this formidable success and on scoring cheap points by
    caricaturing our legislation and institutions.

    "We have progressiveley united most of western Europe and achieved a
    level of integration which has no parallel anywhere in the world."

    The original text of his speech, entitled "a message for the sceptics",
    included a critical reference to last week's Tory election poster
    depicting Tony Blair as a puppet on the knee of Chancellor Kohl of
    Germany.

    The section was removed after officials warned that it was too
    inflammatory. Although Mr Santer's speech did not refer directly to the
    British politicians, the president's spokesman, Klaus van der Pas,
    commented: "The Dutch have a saying for it - if the shoe fits, wear
    it."

    Mr Santer's language was his strongest since the height of the beef war
    last spring. He appeared to be aiming his fire not only at hard-line
    Euro-sceptics but also at many in the centre ground of British politics
    who are calling for the process of integration in Europe to be slowed.

    Europe, he said, could not stop and pause. It had to move forward
    continuously. Mr Santer was "convinced" that the single currency would
    begin as planned on Jan 1, 1999.

    The next big challenge was to sign a treaty at Amsterdam which would
    allow the EU to enlarge early next century to include the countries of
    central and eastern Europe.

    He confirmed that the next British prime minister would come under
    pressure to cede more sovereignty at the summit by agreeing to greater
    co-operation over justice and home affairs and the dilution of the
    national veto. "No one wants gridlock. In order to avoid this we must
    widen the use of majority voting as much as possible."

    He rounded on sceptics for offering no other vision of the future. "Do
    these doom merchants want us to step backwards towards a Europe only
    composed of simple trading arrangements?"

    Mr Santer's comments overshadowed a major foreign policy speech by Mr
    Blair in which he argued that he would give Britain a "fresh start" in
    Europe while blocking any attempt to create a superstate.

    In his strongest personal attack yet on Mr Major, he said Britain was
    no longer respected abroad because of the "shambles" in the
    Conservative Party. "I know how to negotiate. I know how to lead. John
    Major can do neither," Mr Blair told an audience of diplomats in
    Manchester.

    Mr Major responded in a speech in York last night. Quoting Mr Blair's
    original opposition to council house sales, tax cuts, pensions, school
    choice and wider share ownership, he said: "Can there ever have been a
    more stunning misjudgment in the history of politics?" 
7.1430IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 18:1691
    Bridgewater Four 'framed by police in The Syndicate'

    By David Graves 

    A GROUP of regional crime squad detectives who called themselves The
    Syndicate contrived "a strategy of deception" to persuade one of the
    Bridgewater Four to make a false confession, the Appeal Court was told
    yesterday.

    As a result of the "forgery and deceit" used by the officers on Patrick
    Molloy he wrongly implicated three other men in the murder of the
    Staffordshire newspaper boy Carl Bridgewater in 1978, said Michael
    Mansfield, QC. He claimed that Molloy, who later died in prison, told
    officers that he and the other men had been burgling a farm when Carl
    was murdered. He made the confession after being shown a statement
    purporting to have been made by one of his alleged accomplices which
    implicated him.

    But Mr Mansfield told three judges that all the evidence now pointed to
    two detectives fabricating the original statement by Vincent Hickey and
    then also faking Molloy's subsequent confession. 

    The three surviving members of the Bridgewater Four were released from
    prison by the Appeal Court in February after 18 years in custody
    pending the full appeal hearing, expected to last up to four weeks. The
    court will have to decide whether to quash the convictions for murder
    of Hickey, 44, his cousin Michael Hickey, 35, and James Robinson, 63.
    As the case started, the men sat at the front of the court listening
    intently.
                       
    Carl was 13 when he was killed by a single shot to the head at close
    range when he stumbled across a burglary at Yew Tree Farm, near
    Stourbridge, in September, 1978. Mr Mansfield, for Molloy, told the
    court that his client had confessed and signed a statement, known as
    Exhibit 54, because of the "force of oppression" used by the detectives
    and their strategy of deception on him.

    All the members of The Syndicate - a name they used themselves - were
    at the time of the murder members of No 4 Regional Crime Squad based in
    Bilston, West Midlands. They were seconded to the murder investigation,
    which was headed by Staffordshire police. The QC said they were led by
    Det Insp Jeffrey Turner, the officer in charge of interviewing Molloy,
    who decided who should question him and when. The officers who actually
    produced his confession were Det Con John Perkins and Det Con Graham
    Leeke.

    Mr Mansfield also named as members of The Syndicate two other
    detectives, Det Sgt John Robbins, who took notes of interviews with
    Molloy, and Det Sgt Dennis Walker, who was also involved in the
    interviews at Wombourne police station, Staffs. He claimed that Det
    Chief Insp Weslea Watson, a senior member of the Staffordshire police
    investigation team, was also present at the police station when Molloy
    was being aggressively interviewed in a cell and "may have known what
    was going on".

    Mr Mansfield told the judges that Molloy had been held in custody for
    55-and-a-half hours without having access to a solicitor before he
    signed Exhibit 54. When he eventually saw a lawyer he immediately
    claimed that he had been shown a statement by Vincent Hickey which had
    implicated him in the murder, although the statement was never
    subsequently seen by anyone.

    The QC claimed that the majority of interviews conducted with Molloy by
    members of the regional crime squad were never entered on his custody
    record because Staffordshire officers, "possibly going as far as Mr
    Watson, were turning a completely blind eye to what the squad was
    doing". Police notes of the interviews had subsequently also gone
    missing, Mr Mansfield said.

    The existence of the "Hickey interview" came to light in February when
    a forensic scientist, using the electrostatic definition analysis
    (ESDA) technique, discovered impressions on the top third of the front
    page of Exhibit 54 of a pre-statement caution allegedly written and
    signed by Hickey.

    The wording of the caution was consistent with the handwriting of Det
    Con Leeke and the signature that of Det Con Perkins, said Mr Mansfield.
    Det Con Perkins, who joined the West Midlands police serious crime
    squad in 1983, had also been subsequently convicted in 1989 by a police
    disciplinary tribunal of faking a contemporary account of another
    interview.

    The QC said that when members of The Syndicate were later questioned
    about allegations that they had produced a fake statement to extract a
    confession from Molloy, Det Con Leeke had described the claim as "utter
    drivel". Det Sgt Robbins had also described the allegation as "absolute
    rubbish" and had gone as far as to say that he would still hang the
    Bridgewater Four himself while holding a "bacon sandwich in his hand",
    Mr Mansfield said.

    The case continues.
7.1431IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 22 1997 18:1737
    USAF home in on mystery-flight jet

    By John Hiscock in Los Angeles 

    INVESTIGATORS hope to begin solving the mystery today of the last
    flight of a bomb-laden US air force attack jet thought to have crashed
    into a Colorado mountain.

    Ground crews will attempt to reach what they believe is the wreckage of
    the A-10 Thunderbolt, almost three weeks after the plane vanished
    during a training mission over Arizona. Scraps of paper were also
    spotted at the site. The searchers will be seeking not only the body of
    Capt Craig Button but also the plane's four 500lb bombs and 575 rounds
    of 30-millimetre cannon ammunition. 

    Snowstorms and high winds forecast for the area could hamper the search
    attempts. Officials said that the terrain is so treacherous that they
    are not concerned about passers-by coming into contact with the debris.

    The wreckage was discovered on Sunday when searchers in helicopters
    spotted parts of the Thunderbolt protruding through melting snow in the
    area where air force officials believe that the aircraft went down near
    Eagle, 100 miles west of Denver.

    There had been speculation that Capt Button had made off with the plane
    as part of an anti-US government plot by civilian militias. Radar data
    and witness accounts show that he deliberately broke away from a
    three-plane formation. Air force officials inspected all 140 airstrips
    and hangars between Arizona and Colorado to make sure that the plane
    had not been hidden. Military investigators looked into Capt Button's
    background but discovered no indications that he was depressed or
    unstable and that the crash was suicide.

    Experts now wonder whether he suffered from lack of oxygen caused by
    exposure to fuel fumes. This might have disoriented him. He had
    completed a refuelling manoeuvre at 19,000ft just before he
    disappeared.
7.1432IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:31109
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 23-Apr-1997 1:10 EDT   REF5110

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    PERU-HOSTAGES 

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- A hostage crisis ordeal that transfixed
    international observers for 126 days, came to an abrupt end when
    government soldiers stormed a Japanese ambassador's residence in a blur
    of exploding gunfire. In less than a half-hour the soldiers rescued 71
    hostages. One hostage and two soldiers were killed as were all 14
    rebels, including leader Nestor Cerpa. President Alberto Fujimori said
    the killed hostage was Supreme Court Justice Carlos Giusti. 
   
    WHITEWATER 

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- Whitewater prosecutors told a federal judge
    they've gathered "extensive evidence" of possible obstruction of
    justice, including witness tampering, perjury and document destruction.
    The judge granted a six-month extension of the grand jury that
    prosecutors have been using to investigate President and Mrs. Clinton's
    roles in Whitewater. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- The jury in the Oklahoma City bombing trial has been
    selected, with the judge taking extraordinary measures to keep the
    identities of the panelists secret. U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch
    told jurors to return Thursday to take their oath and hear opening
    statements in the case against Timothy McVeigh. Although their names
    were not disclosed, sources said the jury consisted of seven men and
    five women, with an alternate panel of three men and three women. 
   
    ESPY PROBE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ron Blackley, former Agriculture Secretary Mike
    Espy's chief of staff, was indicted on charges he lied about receiving
    $22,000 from private businesses while a government employee. A federal
    grand jury returned a three-count indictment charging Blackley with
    failing to disclose the payment, falsifying details about the money and
    denying he had received any income other than his government salary. He
    faces a maximum of five years in prison and heavy fines. 
   
    PAC MONEY 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The political-contribution arms of corporations,
    labor unions and interest groups contributed $217.8 million to federal
    candidates in 1995 and 1996, the Federal Election Commission said. The
    PAC's contributions were up 15 percent over the 1993-94 election cycle.
    Republican congressional candidates took the largest chunk, $115.8
    million, compared with $98.8 million for Democrats, the FEC said.
    Another $2.5 million went to presidential candidates. The rest went to
    other congressional candidates. 
   
    KOREA-DEFECTOR 

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- A high-ranking North Korean defector says
    North Korea has nuclear and chemical weapons capable of "scorching"
    South Korea and Japan, South Korea's intelligence agency revealed.
    Hwang Jang Yop's reported disclosure is the most credible testimony so
    far that North Korea has developed tactical nuclear weapons. The
    isolated communist nation has denied having a nuclear weapons program. 
   
    INTERNET-VIRUS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A computer virus is circulating on the Internet.
    AOL4Free.com destroys files on users' hard drives, the U.S. Department
    of Energy says. Computer users who download and run the program --
    either from an online service or e-mail -- will have all the files on
    their hard drives wiped out, the DOE said. 
   
    ALABAMA-TORNADO 

    RAINSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -- The National Guard was called in Tuesday to
    protect the town after the police station was heavily damaged by a
    tornado and six businesses were destroyed. The Guard arrived with
    military vehicles after the tornado touched down at about 4 p.m. Six
    businesses were destroyed and eight were heavily damaged, said Rita
    Adrian, of the DeKalb County Emergency Management agency. The Red Cross
    reported 40 to 50 homes damaged. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was higher against the yen in early trading
    Wednesday in Japan. The Nikkei gained 166.82 to 18,711.27. In New York,
    the Dow reached its highest level in nearly a month, closing up 173.38
    at 6,833.59. 
   
    AVALANCHE-BLACKHAWKS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Bob Probert, known more for brawling than scoring, had
    two of Chicago's four second-period goals as the Blackhawks evened the
    Western Conference quarterfinals at two games apiece Tuesday night with
    a 6-3 victory over the Colorado Avalanche. Tony Amonte also scored
    twice for the Blackhawks, who outworked and outskated the defending
    Stanley Cup champions for the second straight game. 
   
    PANTHERS-RANGERS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A back-and-forth contest swung in the Rangers'
    direction near the end of overtime as Esa Tikkanen bounced a shot off
    the goalnet camera to give New York a 4-3 victory over the Florida
    Panthers on Tuesday night. The Rangers now lead the first-round,
    best-of-7 series 2-1. Game 4 is Wednesday night at Madison Square
    Garden. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1433IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3192
    RTw  23-Apr-97 04:10    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LIMA - Peruvian troops stormed the Japanese ambassador's residence in
    Lima, freeing 71 hostages as their Marxist rebel captors were caught
    off guard while apparently playing soccer. One hostage -- a supreme
    court judge -- two soldiers and all 14 guerrillas died in the fierce
    battle that ended the four-month siege. 

    TOKYO - Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto said he regretted he
    was not informed in advance of Peru's storming of the residence of the
    Japanese ambassador to end a long siege but said no one could criticise
    the move. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Despite an impasse in its Korean peninsula peace
    initiative, the United States pledged to continue providing food aid to
    North Korea and to continue a bilateral dialogue with its regime.

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton plans to meet with the Dalai Lama
    despite China's strong objections, White House officials said. The
    officials said the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled leader, will meet with
    Vice President Al Gore at his White House offices and Clinton will make
    a "drop-by visit." 

    - - - - 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida - Life on board Russia's Mir space station was
    returning to normal and there were no plans for the three-member
    U.S.-Russian crew to leave, NASA officials said. Russian ground
    controllers told reporters earlier the 11-year-old space outpost may
    have to be abandoned if problems with its cooling system persisted. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain's election was thrown wide open when an opinion poll
    showed the ruling Conservatives had slashed the Labour party's double
    digit lead to just five points with just a week to go before the vote.
    The ICM poll in The Guardian newspaper put Labour at 42 percent, the
    Conservatives at 37 percent and the Liberal Democrats at 14 percent. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - The ruling centre-right will retain a large majority in
    France's snap parliamentary election, according to the first survey
    carried out since President Jacques Chirac called the poll. The CSA
    poll said the ruling coalition would win 332 of the National Assembly's
    577 seats to 201 for the Socialists and 20 for the Communists. 

    - - - - 

    UNITED NATIONS - An emergency special session of the General Assembly
    on Israeli building in East Jerusalem will be convened on Thursday, a
    U.N. spokesman said. The 22-member Arab group of states requested the
    session at the end of March but it has taken since then to obtain the
    endorsement of the required majority of the assembly's 185 members. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin and his Chinese counterpart
    Jiang Zemin are expected to crown their talks on Wednesday by signing a
    political declaration outlining their joint vision of the world order
    in the next century. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - World Trade Organisation (WTO) Director General Renato
    Ruggiero predicted a tough time ahead in negotiations over China's
    entry to the global trade club. "We are approaching now the final stage
    of the negotiations, and just because of that it will be a tough time,"
    he told a news conference. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - Blue-chip stocks posted their second-largest daily gain on
    Tuesday as investors sought safety in big-name shares, while bonds rose
    after a solid Treasury note auction. The Dow Jones industrial average
    ended up 173.38 points, or 2.60 percent, at 6,833.59. 

    - - - - 

    LOS ANGELES - Action movie star Arnold Schwarzenegger, who underwent
    heart surgery last week to replace a heart valve, has been released
    from the hospital, his publicist said. 

    REUTER
7.1434IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:31136
    AP 23-Apr-1997 1:13 EDT   REF5113

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Troops End Lima Hostage Standoff

    By LYNN MONAHAN

    Associated Press Writer

    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- In a lightning assault, Peruvian troops stormed the
    Japanese ambassador's mansion Tuesday and rescued 71 hostages held for
    four months, killing all 14 rebel captors as the unsuspecting
    guerrillas played soccer. 

    One captive, Supreme Court Justice Carlos Giusti, and two soldiers also
    died, President Alberto Fujimori said. Some hostages were secretly
    warned just before the raid, one of the freed men said. 

    Fujimori said 25 other captives were injured in the gunfire and
    explosions that rocked the compound. Two were in serious condition --
    Peru's foreign minister, Francisco Tudela, and another Supreme Court
    justice, both suffering gunshot wounds. 

    "I didn't waver for a single minute in giving the order for this rescue
    operation," said the president, who throughout the crisis adamantly
    rejected the guerrillas' demand that jailed comrades be freed in
    exchange for the captive diplomats and businessmen. 

    The operation ended an international ordeal that had transfixed two
    nations and focused global attention on a little-known leftist rebel
    group, Tupac Amaru, which has waged guerrilla war here since 1984. 

    In Tokyo, Japan's prime minister called it a "splendid rescue," but
    also said it was "regrettable" that Peru had not forewarned his
    government of the surprise, broad-daylight attack. 

    Fujimori told reporters late Tuesday that intelligence information
    convinced him it was an ideal time to end the impasse by force. 

    He apparently was referring to word of the indoor soccer game. Bolivian
    Ambassador Jorge Gumucio, one of the freed hostages, said eight
    hostage-holders were playing soccer in the main hall of the diplomatic
    residence when the security forces struck, setting off an explosion in
    a tunnel directly under the hall about 3:30 p.m. 

    The 140-man military-police assault team then poured through the
    compound's front gate and blasted open the mansion's front door. Others
    attacked from the rear, and a third unit climbed to the rooftop and
    shepherded hostages down to the ground. 

    "I was playing mahjong with fellow hostages, and we suddenly heard the
    enormous blasts," said Tadashi Iwamoto, president of Lima Tomen, a
    Japanese trading house. "We grabbed blankets and covered our heads and
    lay flat on the floor." 

    Iwamoto said some hostages suffered burns, but one group kicked the
    iron fence and the door in until they broke and went outside and
    climbed down to the ground. 

    The assault ended quickly. As smoke billowed over the residence,
    triumphant soldiers hauled down the guerrillas' flag, and ex-hostages
    and rescuers cheered and jubilantly sang the Peruvian national anthem.
    A large pool of blood could be seen at the bottom of a stairway. 

    Fujimori said all 14 rebels were killed, including the group's leader,
    Nestor Cerpa, and at least two teen-age girls. Gumucio said Cerpa was
    one of those playing soccer. 

    Gumucio also said authorities managed to warn some of the captives 10
    minutes before the raid. He declined to say how. 

    The hostages, all male, were mostly Peruvians and included Fujimori's
    brother. They also included 24 Japanese -- 12 businessmen and 12
    diplomats, including Japan's ambassador, Morihisa Aoki, who suffered a
    slight elbow injury during the rescue. There were no Americans among
    the hostages. 

    Less than an hour after the raid, Fujimori strapped on a bulletproof
    vest and victoriously entered the compound. He shook ex-hostages' hands
    and joined with them and soldiers in singing the national anthem. 

    Smiling and carrying a large red-and-white Peruvian flag, Fujimori
    traveled with two busloads of hostages, apparently unharmed, to a
    military hospital. 

    Other hostages were rushed off in ambulances. Friends and family
    gathered at the nearby hospital to look for loved ones. 

    "We're here to applaud the hostages and police for their bravery," said
    one woman, Edith Gonzalez. "There was no other alternative but to
    attack." 

    But the sister of one hostage said she wasn't sure. 

    "I don't know if the attack was necessary," said Nancy Dominguez, 53.
    "All I know is it was a horrible shame." 

    Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto said Peru had not told him in
    advance of the raid, even though the compound is technically Japanese
    soil. Japan had repeatedly asked the Peruvians to avoid any actions
    that might endanger the hostages. 

    "Our country was not informed in advance and this is very regrettable,"
    Hashimoto said. But he expressed support for Peru's leader, saying,
    "There should be nobody who could criticize Mr. Fujimori for his
    decision." 

    The two national leaders consulted closely during the crisis. At a
    meeting with Hashimoto in Canada, Fujimori agreed to talks with the
    guerrillas. He subsequently traveled to Cuba and won President Fidel
    Castro's agreement to grant asylum to the rebels if necessary to end
    the standoff. 

    But the negotiations broke down March 12 over the rebels' demand that
    Peru free their jailed comrades. Fujimori repeatedly ruled that out. 

    Fujimori had said he would use force to end the crisis only as a last
    resort, but Peruvian news media repeatedly reported military plans to
    raid the compound. 

    The heavily armed guerrillas stormed the residence on Dec. 17 during a
    cocktail party marking the Japanese emperor's birthday and took almost
    500 hostages. They quickly released most of them. 

    Rebels had warned they had heavily mined the compound to prevent an
    assault, and staged drills earlier this month to prepare for raids. 

    The hostage crisis had sparked a political crisis in Peru, and Peru's
    interior minister and national police chief stepped down over the
    weekend to accept blame for security lapses that allowed the takeover. 

    The Tupac Amaru guerrillas took the group's name from a colonial-era
    Indian rebel. They espouse a vague leftist ideology -- denouncing
    Fujimori's free-market reforms as a boost only for the rich -- but
    don't call themselves communist or Marxist. 
7.1435IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3134
    RTw  23-Apr-97 07:11    

    Nepal to send two rare rhinos to Britain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KATHMANDU, April 23 (Reuter) - Two single-horned rhinoceroses will be
    flown next week to Britain from Nepal where wildlife experts hope the
    rare beasts will breed in captivity, authorities said on Wednesday. 

    The two female calves of 14 and 16 months are part of a global
    conservation drive for breeding the endangered species in captivity at
    the Whipsnade Wild Animal Park near London. The park already has seven
    rhinos of the same species. 

    The one-horned Asian rhino is found only in the swampy grassland of
    India and Nepal. Nepali wildlife experts captured the two rhinos in
    March in the Royal Chitaun National Park, about 100 km (60 miles) south
    of Kathmandu. 

    Last year the Nepali government decided to donate two rhinos to the
    Zoological Society of London. But the transfer was delayed due to
    concern in Britain over bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad
    cow disease. 

    Beef exports from Britain were banned by the European Union in March
    last year after the brain-wasting bovine disease was linked to the
    human equivalent, Creutzfeld-Jakob disease (CJD). 

    Wildlife experts said the rhinos had been in quarantine since being
    captured. British officials said the animals would be transferred to
    London next Monday. 

    REUTER
7.1436IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:31120
    RTw  23-Apr-97 06:59    

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE-Gaddafi struggles to sell his theories in Tripoli 

    By Abdelaziz Barrouhi 

    TRIPOLI, April 23 (Reuter) - At the campus of al-Fateh University on
    the outskirts of Tripoli, visitors invited to a seminar on the
    political theories of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were carefully kept
    away from the students. 

    For while at the conference room Gaddafi's "popular power" theory was
    praised and explained by officials, in the classroom students seem to
    disagree. 

    And the authorities did what they could to keep the foreign visitors
    and local students apart. 

    Doors separating the conference room from the rest of the campus were
    locked and to pass them, one had to be checked by members of the
    pro-Gaddafi Revolutionary Guards. Walls, though high enough, were
    reinforced with barbed wire. 

    The disenchantment among students was reflected in a speech by Gaddafi
    himself which was published by "Attaleb" (The Student) paper run by the
    country's pro-Gaddafi students association. 

    "When you introduce doubts about popular (power), about (popular)
    congresses and (popular) committees...then that means that you are
    socially mad," Gaddafi told a students rally at Tripoli University
    earlier this month. 

    "That means that you are taking colonialism poison and you must be
    delivered from it." 

    Gaddafi, then a 27-year-old army officer, led a military coup on
    September 1, 1969, which deposed King Mohammed Idris and set up a
    Revolutionary Command Council (RCC). 

    In 1977, Gaddafi introduced a system of rule by the masses, or
    "Jamahiriya." The RCC was dissolved and the Council of Ministers was
    replaced by a General People's Committee. 

    The "popular system" is based on Gaddafi's political, social and
    economic views, an eccentric brand of socialism imposed on almost every
    activity. 

    The system bans political parties and freedom of expression. Dissent is
    dealt with as a crime. 

    ECONOMICS, NOT JUST POLITICS 

    But its not just the students who are disenchanted. The ordinary Libyan
    is also worried as he sees his standard of living deteriorating in the
    oil-rich country because of U.N. sanctions and, Libyans and diplomats
    say, the anarchy in the economy introduced by the popular system. 

    The sanctions were imposed on Libya in 1992 after Gaddafi refused to
    hand over to Britain or the United States two Libyans suspected of
    links to the downing of an American airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland,
    in 1988 in which 270 people died. 

    Many Libyans say life is turning worse despite the oil wealth. But they
    would not openly blame Gaddafi for that. 

    "There is no logic. We are one of the richest countries in this region,
    but we have no welfare," a school teacher who only gave his first name,
    Mohammed, said at one of Tripoli's markets. 

    The average monthly wage is 250 dinars ($641 at the official rate; $73
    at the black market rate). 

    Libyans complain salaries are paid after delays of several months and
    that the wages have not been raised since 1988 while inflation, for
    which the last official figure published was for 1991, was estimated at
    between 20 and 60 percent a year. 

    Libyan families can get monthly rations of subsidised goods like
    cooking oil, flour, sugar, pasta, tea and tomato. 

    "But when you have a large family like me, you must complete the supply
    by buying them on the free market at higher prices... Imported goods
    cannot be afforded by the average person," Mohammed said. 

    NO HOUSES FOR RENT 

    Because in Gaddafi's popular system the Libyan occupier of a house
    becomes its owner, people do not invest in building houses unless it is
    for themselves or for rental to foreigners. 

    Therefore, there are no more houses for rental to Libyans.
    Working-class young men can only live in their parents' house when they
    get married if space allows, otherwise they abstain from marrying. 

    "There is a drop of marriages in the big cities," a civil servant said. 

    Gaddafi last month said that housing would no more be a problem. "It is
    simple. if we need 30,000 houses per year, then, let's build them," he
    said, without elaborating when and how the authorities would do that. 

    "No marriage, low wages, no soccer matches -- banned since last
    summer's incidents --, no alcohol -- banned since the revolution in
    1969 -- and no visas to visit Western European countries. What a golden
    life," said 24-year-old Bassam who runs a "suitcase business," selling
    goods he buys in Turkey. 

    He mentioned soccer in reference to riots at a football match last year
    in which dozens of people died. Opposition sources and diplomats said
    the root of the disturbances was political. 

    To add to the gloom, dirt and dust pile up in Tripoli's streets. 

    "Tripoli is one of the world's dirtiest cities...In some places, it
    looks like a devastated city," says a globetrotting European
    environment activist invited by Libyan authorities to the April 15
    celebrations of the 1986 U.S. raids on Tripoli and Benghazi. 

    REUTER
7.1437IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:32131
    RTw  23-Apr-97 03:24    

    FEATURE - Not hopping but flying, Natural Law ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Not hopping but flying, Natural Law candidates say 

    By Helen Smith 

    MILTON KEYNES, England, April 23 (Reuter) - Nick Pullen sits locked in
    the lotus position, face raised to the ceiling, eyelids flickering.
    Suddenly he starts to bounce and, rotating his arms, propels himself
    energetically along two mattresses. 

    According to the Natural Law Party this is yogic flying and it is the
    answer to all the world's problems. 

    "But he's only hopping," say sceptical journalists gathered for the
    campaign launch of two Natural Law Party candidates ahead of Britain's
    May 1 election. 

    "Well, we haven't actually achieved the flying stage," concedes Hugh
    Kelly, candidate for Milton Keynes South West. 

    Ancient Vedic law states there are three stages to yogic flying. By the
    third stage practitioners are able to fly at will but contemporary
    devotees haven't been able to get past the first, hopping stage because
    of all the "collective stress" in society, Kelly explains. 

    At Britain's last national election in 1992, when the party was
    founded, it won 0.4 percent of the vote. It now claims to have branches
    in 50 countries and to have won seats in Italy, the Netherlands,
    Croatia, Serbia and Germany. 

    With 7,000 yogic flyers at work, a ruling Natural Law Party would be
    able to cut taxes -- eliminating Value Added Tax and reducing income
    tax -- because of the fall in spending on health, defence and policing,
    says Kelly. 

    BENEFITS OF YOGIC FLYING 

    Despite being confined to hopping, the Party claims its yogic flyers
    have already brought benefits to Britain. 

    A group of 200 practitioners on Merseyside, northwest England, have
    produced a 15 percent cut in the region's crime rate since 1988, the
    party maintains. 

    Merseyside police are doubtful. "But we welcome anything that brings a
    reduction in crime," says a spokeswoman. 

    Only half a dozen journalists turned up for the launch conference in a
    large, hotel function room in the centre of Milton Keynes, some 40
    miles (65 km) north of London. 

    Both candidates wear pale grey suits, a little too summery for the
    chill day, with striped shirts and sober ties. Each takes his turn to
    say his piece, while the other gazes meditatively into space. 

    Kelly, with his broad shoulders and broader smile. dwarfs his partner,
    Martin Simson, and he has an evangelist's fervour. "We're bringing the
    light of science into politics," he beams. 

    Simson, a balding, 35-year-old concentrates on the societal ills that
    are preventing the party's yogic flyers from getting off the ground.
    "At the moment, governments are a puppet of collective stress in
    society," he says. 

    REDUCING SOCIETY'S STRESS 

    Yogic flying -- or indeed hopping -- reduces society's collective
    stress, bringing all kinds of beneficial results such as improving the
    nation's health and bringing down the crime rate, Kelly says. 

    Thankfully, not everybody has to take up the arduous task of flying to
    bring about this virtuous result. 

    A group of just 800 yogic flyers would be enough to sort out all
    Britain's troubles, according to a precise mathematical formula worked
    out by the Natural Law Party's guru, Maharashi Mahesh Yogi -- the
    Indian mystic who converted the Beatles to transcendental meditation in
    the 1960s. 

    The important thing is that they all fly together, twice daily, says
    Simson. "Yogic fying creates bubbling bliss in the individual and
    society," he says. 

    The obvious place to find huge numbers of yogic flyers is in the armed
    forces and this is one of the central planks of the Party's manifesto. 

    Under Natural Law Party rule, three percent of Britain's armed forces
    -- about 7,000 people -- would become a "prevention wing" practising
    transcendental meditation and yogic flying. 

    "This is an effective and scientifically-proven method of reducing
    negativity and conflict. The remainder of the armed forces would carry
    out their duties as before, while the prevention wing would eliminate
    conflict at its source by preventing the birth of an enemy," says the
    Natural Law Party. 

    An army spokesman declined to speculate on how British soldiers might
    react to being told they were to become yogic flyers. "Try the Royal
    Air Force, they might be interested," he suggested. 

    The party is also ready to address foreign policy matters -- the 15
    nations of the European Union are not ready for economic union yet
    "because they haven't got a harmonious collective consciousness." 

    Simson and Kelly are standing for the two seats Milton Keynes, a town
    built in the 1960s and 70s to house some of London's overspill. 

    The Natural Law Party's headquarters, a vast turreted mansion called
    Mentmore Towers -- a gift to the Maharishi's followers from former
    Beatle George Harrison -- is nearby. 

    Both Simson and Kelly live at Mentmore Towers, where they are part of a
    team of 20 yogic flyers bringing peace to the prosperous county of
    Buckinghamshire. 

    So far, the fruits of their efforts are not much in evidence -- or are
    they? 

    The broad avenues of Milton Keynes are uncannily clean. Smartly-dressed
    office workers chat happily as they walk in pairs across the concrete
    plazas from one gleaming steel and glass building to another. 

    Even the plants in the ubiquitous flower beds seem unnaturally tidy and
    obediently green.

    REUTER
7.1438IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3249
    RTw  23-Apr-97 02:45    

    Major threatens to rock EU summit - newspaper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 23 (Reuter) - British Prime Minister John Major issued a
    stern warning to his European counterparts on Wednesday, vowing to
    disrupt the next European Union summit unless plans for a federalist
    Europe are dropped. 

    In an interview in The Daily Express newspaper, Major said European
    leaders must drop their demands for closer integration at the meeting
    in Amsterdam in June. 

    "It will be 14-1 against. I'll just say no. That's all I can do. The
    only thing you can do is say no," he told the newspaper. 

    Major comments came a day after EU Commission President Jacques
    Santer's attack on Eurosceptic "doom merchants" fighting closer ties
    with Europe. 

    In a lecture on European integration on Monday Santer said plans to
    expand the European Union depended on a successful conclusion of the
    Integergovernmental Conference (IGC) in Amsterdam. He said rejection of
    the the Amsterdam treaty would be catastrophic.

    Asked if Major would used Britain's veto to block a deal he said: "It
    was 11-1 at Maastricht. And they all wanted the social chapter and they
    all wanted me to agree to a single currency. 

    "I just said no. And if they hadn't given us what became known as
    opt-outs, I was blocking the Maastricht Treaty. It could have gone
    ahead." 

    Major said he is prepared to do the same thing in Amsterdam. 

    "I am prepared not to agree." 

    Major, who is facing an election in eight days, has made Europe a focus
    of his campaign, vowing to maintain British sovereignty and insisting
    on a "wait and see" policy on joining a single currency. 

    The latest opinion poll in The Guardian newspaper, which shows the
    Conservatives cutting the Labour Party lead to just five points,
    suggests his decision to make Europe a theme of the campaign has paid
    off. 

    REUTER
7.1439IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3276
    RTw  23-Apr-97 01:57    

    UK poll shows Labour lead slashed to five points

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Patricia Reaney 

    LONDON, April 23 (Reuter) - Britain's election was thrown wide open on
    Wednesday when an opinion poll showed the ruling Conservatives had
    slashed the Labour party's double digit lead to just five points with
    just a week to go before the vote. 

    The ICM poll in The Guardian newspaper put Labour at 42 percent, the
    Conservatives at 37 percent and the Liberal Democrats at 14 percent. 

    "In a dramatic development, which may prove to be the definitive point
    in the 1997 election campaign, Labour's lead over the Conservative
    party has been reduced to just five points," the Guardian said. 

    The ICM poll, which has consistently given Labour a smaller lead than
    other polls, showed the Conservatives gaining six points, from 31 to 37
    percent, since the previous week and Labour dropping three points from
    45 to 42. 

    It was Labour's lowest lead in five years. 

    The Guardian credited the Conservatives' gain to Major's decision to
    make Europe a central theme of the campaign. 

    The Conservatives, who have dismissed other polls, were reluctant to
    get carried away with this one, but senior aides for Prime Minister
    John Major said it was consistent with private surveys. 

    The Guardian called it a "bombshell" for Labour. 

    "The survey reveals that the Conservatives have slashed Labour's lead
    from 14 points to five and opened up the possibility of a stunning Tory
    victory against the odds in eight days' time," the left-leaning daily
    said. 

    But it was not all bad news for Labour, which had enjoyed a double
    digit lead over the Conservatives for the past 18 months. A rolling
    Gallup poll in The Daily Telegraph showed Labour widening its lead to
    21 points, an increase of five on the previous week. 

    "The latest survey shows Labour enjoying the backing of 51 percent of
    the electorate, up three points, the Conservatives on 30 percent, down
    two points, and the Lib Dems (Liberal Democrats) unchanged at 12
    percent," the newspaper said in a statement. 

    Labour said it was too difficult to make any sense of the two very
    different results. 

    "They are so contradictory that it would be sensible to await what
    happens in the remainder of the week before anybody even attempts to
    make a judgement," the party said. 

    Others were also sceptical about the latest polls. 

    "The ICM poll throughout this campaign has shown Labour doing worse
    than all the other polls. The Gallup poll which has just been brushed
    aside tonight is showing (Labour) with a 21 point lead," Des Wilson, a
    campaign analyst, told Sky television news. 

    "I don't think it is a hand grenade yet into the campaign. I think if
    another poll or two comes out this week that are moving in that
    direction the last week will be sensational. As things stand at the
    moment there is a real possibility that this is a rogue poll," he
    added. 

    ICM used telephone interviews of a random sample of 1,004 adults on
    April 20-21 for the poll. The Gallup survey is based on interviews with
    1,129 electors on April 20-22. 

    REUTER
7.1440IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3277
    RTos 23-Apr-97 00:49    

    Mir Crew May Have to Evacuate

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KOROLYOV, Russia (Reuter) - The Russian-American crew on Russia's
    11-year-old Mir space station are struggling with a  leak of antifreeze
    vapor and may have to abandon ship, mission control said Tuesday. 

    Spokesman Viktor Blagov said that at the moment there was no reason to
    evacuate Mir, but added: "The team is continuing its repairs. It's a
    difficult task and if it cannot be solved Mir might be abandoned by the
    cosmonauts." 

    Speaking from space, NASA astronaut Jerry Linenger said he and his two
    Russian colleagues had almost abandoned ship twice in the past few
    months. 

    Blagov, deputy head of the flight program, said the cosmonauts had
    repaired two leaks in the cooling system with special glue but had yet
    to find a third through which antifreeze was escaping into Mir's air
    supply. 

    "It's on the limit of what is acceptable," he told a news conference,
    adding that it was not clear how dangerous the concentration of
    antifreeze vapor was. 

    "We immediately told NASA about the defects on the station and the
    American specialists are kept continually informed about what is
    happening on Mir," he added. 

    He said an urgent evacuation of the cosmonauts could be ordered from
    ground control or by the space station commander. 

    "That could happen if there's a big fire on the station or if there is
    decompression," Blagov said, adding that the men could reach Earth in
    an hour using the Soyuz rocket which is now docked with Mir. 

    "Mir orbits Earth 16 times in a 24-hour period. Three of them are over
    the region of the launchpad in Kazakhstan, where everything is ready
    for a search for the cosmonauts," he said. 

    The Mir crew could also return to Earth in any other orbit, he added.
    "But in that case the place of touchdown could be in France, Ukraine,
    Britain, Asia or the United States." 

    The leaks, which occurred during the past month, are the most serious
    so far on the station, which has also suffered four fires while in
    orbit, the last in February. 

    Blagov said that leaks had been caused by electric cables touching the
    pipe carrying anti-freeze to the cooling system. He said that 1.6
    liters of antifreeze had leaked out. A liter is about a quart. 

    In the Kvant module where the main cooling system equipment was, the
    temperature had soared to between 79 to 88 degrees, which was bad for
    the cosmonauts trying to carry out repairs and could damage equipment
    for scientific experiments stored there. 

    Igor Goncharov, specialist for medical emergencies on the orbiting
    station, said the crew's morale had been hit by the high temperature
    and stress suffered by the cosmonauts as a result of a fire Feb. 23. 

    "They complained of insomnia but an analysis of their blood and urine
    did not show any abnormalities in their organisms," Goncharov said,
    adding that the men had interrupted their sleep patterns by working
    through several nights. 

    "Now they have been given strict instructions to go to bed at 11 p.m.
    and wake up at eight in the morning," Goncharov said. The cosmonauts
    had also resumed their physical exercises. 

    In four of Mir's six modules, living conditions were normal. "The team
    spends most of its time in safe sections," he said. 

    REUTER
7.1441IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3257
    RTos 22-Apr-97 22:52    

    Reynolds Memo Addressed Teen Smoking

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (Reuter) - A 1980 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. memo
    introduced into evidence at a wrongful death trial Tuesday detailed the
    smoking habits of teen-agers but said the information was not to be
    used to market cigarettes to them. 

    The memo, which lawyers for the plaintiff said was written by Reynolds'
    researcher Claude Teague, noted that Reynolds was losing market share
    among teens and that rival Philip Morris Cos. Inc. was gaining. 

    The memo was introduced by the plaintiff during testimony of
    advertising expert Richard Pollay, a University of British Columbia
    professor called to the witness stand to explain how tobacco companies
    sold their products through advertising. 

    Plaintiff Dana Raulerson sued R.J. Reynolds, a unit of RJR Nabisco
    Holdings Corp., on behalf of the estate and children of her sister,
    Jean Connor, who died of lung cancer at age 49. 

    The memo provided details of what cigarette brands were used by smokers
    between the ages of 14 and 17 and noted that Reynolds brands Winston
    and Salem were "steadily losing share among this age group," falling
    from 21 percent in the spring of 1979 to 19.9 percent in the fall. 

    "Smoking behavior of 14 to 17 year olds is analyzed in order to improve
    our ability to forecast future trends," the memo said. "It is not
    designed to be used as a tool for developing marketing strategies for
    this population group." 

    It noted that 52 percent of teen smokers used Marlboro, a Philip Morris
    brand, in the fall of 1979. 

    On cross examination, Reynolds' attorney Paul Crist pointed out that
    the memo specifically said the analysis was not to be used for
    marketing purposes, which Pollay said he found hard to believe. 

    Judge Bernard Nachman ordered the comment stricken from the record. 

    Pollay testified that Reynolds used characters from "The Flintstones,"
    a cartoon popular with children, in its advertising in the 1960s. 

    Crist noted in cross-examination that when "The Flintstones" made its
    debut in 1960, it was advertised as "an adult comedy in cartoon form."
    But Pollay said 30 percent of its viewers were minors. 

    On Monday, Raulerson told jurors that her sister had begun smoking as a
    teen-ager and had watched "The Flintstones." 

    Anti-tobacco litigators have long claimed that tobacco companies market
    their products to children. 
 
    REUTER
7.1442IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3231
    AP 22-Apr-1997 23:47 EDT   REF5018

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wisc. Rules on Child Law, Fetuses

    MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- The state's child protection law does not cover
    fetuses, the Wisconsin Supreme Court said Tuesday, ruling that a
    pregnant woman should not have been confined because she used cocaine. 

    The woman's doctor had alerted authorities that she tested positive for
    cocaine, and a judge used the law to order the 25-year-old woman to be
    hospitalized. 

    She gave birth three weeks later. Her son is in foster care and she is
    attempting to regain custody, her lawyer said. 

    Waukesha County lawyers claimed that officials were applying reasonable
    measures to protect the woman's fetus from obvious risk of harm. 

    But in a 4-3 ruling, the state's high court said the Legislature did
    not intend to include fetuses when it wrote the child protection law
    and it overturned a lower court ruling that said a fetus is a child
    under the protection law. 

    The court ruled that many sections of the law cannot be applied to
    fetuses because it presumes the child is separate from the parent. 

    Lawyers for the woman, known in court records as Angela M.W., argued
    the detention was an unconstitutional violation of the woman's rights
    to privacy and physical integrity. 
7.1443IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3228
    AP 22-Apr-1997 23:07 EDT   REF5975

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Radio Station's Prank Costly

    OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- It's finally payback time for motorists caught
    in a traffic jam because of a radio station prank. 

    For three days next month, there will be no tolls on the San
    Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. The station's former owners will pay
    $500,000 to cover the $1 toll on May 13-15. 

    They will also pay $480,000 for sign and bridge improvements and
    training for toll collectors, state transportation officials said
    Tuesday. 

    The ill-fated incident took place in May 1993 and was intended to poke
    fun at President Clinton after reports that he tied up traffic at Los
    Angeles airport while getting a haircut aboard Air Force One. Later
    reports questioned whether the haircut delayed air traffic. 

    A van from radio station KSOL parked across several westbound lanes of
    the bridge during the morning commute while an employee got a haircut,
    snarling traffic. 

    The former owners agreed to pay the money to settle a class-action
    civil lawsuit filed on behalf of Bay Bridge drivers. 
7.1444IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3225
    AP 22-Apr-1997 23:07 EDT   REF5976

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Boy Mauled by Pet Wolf

    HARRAH, Okla. (AP) -- A woman found her 3-year-old son lying
    unconscious Tuesday with deep bite marks on his neck, mauled by one of
    the 11 wolves the family raised. 

    "The dog was standing over him as if its prey had been killed and it
    was protecting its prey," Police Chief Rick Reier said. 

    Colt Rannals underwent a 3 1/2 hour operation at Children's Hospital
    and was in serious condition, said spokesman Jake Lowery. He had wounds
    to his neck and chest. 

    The 11 wolves that are raised and bred at the family's home outside
    Harrah are kept in a cage, although the one that attacked the boy was
    on a chain outside a fence, police said. 

    It will be up to the family to decide if the wolf should be destroyed. 

    Reier said police were checking to be sure the family was in compliance
    with state and federal breeding regulations. 
7.1445IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3269
    AP 22-Apr-1997 21:51 EDT   REF5946

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Teen Gets 60 Years in Murder

    By MIKE ROBINSON

    Associated Press Writer

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A teen-ager was sentenced Tuesday to 60 years in prison
    for shooting to death an 11-year-old fellow gang member who was wanted
    by police for the killing of a neighborhood girl. 

    Cragg Hardaway, 18, was convicted Feb. 28 of first-degree murder for
    the killing of Robert "Yummy" Sandifer. Prosecutors said he lured
    Robert to a desolate underpass on the city's South Side and shot him
    three times. 

    Hardaway's 16-year-old brother, Derrick, is serving a 45-year sentence
    for his part in the 1994 killing. 

    Cragg Hardaway admitted bringing Robert to the underpass, but he said
    someone named "Kenny" did the shooting. No one besides the Hardaways
    have been charged in the case. 

    "I didn't kill Yummy -- I'll say that," Hardaway told Circuit Court
    Judge Daniel J. Kelly at his sentencing. 

    But Kelly said Hardaway knew what would happen in the underpass. 

    "There is no doubt that you led this young man to his execution," Kelly
    said. 

    The cold-blooded killings and the youthfulness of the assailants and
    victims horrified the city in the summer of 1994. 

    Prosecutors said Robert was ordered by the Black Disciples street gang
    that August to shoot a rival gang member. But Robert botched the
    killing and instead killed a 14-year-old Shavon Dean, a bystander. 

    Prosecutors said the girl's death drew so much attention from police
    and the public that gang leaders wanted Robert killed before detectives
    could question him. 

    So four days after the shooting, the Hardaway brothers tracked Robert
    down, lured him into a car with the promise of getting him out of town,
    then drove him to the seldom-used underpass. 

    Derrick, then 14, signed a confession saying he and his brother drove
    Robert to the underpass. He said he waited in the car, heard three
    shots, picked up his brother and drove off. 

    Robert's slender body was found in a pool of blood a short time later.
    He was buried with his teddy bear. 

    At an earlier trial for Cragg, who was 16 at the time of the shooting,
    the jury deadlocked and a mistrial was declared. 

    Kelly said he issued a harsher sentence for Cragg Hardaway than his
    brother because it was clear he had a more serious role in the
    shooting. Cragg Hardaway must serve at least 30 years of his sentence,
    with 1 1/2 years credit for time already served. 

    Defense lawyer George Howard argued that there was no evidence to prove
    that Hardaway pulled the trigger. He also said Hardaway is not
    completely responsible for what life on the streets has done to him. 

    "Don't throw this boy away," Howard told the judge. 
7.1446IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3242
    AP 22-Apr-1997 21:37 EDT   REF5941

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Weather Confounding Plane Search

    By ROBERT WELLER

    Associated Press Writer

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- The Air Force released an aerial photograph of the
    suspected crash site of a missing warplane Tuesday as a second day of
    bad weather kept a helicopter crew from taking a firsthand look. 

    The photo showed metal wreckage sticking out of the snow. A-10 pilot
    Capt. Martha McSally said one piece looked like a part used to control
    wing flaps. 

    Snow, wind, lightning and even the occasional flash of sunlight
    bedeviled crews waiting all day for a chance to reach the 13,000-foot
    cliff and lower crews in hopes of verifying whether the parts are from
    the missing A-10 Thunderbolt. 

    Maj. Gen. Nels Running looked at the snow-covered peaks and said, "If
    only that blue sky floats over ... we'll have a window of opportunity." 

    Running said his crew needs only about three hours on the cliff to
    verify that the wreckage is that of the warplane with four bombs aboard
    that disappeared from a training mission over southern Arizona on April
    2. 

    The possible site 15 miles southwest of Vail, discovered Sunday, is
    some 800 miles off the course that Capt. Craig Button was supposed to
    follow. 

    There was no sign of Button at the site, and Running hinted there is
    little hope of finding him alive. "This isn't a life-saving mission,"
    he said. 

    Forecasters said a strong front was expected to bring substantial new
    snow to the high country Wednesday afternoon, and it could be as late
    as Sunday before the weather clears. 
7.1448IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3268
    AP 22-Apr-1997 20:16 EDT   REF5906

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Judge Clears Cops in Road Death

    By CLAUDIA COATES

    Associated Press Writer

    PITTSBURGH (AP) -- A judge on Tuesday ruled out a second trial for two
    white police officers accused in the death of a black motorist, saying
    prosecutors had unfairly singled them out. 

    Allegheny County Judge David Cashman dismissed involuntary manslaughter
    charges against Brentwood police Lt. Milton Mulholland, now a janitor,
    and Officer Michael Albert from Baldwin, who were among five officers
    at the scene of Jonny Gammage's death. 

    "When one acknowledges the fact ... that these individuals were the
    only ones prosecuted, it becomes clear that a political purpose was
    attempting to be served rather than the interest of justice," Cashman
    said. 

    He also removed the case from the office of District Attorney Robert
    Colville and gave it to Attorney General Mike Fisher for any further
    proceedings. 

    Colville said he will appeal all the decisions, saying Cashman was
    wrong to say prosecutors bowed to political pressure by charging the
    officers. 

    "Life is under political pressure," Colville said. "We charge everybody
    in that political pressure." 

    The officers fought with Gammage, 31, of Syracuse, N.Y., in Pittsburgh
    on Oct. 12, 1995, after police stopped him in a luxury car that
    belonged to his cousin, Ray Seals, a defensive lineman now playing for
    the the Carolina Panthers. 

    A fight began when one officer knocked a cellular telephone and an
    address book out of Gammage's hand. He said later he thought the phone
    was a weapon. Officers pinned Gammage to the pavement and he suffocated
    from pressure on his neck and back. 

    Mulholland and Albert's trial last fall ended in a mistrial when
    Coroner Cyril Wecht, under questioning by the defense, said Albert
    should explain what he did that night. A defendant is not required to
    testify at a trial. 

    A third officer was acquitted in a separate trial and two others were
    not charged. 

    The officers' lawyers denied Gammage was pulled over only because he
    was a black man driving an expensive car late at night in a white
    suburb. They said the officers couldn't see his face through the tinted
    windows. 

    "We've said from the very beginning that this was selective
    prosecution, and when the trial blew up with Dr. Wecht on the stand, we
    took the position that we shouldn't be tried again," said Mulholland's
    lawyer, Patrick Thomassey. 

    Cashman's ruling "proves beyond a doubt that the federal government has
    got to step in and prosecute all of the police who were responsible for
    killing Jonny Gammage," said Dorothy Urquhart, a spokeswoman for United
    Concerned Citizens at Work, which has supported prosecution of the
    officers. 
7.1449IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3363
    AP 22-Apr-1997 22:52 EDT   REF5965

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. Eyes Big Savings

    By TERRILL YUE JONES

    Associated Press Writer

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Eager to show members -- particularly the United
    States -- that it is committed to reform, the United Nations has
    announced it will save $100 million this year through budget cuts and
    other measures. 

    The United States has been pressuring the world body to cut its budget
    and improve efficiency. Last year, Washington vetoed former
    Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali's attempt to seek a second term
    because it said he had not proved himself as a reformer. 

    Meanwhile, the Republican-controlled Congress has been reluctant to pay
    U.S. debt to the United Nations -- estimated at $900 million according
    to the Clinton administration and at $1.3 billion by the United
    Nations. 

    On Monday, the top U.N. official for finance and administration said
    the body was making improvements. Last year, it saved $30 million, but
    it is on track to save $123 million in 1998-99. 

    "We are not just cutting costs. We are working to increase our
    effectiveness as well as our efficiency," Joseph Connor told U.N.
    ambassadors. 

    Secretary-General Kofi Annan took over the United Nations in January
    with Washington's blessing and the understanding that he would cut
    expenses. 

    Annan has proposed eliminating 1,000 vacant positions by 1999. He also
    seeks to reduce administrative costs to 25 percent of the budget from
    38 percent by 2001. 

    "There is wide agreement that 38 percent of the budget is too large a
    share going into non-program activities," Connor said. 

    The Department of Peacekeeping Operations, for example, has saved $21
    million by chartering ships for deliveries to several points rather
    than ordering one-way deliveries that have ships return empty. 

    The United Nations has ordered staff to cut back on telephone calls and
    use electronic mail more frequently. In addition, U.N. headquarters now
    sends a single copy of documents to member governments instead of 40,
    Connor said. 

    The world body also is reducing its vast amount of paperwork, and is
    looking to outside organizations as models. 

    One attempt will be to try to boil down the 300-page U.N. budget, which
    Connor called "a monster," to something more manageable. 

    "We will be putting particular emphasis on simplifying processes in the
    human resources area in the next several months," Connor said. More
    hiring is being done based on video-conference interviews, cutting
    costs this year by $50,000. 
7.1450IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3388
    AP 22-Apr-1997 20:09 EDT   REF5900

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Many Russians Ambivalent on Lenin

    By DAVE CARPENTER

    Associated Press Writer

    GORKY LENINSKIYE, Russia (AP) -- It's as silent as Vladimir Lenin's
    tomb these days at the pillared country manor where the Soviet founder
    charted the early progress of his socialist revolution. 

    Once a must destination for droves of communist faithful, the wooded
    estate where the legendary leader lived and died is now often watched
    over only by bored museum guards and woodpeckers. 

    Not that his legacy is disappearing, of course. Moscow's Red Square was
    awash in nostalgia Tuesday for the 127th anniversary of Lenin's birth,
    with hundreds of die-hard communists laying red carnations and wreaths
    at his mausoleum and filing past his illuminated body. 

    The mere mention of Lenin's name can still evoke strong emotions among
    the elderly. But with most Russians consumed by the daily struggle to
    make ends meet, few besides pensioners spend much time thinking about
    the father of the Soviet Union any more. 

    The once-honored anniversary seems to produce increasingly token
    tributes in a nation that was gripped by a Lenin personality cult for
    decades. 

    The main communist newspaper, Sovietskaya Rossia, virtually ignored the
    anniversary. And the Lenin Museum in Gorky Leninskiye south of Moscow
    remained closed as it does every Tuesday. 

    A half-dozen years after the Soviet Union's collapse, Lenin's
    once-overpowering personal legacy is becoming more and more just a
    stroll down memory lane. 

    "Not many people bother coming out here any more," said a security
    guard recently at the Gorky Leninskiye estate, home to what officials
    say is one of only two Lenin museums left in Russia. A Kalashnikov
    slung over his shoulder, he gave his name only as Vladimir. 

    "Ten years ago, there used to be a tour group every five minutes. Now
    it's just some Koreans and Vietnamese, and a few Russian families on
    weekends. I guess everybody found something better to do." 

    Down a birch-lined path from the yellow mansion where Lenin died of a
    brain hemorrhage in 1924, visitors to the hulking concrete Lenin Museum
    are so infrequent that lights in the marble-tiled display hall are
    generally kept switched off. 

    A white statue of the leader of Russia's 1917 Bolshevik Revolution
    gazes out on an empty hall containing his writings, photographs, even
    his old Communist Party card. "Most of all, he loved nature," intones
    the narrator of a gushing slide-show tribute. 

    If Lenin's memorials don't draw a lot of visitors, one can still find
    his defenders among pensioners, embittered by the sweeping political
    changes of the last decade that crushed their lifelong ideals and
    impoverished millions. 

    "Under the system founded by Lenin, studies and medical treatment were
    free and we lived well," 73-year-old Nina Korshunova said in Red
    Square, where top Communist Gennady Zyuganov led a procession into the
    mausoleum. "Now just look how poor Russia is." 

    Fiery resistance from stalwart communists has kept the government from
    carrying out long-discussed plans to put Lenin's mummified body to rest
    in a cemetery. The communist-dominated parliament last month condemned
    President Boris Yeltsin's latest such proposal as "vandalism." 

    But the advanced age of most communist loyalists makes Lenin's eventual
    burial seem likely. Russian youngsters are no longer indoctrinated
    about "Grandpa Lenin." Some youths even threw tomatoes at the indignant
    Zyuganov and his deputies on Tuesday. 

    Dmitry Molchanov, 40, has spent the last 10 years making his living by
    taking pictures of tourists in front of Lenin's mausoleum. Complaining
    of the decline in visitors, he dismisses Lenin as "not a great man, but
    a great schemer." 

    "If he had chosen the right path, Russia would be much better off
    today," said the stocky photographer, who wore a parka and a baseball
    cap with Cowboys written on the front. "And my business would be
    better." 
7.1451IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed Apr 23 1997 11:3347
    AP 22-Apr-1997 18:47 EDT   REF5857

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saddam's Son Talks of His Surgery

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Saddam Hussein's eldest son said Tuesday he
    expects to fully recover from surgery for leg injuries suffered in a
    December assassination attempt, but unofficial reports suggested he was
    treated for more serious injuries. 

    Odai Hussein, the Iraqi president's heir apparent, underwent surgery
    Sunday. 

    Though Odai said doctors operated on his shattered left leg, Western
    diplomats and opposition figures have said German and Iraqi doctors
    were removing a bullet lodged near his spine. 

    An Iraqi doctor who assisted in the operation said the team
    "reconstructed the shattered bone" of Odai's left leg, Iraqi television
    reported Tuesday. 

    The doctor, who was not identified in the report carried by Egypt's
    Middle East News Agency, said Odai would be able to move "in the next
    few days." 

    Odai has been hospitalized since December, when gunmen shot him about
    10 times while he waited alone in a car in a Baghdad suburb. Since
    then, he has been seen on television moving his arms but never his
    legs. 

    Today, a white sheet covered him from waist to toe; there was no
    obvious movement in either leg. 

    Still, he told Associated Press Television he should be able to resume
    his usual activities in two to three months and play sports within six
    months. 

    "I will be able to walk on my feet again within several days, or
    several weeks," Odai said at the Ibn Sina hospital in Baghdad. 

    Three opposition groups, including the Iranian-backed Al-Dawa Party,
    have claimed responsibility for the attack on Odai. He blames Iran and
    has said 13 or 14 attempts have been made on his life. 

    Odai unofficially ran Iraq's trade and information ministries and is
    the chairman of the Iraqi Olympic Committee. 
7.1452IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:28104
7.1453IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:28103
    RTw  23-Apr-97 16:16    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    MOSCOW - The presidents of Russia and China joined forces on Wednesday
    in opposing the domination of one superpower in the post-Cold War world
    in a declaration which the Kremlin described as a breakthrough in its
    Asian policy. 

    Neither Yeltsin, nor Jiang, who is on a five-day state visit to Russia,
    mentioned any specific country. But there was little doubt they were
    referring to the United States. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peru celebrated the storming of the besieged Japanese
    ambassador's residence, where elite commandos freed 71 hostages and 14
    Marxist rebel captors were killed after being surprised while playing
    indoor soccer. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - The popularity of both French President Jacques Chirac and
    Prime Minister Alain Juppe has slipped further, according to an opinion
    poll carried out shortly before Chirac called a snap parliamentary
    election. 

    Stunned survivors of Algeria's worst massacre in five years of
    slaughter told in tearful testimony published here on Wednesday how
    Moslem rebels mercilessly hacked and shot 93 people to death in a
    night-long bloodbath. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - China told U.S. leaders not to jeopardise ties by meeting the
    Dalai Lama, after U.S. President Bill Clinton signalled he would brave
    Beijing's wrath with a "drop-by visit" to the exiled Tibetan leader. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - A new poll showing a dramatic fall in the opposition Labour
    party's lead electrified the campaign for Britain's May 1 election,
    turning what had seemed to be a certainty into an open race. 

    - - - - 

    DUBAI - Iran's largest wargames convey a message of peace and
    friendship to Gulf states while displaying the might of Islam, a senior
    Iranian commander said as Iran paraded its naval power in the strategic
    waterway on Wednesday. 

    - - - - 

    VLORE, Albania - An international security force's Italian flagship,
    which ran aground off the rebel-held Albanian port of Vlore in stormy
    seas, was stuck on a sandbank for a second day, witnesses said. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - North Korea broke its silence on defector Hwang Jang-yop's
    arrival in South Korea, angrily calling for the expulsion of a
    "lunatic" whose criticisms of Pyongyang it said amounted to a war
    declaration. 

    - - - - 

    NEW DELHI - New Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral won a vote of
    confidence in parliament late on Tuesday, ending a 24-day political
    crisis that Hindu nationalists said had been unnecessary. 

    - - - - 

    TACHILEK, Burma - A U.S. decision to slap sanctions on Burma has marred
    a public relations offensive launched by Rangoon but military leaders
    and diplomats shrugged off the immediate impact of the move. 

    - - - - 

    BAGHDAD - The United States will pay dearly if it attacks Iraq in
    reprisal for its sending of military helicopters into Western-declared
    no-fly zones, the official al-Iraq newspaper said. 

    - - - - 

    SYDNEY - An Australian politician began an attempt to revive euthanasia
    in the Northern Territory by amending laws to carry only a minor fine
    for helping a terminally ill person die. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - Police raided a troubled state-run nuclear firm looking for
    evidence to support a criminal complaint over its false reporting of
    Japan's worst-ever nuclear accident last month. 

    - - - - 

    LULA, Zaire - Zairean villagers armed with machetes attacked Rwandan
    refugee camps in eastern Zaire to avenge the killing of six Zaireans,
    witnesses said. 

    REUTER
7.1454IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2882
    Cat's DNA Used in Court Case

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The police had an old leather jacket stained with a
    murder victim's blood. They thought it belonged to their suspect. But
    how to show it?

    They did it with cat hair.

    In one of the odder tales of DNA evidence in the courtroom, the suspect
    was convicted after hairs in the jacket were genetically matched to a
    cat that lived with him.

    The case of Snowball, the white American shorthair cat, was reported
    today in the journal Nature. It was one of the few times that nonhuman
    DNA has been used this way in a murder trial.

    The woman was 32 when she disappeared from her home on Canada's Prince
    Edward Island in 1994. Her body was found in a shallow grave a few
    months later, and police suspected her former common-law husband.

    By then, the brown leather jacket had been discovered, stuffed in a
    plastic bag and left in the woods. Tests showed the bloodstains
    belonged to the woman.

    The cat hairs were found in the lining. Police recalled seeing Snowball
    at the man's home during their investigation.

    So they sent a blood sample from Snowball and hair from the jacket to
    Stephen J. O'Brien of the National Cancer Institute in Frederick, Md.
    O'Brien has studied cat genetics for 20 years.

    O'Brien and colleagues reported in Nature that Snowball's DNA matched
    genetic material from the root of one of the hairs.

    To help O'Brien compute the likelihood that such a match would occur by
    chance, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police had a local veterinarian draw
    blood randomly from 19 cats. O'Brien studied DNA in those samples, plus
    data from an earlier survey of nine cats from the United States.

    The likelihood that the jacket hair DNA would match Snowball's DNA just
    by chance was computed at about 1 in 45 million.

    The suspect was convicted of second-degree murder last July, and the
    DNA evidence was "a major contributing factor," said Cpl. Phonse
    MacNeil of the Mounties in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.

    Nonhuman DNA evidence has been used before in murder cases. In Arizona
    in 1993, a man was convicted after DNA from seed pods in his pickup
    truck was matched to a palo verde tree at the site where the victim's
    body was found.

    Edgar Espinoza, deputy director of the government's National Fish and
    Wildlife Forensics Laboratory in Ashland, Ore., said he had heard of
    another case in which hairs on a blanket that wrapped a murder victim
    were matched by DNA to a suspect's dog.

    O'Brien's analysis was admitted in the Canadian court after a special
    hearing.

    George Sensabaugh, a professor of forensic and biomedical science at
    the University of California at Berkeley, said he believes Snowball's
    DNA match is real. But he said defense attorneys would probably
    challenge the analysis in a U.S. court.

    "Frankly, I don't know whether a court would accept it or not," he
    said.

    One objection would be that so few cats were used to compute the
    likelihood of a DNA match by chance, he said. Another would be that the
    particular DNA trait matched is not generally used in forensic DNA
    profiling, because of concerns about ambiguous findings, he said.

    O'Brien said he made up for his small number of cats by making
    comparisons at 10 sites in the DNA, which is more than usual in cases
    involving human hair. And the DNA trait he used gave clear results in
    the Snowball case, he said.

    O'Brien's team did the analysis during O.J. Simpson's murder trial.

    "We were all watching the DNA evidence go down the toilet in the O.J.
    Simpson case, and we were determined that was not going to happen to
    us," he said.
7.1455IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2929
    6-Year-Old Charged With Felony

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LARGO, Fla. (AP) -- A first-grader who disrupted a crime prevention
    class was arrested on a felony battery charge, handcuffed and whisked
    to a juvenile center where she stayed for hours until her father took
    her home.

    Chantel Woodard, 6, kicked, hit and spit at a school principal and a
    police officer during a 75-minute tantrum, authorities said.

    Police said they arrested the girl at Largo Central Elementary School
    on Monday because they didn't know what else to do with her. Her
    parents could not be located.

    "The whole idea was to get the child some help," said police Capt. Joe
    Gillette. He said he did not think the case will be prosecuted.

    Officer Paula Crosby said she was showing a crime prevention movie when
    Chantel moved her chair closer to the television. Others followed. When
    the children were told to return to their desks, Chantel refused and
    began her tantrum.

    The girl's mother, O'Neal Woodard, said any adult should be able to
    subdue her daughter without arresting her.

    Chantel will be placed in a special class for emotionally disabled
    children when she returns to school next week, school officials said.
7.1456IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2969
    63-Year-Old Becomes Oldest New Mom

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A 63-year-old woman who lied about her age when she
    sought in vitro fertilization delivered a healthy girl late last year,
    and doctors said Wednesday she is the world's oldest new mom.

    The woman said she was 50, instead of 60, when she approached the
    doctors at the University of Southern California's Program for Assisted
    Reproduction, program director Richard Paulson said. It took three
    years for her to become pregnant using a donated egg and her husband's
    sperm.

    "Had the individual disclosed her actual age ... she would not have
    qualified for treatment at USC, since the program uses an arbitrary
    upper age limit of 55 for women seeking fertility therapy," the program
    said in a statement.

    The baby was delivered by Caesarean section and weighed 6 pounds, 4
    ounces.

    Doctors learned the woman's true age at the end of her first trimester,
    Paulson said. They did not release her identity.

    All women over age 45 who wish to undergo egg donation must pass a
    series of rigorous physical tests to ensure they are fit enough to
    withstand the stress of pregnancy.

    "It turned out that she sailed right through it," Paulson said in a
    telephone interview. "It is remarkable that a 63-year-old can
    successfully conceive and adapt to the rigors of pregnancy sufficiently
    well to deliver a healthy baby at term."

    A healthy woman in her 60s can expect a normal lifespan of nearly
    another 25 years, said Dr. Stanley Korenman, associate dean for ethics
    and medical science training at the University of California, Los
    Angeles. He added that judging the morality of such a case is
    difficult, noting that people without children develop a deep passion
    for childbearing.

    "Would you rather have a 63-year-old mother who is (presumably)
    wealthy, or would you rather have a 14-year-old impoverished girl who
    is a mother?" Korenman asked.

    "It's not so evil," he continued. "It's unappealing on its face ... but
    I don't see the intrinsic immorality of it."

    An article about the birth, to be published in the May issue of the
    journal Fertility and Sterility, said that when arbitrary age limits
    are imposed, people will devise a ruse to get a service.

    "Human beings whose age falls outside of these limits become motivated
    to deceive the providers of those services to avail themselves,"
    according to the article.

    The woman has been married to her husband -- who is 60 -- for 16 years,
    and the couple have no other children.

    Paulson said the successful birth raises the threshold on beliefs about
    conception.

    "It may be said that women have not one, but two biological clocks --
    the clock for the eggs and ovaries seems to run out much earlier than
    the one for the uterus," Paulson said.

    Medical literature, so far, has documented fewer than 100 deliveries in
    women over age 50. A previous case from Italy reported a successful
    pregnancy for a 62-year-old woman.
7.1457IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2977
    Missouri Joins In Tobacco Suit

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Missouri plans to get a piece of the pie if a
    number of state attorneys general reach what could be a $300 billion
    settlement with major tobacco companies.

    Attorney General Jay Nixon said Wednesday that Missouri will join
    litigation against the tobacco companies.

    Nixon said he plans to file a lawsuit against major tobacco companies,
    alleging violation of Missouri consumer protection laws. Nixon said the
    companies target children in advertising and lie to consumers about the
    nature of nicotine.

    Nixon didn't say when the lawsuit would be filed.

    Last month's settlement by the tobacco company Liggett Group Inc. with
    several states "dramatically changes the posture of the litigation,"
    Nixon said, because of Liggett's willingness to share information.

    "I have said all along that this was a strong case and could be won in
    Missouri courts," Nixon said, in a telephone interview from Jefferson
    City. "The recent availability of the Liggett documents pounded the
    nail that brought about this suit. Other states were doing discovery
    that we didn't have access to."

    Asked why Missouri didn't get involved in the litigation earlier, Nixon
    said:

    "I just felt that after reviewing all matters at this point it was time
    to join the suit. ... This is a major piece of litigation that would
    require significant resources."

    A clause in the Liggett settlement would allow other states to enter
    the litigation within the next six months and have the same access to
    the information and settlement fee paid by Liggett, Nixon said.

    Missouri needs to get involved in order to receive any future
    settlements that might be proposed in Congress, Nixon said.

    Philip Morris Cos. and RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp., the nation's two
    largest tobacco companies, recently began settlement talks with eight
    states seeking to recover smoking-related health costs.

    On Wednesday, Pennsylvania joined more than 20 states that have filed
    lawsuits against Philip Morris and RJR Nabisco. And Nebraska's attorney
    general, Don Stenberg, said Wednesday that his state doesn't wish to
    file a lawsuit but deserves part of a multi-state settlement that could
    be worth billions.

    Peggy Carter, a spokeswoman for RJR Nabisco, on Wednesday said the
    company was not commenting on settlement issues.

    An industry spokesman working with Philip Morris in settlement
    discussions did not immediately return a call on Wednesday.

    Nixon said his proposed lawsuit and those filed by attorneys general in
    at least 20 other states were individual actions based on state law
    claims, rather than a national class action.

    "We are working very closely with other attorneys general in a
    coordinated effort," Nixon said.

    The tobacco industry for four decades fiercely defended against
    lawsuits against cigarette makers, and those lawsuits met with little
    success despite mounting evidence of smoking's addictiveness.

    But Liggett, in return for its March settlement that protects the
    company from litigation, admitted cigarettes are addictive and provided
    evidence that implicates other tobacco companies.

    Tobacco company shareholders also have sued, claiming stock prices were
    overvalued because the companies failed to disclose damaging
    information on smoking hazards. Revenues were $45 billion last year,
    but stock prices were jumpy nonetheless
7.1458IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2944
    Peru president: Attack 'well prepared'

    By JANE HOLLIGAN 

    LIMA, April 23 (UPI) _ Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori denies that
    commandos involved in the dramatic rescue of 71 hostages were told to
    take no prisoners. 

    ``The order was to rescue the 72 hostages safely...and I was sure that
    could be achieved,'' he told a news conference on Wednesday. 

    All 14 Tupac Amaru rebels, including their leader, were killed in
    Tuesday's commando siege of the Japanese ambassador's residence in
    Lima. One of the 72 hostages and two soldiers also were killed in the
    attack, which ended a standoff that began Dec. 17. 

    Tunnels dug under the cover of blaring music were used to gain access
    to the rebel-held residence. Fujimori said the operation was ``well
    prepared.'' 

    Eight to 10 of the rebels were killed in the explosion that marked the
    start of the attack. The blast took place in the mouth of a tunnel in
    the living room, where some of the rebels were playing soccer. 

    Rebel leader Nestor Cerpa managed to get to his weapon but was among
    six rebels gunned down on a stairwell in a fight with soldiers. 

    Early on in the hostage crisis that began Dec. 17, soldiers aimed
    speakers at the walled diplomatic compound and blared music at the
    building to mask sound from the digging of the tunnels. 

    On Wednesday, Peruvian authorities removed the bodies of the 14 rebels
    killed in the strike. Explosives experts checked for bombs or mines in
    the residence, which was booby-trapped by the rebels. 

    The former hostages said they were tipped off a few minutes before the
    attack began, although it is unclear by whom. 

    Japanese Ambassador Morihisha Aoki, looking weak and speaking to
    reporters from a wheelchair, said that when he heard the first
    explosions, ``the first thing that came into my head was ... now my
    life will end.'' 

    Copyright 1997 by United Press International. 
7.1459IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2977
    RTw  24-Apr-97 06:10    

    Studies shed light on cocaine's kick

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, April 23 (Reuter) - U.S. researchers said on Wednesday they had
    demonstrated how cocaine gets people "high" and predicted their tests
    could help develop better drugs to treat addicts. 

    Tests on mice have shown that cocaine acts on dopamine, a
    neurotransmitter that carries signals between brain cells and is
    important to movement and motivation. 

    Higher levels of dopamine create feelings of euphoria. 

    In mice, cocaine blocks the re-uptake of dopamine -- t keeping it from
    being absorbed back into cells and thus keeping more of it around for
    longer. 

    Nora Volkow of Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and
    colleagues found this also happens with people. 

    Positron emission tomography (PET) scans showed doses of cocaine
    blocked between 60 percent and 77 percent of the enzyme that is
    responsible for re-uptake of dopamine. 

    "This is the first demonstration in humans that the doses used by
    cocaine abusers lead to a significant blockade of dopamine transporter,
    and that this blockade is associated with the subjective effects of
    cocaine," they wrote in a letter to the science journal Nature. 

    The dopamine transporter enzyme would be a good target for an
    anti-cocaine drug, but they said any such drug would have to be given
    at high enough doses to completely block the enzyme. 

    Volkow's group recruited 17 cocaine users, injected them with cocaine
    and used the PET scans to see what was happening in the brain. The
    volunteers were asked to describe whether they felt "high, a "rush,"
    "restlessness" or "cocaine craving." 

    Cocaine acts very quickly, which could be why it is such a popular
    drug, they said. 

    But they also showed that cocaine's kick wears off quickly. "After peak
    effects, self-reports for the high declined faster than the rate of
    clearance of cocaine from the brain," they wrote. 

    Dopamine's role was now well known, they said. "But addiction to
    cocaine involves other effects, such as craving, loss of control, and
    compulsive intake; the role of the dopamine system in these effects is
    less well understood." 

    So they used PET scans to watch what happened when 20 cocaine addicts
    and 23 non-addicted volunteers took methylphenidate, a drug that acts
    like cocaine. 

    The addicts did not get as "high" as the non-users, and also said
    methylphenidate gave them cocaine cravings. 

    Addicts had an extra response to the drug in the thalamus, which relays
    sensory input to the cerebral cortex, the area of the brain that
    controls movement, sense, thought and memory. Non-addicts did not show
    this response. 

    Volkow's group said their findings could lead to better understanding
    of how cocaine acts in the brain. 

    Scientists are looking for a way to help cocaine addicts quit. In 1995
    a team at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California said
    they had created an anti-cocaine vaccine using a chemical very similar
    to cocaine, known as a conjugate, to create antibodies against the
    drug. 

    REUTER
7.1460IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:29108
    RTw  24-Apr-97 03:23    

    FEATURE - UK election hopefuls learn to dress the part

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Andrew Steele 

    LONDON, April 24 (Reuter) - If the May 1 election is Britain's ultimate
    political beauty contest, parliamentary candidates are flawed
    supermodels in need of a make-over. 

    In a quiet backstreet just a few blocks from parliament, a friendly
    American with a critical eye is repackaging leading candidates for
    their big day, diplomatically persuading them to make themselves more
    attractive to the voting public. 

    She won't name names but Mary Spillane says she is involved at the top
    level of image-massaging campaigns for all three of Britain's major
    political parties. 

    Spillane, who shares her office with a rack of ties, swathes of suit
    cloth and glowing testimonials from grateful clients, is the sartorial
    spin doctor of the election campaign, an apolitical activist for good
    dress and good style. 

    She aims to improve the image of candidates, agents and other public
    figures, assessing everything from shirt colour to body language. 

    "Elections are won and lost on imagery, it is natural for people to
    want as much help as they can get," Spillane told Reuters.

    Color Me Beautiful Image Consultants, the company she heads, has been a
    major force in shaping the outward image of the British politician,
    although she says it is sometimes difficult to persuade her clients to
    drop the blue pin-striped image which is synonymous with Westminster. 

    "Seals are more amenable to training than your average middle-aged
    British man," said Spillane, a former Washington lobbyist and adviser
    to former U.S. president Ronald Reagan. 

    "But they come along here, aware that they need a retuning for their
    image. We will advise on the best colours, the best cut of suit, the
    best manner to project to the electorate. 

    "Maybe they just need a haircut or a new pair of glasses...sometimes
    they need to go on a diet or go on the wagon. 

    "If you have a slick, 30-something opponent and you are in your late
    50s with a full waistline and a claret-marked complexion, we can show
    you how you can change yourself and give some puff to your campaign." 

    CONTRASTS BETWEEN BRITAIN AND U.S. 

    A masters graduate of Harvard, Spillane has introduced some of the
    slicker elements of American politics to the British scene. But she
    draws the line at introducing the over-packaged Washington version of
    public life to this side of the Atlantic. 

    "The British do things differently, thank goodness. You would never
    accept some of the American elements of a political campaign. Across
    there it's way over the top, we don't want to go down that road.
    Fortunately you are blessed with a short election campaign," she said. 

    Spillane, who founded the Color Me Beautiful consultancy in Europe 15
    years ago, is tactful enough to be even-handed in her criticism of the
    major party leaders. 

    Of Prime Minister John Major, who once admitted to tucking his shirt
    inside his underpants, she says that he was a master of people contact
    and speaking off the cuff. 

    But he was incapable of looking relaxed. His off-duty uniform of "grey
    permapress trousers and an embarrassing fluffy jersey" was a turnoff,
    she said. 

    Labour party leader Tony Blair, whose debonair looks and slick dress
    has dramatically transformed the dirty-overall image of his party, is
    streets ahead in the fashion stakes, hitting the right balance between
    workaday formality and off-duty casualness, Spillane said. 

    "But his behaviour is very constrained, he isn't very good at contact
    with people. He's not good at kissing babies," said Spillane. 

    Paddy Ashdown, leader of the minority opposition Liberal Democrats, was
    the best raw material of the three, she said. 

    "He chooses the right clothes, but then he seems to put them on and
    then forget about them. Also there is a feeling that he is 'too
    honourable by half', which borders on arrogance." 

    Spillane is complimentary of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher,
    who continually updated her image during more than a decade as
    government leader. "She was always learning, she knew how important
    image is," she said. 

    Once the election is over, Spillane will revert to her mainstream
    business of image consulting for business clients and private
    individuals. 

    But she retains a soft spot for her political proteges -- at least the
    male parliamentary hopefuls. Although admiring Thatcher, Spillane says
    her female political clients in general were more difficult to advise. 

    "The men are far easier to handle. The women are more resistant to
    change."

    REUTER
7.1461IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2923
    RTw  24-Apr-97 00:58    

    NINE INJURED IN BLAST AT UK GASWORKS - POLICE

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 23 (Reuter) - At least nine people were injured, four of
    them seriously, in an explosion at a gasworks in Runcorn, northwest
    England, on Wednesday evening, emergency services said. 

    The injured were all employees at the gas works, who were working on a
    gas main when it exploded, officials said. 

    "It appears to be a genuine, unfortunate accident," said a police
    spokeswoman. 

    The gas works went up in flames and "was still burning out of control,"
    a fire brigade spokesman said at around midnight. 

    Ten fire engines were called to the scene, the area was cordoned off
    and nearby houses evacuated. 

    REUTER
7.1462IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 11:2980
    RTw  23-Apr-97 23:22    

    Latest polls dismiss plunge in Labour fortunes

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Helen Smith 

    LONDON, April 23 (Reuter) - A string of opinion polls on Wednesday gave
    Labour a comfortable lead over Britain's ruling Conservatives and wrote
    off an earlier poll showing a plunge in support for the main opposition
    party as a rogue. 

    The poll in Wednesday's Guardian newspaper had shown the Labour Party's
    lead over the Conservatives plummeting to five points from 14 points a
    week ago, suggesting the campaign for the May 1 election had turned
    from a certainty to an open race. 

    But polls for Channel Four television news, the Daily Telegraph and The
    Times put Labour's lead at 19 points, 20 points and 21 points
    respectively. 

    Two of the polls showed a slight decline in Labour's lead which has
    been in two-digit figures throughout the five-week election campaign
    and reached as high as 28 points at one time. 

    The other showed Labour's lead had risen four points in a week, while
    support for the Conservatives, at 27 percent, was at its lowest since
    the middle of March. 

    Political analysts had suggested that the ICM poll in the Guardian may
    have been a freak, but wanted more evidence to prove this. 

    "All the other polls suggest they (the Conservatives) are still
    trailing very badly and one poll is always suspect," said Roger Jowell
    of the British Election Studies organisation. 

    The polls did not bring unadulterated good news for Labour. The Gallup
    poll for Channel Four showed that half of voters had still not finally
    made up their minds who to vote for. 

    It put support for Labour at 50 percent, down four points from two
    weeks earlier, while the Conservatives, who have been in power for the
    past 18 years, were unchanged at 31 percent. 

    But the pollsters said that if they excluded people who were not
    certain to turn out on polling day and those who said they may still
    change their minds, Labour's lead slipped to just 12 points. 

    Labour, led by moderniser Tony Blair, is wary of complacency about its
    chances of winning the election. 

    In the 1992 election, opinion polls had shown it almost certain to
    clinch victory until shortly before polling day and Prime Minister John
    Major was returned to office with a 21-seat majority. 

    Blair kept up the momentum on Wednesday, pledging to create a one
    billion pound ($1.63 billion) fund for innovative health and education
    projects from the proceeds of Britain's lottery. 

    His party had more good news with a report that Alan Sugar, a computer
    billionaire who was Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher's
    "favourite businessman," had announced he would be voting Labour next
    Thursday. 

    Major, who has been campaigning in Scotland for two days, returned to
    the offensive, accusing Labour of stealing his party's policies. 

    "Let us suppose that I said I had decided in the interests of national
    security to invade Mars," Major told a party rally. 

    "This would set the Labour Party something of a poser. By tomorrow
    morning Mr Blair would have decided to invade Mars as well, and then he
    would say Why has it taken them so long to do this after 18
    Conservative years of government?' 

    Labour needs a 4.3 percent swing to win next Thursday's election and
    the new polls show it would have a swing of between six and 14 points. 

    REUTER
7.1463IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0532
7.1464IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0574
    THE first evidence against Timothy McVeigh, 29, for allegedly
    organising the Oklahoma City bombing, is to be presented at his Denver
    trial today, amid extraordinary efforts to shield the identities of the
    mostly white jury of seven men and five women.

    Linda Jones, a scientist with the British Government's forensic
    explosives laboratory, will be a crucial prosecution witness. Noted for
    her work on IRA cases, she has examined bomb fragments and is needed to
    counter recent disclosures of sloppiness at the FBI laboratory. The FBI
    has been forced to drop its own leading explosives expert after he was
    criticised by the Justice Department for producing inaccurate and
    flawed testimony in the case.

    McVeigh is charged with the lorry-bombing of the Oklahoma City federal
    building on April 19, 1995, killing 168 people and injuring hundreds
    more.

    The panel of jurors is to be completely anonymous, with members being
    assigned letters of the alphabet. A tall, curving white wall has been
    constructed in the oak-panelled courtroom to conceal them from the gaze
    of spectators in the gallery.

    Such precautions have previously been taken only in trials of Mafia
    leaders such as John Gotti, and even then, bare details about jurors
    occupational skills were allowed to be published. But Judge Richard
    Matsch is trying to stop even these from leaking out.

    Fears of possible retribution from extremists if the jury sentences
    McVeigh to death is one reason. The judge is also anxious to avoid the
    circus atmosphere of the trial of O J Simpson.

    Three weeks ago, in strict secrecy, he summoned 180 potential jurors to
    a heavily guarded auditorium, for a three-hour lecture on the facts of
    the explosion and the arrests. He implored them to accept their
    responsibility, saying the system worked best when jurors took their
    duty seriously. 

    Federal agents were used to guard the mass of people throughout the
    jury selection process. The judge is obviously determined to keep a
    firm grip of the proceedings, and not let events get out of hand as
    happened with Judge Ito in the Simpson trial. Fortunately for him,
    federal rules prohibit television cameras in the court.

    He has banned lawyers from talking to the 2,000 journalists accredited
    to cover the case and says he will throw out anybody who makes any kind
    of drawing. US marshals have been told to move jurors in and out of the
    courthouse without them being recognised. A school bus, its windows
    blanked out, is being used.

    The judge has made clear that any reporter who even remotely identifies
    a juror will incur his wrath. It has taken 16 days of intense
    questioning to empanel the jury. By law, all those selected had to
    agree they would be able to impose a sentence of execution.

    If convicted, McVeigh could face death by lethal injection at the state
    prison at McAlester, Oklahoma, or in a federal death chamber that has
    just been constructed in Terre Haute, Indiana.

    During the cross-examination of potential jurors, many Protestants
    cited the idea of "an eye for an eye". A woman was even asked what she
    would expect to happen to her on Judgment Day if she agreed that
    McVeigh should die. She said she would go for the death penalty and
    take her chances with God.

    During such talk, McVeigh has appeared completely at ease, even joking
    at times with his lawyers. Smartly dressed in khaki slacks and usually
    a blue, open-necked shirt, he looks entirely different from the
    stiff-faced prisoner in an orange jump suit first glimpsed by Americans
    as he was led out of a courthouse in Perry, Oklahoma.

    The defence team claims that this was a "perpetrator of the crime"
    walk, orchestrated by the FBI to make the "prisoner look dangerous,
    like someone who would mail package bombs for two decades, blow up a
    building in Oklahoma City or attempt to assassinate a president".
7.1465IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0646
7.1466IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0671
    England's sporting hero makes a fitting farewell

    By Ben Fenton 

    WITH timing that might be cited by some as proof that God is indeed an
    Englishman, Denis Compton, double international at soccer and cricket
    and slayer of numerous sporting dragons, died aged 78 yesterday, St
    George's Day.

    It was also 11 years to the day since the gathering into a celestial
    First XI of Compton's batting partner and best friend Bill Edrich, and
    of Jim Laker, the great England off-spinner.

    J J Warr, the captain of Middlesex during the Compton and Edrich
    heyday, said: "How sad, and yet how fitting, that Denis and Bill should
    both be taken from us on St George's Day. Nobody ever represented their
    country with more pride and courage than those two."

    Compton's widow, Christine, said at their home in Burnham, Bucks:
    "Denis would have been very glad that, if he had to die, he did so on
    St George's Day because he was very British and very proud to be
    British."

    The cricketer's death in the Princess Margaret Hospital, Windsor, from
    complications arising from a hip replacement operation at the weekend,
    came on the first day of the 50th county cricket season since he
    rewrote the sport's record books. In 1947, he scored 3,816 runs
    including a record 18 centuries at an average of more than 90.

    The Prime Minister paused in campaigning to pay tribute. "It wasn't
    just the game he played, it was the way he played it," Mr Major said.
    "Those who ever saw Denis Compton bat have an imperishable memory of
    the greatest cavalier of cricket."

    He was the first professional sportsman to have an agent, and his
    commercial activities off the field, particularly as the "Brylcreem
    Boy", coupled with his reputation for fast-living, brought him
    unprecedented popularity in the post-war years.

    Sir Colin Cowdrey said: "He just captivated the crowd. People would
    come away from a match much happier just for a sight of him playing."

    Other former England captains joined in paying their respects to a man
    who still holds the record for the fastest triple century, scored in
    three hours and one minute against Northern Transvaal in 1949.

    David Gower said: "He would have been in my top three of our greatest
    batsmen of all time." And Ted Dexter said: "Denis was an inspiration to
    me."

    Dickie Bird, the former Test match umpire, said after leading a
    minute's silence before the start of Cambridge University's match
    against Middlesex: "Denis was a tremendous character, a great player -
    so much flair, so much natural ability."

    As well as his extraordinary cricket career, Compton played 185
    football matches for Arsenal between 1932 and 1950, scoring 90 goals
    and winning FA Cup and League Championship medals. He won 12 England
    caps during the war.

    The boy who learned his cricket defending a lamp-post in Alexandra
    Road, Hendon, north-west London, overcame the hurdle of having his
    first-class debut cut short when he had scored 14 by an umpire who
    later admitted he had given him out because he was desperate to visit
    the lavatory.

    Perhaps the summation of Compton's place in cricket history and the
    affection of a nation came from Sir Neville Cardus, who wrote in 1947:
    "The strain of long years of anxiety and affliction passed from all
    hearts and shoulders at the sight of him. There were no rations in an
    innings by Compton."
7.1467IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0679
7.1468IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0629
7.1469IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0647
    Europe plans co-operation to combat sex slavery

    By Adrian Porter in Strasbourg 

    MEASURES to combat sex slavery have been proposed by the Parliamentary
    Assembly of the Council of Europe.

    Under a new international convention, all 40 member states would be
    obliged to step up the fight against forced prostitution, "mail order
    brides" and general trafficking in women, especially those from Central
    and Eastern Europe. Governments would have to draw up standard and
    severe punishments for the crime. They would also have to develop
    co-operation among police forces and provide assistance and protection
    for women who are forced into prostitution.

    Delegates to the Parliamentary Assembly, who debated the issue in
    Strasbourg yesterday, heard a report which said the problem had not
    been as widely recognised as, for instance, child abuse; possibly
    because the victims were seen as less innocent and because the crime
    took place in "unsavoury" circles. The report said that there had been
    a dramatic increase in sex slavery among member countries recently,
    with an estimated half-a-million women being trafficked in EU countries
    in 1995.

    The number of women victims from central and eastern European countries
    had tripled since the downfall of communism. Many of them had been
    promised an escape from the poverty of their home countries with jobs
    as waitresses, beauty parlour assistants or au pairs. Their passports
    were confiscated by the traffickers as soon as they crossed into
    Western Europe and they were forced into nightclubs and brothels under
    inhumane conditions.

    The report claimed that it was not unusual for a trafficked woman to
    have to "serve" 10 clients a night, often involving dangerous or
    degrading sexual acts.

    Because most of the women were illegal immigrants, frightened of being
    involved with the authorities, the proposed convention would offer
    residence permits and witness protection programmes to those willing to
    testify in court. This was especially necessary because of the
    increasing involvement of organised crime in European sex slavery with
    its associated undertone of threatened violence against victims and
    their families if they tried to break out of the system.

    Lydia Maximus, a Socialist deputy, said the convention should also try
    to stamp out corruption among some police forces which, she said, were
    "part and parcel" of forced prostitution.
7.1470IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0792
    Freed hostages recall months filled with fear

    Reports by David Sapsted in Lima 

    HOSTAGES held captive under the guns of Marxist guerrillas for more
    than four months yesterday began recounting their days trapped inside
    the Japanese ambassador's home in a suburb of Lima.

    That ordeal ended on Tuesday afternoon, when Peruvian commandos stormed
    the compound, killing all 14 rebels and freeing all 72 hostages. One of
    the captives, a Peruvian Supreme Court judge, was wounded in the leg
    and died later of a heart attack.

    As Peruvians took to the streets of Lima to wave flags and sound car
    horns, the freed hostages spoke of their fear of dying as the raid got
    under way, and of now being able to rediscover such simple pleasures as
    a walk in the sun.

    Minutes before the commando attack began, word spread among the
    hostages - 47 Peruvians, 24 Japanese and the Bolivian ambassador - that
    an assault was imminent.

    "I thought it was a joke, so I just kept on playing cards," said Father
    Juan Julio Witcht, a Jesuit priest, who remained a hostage though
    Nestor Cerpa, the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement leader, offered
    him his freedom five days after the rebels blasted their way into a
    cocktail party at the compound on Dec 17.

    None of the released men would say how word had reached them that the
    assault was imminent. However, local doctors have been allowed to check
    on the captives in recent weeks, and it is believed communication
    devices were smuggled in.

    Morihisa Aoki, the Japanese ambassador, said he was sure he was going
    to die as gunfire broke out and explosions shook his once-elegant home.
    As his bedroom on the second floor filled with smoke, he kept telling
    fellow hostages: "Don't move."

    Someone gave him a water-soaked towel to make breathing easier and then
    put a mattress over him for protection. "When I heard the sound of the
    first explosion, the first thing that came into my head was that my
    life was over," said the ambassador, who was still wearing a bandage on
    his right arm yesterday, and was in a wheelchair, because he had hurt
    his hip as he escaped.

    He said all the hostages had behaved with great dignity during their
    four months of captivity. "We kept solidarity, self-respect, bravery,
    patience," he said. "For that reason, I'm here talking to you, and not
    in a coffin."

    He said an awareness that people around the world were still thinking
    of them "cheered us up, and at no time did we feel isolated". Even the
    turning on of television camera lights at night lifted their spirits.

    He had an extra reason to celebrate: he was reunited with his wife,
    Naoko, on Tuesday, their 29th wedding anniversary. "I never expected
    President Fujimori would make this happen on the day of my wedding
    anniversary as a gift," he said.

    The ambassador said that during his captivity he had discussed the
    situation with Francisco Tudela, the Peruvian Foreign Minister, and
    fellow-hostage, who was shot in the ankle during Tuesday's assault. "If
    the rebels had been able to leave the residence and repeat the same
    kind of thing, then the four months of captivity would have been in
    vain. I hope and trust terrorist groups are going to take this as a
    strong lesson," he said.

    Jorge Gumucio, the Bolivian ambassador, said Peruvian military officers
    among the hostages had given advance warning of the attack when most of
    the captives were gathered on the second floor of the residence as the
    guerrillas played a game of indoor football in the living room.

    "At first, I thought we had 10 minutes' warning, but now I realise it
    must have been less," he said. "However long it really was, it seemed
    like an eternity." Mr Gumucio said one of the hardest aspects of his
    incarceration was "not being able to see the sun" because of the
    curtains his captors had placed across the windows.

    He said the rebels had generally treated their captives well and
    "respectfully" after the threats of executions made during the first
    few days of the siege, when more than 500 partygoers were initially
    held. The former hostages agreed that the rebels had been taken
    completely by surprise by the attack.

    Cerpa and his chief lieutenant, known only as Tito, were among those
    playing soccer when it happened. All praised the work of Archbishop
    Juan Luis Cipriani, who acted as intermediary in talks between the
    government and the rebels, and who conducted Mass for the hostages
    during their captivity.

    "He saw us through our periods of pessimism," said the Bolivian
    ambassador. "He saved our lives."
7.1471IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu Apr 24 1997 17:0735
    Passive smoking 'affects ovaries'

    By Bruce Johnston in Rome 

    POTENTIALLY harmful traces of tobacco have been found in the ovaries of
    women who do not smoke but whose husbands or companions do.

    The ovaries of some women were found to be "deformed", reducing their
    ability to have children, researchers at the Assisted Fertility Centre
    of Bologna University told a convention of medical specialists in
    Italy. "This provides incontrovertible evidence that passive smoking
    damages human tissue and organs," said Dr Elena Porcu, who runs the
    centre with Prof Carlo Flamigni, Italy's leading practising fertility
    expert.

    "The same also goes for the extremely delicate tissues and organs that
    govern human reproduction," said Dr Porcu, who is a smoker. "This is
    why we are advising not only couples wanting a child by natural means
    to not smoke but also those seeking one by artificial fertilisation."

    She added: "Twenty per cent of hardened female smokers have chromosome
    irregularities in their ovaries. This is a high percentage, which drops
    to five per cent in the case of non-smokers. Besides damaging the
    ovaries, cigarettes accelerate the menopause."

    Dr Michael MacNamee, scientific director of Bourn Hall, the leading
    fertility centre near Cambridge, said he would like to know more about
    the research.

    "But we advise all couples, men and women, who are contemplating
    pregnancy to stop smoking. It is absolutely essential. It compromises
    their own reproductive success and the health and wellbeing of their
    baby," said Dr MacNamee.

    Smoking compromised the reproductive health of men and women, he said.
7.1472IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:00104
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT 

    Friday, April 25, 1997 1:00 am EDT 

    Friday, April 25, 1997 

    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Murder suspect Timothy McVeigh blew up the Oklahoma City
    federal building in a plot to spark a second American revolution, a
    prosecutor said Thursday in opening statements. Assistant U.S. Attorney
    Joseph Hartzler said McVeigh sought to impose his will on America by
    killing innocent people. McVeigh's defense startled onlookers by
    beginning its remarks with a six-minute reading of each name of the 168
    victims who died in the bombing. 

    CHEMICAL WEAPONS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate has ratified a treaty designed to ban
    chemical weapons around the globe by a 74-26 vote, seven more than the
    two-thirds needed for approval. All Democrats voted in favor of the
    measure, while Republicans were split. The treaty, opposed by many
    conservatives, bans the use, development, production or stockpiling of
    all chemical warfare agents and requires the destruction of existing
    stockpiles over the next decade. It has been signed by 164 nations thus
    far, and ratified by 75. With or without American ratification, the
    pact will take effect on April 29. 

    PHONE MERGER 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Justice Department approved the merger of Bell
    Atlantic and Nynex, concluding that the combination of the two Baby
    Bells along the Eastern seaboard does not violate antitrust laws. It is
    the second-biggest merger in U.S. history. Bell Atlantic's takeover of
    Nynex creates a firm controlling 38 million phone lines from Maine to
    Virginia. The $23 billion deal must still get Federal Communications
    Commission approval. 

    MISSING ARMAMENTS 

    FAIRFIELD, Texas (AP) -- Authorities searched Thursday for two trucks
    -- one carrying four unarmed Air Force missiles and the other machine
    guns and mortars -- that disappeared 175 miles apart in Texas,
    officials said. President Clinton said the truck with the guns had been
    found. The Texas Department of Public Safety was told by Houston police
    that the FBI was searching for a tractor-trailer carrying four unarmed
    missiles, a department spokesman said. The truck, with Ohio license
    plates, was last seen heading south on Interstate 45 near Fairfield,
    about 80 miles south of Dallas. 

    MISSING PLANE 

    EAGLE, Colo. (AP) -- An military team, unable to overcome snowy
    conditions on a Rocky Mountain peak, abandoned efforts Thursday to
    reach the wreckage of a warplane last seen more than three weeks ago.
    Since plane debris recovered Wednesday was identified as part of the
    missing A-10 Thunderbolt, the remaining question is the fate of pilot
    Capt. Craig Button. The pilot veered away from his formation on April 2
    while on a training mission over Arizona. 

    B'NAI B'RITH 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- More than 100 workers were quarantined for eight
    hours Thursday at the international headquarters of B'nai B'rith after
    a foul-smelling package was discovered in the mail room. The FBI is
    investigating the incident as terrorism. After tests allayed initial
    fears that the suspicious substance in a petri dish might be a deadly
    toxin, the workers -- and several children -- were told they could go
    home. 

    INTERNET NAMES 

    GENEVA (AP) -- A new system for Internet naming goes into effect next
    month. The plan is to open up the registration system, currently
    controlled by one corporation, the Virginia-based Network Solutions,
    Inc. Under the new system, other companies besides NSI will enter into
    the lucrative business of farming out Internet names. The new system
    will add seven new extensions, icluding .firm for businesses, .store
    for companies selling products. 

    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar bought 126.32 yen, up slightly in early Friday
    trading. The Nikkei fell 27.90 points to 18,670.17. In New York the Dow
    closed at 6,792.25, down 20.47. 

    WOODS-ZOELLER 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Tiger Woods says he was stunned by Fuzzy Zoeller's
    racially insensitive remarks, but believes no offense was intended and
    accepts Zoeller's apology. Zoeller's remarks came in a CNN interview
    about an hour after Zoeller finished his fourth round in the Masters,
    which the 21-year-old Woods won by a record 12 strokes in becoming the
    first black to win a major title. 

    NBA-PLAYOFFS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The New York Knicks outshot the Charlotte Hornets in
    Thursday night's NBA playoff opener for a 109-99 win. John Starks, who
    was presented with his Sixth Man Award trophy prior to the game, put
    the Knicks ahead for good with one of their five 3-pointers in the
    fourth quarter. In Miami, the Heat crushed the Orlando Magic, 99-64. 

    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT                 
7.1473IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0196
    RTw  25-Apr-97 04:19    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KISANGANI, Zaire - The U.N. refugee agency has demanded an answer from
    Zaire rebels on the fate of 55,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees gone missing
    from a camp. A U.N. team found Kasese camp set in jungle 25 km (15
    miles) south of Kisangani entirely devoid of refugees, though it was
    teeming last week. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate cleared the way for a vote to approve a
    world treaty outlawing chemical weapons by stripping out four disputed
    conditions that would have prevented U.S. ratification. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peru paid tribute to the slain heroes of its hostage crisis and
    Japan thanked the South American country for the military strike that
    rescued 71 captive VIPs from its embassy residence. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - The prosecution accused Oklahoma City bombing defendant
    Timothy McVeigh of being a right-wing extremist who thought the deadly
    blast would trigger a second American Revolution.

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. Defense Department expressed concern at an
    American airman's alleged break-in of a woman's apartment in Okinawa
    but said this did not compare to the 1995 rape of a Japanese schoolgirl
    by three U.S. servicemen. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The United States again cautioned Iraq against any move to
    increase its forces in southern Iraq under the guise of flying Muslim
    pilgrims home from Saudi Arabia through a "no-fly" zone. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Repeated warnings by U.S. officials on Japan's resurgent
    trade surplus could affect otherwise problem-free bilateral relations,
    Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto said on Thursday. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean President Kim Young-sam's controversial son
    appeared in parliament on Friday at the climax of a special probe into
    a loans-for-kickbacks scandal that has rocked the nation.

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The United States urged Japan to provide food aid to
    famine-threatened North Korea and said this issue would be raised when
    Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto visits Washington on Friday. 

    - - - - 

    UNITED NATIONS - An emergency special session of the General Assembly
    is expected to adopt a resolution on Friday condemning and demanding an
    immediate halt to Israel's construction of a new settlement in East
    Jerusalem, captured during the 1967 Middle East war. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - With an election less than a week away, the battle between
    Britain's ruling Conservatives and their Labour rivals is growing ever
    more vitriolic. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - The prosecution opened its case against Oklahoma City bombing
    defendant Timothy McVeigh, accusing him of murdering 168 men, women and
    children so blood would "flow in the streets of America." 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Chinese President Jiang Zemin, winding up a five-day visit,
    takes a break from official business on Friday to tour the estate of
    19th-century Russian writer and philosopher Leo Tolstoy. 

    - - - - 

    MARSEILLE, France - France's snap parliamentary election has turned
    into a presidential-style head-on clash between Prime Minister Alain
    Juppe and Socialist challenger Lionel Jospin as polls point to a close
    race. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER
7.1474IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0168
    RTw  25-Apr-97 07:07    

    Birth pill does not cause heart attacks -WHO study

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, April 25 (Reuter) - Birth control pills do not increase the
    risk of heart attacks, World Health Organisation researchers reported
    on Friday. 

    The study follows research that shows the pill does not increase the
    risk of a stroke although some types can increase the very small risk
    of a blood clot. 

    Neil Poulter and colleagues at University College, London University,
    along with researchers at twenty-one other institutions in Asia,
    Europe, Latin America and Africa, gathered information on 368 women
    aged between 20 and 44 who had heart attacks. 

    Women who already had some risk factors for heart attacks -- such as
    smokers and those with high blood pressure -- further increased that
    risk when they took the pill. 

    But women with no other risks do not have more heart attacks on the
    pill than women not taking it, they wrote in the Lancet medical
    journal. 

    "Very few (heart attacks) were identified among women who had no
    cardiovascular risk factors and who reported that their blood pressure
    had been checked before oral contraceptive use," they wrote. 

    The risk was only "substantial" -- more than four cases per 100,000
    women -- in women over 35 who smoked. 

    Early versions of the pill, first made widely available in the 1960s,
    did cause women to have more heart attacks. But contraceptives have
    since been re-formulated with less oestrogen and have been shown to be
    much safer. 

    Last year the British government caused a global panic by issuing
    advice about the newest, third-generation pills. They were found to
    double the risk of a deep vein thrombosis -- a blood clot in the leg
    veins. 

    Sales of the pills, formulated with the hormone progestagen in an
    attempt to make them even safer than earlier pills, plummeted -- as did
    the stocks of companies that make them. 

    But Poulter says the risks are very tiny to begin with. 

    "I think the key thing is perspective," said Poulter. "These risks are
    still small. They are still less than you would see in pregnancy." 

    Last week Jan Rosing and colleagues at Maastricht University in the
    Netherlands said they had shown contraceptive pills interfered with the
    body's chemical mechanism for preventing clots. 

    Tests on blood plasma showed women who took birth control pills had a
    "significantly decreased sensitivity" to activated protein C (APC), a
    vital anticoagulent in the blood. This could explain the effect on
    thrombosis. 

    But overall researchers say the pill is very safe and the risks are
    lower than those associated with pregnancy.

    REUTER
7.1475IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0188
    RTw  25-Apr-97 00:46    

    Falkland Islanders cast wary eye on UK election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Patrick Watts 

    PORT STANLEY, Falklands, April 25 (Reuter) - Falkland islanders
    breathed a huge sigh of relief when the Labour Party lost the last
    British election in 1992. This time around, they are less suspicious
    but still wary. 

    Conservative leader Margaret Thatcher has been a heroine for the 2,100
    islanders ever since she went to war in 1982 to wrest the disputed
    islands back after an Argentine invasion. They even have a national
    holiday in her honour. 

    John Major, Thatcher's successor as prime minister, has maintained
    those close links with a special tradition of broadcasting an annual
    Christmas message to the windswept archipelago. 

    The islanders celebrated Major's surprise 1992 election victory as the
    then Labour opposition leader Neil Kinnock had provoked their ire by
    repeatedly stating: "A Labour government would talk to Argentina about
    the Falklands." 

    With new Labour leader Tony Blair now the opinion poll favourite to win
    the British election on May 1, islanders mutter words of warning to
    those who may become too complacent. 

    Labour denied it would hand the islands back to Argentina after Defence
    Minister Jorge Dominguez reportedly told Jane's Defence Weekly that he
    and Foreign Minister Guido Di Tella had meetings with several Labour
    officials including Blair. 

    "I believe that after May 1 a new phase of review of the Malvinas
    (Falklands) with a new administration will start," he was quoted as
    saying. 

    That prompted Labour headquarters in London to put out a blunt
    statement: "There is not one shred of truth in the suggestion that
    there might be any change of policy towards the Falklands were Labour
    to be elected on 1st May." 

    Despite those assurances, Velma Malcolm of the Falklands Islands
    Association pressure group maintains: "You can never trust a Labour
    government." 

    Tony Lloyd, Labour's party spokesman on the Falklands and Latin
    America, paid a familiarisation visit to the islands and insisted
    "There is no difference between the policy of the Conservative
    government and Labour." 

    But the islanders still remained sceptical. 

    Councillor Richard Stevens said: "There is always fear of the unknown,
    considering that the Labour Party have not been in power for 18 years." 

    Fellow councillor Norma Edwards was also apprehensive about Lloyd: "I
    spoke to him and he just didn't seem to understand why islanders are
    adamant that they do not desire closer links with Argentina or why they
    refuse to allow Argentine passport holders into the Islands." 

    The Conservative government bowed to strong islander pressure in 1985
    and declared a 200-mile (320 km) fishing zone around the Falklands,
    allowing the government there to licence foreign fishing trawlers and
    bring new prosperity to the islands. 

    "Our standard of living has gone up seven fold thanks to the
    Conservative government's declaration," said fishing company director
    Terry Betts of the licence income that gives the Falklands financial
    autonomy from Britain apart from defence. 

    Exploratory oil drilling around the Falklands is to begin next
    February, another vital factor in the islands' future. 

    "There would be a hell of an outcry in Britain if a Labour government
    suddenly decided to open sovereignty talks with Argentina, particularly
    as we have the prospect of a huge oil bonanza," said local newspaper
    editor Tony Burnett. 

    "We have already pledged to pay for our defence and after financing our
    own needs locally, will offer any excess cash to Britain. It could be
    hundreds of millions of pounds. Would the British public be prepared to
    lose all that?" he asked. 

    REUTER
7.1476IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0171
    RTw  25-Apr-97 04:04    

    Study indicates AIDS getting more aggressive

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, April 24 (Reuter) - The HIV virus that causes AIDS could be
    getting more aggressive, Italian researchers reported on Friday. 

    A study of nearly 300 people infected with HIV showed those infected
    after 1989 got sicker faster than those infected before, Dr Allessandro
    Sinicco and colleagues at the University of Turin said. 

    The virus could be mutating into stronger forms -- and early screening
    was thus more important than ever, they said in a report in the British
    Medical Journal. 

    "Our findings suggest possible changes in the course of HIV epidemic in
    the 1990s and raise intriguing issues on the course of HIV infection,"
    they wrote. 

    "The emergence of more virulent strains due to multiple biological
    mechanisms may be responsible for a more aggressive course of HIV
    disease in patients who have recently seroconverted," they added. 

    Seroconversion is when the body develops antibodies to HIV -- usually
    within two weeks of initial infection. 

    If this was true, AIDS experts would have to think about different
    treatment strategies, they said. 

    "In particular, if HIV disease has become more aggressive, more
    frequent screening would be essential to identify patients who have
    just seroconverted and could benefit from early antretroviral
    treatment." 

    Experts now recommend treating HIV with a cocktail of anti-viral drugs
    as soon as the immune system shows damage -- usually measured by
    counting immune system cells known as CD4 cells.

    Studies show this combination therapy can knock the virus back to
    undetectable levels. 

    Sinicco's study included 285 patients infected with HIV recruited
    between September 1985 to January 1995. They included women, drug
    users, homosexuals, and a small group with other risk factors. 

    As the 10-year study progressed, more and more women showed up with
    HIV, as did the number of men infected heterosexually. 

    Patients infected after December 1989 showed faster declines in immune
    system function and a quicker build-up of the virus than those infected
    earlier, they found. 

    "Consistent with previous reports, our data show that the first 12
    months after seroconversion are extremely critical for the future
    course of HIV disease," they wrote. 

    People who seroconverted after December 1989 lost more CD4 cells every
    day, they added. 

    Those infected later also developed AIDS sooner, Sinicco said. 

    It could take up to 10 years for those infected in 1985 to develop the
    illnesses like pneumonia or Kaposi's sarcoma that define AIDS, while on
    average it only took two and a half years for those infected between
    1992 and 1995.

    REUTER
7.1477IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0132
    RTw  25-Apr-97 01:29    

    Shuttle Atlantis moved to pad for Mir mission

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, April 24 (Reuter) - The space shuttle Atlantis was
    moved to its Florida launch pad on Thursday for a mission to Russia's
    ailing Mir space station. 

    The shuttle made the slow, six-hour crawl to its seaside launch pad at
    Kennedy Space Centre riding atop a giant tracked transporter.

    Atlantis is due to make a predawn blastoff on May 15 and will
    rendezvous with the Russian orbiting outpost two days later. The
    shuttle will pick up U.S. astronaut Jerry Linenger and drop off his
    replacement, British-born Michael Foale. 

    Linenger has been aboard the Mir since January and has had to endure a
    brief but serious fire and a string of technical problems affecting the
    station's life support and cooling systems. 

    The shuttle will also deliver a new Russian-built oxygen generator to
    replace a faltering device that supplies the breathing air for the
    station's crew. 

    Meanwhile, NASA officials said all looked set for the launch of a
    weather satellite from Cape Canaveral early on Friday. An Atlas rocket
    was scheduled to send the $220 million satellite aloft at 1:49 a.m. EDT
    (0549 GMT). 

    REUTER
7.1478IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0189
    RTw  25-Apr-97 00:59    

    British Loonies make madness a virtue in election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Andrew Steele 

    LONDON, April 25 (Reuter) - The suit was grey, the spectacles were
    large and the expression was earnest. But could that really be John
    Major cuddling up to a buxom brunette in leather underwear, neon makeup
    and fishnet stockings? 

    That was the question flitting through the minds of alarmed tourists on
    Thursday as they stood in the shadow of Big Ben outside Britain's
    parliament. 

    But they could rest easy. "John Major" was in fact a lookalike who had
    come along to support a pre-election get-together of Britain's most
    eccentric politicians, the Official Monster Raving Loony Party. 

    "I want to stay friendly with them in case I need a job next week,"
    said an Irish-accented "Major" after declining to give his real name. 

    The Loonies, with the election slogan "Vote for insanity -- you know it
    makes sense," are a perennial feature on the British electoral map,
    adding a touch of madness to an otherwise earnest and often boring
    campaign. 

    More than a dozen Raving Loony candidates for the May 1 election,
    together with a motley band of supporters, collected on Westminster
    Bridge to hear the words of wisdom from chief loony and party founder
    Screaming Lord Sutch. 

    Sutch, brandishing a brass megaphone and his "election roll" filled
    with cheese and a bit of fruit cake, bounded among his supporters in
    his trademark leopard-skin suit and top hat. 

    He presented some of his potential cabinet ministers in the unlikely
    event of having to form a government -- bookmakers put Sutch's chances
    of becoming prime minister at 15 million to one. 

    A man dressed as a banana who is bidding to represent the people of
    Wokingham seemed determined to get his hands on the agriculture
    portfolio. 

    "Wokingham's going bananas...hang on a minute my banana's deflating,"
    said "Loony Banana," who quickly breathed a bit of puff back into his
    yellow plastic costume. "This is the only inflation you will see from
    me," he shouted. 

    A young man in a fetching pink frock and red magician's hat seemed a
    dead cert for arts and culture. 

    The Loonies seem particularly keen to cash in on the sex and financial
    "sleaze" scandals which have reverberated through the campaigns of the
    main parties. 

    The only difference is that the Raving Loony Party are all in favour,
    not against. 

    "Let's hear it for sleaze," screamed the party's "sleaze and own
    affairs" spokesman "Screwy" Screwdriver, who is standing for
    Sittingbourne. 

    Sutch, who has pulled out of the election race at the last minute
    because of his mother's ill-health, is in favour of a two-day working
    week and free sex and electric toilet seats for the elderly on the
    National Health Service. 

    He wants closer relations with Europe by the simple expedient of towing
    the country south to warmer climes. 

    A single European currency? No problem, says Sutch, brandishing a
    fistful of one-million-pound notes bearing a picture of what he
    describes as the "Queen Loony herself," former prime minister Margaret
    Thatcher. 

    Sutch, Britain's longest serving political leader, makes his living as
    a rock singer when he is not inhabiting the lunatic fringe of politics.
    He started his political career as the candidate for people
    disillusioned about mainstream candidates. He has now stood for
    parliament more than 40 times. 

    But he is ever the optimist that this time, his party will go one
    better than its previous best -- in Rotheram in 1994 when Sutch polled
    1,114 votes. 

    REUTER
7.1479IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 11:0140
    Friday April 25 1:20 AM EDT 

    Drug raid on Chrysler plant nets 29

    FENTON, Missouri, April 25 (UPI) _ Police on Thursday arrested 29
    persons as they concluded a 17-month investigation of drug trafficking
    at Chrysler Corporation's facilities in St. Louis County. 

    Chrysler spokesman Tony Cervone says 26 of the 29 persons arrested were
    Chrysler employees with 22 terminated immediately and four under
    review. The other three were contract workers. 

    The investigation at the St. Louis North and St. Louis South plants has
    been underway since November 1995, and is the second drug bust at a
    Chrysler plant in the past two years. The earlier undercover operation
    resulted in the arrest and termination of 23 persons at the plant in
    Sterling Heights, Mich. 

    Cervone says the drug trafficking problem was brought to the attention
    of Chrysler management by concerned employees at the two plants where
    7,800 workers make the minivan and Dodge Ram pickup. 

    He says, ``We feel we've done a thorough job and, yes, we do feel we've
    cleaned house.'' 

    Cervone says, ``The important thing is that we don't generalize and
    make it sound like everyone at this plant is a drug user or drug
    pusher. It was half of 1 percent of the employment. These 29 people
    deserved to be out of there.'' 

    Executive Vice President for Manufacturing Dennis K. Pawley says, ``We
    do not believe the behaviors of the people arrested today are
    indicative of our workforce here in St. Louis nor do we believe it is
    fair to allow a small number of individuals to tarnish our collective
    reputation.'' 

    Copyright 1997 by United Press International. 

    All rights reserved. 

7.1480IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:02104
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997
    Issue 700
    
    Bomb plotter aimed 'to shake up America' By Hugh Davies in Denver 
    
    A PROSECUTOR in Denver said yesterday that the "hate-filled" mastermind
    of the bombing in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people was involved in
    a Right-wing plot.
    
    As the charges were read to the court, blue-eyed Timothy McVeigh sat
    silently, poker-faced and scribbling notes furiously. It was alleged
    that his favourite alias was Robert Kling, because he admired the
    terror tactics of the Klingons in the TV series Star Trek.
    
    During the opening moments of the trial, it was claimed that the FBI
    had found a file created by McVeigh on his sister Jennifer's computer
    before the attack. It was apparently a message meant for the American
    government. The file was called "ATF READ", referring to agents of the
    Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms whose attempt to storm the
    Branch Davidian Sect compound at Waco, Texas, ended in a gun battle and
    death.
    
    The file said: "All you tyrannical mother******s will swing in the wind
    one day for your treasonous actions against the Constitution and the
    United States. Die, you spineless cowardous bastards."
    
    McVeigh, 29, allegedly wrote that the US government had "drawn first
    blood" with the fiery end to the Waco siege that killed 50 adults and
    25 children. But the action would be avenged. "Blood will flow in the
    streets."
    
    The assistant US attorney Joseph Hartzler said McVeigh was so fired up
    that he meticulously planned the bombing as "the first shot" in what he
    imagined would be "a violent, bloody revolution in this country". The
    prosecutor said he spent six months gathering materials, using a mail
    order "explosives cookbook" from Paladin Press in Boulder, Colorado,
    called Homemade C-14. He chose April 19, 1995, "to shake up America"
    because it was the second anniversary of the Waco fire. The date was
    also regarded by "patriots" as the anniversary of the opening of the
    American Revolution.
    
    "McVeigh envisioned that the bomb would bring liberty to this nation.
    He wanted to impose the will of Timothy McVeigh on the rest of America
    with premeditated violence and terror by murdering innocent men, women
    and children."
    
    The explosion devastated the Alfred P Murrah federal building in
    Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, including 19 children. The
    prosecutor said that when McVeigh was arrested driving north from
    Oklahoma City in his "get-away car", he was wearing a T-shirt bearing a
    quote from John Wilkes Booth, who shot Abraham Lincoln. It referred to
    the "blood of patriots" and the shirt was emblazoned with "droplets of
    scarlet blood".
    
    Earplugs were found in his pocket that, according to an FBI chemist,
    bore "the residue of undetonated explosives". Mr Hartzler said McVeigh
    was also carrying a crumpled business card from a military surplus
    firm. On it was written: "TNT at $5 a stick. Need more. Call after May
    1."
    
    Mr Hartzler said McVeigh had also copied out an excerpt from The Turner
    Diaries, a novel that is revered by US extremists and militias. The
    book is about men seeking to overthrow the government by killing 700
    people in a lorry bombing of the FBI headquarters in Washington.
    
    The explosive in the book was made from oil and ammonium nitrate
    fertiliser, just like the Oklahoma City bomb, said Mr Hartzler, who has
    multiple sclerosis and delivered his narrative from a wheelchair.
    
    The excerpt read: "The real violence of our attack today lies in the
    psychological impact and not in the immediate casualties."
    
    In prison interviews, McVeigh allegedly said he was angered by the
    federal attack at Waco, but he insisted: "I have never had my hands on
    a bomb." 
    
    The jurors will have to wade through a minefield of contradictory
    evidence, including some alarming depositions that are said to
    implicate a leader of the extremist White Aryan Resistance who is a
    former Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.
    
    The scope of the case is said to rival the criminal investigation of
    John F Kennedy's assassination. It includes 22,000 witness statements,
    more than 400 hours of videotapes from various surveillance cameras and
    even US spy satellite photographs.
    
    McVeigh's lawyer, Stephen Jones, is expected to suggest that a foreign
    government, "probably Iraq" hired a "a Middle Eastern bombing engineer"
    to detonate the explosion with the help of neo-Nazis. In a court
    petition, lawyers say the attack was "contracted out" through an Iraqi
    base in the Philippines and it was "possible that those who carried out
    the bombing were unaware of the true sponsor". 
    
    McVeigh, from a working-class family in Buffalo, New York, was an
    infantryman in the Gulf war and was decorated for knocking out an Iraqi
    tank. The FBI alleges that, after being rejected by the elite Green
    Berets Special Forces, he drifted into Right-wing extremist politics.
    According to an old army friend, Michael Fortier, he wanted to startle
    the nation.
    
    A separate trial is to follow for his alleged co-conspirator, Terry
    Nichols, 42. Judge Richard Matsch has ruled that a statement made by
    him to FBI agents two days after the bombing can be used only in the
    second case.
7.1481IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:1162
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997
    Issue 700
    
    Netanyahu facing UN censure over Jerusalem homes
    
    By Anton La Guardia in Jerusalem 
    
    THE Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, faced international
    condemnation and a possible call for sanctions yesterday over his
    building policies in disputed East Jerusalem.
    
    The United Nations General Assembly was last night convening an
    emergency special session - the tenth in nearly half a century - to
    discuss an Israeli decision to press ahead with building a 6,500-home
    Jewish neighbourhood in East Jerusalem. The area was conquered and
    annexed by Israel in 1967.
    
    The prime minister said separate infrastructure work to allow Arabs to
    build more houses would also be carried out. Palestinians dismissed the
    offer as a fig leaf. Israel says East Jerusalem is part of its
    undivided capital, but most of the international community still
    regards it as occupied territory and keeps its embassies in Tel Aviv.
    Palestinians want to establish the capital of a future state in east
    Jerusalem.
    
    A draft of the General Assembly resolution sponsored by the Palestine
    Liberation Organisation demanded a "full and immediate cessation" of
    building work at Jebel Abu Ghneim, known to Israelis as Har Homa.
    
    It recommended a boycott of Israeli companies and other organisations
    involved in settlement activity in the occupied territories and called
    for a team of UN monitors to be sent to the region and report within
    two months.
    
    European countries were busy trying to soften the resolution,
    particularly the calls for specific action. However, a general
    condemnation and some sort of language discouraging investments in
    Israeli settlements is expected to survive.
    
    "We are telling the Arabs that they should agree to a text that
    commands the widest possible support," said one Western official.
    
    It is the fourth time in recent weeks that the United Nations has
    debated Israeli building in East Jerusalem. Arab countries are furious
    at America's decision to veto two earlier Security Council
    condemnations of Israel although Washington has criticised the building
    policies.
    
    Israeli officials had expressed relief last week when the Arabs were
    struggling to gather firm support from 93 countries - a majority of the
    General Assembly - to convene the session.
    
    European countries did not support the meeting. But the Palestinian
    leader Yasser Arafat has steadily built up diplomatic support, first
    among Arabs and then in the Non-Aligned Movement.
    
    Mr Netanyahu is adamant that no amount of pressure will stop him from
    building in Jerusalem. Weakened by a scandal over the failed
    appointment of a new attorney-general, including a narrow escape from a
    police call for the prime minister to be prosecuted, Mr Netanyahu may
    no longer have the domestic authority to compromise on the issue of
    Jerusalem.
7.1482IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:1552
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Hayfever drug faces curbs after 14 die
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 
    
    A HAYFEVER treatment taken by up to three million people a year and
    sold under brand names including Boots Antihistamine tablets and
    Aller-eze Clear is set to be withdrawn from over-the-counter sales
    following fears about its safety.
    
    The Health Department disclosed yesterday that 14 people have died as a
    result of taking products containing the drug terfenadine - also sold
    as Triludan - since 1982 and that it may cause serious illness when
    taken in combination with concentrated grapefruit juice.
    
    The department has written to all doctors and pharmacists announcing a
    six-week period of consultation - which it is legally required to give
    - with a view to removing it from sale in chemists' shops and making it
    available only on prescription.
    
    Terfenadine is one of the most popular non-sedating antihistamines
    taken by an estimated 2-3 million people to treat hayfever, mostly in
    the May to July period. It is sold under a variety of brand names
    including Aller-eze Clear, Boots Antihistamine Tablets, Boots Hay Fever
    Relief Antihistamine Tablets, Boots Once-a-Day Antihistamine Tablets,
    Histafen, Terfinax, Seldane, Triludan, Terfenor, Triludan Forte and
    Terfex.
    
    Prof Michael Rawlins, chairman of the Government's Committee on Safety
    of Medicines, who announced the proposed withdrawal, said terfenadine
    was perfectly safe when used correctly. But he said it should not be
    taken by anyone taking certain antibiotics including erythromycin and
    clarithromycin or some treatments for fungus infections including
    ketoconazole and itraconazole.
    
    It should not be taken by anyone with heart or liver problems, the
    recommended dose should not be exceeded and it should not be taken with
    grapefruit juice. Terfenadine has been found to react with these drugs,
    and with a chemical called psoralen in some grapefruit juices, to cause
    serious irregularities in the heart rhythms of some susceptible people.
    
    There have been 33 such cases of heart arrhythmias reported by doctors
    since 1982 and Prof Rawlins said the recent discovery that grapefruit
    juice was implicated was the "final straw" in reaching the decision to
    seek withdrawal.
    
    A spokesman for Boots said that in the vast majority of cases
    terfenadine was safe and effective and Boots had no plans for the
    immediate withdrawal of the drug. France, Greece and Luxembourg have
    recently taken the drug off the market and America is also considering
    a total ban.
7.1483IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:2274
7.1484IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:2734
7.1485IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:3226
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Wedding firm boss jailed for trying to rape girl, 16
    
    THE owner of a firm that hires out horses and carriages to weddings was
    jailed for five years yesterday for trying to rape a teenager after
    interviewing her for "a dream job".
    
    Robert Winston Churchill, 54, gave the 16-year-old colas laced with
    rum, Nottingham Crown Court was told. The girl said that she answered a
    newspaper advertisement for a job caring for the horses and preparing
    carriages for wedding ceremonies. It also offered live-in
    accommodation. But during the interview, Churchill gave her two
    tumblers of what looked like cola but which contained large amounts of
    rum.
    
    She said she was violently sick and passed out. When she woke up, she
    was naked in bed with Churchill trying to get on top of her. He was
    also naked. She struggled, saying that she wanted to go home, but he
    told her: "Come on, give an old man a chance." Eventually , she slipped
    away and escaped.
    
    Churchill, of Wollaton, Nottingham, was convicted of attempted rape
    after pleading not guilty. He was told by Judge John Hopkin: "You
    awaited your opportunity and were going to have intercourse with her.
    She was terrified. The effect on her was devastating."
7.1486IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:3569
7.1487IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:4050
7.1488IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:4445
7.1489IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:4931
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Teenager arrested after stolen car kills girl of nine
    
    A TEENAGER was in custody last night after a nine-year-old girl was
    knocked down and killed by a stolen car.
    
    Teleri West died trapped under the wheels of the speeding car as it
    skidded out of control and mounted a pavement. Her 14-year-old friend,
    Sean Rogers, who was walking with her, was "stable" in hospital with
    severe leg and pelvic injuries.
    
    The children were struck near a pedestrian crossing close to their
    homes at Graig Wen, Morganstown, Cardiff, on Wednesday night. South
    Wales police said a 16-year-old Cardiff youth had been arrested and was
    being questioned. Officers said the arrested driver later failed a
    breath test.
    
    The blue Vauxhall Nova hatchback had been reported stolen from the
    central Cardiff area earlier on Wednesday evening.
    
    Friends and neighbours laid posies of flowers yesterday on the pavement
    where Teleri, an only child, died. Her mother, Helen, 32, was under
    sedation yesterday but Christopher Lundregan, 26, her stepfather, said:
    "Her mother and I heard a loud bang at about 9pm and ran out. We saw
    Teleri lying face down in the middle of the road. She must have
    suffered the full impact of the crash. The ambulance arrived but it was
    too late. Teleri was dead."
    
    Teleri's fellow pupils at Ysgol Gymraeg Coed-y-Gof were told of her
    death yesterday by Arwel Williams, the head teacher.
7.1490IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:5249
7.1491IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:5529
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Four jailed for trying to silence witnesses
    
    FOUR men were jailed yesterday for using violence to try to intimidate
    murder trial witnesses into not giving evidence.
    
    One of their victims, David Jacobs, 32, had his hands virtually severed
    when he was attacked in a public house. He was mutilated with butcher's
    knives, a machete, a golf club and chunks of wood, Worcester Crown
    Court was told.
    
    A smoke bomb was thrown into the home of another witness and a car
    damaged with a pickaxe. The men were trying to prevent the witnesses
    giving evidence last year at the trial of Scott Anderson, 22, who was
    cleared of murdering Mark Garrett, 28, who was stabbed two years ago.
    
    James McDaid, 28, of Rousey Close, Frankley, West Midlands, was jailed
    for 14 years and Ronald Clarke, 30, of Teviot Tower, Newtown,
    Birmingham, was given 12 years after being convicted of inflicting
    grievous bodily harm on Mr Jacobs.
    
    Lee Anderson, 25, of Titania Close, Frankley, and John Wilson, 26, of
    Tessall Lane, Northfield, Birmingham, were both jailed for five years
    after being found guilty, along with McDaid, of damaging a house in
    Epping Close, Frankley.
    
    Mr Jacobs and six other witnesses had moved to secret addresses, the
    court was told.
7.1492IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 12:5820
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Rail passenger complaints up by 56 per cent
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 
    
    COMPLAINTS from train passengers in southern England have risen by 56
    per cent in 12 months, according to figures published yesterday.
    
    The region's rail users' consultative committee received 1,024 written
    grievances in the year to March, compared with 655 in 1995-96 and a
    previous annual high for the decade of 817.
    
    The complaints were fuelled by the many cancellations implemented by
    South West Trains over the 10 weeks before Easter as a result of making
    too many drivers redundant. The increase also reflected concern over
    poor service information and overcrowding.
    
    All operators in the region are now private, but many services were in
    BR hands for at least half the period.
7.1493IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:0357
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Builders uncover Roman des res 
    
    By David Lovibond and Ben Fenton 
    
    THE remains of a palatial Roman villa, among the most significant
    archaeological finds of the century in Britain, have been uncovered in
    the middle of one of the country's biggest housebuilding developments.
    
    The villa, thought to have been the residence of perhaps the most
    important official in the administration of Late Roman Britain, was
    revealed when mechanical diggers started to tear into an area of land
    near Swindon. In an extraordinary display of co-operation, the site's
    developers have agreed to suspend their plans to develop the four-acre
    plot and are in discussions with the Wiltshire county archaeologist,
    English Heritage and the local council about the best way to preserve
    it undisturbed. However, only a multi-million pound investment would
    allow the site to be preserved so that it could be seen by the public.
    
    Bryn Walters, the archaeologist in charge of the site, described the
    find as "sensational". He said he believed the complex, which includes
    outbuildings, storehouses and possibly up to 12 tiers of vineyards, was
    home to the Roman "procurator", or treasurer, for the region and was in
    its heyday in the time of the Emperor Constantine the Great (AD
    306-337).
    
    "This is a site of national significance," Mr Walters said yesterday.
    "We have found evidence of mosaics, an intricate hypocaust system of
    under-floor heating, baths and the surviving earthworks of what were
    probably vine terraces. This was no ordinary villa, but a palatial
    building that clearly had an important administrative function."
    
    He said that the procurator was an extremely important official who
    answered directly to the Emperor for the fiscal management of whole
    regions of the Empire. The site was part of a 16-acre, 364-home plot
    within the huge North Swindon development area.
    
    In law, the developers, Robert Hitchin Homes, would have been within
    their rights to dig up the entire area. But Andrew Crosby, a director
    of the company, said: "We recognise the importance of this villa. Under
    no circumstances are we simply going to carry on regardless."
    
    Roy Canham, the county archaeologist, praised the company for its
    "astonishing performance". Talks are under way with the local council
    which may lead to the developers receiving an alternative plot of land
    as compensation.
    
    Mr Walters says the site should be exposed under a protective building,
    creating a tourist attraction and educational amenity.
    
    One of the most significant Roman complexes in Britain may have been
    discovered in a field near Faversham in Kent. Dr Paul Wilkinson, the
    archaeologist who discovered it, believes that the 40-room complex may
    have been the retreat of a rich Canterbury family. Some academics
    believe it may be the remains of Durolevum, a place mentioned in Latin
    texts but which has eluded archaeologists.
7.1494IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:1333
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Scientists pay lip service to language 
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
    
    WATCHING a person's lips when they speak helps you to understand what
    they are saying, whether you can hear them or not, according to the
    result of a brain scanner experiment published today.
    
    Today a team of British scientists using a brain scanner says
    lip-reading activates the auditory cortex, the same brain region that
    is involved in hearing.
    
    The team became interested in how lip-reading helps us to understand
    language after finding out that some deaf schizophrenics "hear" voices
    when seeing a speaker mouthing at them. That seemed to suggest that
    hearing and vision were linked in some way.
    
    Roots of the "hallucinations" may lie in the auditory cortex in the
    light of studies of normal-hearing people reported in the journal
    Science by Gemma Calvert, a psychologist from Oxford, Prof Tony David,
    of the Institute of Psychiatry, and Prof Ruth Campbell, from University
    College, London.
    
    "This is an unexpected and intriguing finding, since this is the first
    demonstration that visual information alone can activate brain regions
    that are otherwise engaged by sound," Ms Calvert said. "Research
    provides a further illustration of how novel brain imaging techniques
    can inform us about how the brain deals with understanding speech."
    
    The research will cast light on why those who go deaf later in life are
    unable to learn to lip-read beyond a rudimentary level. 
7.1495IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:1758
7.1496IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:2325
7.1497IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:3254
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
                                 
    How the 'nerd' earned respect
    
    By Robert Uhlig, Technology Correspondent 
    
    THE socially-outcast computer "nerd" is on the brink of a turn-around.
    
    Children and teenagers now see an obsession with computers as normal
    and even aspirational, according to a study about to be published.
    
    The study by the Henley Centre says: "The stereotypical image of
    computer enthusiasts as 'nerds' has faded among young people." Chad
    Wollen, an analyst who compiled the Henley Centre's Media Futures 97
    study, said: "While there is still the label of being a nerd, for young
    people it has become a complex description, and has become a term of
    praise or a label for somebody who is an expert. In the last two years,
    the nerd has become trendy and quite chic in the fashion world and the
    expression is now less pejorative than ever before."
    
    Mr Wollen attributes the change to education, which has given children
    a greater access to computers than society at large. Schools and
    colleges have bred a familiarity with new technologies which is not
    seen as "sad", socially inept or escapist. Instead, a "new media
    generation" has emerged, with perceptions and tastes that are different
    from those of adults.
    
    "Many young people have adopted the term as a badge of pride, and the
    use of 'nerd' as an insult has been almost completely whittled away,"
    Mr Wollen said. Successful entrepreneurs such as Bill Gates, founder of
    the computer software company Microsoft and the world's richest man,
    have helped the change in perception and brought associations of
    success and wealth to nerds.
    
    Among adults, the study says, four new social groupings have emerged
    which reflect our ability to adopt new technology and our anxieties
    about the future.
    
    "Out of controls" are anxious and stressed about "life management" and
    apathetic about technology. They make up more than a quarter of the
    population, have twice as much difficulty making decisions as the
    average, and never have time to get things done. Most are middle-aged,
    on below-average income, and six in 10 are women.
    
    At the other end of the scale are the "calm converts", one in five of
    the population who, despite working long hours, do not feel rushed, are
    assured and not anxious about the future. They are predominantly male
    and more likely to be a professional and married, so feel their future
    is secure.
    
    The other groups are "older agnostics", who are retired on a low
    income, calm about the future but apathetic about technology, and the
    "clued-up", who are young, well-paid and positive about technology but
    worry about the future.
7.1498IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:3986
7.1499IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:4436
7.1500IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri Apr 25 1997 13:5149
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 25 April 1997 Issue 700
    
    Beetles' spheres are a sensation
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 
    
    SCIENTISTS investigating the secret powers of a beetle which can detect
    a forest fire 20 miles away say they have discovered a sense never seen
    before in animals.
    
    German scientists, studying a species of Jewel beetle, found that it
    has a set of dangling spheres which act rather like eyes, soaking up
    tiny amounts of infra-red light, but then convert the rays into a
    message in a way never witnessed before. They call the new sense
    photo-mechanical reception.
    
    The Jewel beetle's fire-seeking abilities have puzzled scientists for a
    century. The beetle, Melanophila acuminata, seeks fires so that it can
    lay its eggs in nutritious, freshly-burnt wood. 
    
    In the 1940s, firefighters at a desert oil fire in North America
    noticed cohorts of beetles arriving from their habitat 20 miles away.
    But studies showed that the beetle could not be tracking fires through
    hearing or smell.
    
    Dr Helmut Schmitz, of the Friedrich-Wilhelms University in Bonn,
    studied little pits found in the beetle's thorax. In each pit are up to
    100 dangling "sensilla", each topped by a sphere of around a hundredth
    of a millimetre in diameter - massive for a Jewel beetle, Dr Schmitz
    said. When the beetle flies, these become exposed. 
    
    Scientists shone an infra-red beam at a single sensilla - at a
    wavelength corresponding to the light from a forest fire. They blocked
    out any heat, using mirrors, to rule out the possibility that the
    sensillas are heat sensors. They discovered that the spheres absorb the
    infra-red rays and almost instantaneously convert them to heat. The
    heat causes the sphere to swell. In its swollen state, it nudges the
    nerve tip and a message is sent along the nerve. The mechanism is
    unique because it has turned light into heat and then heat into
    mechanical movement. 
    
    "We think that we have detected a new sensory system," said Dr Schmitz,
    who worked with Prof Horst Bleckmann. "It is a photomechanical system
    never before detected in animals".
    
    Peter Hammond, an entomologist at the Natural History Museum, said: "It
    is a sort of eye halfway down the body." Beetles might be able to
    detect the direction of the fire according to which of the spheres the
    light fell on. 
7.1501IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:40103
    AP Top News at 2 a.m. EDT 
    
    Monday, April 28, 1997 2:06 am EDT 
    
    SEPARATIST STANDOFF 
    
    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Hostages have been taken in remote West Texas
    by an armed militant group that believes Texas should be its own
    country. Richard McLaren, the self-styled ``ambassador'' of the
    Republic of Texas, told San Antonio radio station WOAI that the group
    would end its standoff at the captive couple's home in exchange for the
    release of two Republic members under arrest. However, the group has
    recently split into several factions. Last month, one faction
    ``impeached'' McLaren. 
    
    NUKE-DUMP 
    
    LAS VEGAS (AP) -- One of Nevada's senators is dismissing as a non-event
    the completion of a five-mile tunnel that will tell if Yucca Mountain
    is safe for storing the nation's high-level nuclear waste. Sen. Richard
    Bryan said the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board indicates more
    tunneling is still needed to determine if the site can safely handle
    77,000 tons of the waste for the needed 10,000 years. But Ned Elkins of
    the Los Alamos, N.M., national laboratory which is conducting the
    testing, called the completion of the federal government's 2 1/2 year,
    $74 million tunneling project a milestone. 
    
    ELLEN CELEBRATIONS 
    
    NEW YORK (AP) -- For gays and lesbians around the country, this
    Wednesday's episode of ``Ellen'' will be more than just a television
    show. Festivities are being planned around the much anticipated event,
    in which the program's character -- who's star has said she is a
    lesbian in real life -- will ``come out.'' At least 30,000 invitations
    have been mailed around the country, and as far away as Finland and
    Japan, urging people to come out as well. Among the festivities are a
    midnight costume party at the Cambridge, Mass. In Los Angeles, GLAAD
    (Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) was struggling to keep up
    with demand for its ``Come Out With Ellen'' party kits. 
    
    GRANT'S-TOMB 
    
    NEW YORK (AP) -- One hundred years to the day after Ulysses S. Grant
    was interred with ceremony befitting a Civil War hero and ex-President,
    3,000 people gathered Sunday to rededicate his newly restored tomb on
    its bluff overlooking the Hudson River. Grant's Tomb -- a 150-foot
    granite mausoleum -- was a tourist landmark for decades, drawing some
    500,000 visitors annually before official neglect in the 1980s allowed
    it to deteriorate. 
    
    SYNAGOGUE SHOOTING 
    
    DALLAS (AP) -- A man wearing Army fatigues shouted ``die, Jews, die''
    and fired shots at a synagogue filled with worshipers. No one was
    injured. Donald Ray Anderson, 48, was arrested in the parking lot of
    Baruch Ha Shem Messianic Congregation. Bullets shattered glass at the
    synagogue and made holes near a Star of David on the building. From 250
    to 300 members of the congregation were inside and hit the floor when
    they heard shots. 
    
    CLINTON-VOLUNTEER SUMMIT 
    
    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Former Presidents George Bush and Jimmy Carter
    joined President Clinton on cleanup duty along an 8 1/2-mile stretch of
    Philadelphia's Germantown Avenue. Their work, and a related three-day
    summit, is designed to promote volunteerism in America. Some 5,000
    volunteers helped clean city streets. 
    
    CANADA FLOODING 
    
    WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) -- Canada's military sent navy rescue units and
    thousands of soldiers to meet the flood pouring down the Red River from
    the United States. Its the Canadian military's largest deployment in 20
    years. By Monday, more than 6,700 military personnel are expected to be
    in southern Manitoba, helping to build dikes, guard evacuated towns and
    search for people stranded by the region's worst flood of the century. 
    
    ZAIRE REFUGEES 
    
    KISANGANI, Zaire (AP) -- Zaire's rebel leader ordered up to 100,000
    Rwandan Hutu refugees out of Zaire, giving the United Nations two
    months to track them down and send them home. Laurent Kabila promised
    international officials full access to search for the tens of thousands
    of refugees, whose fate is still unknown after they dispersed into the
    jungle when their camps allegedly came under attack last week. Refugees
    said Zairian villagers attacked the camps, killing hundreds, and say
    Kabila's forces opened fire on at least one camp. 
    
    JAPAN MARKETS 
    
    Monday, despite a threat by the G-7 industrialized countries to push
    down the U.S. currency. The dollar is trading at 126.92 yen, up 1.06.
    The Nikkei rose 44.11 points to 18,656.97. 
    
    BULLETS-BULLS 
    
    CHICAGO (AP) -- Michael Jordan scored 55 points as the Bulls took a 2-0
    lead in the Eastern Conference quarterfinals by defeating the
    Washington Bullets 109-104. Jordan was 22-of-35 from the floor in
    breaking the 50-point mark in a playoff game for the eighth time in his
    career. 
    
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT                 
7.1502IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:4077
    RTw  28-Apr-97 04:11    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON - Major industrial nations warned of the dangers of big
    shifts in currency rates that could hurt world trade, but the financial
    markets did not seem to be listening. In a lengthy statement after five
    hours of talks, economic policymakers from the Group of Seven nations
    opposed wild swings in currency rates and said they would monitor the
    markets to see if their wishes were carried out. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Major industrial nations warned against excessive
    volatility in currency markets and stressed the importance of avoiding
    changes in exchange rates that could lead to lopsided trade relations.
    Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of Seven
    richest countries emerged from a five-hour meeting generally upbeat
    about the outlook for their economies. 

    TOKYO - The dollar surged against the yen and the mark in Tokyo after
    the Group of Seven (G7) failed to refer specifically to recent yen
    movements against the dollar in a statement at the end of its meeting
    in Washington, dealers said. 

    - - - - 

    KISANGANI, Zaire - International aid officials hoped to gain access on
    Monday to some of up to 100,000 Rwandan refugees scattered in
    northeastern Zaire after rebel chief Laurent Kabila ordered their
    repatriation within 60 days. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Prime Minister John Major insisted he was not yet out of the
    running in Britain's May 1 election despite opinion polls predicting a
    Labour landslide. Just three days before the election, a Gallup poll in
    the Daily Telegraph on Monday showed Labour's support at 49 percent, 19
    points ahead of the ruling Conservatives. The latest survey was
    consistent with four polls in Sunday newspapers giving Labour a 15-24
    point advantage. 

    - - - - 

    GRAND-MERE, Quebec - Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien called a
    June 2 general election, 17 months before it was due, in order to cash
    in on a solid Liberal lead in the polls. 

    - - - - 

    SMARA, Algeria - Special U.N. envoy James Baker visited the desolate
    desert refugee camp of Smara in Algeria and was promised the release of
    85 Moroccan prisoners of war by the Sahara independence movement. The
    former U.S. Secretary of State said he was optimistic about solving the
    smouldering conflict in the Western Sahara, which has threatened to
    rekindle into war. 

    - - - - 

    FORT DAVIS, Texas - An armed separatist group demanding independence
    for the state of Texas took two civilian hostages as police surrounded
    its mountain compound in a tense standoff. The self-styled Republic of
    Texas grabbed the two hostages in a nearby home after police arrested
    its chief of security on weapons possession charges when he left the
    compound. 

    - - - - 

    TAIPEI - An earthquake measuring 5.3 on the open-ended Richter scale
    struck eastern and northern Taiwan early on Monday, but there were no
    immediate reports of casualties or damage. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER
7.1503IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:4177
    RTw  28-Apr-97 07:20    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - -  

    China hermaphrodite kills 6 mocking neighbours 

    BEIJING - A Chinese hermaphrodite, tired of being ridiculed by his
    neighbours, stabbed six of them to death, including three young
    children, in southern China, a newspaper said. 

    Feng Guohui, 25, of Yangjiang in southern Guangdong province, was born
    with both male and female sex organs. Four years ago he underwent a
    series of operations to become a man, the Yangcheng Evening news. 

    However, Feng felt his neighbours were still gossiping about and
    ridiculing him even after the operation. Last Wednesday he attacked
    them with a knife, killing three women aged 81, 59 and 27, and the
    three children, two of them aged four and one five-year-old. An
    eight-year-old girl survived. 

    Feng fled into nearby woods but was arrested 28 hours later after a
    police manhunt, the newspaper said. 

    - - - - 

    Texas sheriff gets his own armored division    

    TYLER - Sheriff J.B. Smith may only be a small-town Texas lawman, but
    he has acquired a big new weapon in his war on crime -- a pair of
    13-ton armoured personnel carriers. 

    Smith picked up the free army surplus track-driven carriers under a
    federal programme giving old military equipment to civilian police
    forces for anti-narcotics efforts. He said they could come in handy in
    a wide variety of crises. 

    "We could use them in hostage situations, dangerous standoffs and even
    for crowd control," Smith, sheriff for east Texas' generally quiet
    Smith County, said last week. 

    "We have had narcotics raids where there could have been a lot of
    shooting... These carriers would make any criminal think twice. We can
    just back them up to a building and knock down the door," he said. 

    - - - - 

    Doctors, scientists, teachers top prestige poll 

    WASHINGTON - Doctors, scientists, teachers, engineers and members of
    the clergy are the most prestigious occupations in the eyes of
    Americans, according to a Harris Poll. 

    They are followed by police officers, military officers and -- in a
    finding that may surprise some -- members of Congress. 

    At the bottom of the prestige list are union leaders, entertainers,
    athletes, artists and accountants, said the survey of 1,006 adults
    taken between March 26 and April 1. 

    Harris has been sounding out Americans on how they perceive occupations
    in terms of prestige since 1977. During that time, teachers have
    enjoyed the biggest boost. The level of Americans who believe teachers
    have "very great" prestige has surged to 49 percent from 29 percent. 

    By contrast, those who think lawyers have "very great" prestige has
    tumbled to 19 percent from 36 percent during the two-decade period.
    Similarly, the reading for scientists has fallen to 51 percent from 66
    percent. 

    REUTER
7.1504IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:4199
    RTos 28-Apr-97 04:49    

    G7 Warns of Risks from Wild Currency Swings

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Major industrial nations warned Sunday of the
    dangers of big shifts in currency rates that could hurt world trade,
    but the financial markets did not seem to be listening. 

    In a lengthy statement issued after five hours of talks, economic
    policymakers from the Group of Seven nations opposed wild swings in
    currency rates and said they would monitor the markets to see if their
    wishes were carried out. 

    "We agreed that exchange rates should reflect economic fundamentals and
    that excess volatility and significant deviations from fundamentals are
    undesirable," the G7 finance ministers and central bank chiefs said. 

    The G7 -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United
    States -- was mostly upbeat about the world economic outlook. Inflation
    is low and interest rates have generally declined over the past few
    years. 

    But it said that challenges remain and set out specific policy
    prescriptions for each of its members to follow to ensure that the
    world economy remains on track. 

    It also welcomed Russia's "imminent agreement" with the International
    Monetary Fund on a 1997 economic plan, but said Moscow should reform
    its tax system and deepen reforms. 

    The initial reaction from the markets to the G7's call for currency
    stability was not encouraging. In trading in Tokyo, the U.S. dollar
    climbed to a three-year high against the German mark and also gained
    ground against the Japanese yen. 

    In the run-up to the meeting, the United States and Japan had voiced
    particular concern about the yen's recent weakness. 

    The Japanese currency has fallen by over 50 percent against the dollar
    over the last two years, boosting the attractiveness of Japan's exports
    and threatening to push up the country's trade surplus, particularly
    with the United States. 

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin steered clear on Sunday of
    explicitly calling for an end to the dollar's rise, telling reporters
    that the G7 statement spoke for itself. 

    But Bundesbank President Hans Tietmeyer was more explicit. The German
    central bank chief told reporters that G7 generally agreed that a
    further dollar rise would not be appropriate. 

    "The United States is very much interested in having a strong dollar
    but not a stronger one," he said. 

    Some other European nations though do not seem to be as worried about
    the dollar's recent rise. 

    Bank of England Governor Eddie George said the G7 believed that the
    currency market was "in pretty good shape" and saw no reason to draw up
    an action plan to bring it back into line. 

    The dollar has generally risen less sharply against European currencies
    than it has against the yen, and in recent months has been weak, not
    strong, against the British pound. 

    For the most part, the dollar's steep climb of the past two years has
    been good news for the world economy. By holding down import prices, it
    has helped contain inflation in the United States at a time when the
    economy has been strong. 

    At the same time, the fragile economies of Japan and continental Europe
    have been bolstered by the weakness of their currencies, which has
    boosted their exports. 

    To help keep the world economy purring, the G7 set out specific steps
    for each of its members to take. 

    The United States, which just raised interest rates last month for the
    first time in two years, needs to "remain watchful to avoid a
    resurgence of inflation" and should keep reducing its government budget
    deficit, the Group said. 

    Britain too needs to follow that same policy path. 

    In continental Europe, however, the principal task is to reduce
    persistently high unemployment through reforms of its labor markets and
    other measures. 

    Canada too faces considerable slack in its economy although growth
    seems to be picking up in response to substantial cuts in interest
    rates, the G7 said. 

    It said that Japan has the objective of achieving strong economic
    growth led from within and avoiding a significant rise in its trade
    surplus. 
            
    REUTER
7.1505IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:41128
    RTw  28-Apr-97 03:28    

    FEATURE - Lord Byro, Miss Moneypenny battle in ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Lord Byro, Miss Moneypenny battle in British election  By
    Helen Smith 

    LONDON, April 28 (Reuter) - Screaming Lord Sutch isn't standing, but
    his lurex boots will be filled by Happiness Stan, Lord Byro and Miss
    Moneypenny, a tranvestite who stands eight feet (2.4 metres) tall in
    platform shoes and birdcage hat. 

    There are a record 3,717 candidates standing in Britain's May 1
    parliamentary election, 769 more than in 1992, and many of them are
    standing as independents or for fringe parties like the Rainbow Dream
    Ticket Party. 

    Sutch, Britain's longest-serving party leader, has stood down to look
    after his ailing mother. But his Monster Raving Loony Party fights on
    under its motto "vote for insanity -- you know it makes sense." 

    The party is fielding around 20 candidates in the election under a
    manifesto pledging to tow Britain 500 miles (800 km) south into the
    Atlantic to improve the climate, turn Britain's defunct coal mines into
    bungee-jumping centres and to make all dogs eat phosphorescent food so
    that no-one need fear treading in dog mess at night. 

    The Loony Party candidates, including Gary Glitter (not the 1970s pop
    star, but his namesake) and Toby Jug, face stiff competition for the
    title of most outlandish candidate. 

    In the London constituency of Putney, Conservative David Mellor, who
    was forced to resign as Heritage Secretary in 1992 over his affair with
    a statuesque soft-porn actress, is standing against anti-European
    billionaire Sir James Goldsmith and other candidates who take
    themselves rather less seriously. 

    The Sportsman's Alliance: Anything But Mellor is clearly unimpressed
    with Mellor's subsequent career as a sports broadcaster, while the
    Independently Beautiful Party is putting up Ateeka Poole in Putney. 

    She campaigns in a bikini and promotes family values. "I want my mum to
    feel safe to walk the streets at night," says Poole's manifesto on
    crime. 

    Happiness Stan's Freedom to Party Party is also standing against Mellor
    with a campaign to relax nightclub licensing laws. 

    VETERAN WAR CORRESPONDENT STANDING AGAINST CONSERVATIVE 

    Another big battle is brewing in the northwest England constituency of
    Tatton, where Miss Moneypenny's Glamorous One Party is pitched against
    the Juice Party and Lord Byro Versus The Scallywag Tories
    (Conservatives). Slightly less surreal is the candidacy in Tatton of
    veteran war correspondent Martin Bell, appointed as an anti-corruption
    candidate to stand against the Conservative, Neil Hamilton, who denies
    accusations of influence-peddling. 

    The Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats have both stood down their
    candidates to make way for Bell, who began by saying his would be the
    shortest-lived political career in history and within a few days
    resigned from the BBC, vowing to become Tatton's representative in
    parliament. 

    "The Tatton campaign has been two men squabbling about sleaze with no
    one talking about the issues," said Miss Moneypenny, who favours heavy
    theatrical make-up and fake ermine-trimmed robes. "When Bell and
    Hamilton start to talk sense I will fade away." 

    In the London constituency of Kensington, Conservative diarist and
    famed womaniser Alan Clark is facing a challenge from Ted Bear of the
    Teddy Bear Alliance Party, who is campaigning for a "Flea-free
    Britain." 

    Bear concedes "he is only in it for the honey" although it will have
    cost him a 500 pound ($820) deposit to stand in the election and he is
    unlikely to win the five percent of the vote he needs to get his money
    back. 

    Clarke is extremely unlikely to lose the "safe" Conservative seat, but
    Ted Bear is not the only one trying to stand in his way. 

    Judge James Harkess, whose wife and two stepdaughters had simultaneous
    affairs with Clark some 20 years ago -- which Clark later related in
    his published diary -- has travelled to Britain from South Africa to
    campaign in support of Clark's Labour rival. 

    "This is nothing to do with any vendetta or anything of that kind. I
    don't believe in vendettas," Harkess says, somewhat unconvincingly. 

    In St Ives in Cornwall, William Hitchens is standing as the
    Black-Haired Medium Build Caucasian Male candidate, and favours
    legalising cannabis, taxing it and spending the proceeds on nursery
    education. His manifesto is still in the making. Dressed in druid's
    robes, Hitchens offers the people of St Ives blank sheets of paper and
    invites them to write out their own policies. 

    MONSTER RAVING LOONY PARTY STANDS LITTLE CHANCE 

    The Monster Raving Loony Party's Gary Glitter is standing in the south
    coast port of Falmouth against Olympic goal medallist-turned
    Conservative politician Sebastian Coe. 

    If his chances of pipping Coe at the post are slight, Glitter believes
    he stands a good chance of being the tallest candidate in the race --
    although Miss Moneypenny may disagree. 

    "I wear an 18-inch (45 cm) high top hat and five-inch platform heels,"
    he says. "Now the people have got someone to look up to." 

    Like most Loony Party candidates before him, Glitter is unlikely to
    even come close to winning the seat, but the party insists this isn't
    because it lacks popularity. 

    Britain's election laws ban prisoners, the insane and members of the
    House of Lords (Upper House) from voting, stealing away most of the
    Loonies' natural support, the party says. 

    It also blames its own election parties. 

    "Since many of our supporters go to Monster Raving Loony Party victory
    parties the night before the election, they wake up late with enormous
    hangovers and forget where the polling booths are until it's all over,"
    the party manifesto confesses. 
  
    REUTER
7.1506IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:4159
    RTw  27-Apr-97 21:05    

    UK ministers make rally call to Scots Conservatives

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By James Forrester 

    EDINBURGH, April 27 (Reuter) - Three cabinet ministers facing probable
    defeat in Scotland in Britain's May 1 general election made a
    last-ditch attempt on Sunday to enthuse Scottish Conservative
    activists. 

    Scottish Secretary Michael Forsyth, Foreign Minister Malcolm Rifkind
    and Trade Secretary Ian Lang lambasted the opposition Labour party's
    policy on Europe and the economy and its plans for a separate Scottish
    parliament. 

    All three look set to lose their seats in Scotland, according to the
    opinion polls. A survey in the Sunday Times gave Labour 49 percent of
    the Scottish vote, followed by the Scottish National Party on 24,
    Conservatives on 14 and Liberal Democrats on 12. 

    Forsyth dismissed the polls, telling an audience of the party faithful
    at a final rally in Edinburgh that the Conservatives would win seats
    and send more Scottish Conservatives to parliament. 

    Loud applause almost drowned him out when he said Labour's plans for a
    separate, tax-raising, Scottish parliament were designed to appease the
    independence-seeking SNP. 

    "What's at stake is nothing less than the fate of Britain," he said.
    "Devolution is the end of Britain." 

    Forsyth said the 80 million pound ($130 million) cost of a 129-member
    parliament would mean cutting the cash available for health, education
    and policing in Scotland. 

    Lang said economic prosperity in Scotland would recede if Labour won.
    By adopting the European Union model of taxes and burdens on business,
    such as the Social Chapter and a minimum wage, Labour would sign away
    the vital competitive edge now held by British business, he said. 

    Rifkind said other EU countries would see a Labour victory as a clear
    indication that Britain would fall into line with federalist
    aspirations. 

    Labour commitment to end the national veto on crucial policies like
    immigration, asylum, employment and regional and environmental issues
    meant surrender had been conceded before EU negotiations had begun, he
    said. 

    "People in Scotland and other parts of the United Kingdom have good
    cause to be thankful for Conservative integrity and courage," he said. 

    If the latest polls are accurate, the Conservatives would win only two
    of Scotland's 72 seats, down from 10 in the outgoing parliament. 

    REUTER
7.1507IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:4527
    Separatist Standoffs Glance
    
    Several anti-government groups have had standoffs with authorities,
    some of which lasted days or weeks. Among them are:
    
    -- FREEMEN: FBI agents surrounded an eastern Montana ranch occupied by
    the Freemen last year after arresting two leaders of the
    anti-government group. The standoff lasted 81 days, ending June 13 when
    the group's 16 remaining members surrendered. It was the longest armed
    siege in modern U.S. history. An FBI agent died when his pickup truck
    slid off a muddy road outside the ranch the group called Justus
    Township.
    
    -- WACO: The standoff began at the Branch Davidian religious sect
    compound outside Waco, Texas, on Feb. 28, 1993. Four federal agents and
    six Branch Davidians were killed when they tried to serve a search
    warrant as part of a firearms investigation. Leader David Koresh and 80
    followers died when their compound burned on April 19, after FBI agents
    tried to flush them out with tear gas.
    
    -- RUBY RIDGE: The August 1992 standoff with white separatist Randy
    Weaver began with the fatal shootings of Weaver's 14-year-old son and a
    deputy U.S. marshal, as marshals scouted for a way to arrest the elder
    Weaver for failing to appear in court on a gun sales charge. Weaver's
    wife was also killed by FBI sharpshooters during the 11-day standoff at
    Weaver's rural cabin in Ruby Ridge, Idaho.
    
7.1508IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:4770
    Report: Oldest Mom's ID Revealed
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    LONDON (AP) -- A British tabloid claimed to reveal the identity of the
    world's oldest new mother Sunday, saying she was a Los Angeles-area
    bank worker who retired to have a baby.
    
    Arceli Keh, 63, lives in Highland, Calif., 60 miles east of Los
    Angeles, with her husband Isagani, 60, and their 5-month-old daughter,
    Cynthia, the Express on Sunday said.
    
    "I wasn't trying to make history," Mrs. Keh was quoted as telling the
    tabloid. "I just wanted a baby."
    
    The University of South California announced last week that a
    63-year-old woman in its fertility program had delivered a healthy
    girl, born of a donated egg and the sperm of the client's husband. The
    birth set a record for oldest successful pregnancy, and stirred debate
    about parenthood so late in life.
    
    In the Keh's suburban neighborhood Sunday afternoon, some children
    played in the yards near the family's two-story brown stucco house. At
    the Keh residence -- which had a neatly mowed lawn, potted plants in
    front and a vegetable garden out back -- the curtains were drawn in all
    the downstairs windows.
    
    A neighbor said she saw the Kehs load their baggage onto a shuttle bus
    Saturday and depart. No further explanation for their absence was
    available.
    
    Eunice Rainbolt, 57, said the couple told her they had given birth to a
    baby girl, though she never realized Arceli Keh was pregnant.
    
    "I heard a child crying, but I always thought it was their grandchild,"
    Rainbolt said. "I saw a wheelchair in front of her house, and I thought
    she was sick, because she was walking very slowly, but I didn't know
    she was pregnant."
    
    Other neighbors said the Keh's were friendly.
    
    "They're great, like all the people in this neighborhood," said Larry
    Burrus, 53, who has lived in the community for 12 years. "We speak to
    them off and on, but we all work, so it's mostly a hi-and-bye society."
    
    Mrs. Keh's 80-year-old mother was "shocked" by the feat, the Express on
    Sunday said.
    
    But Mrs. Keh insists she has no worries about keeping up with her
    daughter when Cynthia is in her teens -- and she is in her 70s, the
    tabloid said.
    
    "I think I'll be able to do that. I love her and that's the important
    thing," she told the tabloid. "Our age doesn't matter. We feel young at
    heart and we love our child. Isn't that what counts?"
    
    The Express on Sunday said the Kehs were immigrants from the
    Philippines who have been married for 16 years. The newspaper published
    pictures of their house and the new father.
    
    Isagani Keh still works as a machine operator because the Kehs spent
    much of their savings -- at least $50,000 -- over three years trying to
    have a baby by in vitro fertilization, the newspaper said.
    
    Keh has no intention of quitting his job at a carpentry shop - he needs
    the money for Cynthia's future.
    
    "We are far from wealthy," Mrs. Keh -- a former bank worker - was
    quoted as saying. "We are working people. I only retired to have my
    baby."
7.1509IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:5066
    Bombing Jury Gets Virtual Tour
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    DENVER (AP) -- Witnesses in the Oklahoma City bombing trial are taking
    jurors on a virtual tour of life at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal
    Building as they describe how an ordinary morning became blood, chaos
    and death.
    
    They greeted co-workers, dropped their kids off at day care and sipped
    coffee at the start of April 19, 1995.
    
    Michael Norfleet, then a recruiting officer for the Marine Corps, had
    stopped to speak to his commanding officer when the bomb hit.
    
    "I took a piece of glass from the top of my head, and it flayed open my
    right eye," he testified Friday. "It cut an artery in my forehead. It
    cut an artery here in my cheek; and at the same time, it cut an artery
    on my wrist.
    
    "I could feel the life ebb out of my veins. I just knew that I was
    losing strength and that if I stayed in the building, that I would
    die."
    
    Norfleet said he followed a trail of blood down the building's steps
    and found help. Doctors later told him he had lost 40 to 50 percent of
    the blood in his body.
    
    Norfleet was one of nine witnesses the prosecution presented on the
    first day of day testimony in the trial of Timothy McVeigh, accused of
    killing 168 people in the bombing.
    
    Testimony was to resume Monday when Danny Atchley, a fire department
    photographer who pulled injured children from the rubble, goes back on
    the stand.
    
    As witnesses testified, U.S. Attorney Patrick Ryan had them mark a
    floor plan of the nine-story building with spots where their colleagues
    died.
    
    Susan Hunt, who worked in the Department of Housing and Urban
    Development, ended her account by reading the names of the 35 HUD
    employees who died in the blast, her voice sometimes shaking as she
    added a brief description of each person's job.
    
    Her presentation contrasted sharply with a longer list of bombing
    victims read by defense attorney Stephen Jones during his opening
    statement. Jones mispronounced several names during his dry recitation,
    while Ms. Hunt's voice betrayed her grief at the loss of colleagues and
    friends.
    
    "It makes a mockery of what Jones did," said Andrew Cohen, a Denver
    attorney who's following the trial. "It makes it seem like a cheap
    trick."
    
    Friday's most searing testimony came from Helena Garrett, whose
    16-month-old son, Tevin, died in the building's day-care center. She
    talked of dropping him off and turning to look at him through the
    floor-to-ceiling windows as she walked across the street to her office.
    
    A few minutes later, she was frantically searching the rubble for
    Tevin, and recalled watching rescue workers lay out a line of the
    bodies of his schoolmates.
    
    "A lady came, a nurse," Ms. Garrett said. "She started tagging our
    babies; and right then I realized they were dead."
7.1510IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:53106
    Town Riled By Sexual Assault Case
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    By JIM CHILSEN 
    
    Associated Press Writer
    
    PORT WASHINGTON, Wis. (AP) -- Kevin Gillson and his 15-year-old
    girlfriend found themselves in the kind of trouble experienced by
    thousands of teens -- she was pregnant.
    
    The 18-year-old wanted to take responsibility by marrying her, getting
    a job and raising their child, expected in early June.
    
    But then police found out and arrested Gillson on a charge of sexual
    assault, which was later boosted to sexual assault of a child. Since he
    was convicted, he will have to register as a sex offender and faces a
    sentence ranging from probation to 40 years in prison.
    
    One tearful juror said she despised her vote to convict the young man,
    but believed she had no choice under Wisconsin law.
    
    Despite assurances from Gillson's girlfriend that the sex was
    consensual, the longstanding law says no one under the age of 16 can
    consent to a sexual relationship.
    
    Few of the 10,000 people in this town 30 miles north of Milwaukee side
    with the district attorney who prosecuted Gillson.
    
    "It's pathetic," said Penni Feezor, 32, serving burgers, chili and
    coffee at a George Webb restaurant. "If he had intentions of doing the
    right thing, why put him in jail?"
    
    "It takes two people to do it, and he's not the only person who's
    gotten a 15-year-old pregnant, and I don't think he deserves one year,
    let alone 40," said Cheryl L. Huettl, 37, as she enjoyed a beer at a
    local bar. "There's not that many guys who are willing to quit school
    to get a good job to support their child."
    
    "I think it's got a lot of people who are dating younger people
    scared," said 15-year-old Annette Moe. "I still don't think you should
    go to jail or get in trouble for it and I don't think he should be
    known to his neighbors as a sexual predator. He didn't rape anybody."
    
    A juror said it wasn't that simple.
    
    "We were led to believe that we only had one choice, the way it was
    presented to us," said juror Holly Sutinen, 39. "We had a copy of the
    law, and they both said they did it and that was our only choice."
    
    "My eyes were full of tears, because it's all our kids sitting there,"
    Sutinen said.
    
    Ozaukee County District Attorney Sandy Williams won't discuss specifics
    on the case, saying it would be a violation of ethics.
    
    But she said her office tried to negotiate a pretrial resolution and
    was told Gillson wanted to go to trial. She would not disclose the
    terms of any proposed deal.
    
    "Does it mean that because he said he's sorry, we're supposed to close
    our eyes to it?" asked Williams, who is up for re-election in 1998.
    
    Gillson's lawyer, Doug Stansbury, said the negotiations "didn't take us
    to a point where there was an incentive to settle the case before it
    went to trial."
    
    He said they haven't yet discussed the possibility of an appeal of the
    April 17 conviction.
    
    The Gillson family does not want to talk to reporters until after the
    sentencing, he said, although Gillson's mother talked earlier to the
    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
    
    "You know, the only thing that hasn't let me down in all this is God,"
    Sue Gillson told the newspaper. "I feel there is no God in the system.
    I just don't trust the system anymore."
    
    The prosecutor said she would recommend a sentence that does not
    include jail time. "I can tell you that in cases like this, probation
    usually occurs, if the person usually takes responsibility for his
    actions and has minimal contact with the criminal justice system,"
    Williams said.
    
    In the meantime, Gillson is free on bail pending sentencing June 24,
    but a condition of his bail is that he not see his girlfriend.
    
    Regardless of the sentence, Gillson must register with police as a
    convicted sex offender.
    
    The sex offender registry bill wasn't intended to punish people like
    Gillson, said state Sen. Alberta Darling, who helped write the measure.
    She wrote to Gov. Tommy Thompson urging a review of sexual assault
    laws, and the governor's office said last week that Thompson would meet
    with her.
    
    At least one juror has written a letter to the judge, asking for a
    lenient sentence. Sutinen and at least one other say they plan to do
    the same.
    
    "This kid told the truth and he was trying to do what was right,"
    Sutinen said. "Both of these kids told the truth and now they're
    getting blasted for it.
    
    "What they did was not right, but it wasn't a crime."
7.1511IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:55115
    $10 Million Offered for Space Trip
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    ST. LOUIS (AP) -- The prize: $10 million. The task: launch a spaceship
    that can give the average person a weekend trip in space.
    
    So far, 10 teams have registered to compete for the prize. The
    contestants range from inventors and company presidents to a serviceman
    and a retiree.
    
    The X Prize Foundation is offering the $10 million prize in the hope
    private enterprise will build a new space travel industry. The
    successful contestants must be able to build a spacecraft that can
    carry three adults 62 miles into space, can make two flights in two
    weeks and can land intact.
    
    Peter Diamandis, a 35-year-old with a medical degree from Harvard and
    an aerospace engineering degree from MIT who heads the foundation, said
    his generation grew up believing "2001: Space Odyssey" was more than a
    movie.
    
    "Many people felt we clearly would have low-cost access for paying
    tourists in space by this point," he said.
    
    Diamandis is not alone in his dream of vacations in space at "orbital
    hotels" with panoramic views of the Earth. When he announced the prize
    last year on the Gateway Arch grounds in St. Louis, the crowd included
    Buzz Aldrin, who walked on the moon with Neil Armstrong in 1969, and
    Burt Rutan, who created the first plane to fly around the world without
    refueling. Rutan was the first to announce his intent to enter the X
    Prize competition.
    
    Although the private sector must build the winning rocket, NASA
    Administrator Dan Goldin said the government would provide any
    technical information that has been made public and make available
    equipment for purposes such as wind tunnel tests.
    
    Paul Tryon, a 65-year-old retiree from the St. Louis suburb of
    Hazelwood, was the ninth contestant to enter. He has more than 34 years
    experience in aeronautical engineering, having worked for McDonnell
    Douglas and Bell Aircraft.
    
    "I definitely think it can be done," Tryon said. "I think it has to be
    done if we're ever going to make serious use of space."
    
    Although most contestants won't talk in detail about their plans, Tryon
    said his initially involved using an F-4 military aircraft, which was
    built by McDonnell Douglas and is no longer used in the United States.
    He figured he could overhaul the control panel so the plane would go
    faster and make the altitude.
    
    "My personal opinion is that you'll never be able to get the American
    public into something that looks like the Apollo," Tryon said. "I think
    they'd be afraid of it, and frankly I think they'd be justified."
    
    The Air Force has since rejected Tryon's request to use an F-4, leaving
    Tryon back at square one.
    
    "I'm not sure if I'll be able to carry on," he said. "I don't want to
    develop a plane from scratch."
    
    Robert Zubrin, co-founder of Pioneer Rocketplane in Lakewood, Colo.,
    said he was putting together a team to raise capital and build his
    spacecraft. Tony McPeak, former Air Force chief of staff and a
    four-star general, is among those he has recruited, Zubrin said.
    
    "The same vehicle that we are developing for the X Prize competition
    will be able to launch satellites at half the current price or be able
    to fly passengers from New York to London in less than one hour,"
    Zubrin said.
    
    Teammates Gary C. Hudson, president, and Bevin McKinney, chief
    executive, of HMX Inc., California, have been designing and building
    launch vehicles for more than a decade. The two are already doing some
    sheet metal work, according to Collette Bevis, spokeswoman for X Prize
    Foundation.
    
    Rutan, president of Scaled Composites in Mojave, Calif., has a
    formidable track record in aeronautical engineering. He created the
    Voyager, which in 1986 became the first aircraft to fly around the
    world on one tank of fuel.
    
    "I believe that we have to have tourism, and I am tired of waiting for
    someone else to do it," Rutan said. "Compared to the difficulty, danger
    and expense of flying in the 1920s, in relative numbers, leaving the
    atmosphere is a piece of cake."
    
    The announcement of the prize came on the 69th anniversary of Charles
    Lindbergh's solo, nonstop flight from New York to Paris. That flight in
    his Spirit of St. Louis single-engine plane took place May 20-21, 1927.
    
    Lindbergh won a $25,000 prize offered by New York hotel owner Raymond
    Orteig in 1919. Eight others grasped at the prize but failed. Lindbergh
    was backed by eight businessmen.
    
    Like Lindbergh, the not-for-profit X Prize Foundation has received
    support from St. Louis business leaders, who have donated $1 million
    for operations of the foundation. They're working on raising the $10
    million for the prize.
    
    The prize's sponsor ideally would be a company, looking to target men
    ge 20 to 50, but individuals also have been approached, Diamandis said.
    
    "This is not science fiction, this is real faith," he said. "The fact
    that we have 10 teams registered so far shows that the will, the drive
    and the technology is out there."
    
    Diamandis predicted that someone will win the X Prize in three to five
    years. "And one to two years after that, we will have commercial
    tickets available for sale," he said.
    
    Although some make fun of the X Prize, Diamandis believes he'll have
    the last laugh. "The best way to predict the future is to create it,"
    he said. "And that's what we're trying to do."
7.1512IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 11:5785
    Tiny Microphones Aided Peru Siege
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Hidden in a chess piece, crutches and even a Bible,
    tiny microphones gave commandos who stormed the Japanese ambassador's
    mansion to free 72 hostages intimate knowledge of the hostage-takers'
    daily routine.
    
    Periscopes allowed commandos to see into the compound's first floor and
    a CIA spy plane with advanced technology was used to detect people and
    rebel-planted mines, according to Peruvian television reports.
    
    Some of the listening devices were displayed on television Sunday. They
    show clearly Peruvian authorities knew what was going on behind the
    thick walls of the diplomatic compound during the four-month standoff.
    
    Seventy-one hostages were rescued in Tuesday's movie-like commando
    assault. One hostage, two soldiers and all 14 Tupac Amaru rebels were
    killed -- including rebel leader Nestor Cerpa.
    
    On Sunday, a Peruvian human rights group said police had arrested
    Cerpa's sister-in-law and another woman and denounced the government's
    "intimidation tactics."
    
    Lawyers for the rights group Aprodeh said police had confirmed the
    arrests of Rosa Cardenas and Susana Roque. Police declined to comment.
    
    Fernando Rospigliosi, a member of Aprodeh, said anti-terrorist police
    arrested the women Saturday as they left the home of the family of Roli
    Rojas, Cerpa's right-hand man who also died in the raid.
    
    Both women are married to jailed rebels, and Cardenas' husband is the
    brother of Cerpa's wife, Rospigliosi said.
    
    The women had visited Cerpa's grave on Friday and Rospigliosi charged
    that police are trying to scare away relatives from visiting the burial
    plots.
    
    "We don't know what has happened to them," Rospigliosi told The
    Associated Press.
    
    The government has denied allegations that some of the rebels were
    killed after they tried to surrender. Authorities quickly buried the
    dead in graves scattered across Lima: That and the fact relatives were
    not allowed to see the bodies, has led to speculation of a cover-up.
    
    Several rebels were killed when commandos detonated explosives under a
    game of soccer being played inside the mansion. Within seconds, an
    elite team of 140 soldiers stormed into the compound from a network of
    tunnels:
    
    President Alberto Fujimori said the intelligence was so precise that he
    didn't waver "for a single minute" before giving the attack order.
    
    A microphone hidden in crutches used by Eduardo Cruz, one of the Tupac
    Amaru leaders, gave authorities access to conversations in the first
    days after rebels stormed the compound during a Dec. 17 cocktail party.
    
    Cruz was injured in the assault and requested the crutches, shown
    Sunday along with other items on the television news program,
    Contrapunto.
    
    Later, authorities smuggled in microphones in a thermos, a guitar, and
    the chess piece. They cut a small section out of a Bible requested by a
    military officer among the captives so he could communicate with police
    and soldiers -- giving them important information leading up to the
    raid.
    
    It is not clear who brought in the microphones. Red Cross workers, who
    regularly took food, clothing and other necessities into the residence,
    have denied knowingly bringing in microphones. The Red Cross has said
    it never would knowingly do so because of its position against taking
    sides in crises.
    
    A Schweizer RG-8A spy plane owned by the Central Intelligence Agency
    flew over the diplomatic residence, pinpointed the location of people
    inside, and detected mines and booby traps around the compound,
    Contrapunto reported.
    
    According to the news program, only eight of the small Schweizer planes
    exist -- three owned by the U.S. Coast Guard, three by the CIA, and one
    each by Colombia and Mexico.
    
    The U.S. Embassy refused to comment on the report Sunday.
7.1513IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 12:06122
    Separatist Leader Takes Hostages
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Armed militant separatists who believe Texas
    should be an independent nation took two neighbors hostage Sunday in
    remote west Texas in retaliation for the arrest of two members.
    
    About three dozen local and state police surrounded the area and, by
    nightfall, began negotiations with the group from a mobile command
    center, said Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Lucila Torres.
    
    Richard McLaren, the self-styled "ambassador" of the the group called
    Republic of Texas, told San Antonio radio station WOAI that the group
    would end its standoff at the couple's home in exchange for the release
    of two Republic members under arrest and another key concession.
    
    "We want them to ... agree to a referendum to allow Texans to vote on
    the independence issue," McLaren said from his group's headquarters in
    the Davis Mountains, 75 miles north of the Mexico border.
    
    The Republic of Texas contends that the annexation of Texas as a state
    in 1845 was illegal, that Texas should remain an independent nation,
    and that the group's leaders constitute the legitimate government of
    the independent nation of Texas. Texas was an independent republic from
    1836 to 1845.
    
    Members of the group stormed the home of Joe Rowe and his wife,
    Margaret Ann Rowe, firing shots at about noon, authorities said. The
    Rowes home is about 15 miles from McLaren's headquarters.
    
    Mrs. Rowe's brother, Bob Bowers, said he spoke by telephone Sunday
    afternoon with his sister, who said her 50-year-old husband had
    suffered a superficial gunshot wound to the shoulder.
    
    "She said she was all right," said Bowers, who asked that his hometown
    not be divulged. "She couldn't tell me how many people were holding
    them hostage ... I asked specifically if he (McLaren) was there and she
    said no."
    
    Ms. Torres refused to say how many people are believed to belong to
    McLaren's group or where they were situated. She said the Davis
    Mountains Resort subdivision was sealed off, and other area residents
    remained inside.
    
    Reporters were being kept several miles from the entrance to the
    subdivision. Telephone calls Sunday night to the McLaren and Rowe homes
    were answered by a message saying the lines had been disconnected.
    
    Authorities said the FBI also had been contacted and FBI spokesman Al
    Cruz in El Paso said the agency was "assessing the situation."
    
    Residents had been complaining for months about McLaren, a wild-haired,
    lanky rancher who would file property liens against his neighbors and
    threaten them with machine guns. He had been avoiding an arrest warrant
    since last December for filing the bogus liens.
    
    Last month, McLaren, 43, threatened to fight back against the
    government and compared his situation to fatal standoffs at Waco and
    Ruby Ridge, Idaho.
    
    "These boys are asking for a total military assault," McLaren said in
    an interview with The Associated Press. "Our defense forces will fire
    because we would consider it an invasion."
    
    Before the phones were disconnected, a man who answered the phone at
    the Rowe home identified himself as Lt. Keys of the Republic of Texas
    Militia and referred calls to McLaren.
    
    "I can't conduct a military operation and answer your questions at the
    same time," he told The Associated Press.
    
    The Republic has had a long-running feud with the Rowes, who lead an
    area homeowners' association and whom McLaren has called "federal
    moles."
    
    "I don't feel free to go down the road anymore without being watched,"
    Mrs. Rowe told CNN several weeks ago.
    
    Residents said authorities had not responded to their pleas to do
    something about McLaren.
    
    "We've been telling people and telling people and telling people this
    was going to happen," said Michelle Behrendt, who also in the area.
    "They sat on their thumbs and did nothing. ... They could have done
    something about this."
    
    McLaren said his group took the Rowes hostage after authorities
    arrested a Republic member.
    
    Robert Jonathan Scheidt, 43, was in the county jail Sunday after being
    arrested when police found two assault rifles in his van. He had a card
    identifying himself as a Republic "captain of the embassy guard,"
    authorities said.
    
    McLaren said he was also angered by the arrest last Tuesday of group
    member Jo Ann Canady Turner on two contempt charges. She was in custody
    Sunday.
    
    "When they arrested her, they enacted a declaration of war," McLaren
    said.
    
    On Tuesday, the group released a statement saying it had issued
    warrants for "foreign agents" responsible for Ms. Turner's arrest,
    including Texas Attorney General Dan Morales, "the unlawful state
    legislature, all United States federal judges and all IRS agents on
    Texas soil."
    
    McLaren told WOAI on Sunday that his followers were dispersing around
    the state to serve "arrest and deportation orders" against those
    officials.
    
    "The Davis Mountains are under the control of the Republic of Texas,"
    McLaren said.
    
    The group has recently split into several factions. Last month, one
    faction "impeached" McLaren. And a message Sunday on a World Wide Web
    site attributed to the Republic of Texas read:
    
    "It appears that Richard McLaren and those acting with him have gone
    completely off the deep end, disregarding the very laws he claims to
    uphold."
7.1514IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 16:5438
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 28 April 1997 Issue 703

    Human alarm clocks have ring of truth 

    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 

    PEOPLE who claim to be able to wake up at a particular time without the
    aid of an alarm clock have been found to be strikingly accurate by
    scientists.

    In a random telephone survey of 269 people, one person in six said that
    self-awakening had become a routine. A quarter of these attributed
    their success to an internal wake-up clock, while many programmed their
    mental alarm with a bedtime ritual of focusing on a specific wake-up
    time. A regular wake-up time was not crucial; good self-awakeners said
    they could change the time easily, according to a report in the journal
    Sleep.

    A group of 15 good self-awakeners - nine women and six men, aged 19 to
    62 - were studied for three consecutive nights at the Sleep and Dreams
    Laboratory at Luther College in Iowa. The volunteers selected their own
    intended wake-up time and wrote it down. In the morning, they recorded
    their actual wake-up time, which was verified by a movement-activated
    recording device worn on one wrist.

    After more than seven hours of sleep, they awakened on average just
    three minutes and 20 seconds later than their target time.

    Whether the skill can be learned or improved has yet to be studied,
    said Dr William Moorcroft, director of the laboratory. "But some people
    say it helps to visualise a clock face." However, researchers suggest
    that the ability may have had an evolutionary advantage. The early
    bird, after all, catches the worm. 

    Dr Moorcroft said he does not use an alarm himself, even to wake up
    early to catch a flight or for an important meeting. He needs one only
    when he has a cold, which seems to disrupt his internal clock, or when
    he is suffering from jet lag.
7.1515IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 16:5745
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 28 April 1997 Issue 703
                                                               
    Man questioned over woman's murder
    
    By David Graves 
    
    DETECTIVES hunting the killer of a judge's daughter said last night
    that they planned to question a man detained 100 miles away over the
    alleged kidnapping of another woman.
    
    Police confirmed that the man was being taken from North Wales, where
    he was held early yesterday, to Manchester to be interviewed about the
    murder of Rachel McGrath. Miss McGrath, 27, the daughter of a district
    judge, died late on Friday after a frenzied knife attack outside a
    public house in Bramhall, Greater Manchester.
    
    Detectives said the man was arrested in connection with the alleged
    kidnapping, in the Manchester area, although one said they were
    "keeping an open mind at this stage" about any possible link with Miss
    McGrath's murder.
    
    A statement issued by North Wales police said: "A man is currently in
    custody in Caernarfon following his arrest in Bangor during the early
    hours of this morning. He was arrested following a police operation
    concerning an alleged kidnapping which originated in Manchester." No
    details were known about the woman involved.
    
    Miss McGrath, daughter of district judge Brian McGrath, died soon after
    arriving to pick up her boyfriend Kevin Forster, 25, from the Victoria
    Tavern in Bramhall, which was packed with 200 late-night drinkers. She
    was left with multiple stab wounds, lying in a pool of blood, and died
    almost instantly. Police believe her attacker could have waited for her
    and struck as she was getting out of her car.
    
    Ambulance crews arrived within minutes, after another woman driving
    into the car park found her body in a pool of blood, but they were
    unable to save her. Miss McGrath, who worked for the Halifax Building
    Society, was known locally as a talented singer, dancer and pianist,
    who took part in many local productions.
    
    Her father, her mother, Diana, and brother, Michael, 29, a solicitor,
    have appealed for privacy.
    
    The Victoria Tavern remained closed yesterday.
    
7.1516IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 17:0043
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 28 April 1997 Issue 703
                                                 
    Salvation Army bans yoga class as 'anti-Christian'
    
    By Sean O'Neill 
    
    A YOGA class has been banned from a Salvation Army hall after
    complaints that it was anti-Christian.
    
    Atsuko Kato was asked to find new premises for her Thursday night yoga
    sessions in Bideford, north Devon, after complaints that she was
    running a "cult activity". Miss Kato, 32, a baptised Christian, had
    been holding classes for several weeks at the hall, also Bideford
    Salvationists' church. 
    
    "Initially they had no problem with the classes, then there were some
    complaints," said Miss Kato. "I was told that the complainants felt
    yoga was somehow an attack against Christianity and was some sort of
    cult activity."
    
    Miss Kato, who is Japanese, said she was hurt by the Salvation Army's
    ruling against yoga, the Hindu system of meditation and exercise. "It
    was very upsetting. I am new to the area and it made me feel unwelcome.
    I think they thought I was doing ritual things like chanting but the
    class is about exercise, breathing, relaxation and a bit of
    meditation."
    
    Miss Kato has received leaflets in the post, including one which said
    yoga was "likely to fill the mind with unhelpful ideas and bring you
    into contact with destructive spiritual forces". She said: "It is utter
    nonsense. Yoga helps a lot of people find relaxation. Despite these
    incidents, most people in Bideford have been very supportive."
    
    A spokesman for the Salvation Army said that its Bideford corps may
    have acted too hastily after a complaint. "That person was not a
    Salvationist but his children used the hall and he threatened to stop
    them coming unless the yoga was stopped," the spokesman said. "With
    hindsight, maybe we would not have acted in the same way again.
    
    "We now understand that that there are groups that are agitating
    against yoga nationally. We must stress that the Salvation Army does
    not think yoga is a bad thing. In any case, it is policy that we do not
    criticise other people's faiths."
7.1517IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 17:0374
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 28 April 1997 Issue 703
    
    Rescuers in a crisis as border war splits corps
    
    By Sean O'Neill 
    
    INTERNATIONAL Rescue Corps, the rapid-response group that has saved
    countless lives in the aftermath of natural disasters, has hit a crisis
    of its own.
    
    Senior staff have left the charity to found a similar organisation.
    They allege that IRC is being run by a dictatorial clique headed by
    Willie McMartin, its Scottish director. Mr McMartin and the IRC
    leadership say the defectors' claims are "laughable".
    
    The split follows years of antagonism between IRC's Scottish region and
    branches in southern England. Disaffection has been greatest in the
    South-West branch, which has folded. Its members have formed the core
    of RAPID-UK (Rescue and Preparedness in Disasters).
    
    IRC was established in 1981 by a group of firemen from around Britain
    to relieve "need, hardship and distress among the victims of natural
    disasters". Gerry Anderson, creator of the television puppet series
    Thunderbirds, became honorary president. From headquarters in Marlow,
    Bucks, it quickly established a worldwide reputation. Teams equipped
    with thermal imaging devices and fibre-optic probes specialised in
    digging out people buried under earthquake rubble.
    
    But there has been wrangling within the organisation since the late
    1980s over whether IRC should be simply a rescue agency or devote
    resources to long-term relief projects. Volunteers returning from an
    earthquake rescue mission in Turkey in 1992 found the group's head
    office had been moved to Scotland and that Mr Anderson and Terry Price,
    the corps commander, had resigned suddenly.
    
    Mr Anderson, 68, told The Telegraph that he left because of the
    aggressive ambitions of the Scottish faction. "I got upset when I felt
    that Scottish nationalism was rearing its head. That seemed unfortunate
    in an organisation devoted to helping people regardless of nationality,
    colour or creed. I had been proud to be involved with such a fine
    organisation, but towards the end of my term it had become
    factionalised."
    
    Internal disagreements were exacerbated when Mr McMartin, who became
    IRC director in 1995, said in a newspaper interview that arriving at a
    disaster scene was "a hundred times better than sex; you're on a big
    high, a huge high". Early this year, a block of volunteers, including
    John Holland, IRC's deputy director, resigned. 
    
    Mr Holland, 41, circulated a letter criticising the leadership for
    "bickering over trivial things and wallowing in their own
    self-importance".He has now joined other former IRC members in RAPID
    "to carry out humanitarian work without building little empires and
    squabbling".
    
    Mr McMartin, 45, speaking from IRC's office in Grangemouth,
    Stirlingshire, dismissed the conflicts as personality clashes. He said
    the charity remained "a perfectly functional organisation". He rejected
    claims that a Scottish clique determined policy and spending. He said:
    "Because of problems south of the border [IRC] is now run from north of
    the border, by an elected council with representatives from each of the
    regions. We are as effective as we have been for many a long year, and
    are currently discussing a number of projects, including one for the
    UNHCR in Zaire. We have not been at an earthquake since 1995, but what
    earthquake has there been since then that required a team? We cannot
    respond if there is not an incident."
    
    Mr McMartin added: "I do feel hurt by some of the things that have been
    said, but I am not going to rise to answering any of those comments."
    
    Gary O'Shea, IRC's assistant director, said membership had fallen from
    133 to 103 since 1995, but he maintained that the organisation remained
    strong. "We have just had a Charity Commission investigation,
    instigated by an anonymous complaint, and we were found to be clean."
7.1518IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 17:0785
7.1519IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 17:1058
7.1520IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 17:1221
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 28 April 1997 Issue 703
                                                 
    TV for elderly 'is no laughing matter at all'
    
    By Alison Boshoff 
    
    TELEVISION executives think that trying to make anyone aged over 50
    laugh is a waste of resources, a conference was told at the weekend. 
             
    Andy Allan, director of programmes at Carlton UK, told a seminar at the
    Golden Rose Festival in Montreux that the industry was failing older
    viewers because it is obsessed with advertising and ratings. He said:
    "You are constantly coming up against this wall of 'did it appeal to
    the 16- to 35-year-olds?' "
             
    He said executives often caved in to advertisers who wanted viewers
    aged 16 to 35, perceived as the biggest spenders. Mr Allan said: "Our
    comedy producers have got to the stage where they feel that it is
    almost immoral to make anyone over 50 laugh. I fear that television is
    going the way of popular music and many, many people are being excluded
    from it."
7.1521IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon Apr 28 1997 17:1545
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 28 April 1997 Issue 703
                                      
    Greek oracle 'was high on methane'
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent
                                           
    THE ancient Greek oracle of Delphi, whose priestess would burst into
    wild utterances after breathing in divine vapours, was built on a set
    of geological fractures which could have released poisonous gases, say
    geologists.
                                           
    A London conference will hear today that the site of the temple of
    Apollo is built on faults through which gases including ethene and
    methane, known to cause anaesthesia and narcotic effects, could have
    risen.
                                           
    Perhaps the oracle's most remembered utterance was to the ancient Greek
    Oedipus, who was told he was fated to kill his father and marry his
    mother.
                                           
    Plutarch's accounts of consultations described the Pythian priestess
    descending into a cave below the temple where she became "filled with
    divine afflatus" before uttering her inspired words. Pythia was said to
    sit on a three-legged stool and inhale sulphurous vapours which issued
    from a hole in the ground.
                                           
    However, French excavators 20 years ago found no evidence of a cave or
    of emissions of gases, which seemed to rule out the ancient accounts.
    They concluded that the region, on the southern slopes of Mount
    Parnassus, was not volcanic, and therefore no fumes could have been
    emitted.
                                           
    But Dr Jelle Zeilinga de Boer, of Wesleyan University in Connecticut,
    said fumes and gases can defuse upwards through fault zones whether
    they are volcanic or not. He said that a major fault zone passes below
    the oracle site. Intersecting it are fractures running in a different
    direction. Warm waters rose along these intersections and left deposits
    of travertine - limestone rock. The faults provide pathways for gases
    of hydrocarbon and hydrosulphide to seep through.
                                           
    Dr de Boer, who is addressing a conference on earthquakes, volcanoes
    and archaeology, said that during periods of activity in the earth's
    crust, the emission of the gases would have increased. These gases
    would have included ethene - an anaesthetic - and methane and ethane,
    which can induce mild narcotic effects.
7.1522IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:51107
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT 
    
    Tuesday, April 29, 1997 1:03 am EDT 
    
    SEPARATIST STANDOFF 
    
    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Authorities reported ``some degree of
    progress'' in their negotiations to end a standoff with armed members
    of a group demanding a referendum on independence for Texas. A state
    SWAT team was within 2 miles of members of the Republic of Texas
    separatist group. State and federal officers ringed the mountainous
    Davis Mountains Resort community as the standoff continued into a
    second night. Earlier Monday, the group released two hostages in
    exchange for a jailed comrade. 
    
    ANTIMATTER CLOUD 
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A massive clump of antimatter particles erupting
    from the center of the Milky Way has been detected by scientists in a
    discovery that could change the way Earth's home galaxy is viewed in
    the future. The discovery, made public Monday at a symposium in
    Williamsburg, Va., was made in a series of satellite observations, The
    Washington Post and The New York Times reported. The satellite, NASA's
    Compton Gamma Ray Observer, was launched six years ago to detect,
    measure and record gamma rays -- the invisible rays that have higher
    energies than other forms of radiation. 
    
    LEOPARD ATTACK 
    
    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- A leopard burst out of its cage at an animal
    sanctuary and killed a woman Monday morning, then escaped into woods.
    Deputies shot and killed it hours later as it followed a baited path.
    Sheriff John Whetsel said the woman was attacked in a fenced run at the
    Oak Hill Center for Rare and Endangered Species. The 60- to 70-pound
    leopard apparently used its weight to force open its locked cage to get
    into the run. The body of the 52-year-old woman was found by her son,
    who works at the center. Her name was not released. 
    
    O.J. SIMPSON 
    
    SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) -- A judge refused to reduce the $33.5
    million in damages awarded in a civil verdict against O.J. Simpson in
    the slayings of his ex-wife and her friend. Judge Hiroshi Fujisaki said
    the amount was not excessive because Simpson had a net worth of more
    than $15 million last year and could make $2.5 million a year. That
    amount doesn't include Simpson's pension funds, which Fujisaki said
    could prevent Simpson from going broke. 
    
    CAMPAIGN FINANCE 
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The chief House investigator of Democratic Party
    fund-raising accused White House officials of withholding documents
    about John Huang and other figures in the controversy. The Clinton
    White House has indicated it will refuse outright to turn over an
    unspecified number of documents, said Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ill., chairman
    of the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee. ``The president
    promised the Congress `full cooperation,' and instead the committee is
    being stonewalled,'' Burton said. 
    
    EDWARDS-INVESTIGATION 
    
    BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- FBI agents raided the home and office of
    former Gov. Edwin Edwards in an investigation of cattle sales involving
    the state prisons. ``I'm in shock,'' Edwards told WBRZ-TV. ``On the
    subpoena were 178 names of people, many of whom I don't even know.'' It
    was unclear if Edwards was subpoenaed. Agents spent several hours at
    Edwards' home in the fashionable Baton Rouge neighborhood called
    Country Club of Louisiana. The former governor was in Gulfshores, Ala.,
    when they arrived. 
    
    VOLUNTEER SUMMIT 
    
    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- President Clinton and three predecessors began
    making plans to draft a national army of community service volunteers.
    Clinton helped thousands of delegates at the Presidents' Summit for
    America's Future break into small work groups to organize their
    community-by-community crusade. 
    
    CHINA MUSLIMS 
    
    BEIJING (AP) -- Chinese police opened fire on a crowd of Muslim
    protesters in the northwestern Xinjiang region last week, killing two
    people and injuring five, an official said. Xinjiang has been shaken by
    a Muslim separatist rebellion, and the crowd, in the city of Yining,
    had been trying to block buses carrying people to jail for
    anti-government rioting in February that killed 10 people and injured
    140. In addition to the 27 people sent to jail, three people were
    sentenced to death Thursday for the riots. 
    
    MARKETS 
    
    NEW YORK (AP) -- Blue-chip stocks snapped a three-session slump, but
    the broad market struggled again. The Dow Jones industrial average
    closed at 6,783.02, up 44.15. NYSE advancers led decliners 1,368-1,118.
    The Nasdaq was at 1,217.03, up 7.74. In Japan, the stock markets are
    closed Tuesday. 
    
    KNICKS-HORNETS 
    
    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- The Knicks made more than 50 percent of their
    field goals for the third straight game as they completed a first-round
    sweep of the Hornets with a 104-95 victory Monday night. Former Hornet
    Larry Johnson had 22 points to lead seven players in double figures for
    New York, which advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals for the
    sixth consecutive season. 
    
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT                 
7.1523IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:5281
    RTw  29-Apr-97 04:36    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - U.S. peace envoy Bill Richardson is due to meet Zaire's
    President Mobutu Sese Seko as rebels advance toward the ailing leader's
    capital. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The United States said it would consider "very seriously"
    any new U.N. food appeal for North Korea and urged other countries also
    to contribute because the Stalinist state is facing a famine. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Major industrial nations backed their call for currency
    stability with more words but no action as the dollar climbed further
    on world foreign exchange markets. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain's Labour Party is heading for a landslide election
    victory that will end 18 years of Conservative rule, opinion pollsters
    predicted. 

    - - - - 

    NABLUS, West Bank - President Yasser Arafat held talks with Palestinian
    opponents of his deadlocked peace accords with Israel into the early
    hours in a bid to find "common ground," PLO officials said. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Russian police have clashed with a Chechen "gang" near the
    border with the separatist Chechnya region and there were casualties on
    both sides, Russia's Interfax news agency reported. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - France's Socialist and Communist parties, uneasy allies when
    not outright enemies for nearly 80 years, meet to try to hammer out a
    plan to beat the ruling centre-right coalition in May 25-June 1
    elections. 

    - - - - 

    TIKRIT, Iraq - Tens of thousands of Iraqis staged a huge parade in
    President Saddam Hussein's home town, marking his 60th birthday with
    pledges to stay loyal to him forever. 

    - - - - 

    FORT DAVIS, Texas - Texas police Monday sought arrest warrants for
    members of an armed separatist group holed up in a mountain compound
    and said special tactics teams were being flown to the scene. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - An FBI agent who searched Oklahoma City bombing defendant
    Timothy McVeigh's car after McVeigh's arrest testified that he found
    passages from a right-wing novel alleged to be a blueprint for the
    attack. 

    - - -- 

    OTTAWA - Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien launched the first full
    day of his re-election campaign by pledging to loosen the government's
    purse strings. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - Recent changes to China's criminal code make it easier for
    Beijing to stifle dissent and have ominous implications for Hong Kong
    after the British colony reverts to Chinese rule on July 1, a human
    rights group said. 

    REUTER

7.1524IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:5356
    RTw  29-Apr-97 02:55    

    Pamela Anderson Lee in court for breach of contract

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LOS ANGELES, April 28 (Reuter) - Pamela Anderson Lee, best known as a
    swimsuited lifeguard in TV's "Baywatch," was in court Monday where her
    lawyer said she backed out of a movie deal because the script included
    simulated sex. 

    The filmmakers charge, however, that she broke her contract because she
    got a better offer that could make her a movie star. 

    Wearing a white suit with a mini-skirt, Lee sat listening to opening
    statements by a lawyer for production company, The Private Movie Co.
    The company is suing her for breach of contract, saying she backed out
    of an agreement to appear in a cable TV movie "Hello, She Lied," to
    make the feature film, "Barb Wire." 

    Plaintiffs' lawyer Adam Miller scoffed at the argument that the
    actress, who is married to Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee and whom he
    described as "a world-famous Playboy model," dropped out of the project
    because the film was too racy. 

    "Your honour, this is Pamela Anderson," he told Los Angeles Superior
    Court Judge David Horowitz. "Pamela Anderson has never done a project
    outside television that did not have nudity." Lee has appeared in a
    Playboy magazine pictorial. 

    Lee's lawyer, Major Langer, claimed the actress never agreed to a
    contract because the script included "simulated sex" in the shower and
    on a pool table. 

    "One thing is true, that Pamela Lee does not and never has had a
    problem with nudity," said Langer, of the actress who recently stripped
    on network television when she hosted "Saturday Night Live." 

    "(However) She did have a problem with the nudity and sexuality in this
    film," her laywer said, adding that the sex scenes were written out of
    the movie when it was later made with model Kathy Ireland in the lead. 

    Miller said the Canadian-born Lee decided to bail out when the
    opportunity arose to make "Barb Wire" -- which subsequently was a
    box-office flop. "This was her major chance to be a movie star," Langer
    said. 

    Lee and her husband recently sued Penthouse magazine for publishing
    descriptions of a sexually-explicit video of the couple on their
    honeymoon. 

    Lee, who was not accompanied in court by her husband, had no comment
    for reporters outside. She is expected to testify sometime during the
    anticipated five-day trial. 

    REUTER
7.1525IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:53139
    RTw  29-Apr-97 03:26    

    FEATURE - Britain's Tony Benn keeps low profile ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Britain's Tony Benn keeps low profile ahead of poll 

    By Andrew Marshall 

    CHESTERFIELD, England, April 29 (Reuter) - For a man who has been
    denounced as a socialist zealot and blamed for helping keep Britain's
    Labour Party out of power for nearly two decades, Tony Benn looks
    surprisingly harmless. 

    Dressed in an old blazer, sporting a large red Labour rosette, and
    knocking tobacco out of three pipes as he talks in the book-filled
    study of his headquarters, Benn looks more like an amiable if eccentric
    professor than a socialist firebrand. 

    The 72-year-old Benn has been a Labour member of parliament since he
    was 25. Although he never captured the leadership of his party, his
    radical policies forged its vision during the early 1980s -- and helped
    drive voters away in their millions. 

    Now his party stands on the threshold of power after 18 years in
    opposition. But it is a modernised, centrist Labour Party that seems to
    have no place for a socialist like Benn. 

    For Benn, however, ending the Conservative Party's rule is the
    paramount goal. 

    "This is the moment we have all waited for -- a chance to improve
    conditions for people in Britain," Benn said as he prepared for another
    day of campaigning in Chesterfield, a former mining town in northern
    England. 

    "I shan't be a minister, of course. But to see the present government
    removed, the one that's done so much damage, would give a lot of
    pleasure here." 

    Benn has frequently been at odds with moderates in the Labour Party. He
    is fervently opposed to a federal Europe, the monarchy and Britain's
    nuclear weapons. 

    STICKING TO OLD BELIEFS 

    His election leaflets proclaim his firm belief in full employment,
    trade union rights and disarmament. His party ditched these concepts
    years ago, but not Benn. "He solemnly pledges that he will
    conscientiously work -- as a committed socialist -- for these
    objectives," the leaflet says. 

    Unlike Labour leader Tony Blair he cannot be accused of changing his
    mind. His opinions are largely the same as when he first entered
    parliament, he says. 

    His election leaflet is exactly the same one that he distributed in
    1992, with each reference to the out-of-date year hidden by a sticker.
    In 1992, Labour lost its fourth election in a row, rejected by an
    electorate still suspicious of socialism. 

    A NEW LABOUR NIGHTMARE 

    "New Labour" was born from the party's succession of electoral defeats.
    The party shifted to the right in a bid to win votes. Opinion polls,
    which show it well ahead with only two days to go until Thursday's
    election, suggest the strategy has worked. 

    Benn is the stuff of New Labour nightmares. He has frequently
    embarrassed it by calls to abolish the monarchy, reject European
    integration and negotiate with Irish nationalist guerrillas. 

    But with the election campaign underway, he is under orders to behave.
    He is keeping his views of New Labour to himself. 

    "Everybody wants to win the election. I certainly do," he said. "So
    nobody's saying or doing anything that might jeapordise that." 

    He hints, however, at a belief that whatever the policies of the
    modernised Labour party, an election victory would galvanise the poor
    and the workers of Britain to make their voices heard. 

    "The main effect of a Labour victory at the election will be to lift
    the national morale," he said. "There will be a new cabinet in position
    but that may not be as important as the effect on people's feelings.
    All their aspirations will come out, they will no longer be on their
    knees." 

    FREE AT LAST 

    Benn was born into the aristocracy but became a radical crusader
    against privilege. On his father's death he inherited a hereditary
    viscountcy which barred him from being a member of parliament. He
    fought a constitutional battle to renounce it. 

    Once tipped as a future prime minister, he was a cabinet minister for
    11 years and narrowly lost a battle for the Labour deputy leadership in
    1981. 

    But his radical beliefs alienated many in his party and he came to be
    regarded more as a militant maverick than a serious statesman. A
    challenge for the Labour leadership in 1988 failed, merely generating
    rancour in an already divided party. 

    Opponents say he is a loose cannon who puts outdated principles ahead
    of Labour's election hopes. 

    "I have no personal career ambitions, for heaven's sake," Benn said.
    "I've been in the Labour Party for 55 years and parliament 47 years and
    the cabinet 11 years. I've fought 16 parliamentary elections. You
    couldn't want more than that." 

    He says his main aim is to fight for the people of his constituency of
    Chesterfield. Benn is passionate about their welfare. 

    "There's 35 percent unemployment here, there's 6,000 people on the
    waiting list for houses, you can't live on a pension and people have to
    wait months or years for operations," he said. "That steams you up." 

    While he has no hope of any real influence in a New Labour government,
    he believes he has a useful role as an elder statesman and a mouthpiece
    for socialist ideas. 

    "I've had a lot of experience and I'll try and be useful," he said.
    "You're a teacher, really, in your old age. That's the function and a
    very useful function it is I think. I'm not going to try to seize power
    from anybody, but to get into the public domain thoughts that have been
    excluded by the Thatcher years." 

    An avid diarist with several published volumes of journals, Benn says
    he will publish his account of the election period in the year 2000. 

    "I'm going to call it 'Free at Last'," he said. 

    Free from what? Benn laughs. "You'll have to guess that for yourself. I
    shan't have any restraints of any sort or kind."

    REUTER
7.1526IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:5327
    RTw  28-Apr-97 22:50    

    Labour drops to 46 percent support in Scottish ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    Labour drops to 46 percent support in Scottish opinion poll 

    EDINBURGH, April 28 (Reuter) - Britain's Labour Party dropped back one
    percentage point to 46 percent support in Scotland as the ruling
    Conservatives and Scottish National Party (SNP) held steady at 18 and
    21 percent respectively in a new opinion poll. 

    Liberal Democrats gained two to 13 percent in the ICM poll to be
    published in the Scotsman newspaper on Tuesday. 

    This level of support in Thursday's general election would see Labour
    winning 55 of Scotland's 72 parliamentary seats. Conservatives would
    lose six of the 10 Scottish seats they held in the old parliament. 

    Liberal Democrats would lose two of their nine seats and the SNP would
    double their number to six. 

    ICM's final pre-election telephone survey of 1,000 voters for the
    Scotsman was carried out between Friday and Sunday last week.

    REUTER
7.1527IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:5347
    RTw  28-Apr-97 22:35    

    U.S. High Court rejects Lockerbie lawsuit appeal

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    WASHINGTON, April 28 (Reuter) - The Supreme Court on Monday let stand a
    ruling that Libya has sovereign immunity shielding it from a lawsuit
    filed on behalf of a victim killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103
    over Lockerbie, Scotland. 

    The civil case was brought by Bruce Smith, whose wife, Ingrid, was
    among the 259 people killed when a bomb exploded in a suitcase on board
    the plane on Dec. 21, 1988. Eleven people on the ground in the little
    Scottish town also died. 

    The lawsuit alleged that Libya was behind the bombing and charged that
    two Libyan agents carried out the attack. It named Libya, the Libyan
    Security Organization and Libyan Arab Airlines, as well as the two
    Libyans. 

    A U.S. Court of Appeals in New York in November upheld a federal
    judge's ruling dismissing the lawsuit against Libya for lack of
    jurisdiction. It said Libya enjoyed immunity under the foreign
    sovereign immunities law. 

    Before the appeals court, U.S. government lawyers expressed concern
    about the foreign policy implications of allowing the suit to go
    forward, warning that the United States could be placed at greater risk
    in foreign courts. 

    Lawyers representing Smith appealed to the Supreme Court to hear the
    case, arguing that "extraterritorial terrorism is conduct which
    forfeits sovereign immunity" under U.S. law. But the high court denied
    the appeal without comment or dissent. 

    Although Libya has been dismissed from the lawsuit, claims against the
    two Libyans are pending. They have been charged in the United States
    and Britain but Libya has refused to extradite them. 

    Other families of the victims have civil lawsuits against Libya and the
    two Libyans pending in federal court in New York. Those cases were
    brought after Congress approved a law last year providing U.S. courts
    with jurisdiction over foreign states in lawsuits involving certain
    acts of terrorism. 

    REUTER
7.1528IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:5325
    RTw  28-Apr-97 22:04    

    Mental patient gets into Buckingham Palace-police

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 28 (Reuter) - An escaped mental patient broke into the
    grounds of Buckingham Palace on Monday, but only managed to wander
    around for a few minutes before being escorted out and arrested, police
    said. 

    The man, who went missing from a mental hospital in southern England
    last week, did not enter the palace, Queen Elizabeth's London
    residence, itself. 

    Police promptly launched a top-level inquiry into the breach of palace
    security. The monarch is at present in residence at Windsor Castle,
    west of London. 

    Security services are currently in a state of high alert because the
    Irish Republican Army has launched a spate of bomb attacks and alerts
    in a bid to put the issue high on the political agenda ahead of
    Thursday's general election. 

    REUTER
7.1529IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 10:56106
    Evidence Produced Against McVeigh
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    By MICHAEL FLEEMAN 
    
    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh had earplugs in his pocket, a loaded
    handgun in a shoulder holster and an envelope full of violent
    anti-government writings when he was pulled over for a traffic
    violation about 75 minutes after the Oklahoma City bombing, witnesses
    testified Monday.
    
    Among the papers stuffed in an envelope in his car was a page from the
    racist novel, "The Turner Diaries," with a passage about government
    bureaucrats: "We can still find them and kill them," according to an
    FBI agent who searched McVeigh's car.
    
    Prosecutors say the tale about an attack on FBI headquarters was a
    blueprint for the Oklahoma City bombing. Another passage from the novel
    found in McVeigh's car read: "The real value of our attacks today lies
    in the psychological impact, not in the immediate casualties."
    
    The sealed envelope was labeled with the handwritten message "Obey the
    Constitution of the United States and we won't shoot you," and inside
    were also quotations from Samuel Adams and John Locke about the dangers
    of overzealous governments, said FBI agent William Eppright III.
    
    The car was searched two days after it was impounded following
    McVeigh's arrest on gun violations unrelated to the bombing of federal
    building in Oklahoma City. The envelope was seen on the car seat at the
    time of McVeigh's arrest.
    
    Offering a detailed account of the chance arrest, Oklahoma Highway
    Patrol trooper Charles Hanger said McVeigh appeared relaxed, answering
    all questions, complying with orders, chatting about guns and even
    offering an explanation of where he had just been.
    
    "He said he was in the process of moving to Arkansas and that he had
    taken a load of his belongings down there," Hanger said.
    
    Prosecutors contend McVeigh was fleeing the bombing when he was
    stopped, and have said explosives residue was found on the ear plugs,
    his clothing and the knife.
    
    A couple of days after the arrest, Hanger cleaned out the squad car
    used to transport McVeigh, and found a business card from a military
    supply store with a handwritten message, "Dave (TNT at $5 a stick) need
    more."
    
    Just after Hanger identified McVeigh in court as the man wearing a blue
    shirt, the defendant whispered something to one of his lawyers and
    exchanged smiles with her.
    
    Under cross-examination, Hanger repeatedly agreed that McVeigh was
    cooperative. And McVeigh attorney Cheryl Ramsey tried to bolster the
    Arkansas move theory by pointing out that taking Interstate 40 and
    Interstate 35 from Arkansas to Kansas is the quickest route that does
    not involve paying tolls.
    
    The defense also sought to show that some of the writings in McVeigh's
    car were less inflammatory than those cited by the prosecution. Among
    the passages was one calling for a political - not violent -- response
    to gun control legislation.
    
    "I would rather fight with pencil lead than bullet lead," the passage
    said.
    
    This testimony marked a sharp change in the tone of the trial, with the
    focus moving from last week's emotional accounts of the bombing to the
    actual evidence against McVeigh.
    
    The 29-year-old Gulf War veteran could face the death penalty if
    convicted of federal murder and conspiracy charges in the deadliest act
    of terrorism on U.S. soil. The April 19, 1995, truck bombing of
    Oklahoma City's downtown federal building killed 168 people and injured
    more than 500.
    
    Hanger told the jury he pulled over McVeigh's yellow Mercury Marquis on
    Interstate 35 about 80 miles north of Oklahoma City because the car was
    missing a rear license plate.
    
    A person driving the speed limit from the bomb site to the site of the
    arrest near Billings, Okla., would have made the 77.9-mile trip in 75
    minutes and 15 seconds, Hanger said.
    
    McVeigh was stopped at 10:17 a.m., 75 minutes after the bomb ripped
    through the federal building at 9:02 a.m.
    
    Hanger said he hid behind the door of his cruiser as McVeigh got out of
    the car and walked toward him. As McVeigh reached for his camouflage
    wallet, Hanger said he noticed a bulge under his light jacket.
    
    "I told him to take both hands and slowly pull back his jacket," Hanger
    said. "He said, 'I have a gun.' I pulled my weapon and stuck it to the
    back of his head."
    
    As Hanger searched and handcuffed him, McVeigh told the trooper he was
    also carrying a knife and a spare clip of ammunition.
    
    In the chamber of the pistol, Hanger found a round of Black Talon
    ammunition, bullets designed to inflict maximum damage.
    
    Hanger then arrested McVeigh for carrying a concealed pistol in a
    shoulder holster. Two days later, McVeigh was tied to the blast as he
    waited in the Noble County Jail in Perry, Okla., for a hearing on the
    gun charge.
7.1530IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:00131
    Texas Standoff Progress Reported
                             
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
                             
    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Authorities reported "some degree of
    progress" Monday night in their negotiations to end a standoff with
    armed members of a group demanding a referendum on independence for
    Texas.
                             
    A state SWAT team was within 2 miles of members of the Republic of
    Texas separatist group. State and federal officers ringed the
    mountainous Davis Mountains Resort community as the standoff continued
    into a second night.
                             
    "Some degree of progress has been made," said Mike Cox, a spokesman for
    the Department of Public Safety. "I think there's some optimism."
                             
    Earlier Monday, the group released two hostages in exchange for a
    jailed comrade.
                             
    Authorities were negotiating with Richard McLaren, self-styled
    "ambassador" of one faction of the separatist group called the Republic
    of Texas. McLaren said in a news release that discussions were taking
    place at his "embassy," a trailer in the development.
                             
    "He continues to invoke the laws of the Republic of Texas. He wants the
    United Nations," Cox said earlier in the day. Republic members have
    told negotiators that "they will defend their sovereign soil."
                             
    Cox said six Republic members were charged Monday night with engaging
    in organized criminal activity, a first-degree felony. Three were also
    charged with aggravated kidnapping in connection with the
    hostage-taking, Cox said.
                             
    Authorities believed the group members were all in or around the
    "embassy" but did not know how many group members were there. One of
    the released hostages, Joe Rowe, estimated there were 10 Republic
    members, including McLaren.
                             
    Authorities urged other residents of the sprawling, remote community to
    leave the area. But "No one else is considered in harm's way," Cox
    said.
                             
    The confrontation started Sunday when two men and a woman wearing
    military-style fatigues fired assault rifles at the front door of Joe
    and Margaret Ann Rowe and took them hostage.
                             
    They were held for 12 hours while their captors demanded the release of
    two followers who had been arrested. Early Monday, they exchanged the
    Rowes for Robert Jonathan Scheidt, identified as "captain of the
    embassy guard" of the Republic of Texas.
                             
    Scheidt, released on his own recognizance, initially didn't want to
    take part in the swap, said Presidio County Judge Jake Brisbin, who
    spent Sunday talking with Scheidt at a jail in Marfa.
                             
    "I suggested to him that there are a few times in people's lives that
    they can step up and do the right thing," Brisbin said. "He said he
    couldn't do that."
                             
    About 20 minutes later, the judge said Scheidt changed his mind. "He
    did not want any harm to come to the Rowes," Brisbin said.
                             
    Brisbin said he sensed that Scheidt was happy not to be involved in the
    siege, especially the hostage-taking.
                             
    "I think that he had ... the feeling that he had gotten into something
    that was much much bigger than they intended it to be," the judge said.
                             
    Mrs. Rowe said she and her husband believed the attackers were willing
    to kill them.
                             
    "It wasn't an empty threat. If somebody will come shooting in your
    door, they mean it," Mrs. Rowe said at a medical center in Alpine,
    where her husband was in stable condition with shrapnel wounds to his
    shoulder.
                             
    Scheidt joined the three people who took the Rowes hostage.
                             
    After the exchange, the armed group left the Rowes' home and
    authorities didn't know where they were within the forested,
    mountainous development of widely separated homes. Reporters were being
    kept several miles from the entrance to the community, about 175 miles
    southeast of El Paso.
                             
    The attack followed months of conflict between Rowe, head of the remote
    community's property owners' association, and McLaren.
                             
    The group's members contend they are the legitimate government of
    Texas, which they say was illegally annexed as a state in 1845. Texas
    was an independent republic from 1836 to 1845.
                             
    McLaren's news release called on Texans to push for a referendum to
    decide whether they want to become an independent nation.
                             
    "I hope this unfortunate incident will be used to reach more people as
    to what their Constitution is about, what their government officials
    are doing and about human rights."
                             
    He has compared his situation to the deadly government standoffs at
    Waco and Ruby Ridge, Idaho.
                             
    "These boys are asking for a total military assault," McLaren said in
    an interview earlier this year with The Associated Press. "Our defense
    forces will fire because we would consider it an invasion."
                             
    Members have waged what legislators term "paper terrorism" by filing
    bogus liens against Texans and public officials.
                             
    For months, bodyguards have protected McLaren as he holed up in the
    Davis Mountains while deputies waited to serve outstanding warrants,
    one stemming from a burglary charge, another from his failure to appear
    for a federal court hearing. Authorities have said the warrants were
    not a top priority.
                             
    "He's a nut," Jeff Davis County Sheriff Steve Bailey said earlier this
    year. "He's a nothing."
                             
    Scheidt was arrested Sunday morning after Sheriff Steve Bailey clocked
    him speeding outside the subdivision and found several weapons in his
    vehicle, including an automatic rifle, Cox said.
                             
    The group also demanded the release of Jo Ann Canady Turner, arrested
    in Austin last week on two contempt charges. She remained in custody
    Monday.
                             
    Those charged Monday with organized criminal activity were McLaren,
    Scheidt, Robert Otto, who calls himself "White Eagle," Richard Keyes,
    Karen Paulson and her husband Greg Paulson. Keyes and the Paulsons also
    face two counts each of aggravated kidnapping in connection with the
    hostage-taking, Cox said.
7.1531IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0139
    Shooters Kill Escaped Leopard
                                                               
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                                               
    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- A leopard burst out of its cage at an animal
    sanctuary and killed a woman Monday morning, then escaped into woods.
    Deputies shot and killed it hours later as it followed a baited path.
                                                               
    Sheriff John Whetsel said the woman was attacked in a fenced run at the
    Oak Hill Center for Rare and Endangered Species. The 60- to 70-pound
    leopard apparently used its weight to force open its locked cage to get
    into the run.
                                                               
    The body of the 52-year-old woman was found by her son, who works at
    the center. Her name was not released.
                                                               
    "All I can say is, it was a savage attack," Whetsel said.
                                                               
    The center rehabilitates injured exotic animals before returning them
    to zoos around the country. Whetsel said it was licensed by the state
    Wildlife Department and U.S. Department of Agriculture, and that he
    knew of no previous problems.
                                                               
    The 7-year-old Persian leopard was shot about a half mile from the
    center Monday night. Its cage had been baited with fresh meat, as well
    as the trail that authorities believe it followed into the woods.
                                                               
    Two sheriff's deputies spotted the cat walking up the road where
    reporters were gathered. They ordered reporters into their cars, then
    opened fire with shotguns. About 10 rounds were fired.
                                                               
    Earlier, Whetsel said officers were ordered to shoot to kill.
                                                               
    "Our concern is once an animal kills a human, it has a propensity to do
    it again. We're not going to take any chances," Whetsel said.
                                                               
    Officers went door to door warning residents in lightly populated far
    northeastern Oklahoma County. Whetsel urged them not to try to hunt the
    animal themselves, "It's quick and silent and very deadly."
7.1532IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0240
    13 D.C. Schools Closed by Trustees
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Over shouts from infuriated parents, trustees
    overseeing the troubled District of Columbia school system voted to
    close 13 schools Monday.
    
    Crying "shame, shame, shame", angry parents rose from their seats and
    turned their backs on the nine-member emergency board as it closed the
    first four schools that came up for a vote.
    
    Eighteen schools had been recommended for closure by schools chief
    Julius Becton and chief operating officer Charles Williams. Becton and
    Williams said the schools needed to be closed to save money and to
    reflect the city's declining student population.
    
    The district has 157 schools to serve its 78,000 students. Enrollment
    has slid as the city loses population to Washington's suburbs.
    
    Trustees chairman Bruce K. MacLaury said the school system is spending
    25 percent more than is needed to operate unused space created by
    declining enrollment. "Such waste is indefensible," he said.
    
    The votes came after more than five weeks of heated public hearings,
    criticism from the parents of the 5,800 students who attend the schools
    in question and closed-door debates among the trustees. Division among
    board members was evident as only four of the 13 votes for closure were
    unanimous.
    
    Some parents, school board officials and city council members have
    decried the process because good academic performance did not keep
    schools off the list.
    
    All but two of the schools will be closed at the end of the current
    school year and students at one school have already been relocated.
    
    Security guards lined the walls of a high school auditorium where the
    votes took place, and attendees were made to walk through metal
    detectors.
7.1533IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0451
    Brokerage Sued for Sex Harassment
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    NEW YORK (AP) -- An investment firm was the scene of a daily hailstorm
    of harassment against women, including dancing strippers and crude
    sexual insults, according to a lawsuit filed Monday by three former
    employees.
    
    Words and deeds were laced with suggestions that sexual favors were
    expected and rewarded at Lew Lieberbaum & Co. Inc. in Garden City,
    according to the federal lawsuit.
    
    Those who did not comply were bombarded with lewd behavior so
    horrifying that the women vomited, cried or ate obsessively to cope
    with the embarrassment and humiliation dished out by their bosses, the
    lawsuit said.
    
    The lawsuit sought unspecified compensatory damages along with
    potentially more than $1 billion in punitive damages from the banking
    and brokerage firm, which also has offices in Manhattan, Connecticut,
    Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Texas, Arizona and Florida.
    
    The company denied the allegations that former employees were harassed.
    
    "In fact, these former employees frequently socialized during and after
    work with many of the same individuals whom they now claim harassed
    them," the company said.
    
    None of the women filing the lawsuits filed a harassment complaint with
    the company prior to leaving, even though it had a policy against
    sexual harassment, the company said.
    
    Last year, the Garden City branch of Smith Barney Inc. was accused in a
    federal lawsuit in Manhattan of operating like a lewd fraternity with
    vulgar remarks and obscene pranks flourishing.
    
    The Liberbaum lawsuit said sales assistant Kimberly A. Casper,
    operations assistant Deanna Caliendo and trading assistant Linette
    Cinelli were subjected to daily insults and sexually degrading behavior
    from four brokers whose desks were situated to make it difficult to
    work without walking past them.
    
    The lawsuit also said harassment thrived outside the area, including
    assault and battery, the hiring of lesbian strippers to perform in the
    office, unwanted massages and demands for sex by executives who
    unbuttoned and pulled down their pants.
    
    The lawsuit alleged that the company also engaged in a degrading
    practice of hiring "wow-girls" -- women who were hired only because of
    their attractive bodies and looks.
7.1534IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0562
    American Jet Has Engine Trouble
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -- An American Airlines jet lost pieces from an
    engine moments after it took off Monday, but the plane returned safely
    to the Tucson airport and there were no injuries.
    
    Some passengers aboard the MD-80 bound for Dallas-Fort Worth
    International airport were evacuated by emergency slides.
    
    There were unconfirmed reports that engine parts from the plane
    showered homes in the area around Tucson International Airport.
    
    Tim Smith, an American spokesman in Fort Worth, said police found some
    engine parts on a roadway but he was unaware of any homes being struck.
    
    "It is possible in a situation like this, if you have a fan blade that
    breaks and comes out the rear of the engine," Smith said.
    
    "We know that police have found some parts in the road. There are no
    signs that it exited the cowling of the engine. It more than likely
    came out the rear exhaust portion of the engine."
    
    The crew aboard American Flight 230 heard a noise and felt a vibration
    in the left engine and warning lights came on in the cockpit, Smith
    said. The crew leveled off the lane at about 2,000 feet, just after
    takeoff at 12:14 p.m. MST, and landed at 12:29, he said.
    
    None of the 129 passengers and five crew members aboard the 139-seat
    plane was injured.
    
    The jet, which had flown into Tucson from Palm Beach, Fla., and Dallas,
    had no history of engine troubles, Smith said. He said he did not know
    its age.
    
    The crew shut the engine down immediately, he said.
    
    Emergency workers on the ground reported seeing a small flash of flame
    around the rear of the engine as the plane landed.
    
    "Because of that report, the captain began an evacuation using the
    slides. But the fire department apparently put it out so quickly that
    we estimate only about a third of the passengers used the slides," he
    said.
    
    The rest of the passengers climbed down stairs at the rear of the
    plane.
    
    Smith and Gary Fay, a Federal Aviation Administration air traffic
    manager in Tucson, said the National Transportation Safety Board would
    investigate.
    
    The runway the plane landed on was closed to other air traffic for more
    than an hour.
    
    American has 260 Super-80 aircraft built by McDonnell Douglas, more
    than any other type of plane in its fleet, Smith said.
    
    Smith said the engine problem was "very rare but not unprecedented."
    
    There was no evidence of a bird striking the engine.
7.1535IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0638
    FBI Raids Ex-Gov's Home and Office
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- FBI agents raided the home and office of
    former Gov. Edwin Edwards and a state agency Monday in an investigation
    of cattle sales involving the state prisons.
    
    "I'm in shock," Edwards told WBRZ-TV. "On the subpoena were 178 names
    of people, many of whom I don't even know."
    
    It was unclear if Edwards was subpoenaed.
    
    Agents spent several hours at Edwards' home in the fashionable Baton
    Rouge neighborhood called Country Club of Louisiana. The former
    governor was in Gulfshores, Ala., when they arrived.
    
    Edwards, a Democrat who stepped down in January 1996 after an
    unprecedented four terms, said his office was also searched.
    
    Agents apparently raided nine sites in the Baton Rouge area, including
    the offices of Prison Enterprises, a state agency that coordinates
    joint ventures between private companies and prisons to put inmates to
    work.
    
    A subpoena to Secretary of Corrections Richard Stalder, made public by
    the governor's office, cited a bill and a corrected bill sent to a
    prison about the purchase of 16 bulls.
    
    Stalder was ordered to appear before a federal grand jury in New
    Orleans on May 6 with all records of cattle contracts and sales since
    1992.
    
    State Legislative Auditor Dan Kyle said he had been handling an
    investigative audit of Prison Enterprises but could give no details. He
    said he knew early Monday that the FBI planned to issue search warrants
    at Prison Enterprises but was not told the scope of the federal
    investigation.
7.1536IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0845
    Antimatter Cloud Discovered
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A massive clump of antimatter particles erupting
    from the center of the Milky Way has been detected by scientists in a
    discovery that could change the way Earth's home galaxy is viewed in
    the future.
    
    The discovery, made public Monday at a symposium in Williamsburg, Va.,
    was made in a series of satellite observations, The Washington Post and
    The New York Times reported.
    
    The satellite, NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observer, was launched six
    years ago to detect, measure and record gamma rays -- the invisible
    rays that have higher energies than all other forms of radiation,
    including X-rays.
    
    "It is like finding a new room in the house we have lived in since
    childhood," said Charles Dermer of the Naval Research Laboratory in
    Washington, one of five collaborating institutions that discovered the
    spewing cloud of antimatter.
    
    "The origin of this new and unexpected source of antimatter is a
    mystery," said researcher William R. Purcell of Northwestern
    University.
    
    Regular matter is constructed of the basic atomic building blocks of
    protons, neutrons and electrons. Antimatter particles are exact
    duplicates except they carry opposite properties. An electron, for
    example, carries a negative charge while its antimatter counterpart
    carries an equal, but positive, charge.
    
    Antimatter cannot be directly detected in space, but when it comes into
    contact with ordinary matter, the two instantly annihilate each other,
    producing gamma rays.
    
    The radiation caused by this annihilation, which emits 250,000 times
    the energy of ordinary visible light, is what researchers have observed
    since last November using the Compton satellite.
    
    The mysterious cloud of antimatter rises about 3,500 light-years above
    the disk of Earth's galaxy. Scientists said they believe it is highly
    unlikely it would ever reach Earth -- but if it did, no harm would be
    done because the cloud is extremely diffuse.
7.1537IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:0950
    DNA Link to Alzheimer's Is Found
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A defect in the genes that drive energy metabolism
    in cells may play a role in Alzheimer's disease, new laboratory studies
    have found.
    
    Researchers say they have discovered a mutation in the mitochondria DNA
    of cells in Alzheimer's patients that may lead to a rise of a
    destructive chemical, called oxygen free radicals, in the brain.
    
    Dr. W. Davis Parker of the University of Virginia and senior author of
    a study to be published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National
    Academy of Sciences said the findings suggest a link between the way
    brain cells process energy and Alzheimer's disease.
    
    Zaven Khachaturian, a scientist with the Alzheimer's Association, said
    the new finding "is a potentially very important new piece of
    fundamental information" that could lead to diagnostic tests for the
    disease and a new understanding of how it develops.
    
    Alzheimer's is a disorder that kills brain cells and causes a gradual
    decline in memory, a change in personality and behavior, and,
    eventually, death. About 4 million Americans, mostly elderly, have been
    diagnosed with the disease. There is no known cure.
    
    In the new study, researchers found that a mutation in cellular DNA
    leads to a failure of glucose processing in brain cells. This breakdown
    causes a rise in oxygen free radicals which could kill brain cells, a
    characteristic of Alzheimer's disease.
    
    Mitochondria are structures that produce energy to make cells function.
    The mitochondria have their own DNA which is different from the DNA in
    the genes of each cell. The mitochondria DNA is only inherited from the
    mother.
    
    To find the gene defect, the researchers removed mitochondria DNA from
    normal neuron cells and inserted DNA from Alzheimer's disease patients.
    The altered cells then functioned in cultures using the transplanted
    DNA.
    
    The researchers found that the altered cells developed energy
    processing failures, leading to the excessive oxygen free radicals.
    They found the mutation was in a mitochondria gene called cytochrome c
    oxidase.
    
    In addition to the University of Virginia, researchers in the study
    were also from the University of California, San Diego, Harvard
    University and MitoKor, a San Diego drug company.
7.1538IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:1025
    Austria Won't Ban Gene Engineering
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- The government rejected citizens' demands for a
    five-year ban on genetic engineering, deciding instead to urge
    companies not to apply for patents on such products for now.
    
    After a meeting of government ministers and environmentalists,
    Chancellor Viktor Klima said Monday it made little sense for Austria to
    try and be an enclave if other European Union countries permit
    genetically engineered products.
    
    The government, however, will call on companies to hold off on patent
    applications until liability questions are cleared up, Klima said.
    
    More than 1.2 million Austrians voted in a non-binding referendum April
    14 in favor of a ban on producing or selling genetically altered food
    and a prohibition on patents for organisms created in genetic
    laboratories.
    
    The EU recently decided to allow imports of genetically altered corn
    into Europe. Farmers, environmentalists and consumer groups contend
    that the corn, mostly from the United States, hasn't been tested
    adequately.
7.1539IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:12110
    Mother of Peru Rebel Demands Body
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    LIMA, Peru (AP) -- The mother of a leftist rebel killed in last week's
    hostage rescue demanded Monday that her daughter's body be exhumed,
    amid suspicions that commandos may have killed some rebels who
    surrendered.
    
    The bodies of 12 of the 14 Tupac Amaru rebels killed when troops
    stormed the Japanese ambassador's mansion, where the rebels held 72
    hostages, were buried in various unmarked graves around Lima.
    
    Authorities' refusal to disclose the locations has raised suspicions
    among relatives that some guerrillas were summarily killed even after
    surrendering.
    
    Eligia Rodriguez Bustamante, mother of 20-year-old Luz Dina Villoslada,
    filed a request for the exhumation with the attorney general's office.
    
    "She wants to make sure the body, in fact, is that of her daughter,"
    said Jose Ramirez, a spokesman for Aprodeh, a human rights
    organization.
    
    News reports quoting unidentified intelligence sources say two young
    women among the rebels were shot after they threw down their weapons
    and yelled: "We surrender! We surrender!"
    
    President Alberto Fujimori has denied the reports but admitted in an
    interview with The Associated Press that he gave an order to
    "neutralize" all the rebels. He said the priority was to rescue the 72
    hostages alive.
    
    Seventy-one of the hostages were rescued; one hostage and two soldiers
    died in the April 22 attack.
    
    Also Monday, the Red Cross denied any role in slipping microphones into
    the ambassador's residence via recreational and other items brought in
    for the hostages during their months of captivity.
    
    Reports during the weekend said radio equipment had been smuggled in in
    a chess piece, guitar, crutches and even a Bible, and had helped
    officials time the commando attack at an opportune moment and warn the
    hostages.
    
    The Red Cross, which maintains neutrality during crises, was allowed
    access into the residence in its role as intermediary and to deliver
    medical and other items to hostages.
    
    Ruben Ortega, a spokesman for the International Committee of the Red
    Cross in Geneva, said the Red Cross did not help conceal the
    microphones and that all items were inspected by rebels on the
    receiving end.
    
    "It is a little bit absurd to assert that ICRC or its delegates had any
    sort of role in these events," Ortega said.
    
    In Copenhagen, Denmark, six Tupac Amaru sympathizers and three members
    of a TV crew occupied the Peruvian consulate for two hours Monday to
    highlight the allegations of summary killings of rebels at the
    residence. All were arrested and to be charged with trespassing.
    
    The Danish leftists want an international investigation into the
    allegations, spokesman Peter Hausmann said.
    
    The group claims to write an Internet page on behalf of the rebels and
    earlier this year invited Isaac Velazco, a Tupac Amaru spokesman in
    Hamburg, Germany, to a news conference in Denmark.
    
    Velazco has warned there would be revenge against Peruvian authorities
    for the rebel deaths, and German government spokesman Peter Hausmann
    said Monday officials were considering whether they have authority to
    muzzle Velazco.
    
    Velazco was granted political asylum after coming to Germany in 1993.
    But under asylum law, officials can curb his right to political
    activity if he makes inflammatory statements.
    
    Human rights activists in Peru, meanwhile, said the wives of two jailed
    Tupac Amaru rebels were arrested and treated roughly by police. The
    women -- one of them the sister-in-law of slain rebel leader Nestor
    Cerpa -- remained under arrest Monday.
    
    Anti-terrorist police arrested Susana Roque and Rosa Cardenas, whose
    husband is the brother of Cerpa's wife, on Saturday as they left the
    home of the family of Roli Rojas, another of the 14 guerrillas killed
    April 22.
    
    The women were treated "roughly, shouted at and insulted," said
    Ramirez, of the Aprodeh group.
    
    "So far the charge against them is that they were walking in a
    suspicious manner and looked like other people sought by the police,"
    he said. "Their homes have been searched and we have been told that
    nothing was found that justifies their detention."
    
    Ramirez said the two women's detention may be part of police
    "intimidation" to keep relatives of the slain rebels from organizing
    protests.
    
    The Tupac Amaru rebels seized the ambassador's residence on Dec. 17,
    taking hostages and demanding freedom for hundreds of jailed comrades.
    
    La Republica newspaper reported Monday that intelligence agents had
    found Cerpa's diary in burned-out ruins of the residence. An entry
    supposedly made by Cerpa said he had changed his original demand for
    release of more than 400 rebel prisoners -- dropping it down to only
    23.
    
    There was no immediate comment from the government on the report.
7.1540IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:1479
    Romanov Jewels Return to Russians
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The czars' jewels went back to the Russian Embassy
    on Monday after a two-week standoff had kept them locked in a vault at
    the Corcoran Gallery of Art.
    
    There was still no word whether the jewels of the Romanov dynasty would
    continue on to Houston, the next stop in a planned seven-city American
    tour, or return to Russia.
    
    Officials at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts at one point Monday
    afternoon said they had heard the dispute was over and that the jewels
    would come to Texas. But director Peter Marzio later backed off that
    statement, saying he was unsure of the exhibit's status.
    
    In Washington, Mikhail Gusman of the Russian committee that organized
    the tour, said: "There is no agreement yet on whether the exhibit will
    go to Houston or beyond."
    
    Added David C. Levy, the Corcoran's director: "I have a signed
    agreement from the American Russian Cultural Cooperation Foundation and
    from representatives of the Russian government that they both agree to
    the transportation of these jewels today back to the embassy.
    
    "I have no assurances beyond that," Levy said.
    
    Lawyers for the two sides remained in meetings trying to work out a
    deal.
    
    A Corcoran official, speaking only on condition of anonymity, said the
    deal being hammered out at a Washington hotel might result in sending
    the jewels to Houston but to no other American sites.
    
    The diamonds, rubies, court vestments and paintings -- including the
    most extensive collection of crown jewels ever to leave Russia - were
    due to open in an exhibit at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts on May 11.
    
    Future scheduled showings included Memphis, Tenn., and San Diego. Three
    more sites were being negotiated.
    
    But when the exhibit closed April 13 at the Corcoran in downtown
    Washington, a dispute surfaced between Russian authorities and the
    American Russian Cultural Cooperation Foundation, headed by former Rep.
    James W. Symington.
    
    The Russian Embassy demanded that the whole exhibit be returned.
    
    "It's all about money," said one Corcoran official, who spoke on
    condition of anonymity.
    
    For a week, cars from the Russian Embassy blocked a truck loaded with
    part of the exhibit, including gowns, icons, paintings, church
    vestments and other relics of the Romanov empire that ruled Russia for
    304 years.
    
    After a week's negotiations, during which the Russians complained about
    the truck being left on the street in Washington's wet spring weather,
    the truck went back to the embassy.
    
    Levy said he would hold on to the jewels -- locked in his museum's
    vault -- until the parties could reach agreement or a court issued an
    order.
    
    On Monday afternoon, two Brinks trucks pulled into the Corcoran's back
    yard and Levy supervised the loading of five cases of jewels and two
    more cases of equipment.
    
    "Wonderful as these objects are," he told reporters, "they pack up in
    pretty small crates."
    
    During the exhibit's 10 weeks at the Corcoran, 80,000 visitors came to
    see such items as a rattle set with emeralds, rubies and diamonds made
    for the son of Catherine the Great.
    
    None of the items had ever been seen in the United States before,
    including the 70 jewels and uncut gems of the Romanovs, who ruled until
    1917.
7.1541IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 11:1519
    Spice Girls Offend New Zealand
    
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    
    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- The Spice Girls have made New Zealand's
    Maoris red hot by doing a war dance that only men are supposed to
    perform.
    
    The five-member British pop group twice danced the haka during a visit
    to Bali, Indonesia, last week after two New Zealand rugby players
    offered to show them how.
    
    "It is totally inappropriate," said Joe Harawira, a member of Urban
    Maorian Authorities. "It is not acceptable in our culture, and
    especially by girlie pop stars from another culture."
    
    Spice Girls record manager Bart Cools said the artists did not mean to
    mock Maori culture and were only following the rugby players, who
    didn't explain the significance of the dance.
7.1542IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 14:3650
7.1543IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 14:3960
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
                                                        
    Tests on labrador could prove BSE has spread to dogs
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
    
    BRAIN sections from a dog have been sent to Britain by Norwegian
    pathologists to confirm that it is the first example of canine
    spongiform disease, akin to BSE.
    
    The move came as Labour accused the Government of excessive secrecy for
    not publishing results of a 1991 study to investigate the possibility
    of BSE being transferred to dogs.
    
    The 11-year-old labrador suffered nervous symptoms, lack of muscle
    co-ordination and seizures. A post mortem examination showed that its
    brain had a spongiform appearance, said Prof Jon Teige, a pathologist
    at the Norwegian College of Veterinary Medicine in Oslo.
    
    "To our surprise, we saw these lesions in the brain similar to those
    observed in scrapie in sheep and mad cow disease," said Prof Teige. If
    confirmed, it would mark the first example of the disease in a dog.
    
    Samples have had been sent to the Institute of Animal Health's
    neuropathogenesis unit in Edinburgh for a second opinion. "Although
    there are some features of the pathology in common with spongiform
    encephalopathies, a number of other conditions have similar aspects,"
    said Dr Chris Bostock, of the institute.
    
    If confirmed, it is also important to determine if it is the
    spontaneous form of BSE or if the dog had been infected in its diet and
    had a transmissible disease. About 95 per cent of Norway's dog and cat
    food is imported, mainly from Britain. Parts of bovine material, which
    could contain BSE, were removed from the animal food chain in 1990.
    
    Scientists are interested in whether dogs are susceptible but
    confirmation would not change the big picture of BSE, Dr Bostock said.
    Dr Gavin Strang, shadow food minister, yesterday accused Douglas Hogg,
    the Agriculture Minister, of secrecy over BSE research. "This work on
    possible BSE in dogs was funded by the public," he said. "Results
    should have been made public."
    
    The Government ruled out further research on dogs yesterday despite
    disclosures in a report six years ago that there was a possibility that
    they could catch a form of mad cow disease from contaminated food. "It
    is unnecessary," said a spokesman. "There is no threat to human or
    animal health."
    
    Tests six years ago by ministry experts on the brains of 444 hunting
    hounds found some abnormalities called fibrils. However, some brains
    had started to degenerate, making the results ambiguous.
    
    The results were passed to the Spongiform Encephalopathy Advisory
    Committee, which agreed that they were inconclusive and ruled out
    further research because there was no public health issue. "We don't
    eat dogs in Britain," the spokesman said.
    
    Mr Hogg said that the research on dogs and BSE "adds nothing to human
    knowledge" during a tour of the North-East which included a visit to a
    sausage factory in marginal Stockton South.
7.1544IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 14:4259
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
                                             
    Insurance firms seek to 'buy up' NHS beds
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 
    
    PRIVATE health insurers are seeking a deal with NHS hospitals on the
    provision of beds, a leaked document revealed yesterday.
    
    The proposals are awaiting response from NHS trusts, which could give
    "approval" for private health insurance policies. One insurer, Norwich
    Union, confirmed it was waiting to hear the outcome of negotiations
    with the NHS Confederation, which represents health authorities and
    trusts. It said a deal might involve trusts promoting insurance
    products.
    
    A spokesman said yesterday that it was just one of a number of health
    insurers pitching for a deal with the NHS Confederation. She said: "We
    made the proposals around Christmas time and we are now waiting for the
    results." 
    
    The insurers want dedicated access to private beds in NHS hospitals,
    which are cheaper than beds in private hospitals. The document dated
    December 1996 was about discussions insurers had with the now-defunct
    NHS Trust Federation.
    
    Last month the federation merged with the National Association of
    Health Authorities and Trusts to form the NHS Confederation.
    
    But Philip Hunt, chief executive of the Confederation, said yesterday
    that he was not in favour of the confederation promoting private
    medical insurance.
    
    He said the NHS Confederation had not yet had the chance to examine the
    proposals. Earlier discussions with the NHS Trust Federation could not
    be considered "an expression of NHS Confederation policy".
    
    He said: "I have informed the co-chairs of the NHS Confederation that
    in my view it would not be appropriate for the confederation to be
    involved in promoting private medical insurance.
    
    "The key objective the confederation has set itself is to be the
    champion of a comprehensive and publicly funded NHS."
    
    Questioned on BBC Radio 4's World At One programme yesterday, Stephen
    Dorrell, the Health Secretary, appeared to defend the move towards
    commercial ties between hospitals and health insurers. 
    
    He said: "It seems to be an extraordinary definition of a free society
    that says you can buy Mars bars and foreign holidays with your own
    money but you can't buy health insurance. So, of course, I think that
    people should be free to use their own resources to buy healthcare if
    that's what they choose to do."
    
    But Shadow Health Secretary Chris Smith leaped on Mr Dorrell's remarks,
    calling them "disgraceful". Mr Smith said: "No one can doubt that a
    Tory minister who compares the services in the NHS with buying Mars
    bars or foreign holidays is happy to preside over the privatisation of
    our health service."
7.1545IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 14:4739
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
                                      
    Hounds' last bay as stag ban bites
    
    By Sean O'Neill 
    
    THE Quantock Staghounds gathered yesterday for what was likely to have
    been their last meeting. 
    
    The National Trust's decision to ban deer hunting on its land has
    deprived the hunt of 896 acres in the heart of its area. The hunt is
    committed to paying staff for another year, and there is talk of a
    legal challenge to the trust's decision. But at the meet on the lawns
    of Bagborough House, near Taunton, Somerset, there was a resigned air.
    
    "It is the last official meet of the season and it looks bleak for the
    future," said Mal Treharne, spokesman for the British Field Sports
    Society. "A substantial and strategic part of the Quantock Staghounds
    hunt country will be lost. People feel bitter and disappointed.
    
    "Part of the fabric of life on the Quantocks and on Exmoor is being
    destroyed by people sitting in London who do not realise the
    implications of their decision."
    
    Roly Ford, the chairman of the Staghounds, said: "It is the end of an
    era and the ruination of the countryside as we know it. The Quantock
    has been hunting for 80 years and staghunting has been going on for
    generations."
    
    Hunt supporters said the 800-strong deer herd on the Quantocks was in
    better condition than it had been for many years, thanks mainly to the
    hunt's stewardship. They also said that the hunt's pack of 60 hounds
    may have to be destroyed if it has to disband.
    
    Meanwhile, animal rights activists celebrated. John Hicks, of
    International Animal Rescue, said: "It has to be one of the greatest
    days of my life. The deer have gone through terrible suffering. They
    would be better off being shot than undergoing the horrendous suffering
    if hunting continued."
7.1546IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 14:5295
7.1547IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 14:5736
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Boy, 17, gets 9 years for knife killing
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 
    
    A TEENAGER who stabbed another boy to death in a row over cigarette
    papers was ordered to be detained for nine years yesterday.
    
    Richard Horwell, prosecuting, told the Old Bailey earlier that the
    stabbing of Tsoye Abimbola, 15, by Damien Holder, then 16, was "another
    senseless killing on the streets of London, caused in part by youths
    carrying knives".
    
    Geoffrey Nice, QC, for Holder, told Judge Ann Goddard that he "cannot
    be blamed for finding himself in an environment where a lot of life has
    been lost recently".
    
    "He cannot be blamed for finding himself in an environment where
    aggression in action is mistaken for manliness and maturity," he said.
    "He cannot be blamed for finding himself in an environment where the
    carrying of knives is normal."
    
    Passing sentence at the resumed hearing at Middlesex Crown Court
    yesterday, the judge told Holder, now 17: "The first step of carrying a
    knife is one that should not have been taken. The fact is that a boy of
    15 is dead because you killed him with a knife. Knives must not be
    carried."
    
    Holder, an art student, of Queens Park, west London, was cleared of
    murder last month but convicted of manslaughter and remanded for
    reports. His mother wept as sentence was passed.
    
    Police faced considerable difficulty getting teenage witnesses to give
    evidence. One had to be brought to court under a warrant because he
    refused to give evidence after being shunned by his friends.
7.1548IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:0056
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Water meters 'reduce wastage in large homes with gardens'
    
    By A J McIlroy 
    
    PEOPLE living in large homes with gardens use less water after meters
    are installed than those in terrace properties, according to a survey.
    
    Mid Kent Water Company, which supplies 525,000 people with 34 million
    gallons of water each day, reported that while the more affluent
    reduced consumption, metering had not discouraged people on lower
    incomes from using water when they needed it. 
    
    The households - 2,000 in Canterbury and 1,200 in Faversham - have been
    monitored since the company installed meters free of charge four years
    ago. The pilot scheme is to test the social and financial implications
    of metering for the water supply industry.
    
    Mid Kent Water sent its survey and findings to the opinion poll company
    MORI for an independent assessment. MORI said last night: "The metered
    households appear to be quite happy to continue to be charged by
    meter." The survey found that metering had achieved the most
    significant reduction in water consumption among higher rateable
    value-banded properties with gardens.
    
    This led to a 50 per cent reduction in consumption during summer months
    - suggesting that families had been more sensible about using
    sprinklers and garden hoses. Installing water meters in homes at the
    other end of the rateable value bands had led to an initial reduction
    in consumption, followed by a steady increase.
    
    "This suggests that these customers have adapted to metering and that
    this method of charging does not result in customers using less water
    than they need or can afford," the survey said.
    
    Brian Clifford, spokesman for Mid Kent Water, said: "The survey and its
    findings have been examined by the pollsters MORI at our request,
    bearing in mind the importance of metering and criticism in some areas,
    including the Labour party.
    
    "These critics claim that replacing the present system of basing water
    bills on the rateable value bands of property would penalise people in
    lower-banded properties, such as the terrace houses in our survey. The
    survey has shown this is not the case."
    
    Marilyn Reid, of MORI, said last night: "This survey shows that being
    charged by meter has resulted in an increased awareness of the value of
    water and a desire to use it more efficiently and avoid waste. The
    metered households in the survey seem content with the situation and
    quite happy to be charged by meter."
    
    Frank Dobson, shadow environment secretary, said the water supply
    industry should be concentrating not on meters for customers but on
    cutting down on leakages from pipes that were losing 810 million
    gallons of water a day.
7.1549IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:0228
7.1550IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:0334
    
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Victoria's royal retreat goes on show
    
    by Auslan Cramb 
    
    THE public was given a glimpse of Queen Victoria's cottage hideaway at
    Balmoral for the first time as the royal estate opened for the summer
    season yesterday.
    
    The Queen would retreat to Garden Cottage in the grounds of Balmoral to
    write her diaries and would occasionally take breakfast there rather
    than in the formal surroundings of the castle. It was also used by
    tutors when teaching her grandchildren.
    
    The building is occupied by senior staff when the Royal Family is in
    residence and, until yesterday, the blinds had remained closed during
    the tourist season.
    
    Captain Roger Wilson, the estate administrator, said the cottage was an
    interesting new attraction, but that it was too small to allow visitors
    inside. Tourists took turns yesterday to look through the lounge,
    bedroom, bathroom and kitchen windows.
    
    Queen Victoria ordered the cottage to be constructed after an earlier
    wooden building, which was occupied by a gardener, fell into disrepair.
    The building is clad in pine from a nearby native woodland, and
    Victorian furniture made from the same wood has been put back in place.
    The interior is said to be virtually unchanged since it was built in
    1895.
    
    Balmoral estate attracts 80,000 visitors during a three-month season
    each summer.
7.1551IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:0642
7.1552IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:0884
7.1553IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:1477
    
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Saddam turns 60 with sweeteners for suffering subjects
    
    By Anton La Guardia, Middle East Correspondent 
                                                 
    SADDAM Hussein threw himself a massive birthday party yesterday,
    filling Iraq's newspapers and airwaves with lavish praise for his
    strength in standing up to "American tyranny".
    
    The cult of Saddam reached a new intensity as the Iraqi president
    turned 60, his power undiminished despite his crushing military defeat
    in Kuwait and nearly seven years of economic sanctions. Loudspeakers on
    the streets of Baghdad blared out slogans such as: "Blessed be your
    birthday, our beloved leader."
    
    Shebab television, run by Saddam's eldest son, Uday, who narrowly
    survived an assassination attempt last year, renamed itself "Birthday
    Television" for the week-long festivities.
    
    In a country where sugar has been rationed for years, Ba'ath party
    officials in towns and villages throughout the country handed out free
    chocolates and cakes. Tens of thousands of Iraqis paraded in Saddam's
    birthplace of Tikrit, north of Baghdad, shouting the traditional Arab
    cry of loyalty: "With our blood, with our soul, we shall defend you,
    Saddam!"
    
    All Iraqi leaders, except Saddam himself, attended the Tikrit
    celebrations as formations of military jets and helicopter gunships
    flew overhead. Along the main road from Baghdad, tents had been set up
    with cauldrons of free food for well-wishers.
    
    Even though international sanctions were partially lifted at the end of
    last year, allowing Iraq to sell limited quantities of oil under United
    Nations supervision, most Iraqis continue to live in grinding poverty.
    Throughout the sanctions, Saddam has maintained his grandiose public
    image. It is more a manifestation of power than of genuine popularity.
    
    Saddam has turned his survival into a symbol of victory over the
    American super-power. Amid the reams of reports on the birthday
    celebrations and newly-composed paeans to the leader, commentators
    predicted that the day would soon come when sanctions would be entirely
    lifted, whether Washington liked it or not.
    
    Saddam twice defied American-imposed restrictions last month when he
    sent flights of pilgrims to Mecca through the southern no-fly zone.
    They travelled out on a civilian airliner, and back on military
    helicopters. The United States protested, but failed to persuade the UN
    Security Council that it was a violation of the air embargo.
    
    A joint report by the former American presidential security advisers,
    Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, published in Foreign Affairs
    magazine, said international support for sanctions was "fraying". They
    said the United States should consider a narrower form of sanctions to
    retain the support of key allies, such as Britain, France and Turkey.
    With the support of France and Russia, Iraq was able to strike a deal
    last year with the United Nations partially to lift the oil embargo to
    buy food and medicines.
    
    Saddam was also able to regain a foothold in Kurdish-held northern
    Iraq, effectively neutralising the area as a base for opposition forces
    despite allied air patrols.
    
    After years of scouring the country for weapons of mass destruction, UN
    inspectors suspect that Saddam is still hiding part of his armoury,
    including biological weapons. But in the past seven years, there have
    also been times when Saddam seemed close to losing power. As well as
    the assassination attempt on his son, several senior members of the
    ruling clan have defected.
    
    Saddam is a gambler who has repeatedly survived his own mistakes. His
    troops attacked Iran in 1980, expecting an instant victory, and became
    bogged down in a gruelling, eight-year war which Saddam overcame with
    the help of Western and Arab friends. But his allies turned enemies
    when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. Six months later, Iraqi forces were
    driven out by the American-led allied forces.
7.1554IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:1637
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Kennedy 'scandal' girl keeps her silence
    
    By David Sapsted in New York 
    
    POLICE are considering applying for a subpoena to force a statement
    from a girl with whom Michael Kennedy, son of the assassinated senator
    Robert Kennedy, is alleged to have started an affair when she was 14.
    
    Police in Cohasset, Massachusetts, expect to decide this week what
    action, if any, to take over newspaper claims that Mr Kennedy, 39, had
    a five-year affair with the family baby-sitter.
    
    The girl, now 19, has not spoken to police, nor have her wealthy
    parents, neighbours of Mr Kennedy in the affluent Massachusetts
    township. No formal complaint has been made to the police.
    
    Under Massachusetts law, men over 18 who have sex with a girl under 16
    are guilty of statutory rape. "No one is talking," said Brian Noonan,
    the local police chief. "You need witnesses, you need testimony and, so
    far, nobody has given us that."
    
    Mr Kennedy, who ran the re-election campaign of his uncle, Sen Edward
    Kennedy, in 1994, announced last week that he and his wife, Victoria,
    were parting.
    
    The Kennedys have been bedevilled by sex allegations, starting with
    Joseph Kennedy, who had an affair with Gloria Swanson.
    
    The image of President John Kennedy, who was assassinated in 1963, was
    tarnished by rumours of sexual romps - including an affair with Marilyn
    Monroe.
    
    Neither Michael Kennedy's lawyer nor the girl's family would make a
    statement on the allegations, based on statements from neighbours of
    the Kennedys and published in the Boston Globe.
7.1555IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:1727
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Pyramid is discovered near Cairo
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
    
    A FRENCH archaeological team in Egypt has uncovered the incomplete base
    of a pyramid, built for an unknown queen, they say dates back to about
    2300 BC, Egyptian newspapers reported yesterday.
    
    The team from the Louvre, Paris, found the 4,300-year-old mastaba - the
    mudbrick superstructure above the tomb - in Saqqara, south of Cairo,
    and evidence of yet another burial complex nearby, the Egyptian press
    reported.
    
    The discovery is the fifth queen's pyramid found in the pharaonic
    cemetery but the name of the queen is not yet known as the south side
    of the tomb, which is being unearthed, has neither an entrance nor an
    inscription.
    
    The archeologists found the pyramid in the queens' necropolis near the
    Old Kingdom pyramid of Pharaoh Pepi I. The team also found the lintel
    of a door inscribed in hieroglyphics with the name of Queen
    Ankhesen-Pepi, wife of Pepi I and mother of Pepi II, whose 95-year
    reign was the longest in history.
    
    The Saqqara plateau, a huge necropolis, has nearly a hundred pyramids.
7.1556IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:1928
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    New tail in the life of Hale-Bopp
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 
    
    NASA confirmed yesterday an eleventh-hour discovery by astronomers that
    the Hale-Bopp comet possesses a third tail of a composition never seen
    before.
    
    Invisible to the eye, the tail is a glowing yellow and, at one point,
    stretched for seven and a half million miles. 
    
    Hale-Bopp, which will disappear far into the solar system in mid-May,
    has two tails which can be seen on a clear night. But British
    astronomers who flew to the Canary Islands to watch the comet, were
    surprised to discover the third tail when they used a filter over the
    telescope which blocked out most types of light from the comet.
    
    A sighting of the tail, which is composed of sodium atoms, has now been
    confirmed by Nasa's Polar satellite, which usually records the earth's
    aurorae and magnetic field. The discovery could lead to new theories on
    the make-up of comets and how they are affected by the sun.
    
    Hale Bopp's most visible tail is made of dust particles while its
    second, bluish tail is made of charged atoms from the comet's nucleus.
    The third tail is narrower and straighter than a dust tail and points
    in a different direction from the other two.
7.1557IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:2147
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Biblical theory is on shaky ground
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 
    
    ARMAGEDDON, where historic battles were fought and where the Bible
    predicts that good and evil will hold their final struggle, was much
    less of a human battleground than archaeologists have thought, it was
    claimed yesterday.
    
    Archaeologists who have interpreted layers of ruins at the site have
    thought they were the consequence of numerous battles - but they may
    have unearthed the remnants of repeated earthquakes instead, a
    conference was told yesterday .
    
    The Book of Revelations depicts Armageddon as the scene of the conflict
    between good and evil. It is probably set at Harmagedon, or the "hill
    of Megiddo", which lies in Israel in the plain of Esdraelon. According
    to the Old Testament, it was the site which Joshua captured, Solomon
    fortified and where Josiah died. German and American archaeologists
    have spent the last century uncovering layers of different buildings
    which they have attributed to numerous other battles. 
    
    But Dr Amos Nur, geologist at Stanford University in the United States,
    has just completed a seismic study of the area. Using a technique which
    records tiny, unnoticeable earthquakes in the area he was able to
    estimate the frequency of much larger earthquakes.
    
    He says that the site was particularly vulnerable to earthquakes would
    have been prey to "swarming", in which boundaries between two plates of
    the earth's crust can rupture in a series of large earthquakes that
    occur over 50 to 100 years followed by hundreds or even thousands of
    years of inactivity.
    
    Armageddon lies on a fault, which caused its strategic importance as a
    route from Assyria to Egypt and which would have predisposed it to the
    earthquakes.
    
    Dr Nur was addressing the conference, held at the Geological Society of
    London, which discussed the idea that many ancient civilisations were
    toppled more by natural disasters than by war. 
    
    Dr Nur said: "Earthquakes have probably been responsible for some of
    the great and enigmatic catastrophes in ancient times. We can now
    define the boundaries of plates, which allows us to locate earthquakes
    precisely."
7.1558IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:24118
    Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
    
    Think you have nothing to hide?
    
    Never before has it been possible for so much information to be
    gathered on so many of us by so few. Tom Standage highlights the issues
    and explains why we are all affected. 
    
    Q
    Hang on a second. I'm a law-abiding citizen, and I don't even have a
    computer - what does all this have to do with me?
    
    A
    The issue of digital privacy affects everyone, even though it's
    computer users and Internet enthusiasts who tend to make the biggest
    song and dance about it. But new technology makes collecting personal
    information about people as simple as swiping a card, or scanning a bar
    code. When you drive down the street, your car number plate can be
    scanned and recognised. As these technologies infiltrate every aspect
    of our lives, personal information that used to be private and
    anonymous is increasingly recorded on computers. This also makes such
    information easier to analyse, process and exchange.
    
    Q
    So what?
    
    A
    Well, when you buy groceries from a local shop, and pay in cash, that's
    a private transaction. But if you buy the same products from a
    supermarket where you are part of a "loyalty" scheme, details of your
    purchases go into a huge database. Similarly, book a holiday, make a
    telephone call, order a pizza or subscribe to a magazine, and you could
    be leaving a further trail of digital footprints behind you - without
    even realising that you have given anything away about yourself. But
    you have.
    Much of this information is collected for marketing purposes, to figure
    out which products and services you are likely to be interested in
    buying. But it's sometimes hard to say where "personal profiling" ends
    and invasion of privacy begins.
    
    Q
    What's the problem? All it means is that I get a little more junk mail
    than I used to.
    
    A
    True, but there's more and more of this information sloshing around,
    and much of it can be bought and sold, and then combined with other
    information to reveal even more about you. How would you feel if you
    applied for a job, and your prospective employer was able to find out
    your credit-worthiness, how much you spend on alcohol in a typical
    week, how big your overdraft is, and which magazines you subscribe to?
    Just because this information is stored digitally doesn't mean it
    should be any easier to get hold of than it used to be. But very often
    it is.
    
    Q
    Surely there are laws about this sort of thing?
    
    A
    Well, yes, the Data Protection Act does lay down rules about what
    companies can and can't do with personal data. In theory, companies
    that fail to register the fact that they store personal information, or
    fail to comply with the "principles of good information handling
    practice" can be fined. But as last week's warning from the Data
    Protection Registrar showed, many companies operating Web sites seem to
    be unaware of the law. And unless you specifically request otherwise,
    it is in many cases still perfectly legal for companies to buy and sell
    the information you provide. Check the small print next time you fill
    in a form!
    
    Q
    I've nothing to fear, though - there are no skeletons in my closet.
    
    A
    Perhaps you don't mind that records of all the phone calls you make are
    available to the police, or that your medical records might not be as
    confidential as you thought they were. Where would you draw the line,
    though? Would you mind if the police could let themselves into your
    home and look around whenever they felt like it, or if the Post Office
    opened all your mail? You wouldn't accept this in the real world, but
    privacy advocates are concerned that this sort of snooping is all too
    common in the digital realm.
    
    Q
    Yes, but surely police access to my private communications is necessary
    to fight crime?
    
    A
    Of course, there are situations where it is legitimate to infringe upon
    the privacy of some in order to enforce the law for the good of society
    at large. But the danger is that new technologies make it too easy to
    cast the net wider - and technology capable of infringing privacy is
    advancing faster than new safeguards to protect it are being erected.
    Even senior policeman have expressed concern.
    
    Q
    Fair enough. But I am not some lefty-activist why should I be concerned
    about this?
    
    A
    Because many things that used to be private in the real world will no
    longer be private in a digital world. As more and more aspects of our
    lives are conducted using digital technology, the line between public
    and private is consistently being redrawn in favour of - cue scary
    music - big business and the state. Spending money, sending messages,
    and storing information used to be private; they seem set to be
    substantially less private in future. It's a slippery slope, and we're
    already sliding down it.
    
    Q
    So what can we do about it?
    
    A
    There are some measures you can take to protect your privacy. But what
    is needed most of all is an informed debate, to put these issues under
    wider public scrutiny. If we do nothing, the degree of personal privacy
    we enjoy today will diminish as more and more aspects of our lives move
    into the digital realm.
7.1559IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 15:2886
    Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
                                   
    Truth is you've nowhere to hide
    
    Michael McCormack finds out how easily the private details of his life
    can be stripped bare 
    
    All life is there for the taking on the Internet - at least in the view
    of technological Cassandras, who fear that it is becoming a digital Big
    Brother, a storehouse of personal and financial details accessible at
    the touch of a button, enabling snoops to compile dossiers on
    individual Net users.
    
    To test the Internet's utility as a source of personal information,
    Connected set an unusual challenge. We asked an experienced private
    investigator to run his professional eye over my life while I hunted
    for evidence of myself on the Internet. We each had two hours to work
    and were given the same starting information: my full name and date of
    birth.
    
    At the sound of Edinburgh's one o'clock gun, we both leapt into action.
    While the investigator, who preferred not to be named, began working
    the phones at his office, I wasted five minutes trying to get connected
    to my service provider.
    
    Search engines seemed a logical place to start looking for information
    about myself but their return was disappointing. AltaVista and Yahoo!
    between them could uncover only a handful of references to me on the
    Web and little more from the Usenet. DejaNews looked a bonanza, finding
    more than 500 references on what I thought was a tightly specified
    search.
    
    On closer inspection, I made my first self-discovery: I share a surname
    with a maker of high-end audio equipment, and both names with an Irish
    author (a distant cousin) and a compulsive American Usenet poster with
    an unhealthy interest in volleyball scores.
    
    Careful pruning brought me the first facts about myself. From Usenet
    postings a browser could learn that I work as a reporter, that I have
    engaged in several nasty public spats with computer hackers, and that I
    live in Edinburgh.
    
    Knowing that, I turned to online newspaper archives, looking for
    first-person features that might hold the key to my quarry. I hit
    paydirt: browsing my cuttings, I learned that I have Crohn's disease,
    I've received extreme unction, I have strong opinions on lab research
    on animals (I love it), I make bad puns in Latin and I smoke up to 12
    Marlboros a day.
    
    With time running out, I gave up on facts and started looking for
    probabilities. The only paper outside Britain that archives my writing
    is the Toronto Globe and Mail - perhaps I'm Canadian? Seventy per cent
    of my archived work deals with technology, another 20 with business,
    the last 10 with sport and modern art, so I appear to be a typical
    freelance: one speciality and a couple of private interests.
    
    Almost exactly two hours after the gun sounded, my fax hums with the
    private investigator's findings. They are impressively detailed. Page
    one has my correct address, age, unmarried status, lack of a criminal
    record, my National Insurance number and the fact that I own property
    in Scotland. Page two raises eyebrows: it holds the balances of my
    three bank accounts and notes that I hold one credit card and two store
    accounts. It also comments that I have a - so far - unblemished credit
    record and have negotiated one loan which I'm still paying off and two
    overdraft increases.
    
    Time to call the PI. "Very easy stuff to find out," he comments. "I got
    your phone number from Directory Enquiries and found your address in
    the phone book. Your property ownership is publicly registered and the
    rest came from your banking records. You're not on the local police
    files but you are known to them as a reporter. There's plenty more I
    could find out but not in two hours on a busy afternoon."
    
    How does an investigator get a look at my banking records? Like most in
    his profession, our PI refused to be drawn on specifics but offered
    this general statement: "Anyone who needs information probably has
    information. Banks, insurance companies, lawyers and many businesses
    occasionally need help tracking someone down and they turn to
    investigators to do that. I would have thought the quid pro quo would
    be fairly obvious."
    
    So forget Big Brother, think big network. The Internet's role as a
    conduit of information from disparate sources is already being filled,
    albeit through informal channels that should raise hackles at the Data
    Protection Registrar. What the Net promises, a good PI can deliver
    faster.
7.1560IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 16:22196
7.1561IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue Apr 29 1997 16:2566
    Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 29 April 1997 Issue 704
                                        
    Palm readers to aid airport security
    
    Robert Uhlig on a device to aid Customs officials
    
    Passengers could soon be monitored at airport passport control by using
    a credit card and pressing their palm on a security scanner.
    
    FastGate, an automated passenger clearance system, has been installed
    at Bermuda International Airport. It will be in full use within four
    weeks.
    
    International airports in Europe, North America and Asia are likely to
    be using the system next year, according to Jeff Mortner, in charge of
    worldwide operations for FastGate at its maker, IBM.
    
    "We have been talking to the authorities in all the major travel
    destinations, including at Heathrow," Mortner said.
    
    "It needs the co-operation of the government, the airport and the
    airlines, but Customs officials like it because it lets them
    concentrate on those passengers who are the biggest threat."
    
    Last year, the Airports Council International reported that more than
    400 million travellers crossed international borders at the world's
    busiest airports. That figure is expected to top 500 million by 2000.
    
    Automated systems can quickly process frequent flyers and other
    passengers seen as "low risk", leaving Customs and immigration officers
    to concentrate on "high risk" passengers.
    
    When travellers first use FastGate at an airport they place their hand
    on a biometric sensor - a scanning device that records the dimensions
    of their palms.
    
    A standard credit card, frequent flyer card or an issued FastGate card
    is placed in a machine similar to a cash dispenser. The hand dimensions
    are stored in a computer database at the airport, and, from that point
    on, called up whenever the card is placed in the immigration machine.
    
    Personal information, such as name, address, date of birth and passport
    number, is also stored on the card, either in advance by the card
    issuer or by the traveller when he first uses the system. The airport
    then builds a database of illegal immigrants, criminals or other
    undesirables.
    
    The checking process takes around 15 seconds. A "clean" passenger can
    then pass through a turnstile similar to those used at Undergound
    stations.
    
    The system can be tailored to use other biometric characteristics, such
    as fingerprints or voice prints. However, hand geometry is not
    considered to infringe personal privacy.
    
    Hand shapes contain enough information to verify a person's identity,
    but not enough detail to be used to find an individual in an automated
    search.
    
    Each hand geometry record is stored in only 10 bytes, which makes the
    system fast and efficient, but limits its use by police forces to
    cross-check against crime records.
    
    The system's only blind spot is for a traveller who gains or loses more
    than 100 pounds between two trips to one airport. "In that case you go
    back to showing your passport to an official," said Mortner.
7.1562IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 11:59108
    AP Top News at 2 a.m. EDT 
    
    Thursday, May 1, 1997 2:07 am EDT 
    
    BRITAIN ELECTION 
    
    LONDON (AP) -- Britain's six-week election campaign ends with the
    national election Thursday. Tony Blair's Labor party ended the campaign
    with a fat lead in the polls, while Prime Minister John Major tried to
    convince voters there was still hope for his Conservatives. Throughout
    the campaign the polls have shown a strong tide running against a
    Conservative Party that has won the last four elections and
    dramatically changed the British political landscape since Margaret
    Thatcher's first win in 1979. 
    
    ELLEN 
    
    NEW YORK (AP) -- Reaction from gays and lesbians to the closet-exiting
    episode of ``Ellen'' ran the gamut from pride and excitement to
    complaints that the move was a cynical ratings ploy. For many across
    the country, the show Wednesday night in which the title character
    announced she was gay was grounds for celebration. The parties came
    after months of will-she-or-won't-she reports about both Ellen
    DeGeneres and her sitcom character, Ellen Morgan, who now becomes the
    first homosexual leading character in a television series. DeGeneres
    made her own announcement that she is gay in a Time magazine cover
    story. 
    
    TOBACCO 
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Cigarette makers want a federal appeals court to
    reconsider a North Carolina judge's ruling that the Food and Drug
    Administration can regulate tobacco. Meanwhile, talks aimed at settling
    litigation against cigarette makers are set to resume Monday in Dallas.
    Those talks remain in very early stages, but Mississippi Attorney
    General Michael Moore prepared to head for Congress Thursday to brief
    lawmakers who would have to put any deal into legislation. Attorneys
    deny the White House itself was negotiating, but acknowledged that any
    settlement will have to have the administration's imprimatur. 
    
    INTERNET NAMES 
    
    GENEVA (AP) -- A new system of Internet addresses likely will be in
    place by summer, even though some companies and governments aren't yet
    ready to sign on. An international agreement to be signed, at least by
    some, on Thursday has two main features -- to replace the single
    American company that can register Internet addresses with an unlimited
    number of companies worldwide, and to double the possible number of
    names that can be used for Internet ``sites.'' 
    
    CLINTON-LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton borrowed the words of Thomas
    Jefferson as he opened the newly renovated Library of Congress
    Wednesday night in time for its 100th anniversary. Clinton read from
    Jefferson's original draft of the Declaration of Independence to an
    audience gathered in the library's main room. The president joined an
    evening celebration in the library's Thomas Jefferson Building to mark
    the library's centennial and unveil the ornate paintings, sculptures
    and mosaics that have been meticulously restored to help the building
    appear as it did when it first opened Nov. 1, 1897. 
    
    McVEIGH 
    
    DENVER (AP) -- The woman who testified that Timothy McVeigh confided
    his plans to blow up the Oklahoma City federal building was portrayed
    Wednesday by defense lawyers as a drug-using liar who changed her story
    to save her own skin. In a cross-examination of Lori Fortier, attorney
    Stephen Jones sought not only to discredit one of the government's star
    witnesses but to suggest she shared blame in the deadliest terrorist
    attack on U.S. soil. She had testified that six months before the
    bombing, McVeigh divulged plans to blow up the building to avenge the
    deadly government siege at Waco, Texas. 
    
    LABOR SECRETARY 
    
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Alexis Herman won Senate confirmation Wednesday as
    labor secretary. Republicans removed a hold on the nomination after
    President Clinton agreed to drop plans to issue an executive order
    telling federal agencies to consider awarding construction contracts to
    unionized companies. Herman was approved 85-13. 
    
    SEPARATIST STANDOFF 
    
    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Rangers arrested seven men Wednesday who
    apparently were driving to the Republic of Texas compound. Weapons were
    found in one of the vehicles, police said. Members of the Republic of
    Texas secessionist group, which claims that Texas was illegally annexed
    to the United States in the 19th century, have been in a standoff with
    police since Sunday. Group members had issued a call for sympathizers
    to join them. 
    
    MARKETS 
    
    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar is trading at 127.09 yen at midday Thursday,
    up 0.17. The Nikkei jumped 310.63 points to close the morning session
    at 19,461.75. On Wall Street, the Dow closed up 46.96 points at
    7,008.99. 
    
    BULLS-BULLETS 
    
    LANDOVER, Md. (AP) -- Michael Jordan brought the Chicago Bulls back
    from a nine-point deficit in the closing minutes before Scottie Pippen
    sank a driving dunk with 7.4 seconds left Wednesday night for a 96-95
    win and a three-game sweep of the Washington Bullets. 
    
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
    
7.1563IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0070
    RTw  01-May-97 04:05    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - U.S. envoy Bill Richardson said Zaire's President Mobutu
    Sese Seko and rebel leader Laurent Kabila would hold their first
    face-to-face meeting on a South African navy ship in the Atlantic. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Opposition Labour Party leader Tony Blair toured Britain,
    fighting for every last vote even though eve-of-election opinion polls
    gave him a commanding lead over Prime Minister John Major. 

    - - - - 

    GENEVA - Hiroshi Nakajima, chief of the World Health Organisation and a
    frequent target for Western criticism, said he would step down next
    year when his current mandate runs out. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW, May 1 (Reuter) - May Day opposition rallies across Russia are
    expected to call for the resignation of President Boris Yeltsin, who
    has unexpectedly returned to Moscow from a holiday on the Black Sea,
    blaming bad weather. 

    - - - - 

    DUSHANBE - Tajik President Imomali Rakhmonov survived an assassination
    attempt which killed two people and injured 60, his spokesman said. 

    - - - - 

    SELIZE, Albania - At least 27 people were killed, 12 of them children,
    when they triggered a blast while looting an underground Albanian
    military weapons store outside Tirana , police said. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - French far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen said he had decided
    against running in France's snap parliamentary election, but denied he
    was shying away for fear of defeat. 

    PARIS - France's centre-right government trumpeted a dip in
    unemployment ahead of a snap parliamentary election, but opposition
    Socialist leader Lionel Jospin said the statistics were rigged. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania's two main parties met formally for the first time
    since they joined an interim government, but failed to agree on the
    form of early elections called to halt the slide towards chaos. 

    - - - - 

    FORT DAVIS, Texas - Communications with an armed separatist group holed
    up in a mountain compound in Texas have broken down with no agreement
    to end a four-day-old standoff with police, authorities said. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - The lawyer for accused bomber Timothy McVeigh lashed into a
    key prosecution witness but she stuck to her testimony that McVeigh
    told her he wanted to destroy the Oklahoma City federal building in an
    act of revenge against the government. REUTER

    REUTER
7.1564IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0083
    RTw  01-May-97 07:03    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Britain's Big Ben grinds to halt on election eve 

    LONDON - Big Ben -- which towers over the House of Commons and whose
    chimes are known around the world -- ground to a halt on the eve of the
    British election. 

    "It was just a one-off. The problem was in the mechanical workings, but
    it wasn't a long or difficult job to tighten up a bearing," said a
    spokeswoman for the House of Commons. 

    Had the 139-year-old clock stopped on Thursday, when British voters are
    expected to bring in a Labour government after 18 years of Conservative
    rule, questions might have been asked. 

    - - - - 

    Coins block bullet, save Brazilian vendor 

    SAO PAULO - A Brazilian lottery ticket vendor said he owed his life to
    his faith in God and four small coins he was carrying in a breast
    pocket, which blocked a bullet fired by a man trying to rob his store. 

    "These coins are blessed," said Raimundo Dias Carneiro, a middle-aged
    vendor in Belo Horizonte. 

    Carneiro, holding the four dented coins in his palm, told TV Globo that
    two armed men approached a booth where he sells lottery tickets and
    said they wanted his money. Carneiro told the men not to shoot but when
    he opened the door to let them in, one fired his pistol. 

    Fortunately, the bullet struck the coins, preventing it from entering
    Carneiro's body. He pushed the two men into his booth and ran into the
    street. Both men were later arrested by police. 

    - - - - 

    Air unions demand action against unruly passengers 

    WASHINGTON - Unruly, often intoxicated passengers are causing dangerous
    inflight disturbances and the problem is likely to worsen as airplanes
    and airports become more crowded, pilots and flight attendants said. 

    The cockpit and cabin crews called on unions, companies, law
    enforcement agencies and the Federal Aviation Administration to join
    together to take tough action. 

    They told a conference on Disruptive Airline Passengers that incidents
    included passengers assaulting pilots, trying to break into a cockpit,
    punching flight attendants and, in one extreme case, a passenger
    defecating on a food trolley. 

    - - - - 

    Sun helps butterflies navigate, study shows 

    LONDON - Scouts and sailors may pride themselves on their abilities to
    navigate using the sun, but butterflies can do it too, scientists
    reported. 

    Tests on Monarch butterflies showed they used the sun as a compass when
    flying the 4,000 km (2,400 miles) from their autumn breeding grounds in
    the eastern United States south to Mexico. 

    Sandra Perez of the University of Arizona and colleagues at the
    University of Kansas threw off the internal body clocks of some
    butterflies by keeping them in the dark. 

    By running with the butterflies, holding a compass, researchers proved
    their intervention had thrown the butterflies off track by exactly the
    amount expected. 

    REUTER
7.1565IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0031
    RTw  01-May-97 06:31    

    HK police probe 11 bridge workers over sabotage

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    HONG KONG, May 1 (Reuter) - Police are investigating 11 workmen after
    Hong Kong's showpiece Tsing Ma bridge was vandalised a week before its
    grand opening by former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher,
    police said on Thursday. 

    Cables under the road level of the world's longest road-rail suspension
    bridge were found to have been slashed in 32 places, but the damage did
    not stop Thatcher cutting the ribbon at a gala inauguration last
    Sunday. 

    A police spokesman said the 11, all Hong Kong residents, were arrested
    on Wednesday on suspicion of sabotage and later freed on bail of HK$200
    (US$25.80) each pending further inquiries and possible further charges. 

    "They were all former workers at the bridge. They had a dispute with
    their boss and had been sacked," the spokesman said. "They are
    suspected of being involved in damaging the bridge." 

    He declined to disclose further details, saying. "Enquiries are still
    ongoing." 

    The bridge connects Hong Kong to its new offshore Chek Lap Kok airport,
    due to open next April. 

    REUTER
7.1566IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:00108
    RTw  01-May-97 03:50    

    FEATURE-Stuffy wool looks for lighter image

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
 
    By James Regan 

    PERTH, Australia, May 1 (Reuter) - Sleeping with the enemy, wok oil and
    weight loss are all part of an Australian drive to put more wool back
    into the wardrobes of the world's fashion buyers. 

    Faced with changing fashion, reluctance among consumers to splash out
    on a new suit and a public perception that wool is hot and heavy, the
    wool industry is looking to lighten up. 

    Rather than maintain an attack on man-made alternatives, fashion houses
    are now being encouraged to weave lycra and polyesters into their wool
    clothes, reducing the weight of some garments and providing "extra
    bounce." 

    According to Ian Hilton, planning director of the International Wool
    Secretariat (IWS), high-quality wool garments can now contain up to
    three percent man-made fibres. 

    "Combining wool with the modernity of lycra is a very comfortable
    marrriage," Hilton told Reuters. 

    In fact Australian sheep farmers are being encouraged to breed finer
    wools for textiles, unlike their rivals in New Zealand who are known
    for growing thick wools used in carpets. 

    TOUGH ECONOMIC TIMES 

    High unemployment in the traditionally big wool apparel buying markets
    of Germany and France have kept a cap on new purchases, while U.S.
    consumers remain keen on cotton. 

    In tough economic times, the first things that go are clothes
    purchases, said Hilton, adding that prices paid for general apparel
    have been falling steadily in major markets. 

    In Germany, more than half the clothes sold last year could only be
    moved at a discount, while in the United States the figure was closer
    to 60 percent, he said. 

    TRADE-IN OLD SUITS 

    In one of the more far-reaching bids to boost wool sales, consumers in
    Japan are encouraged to "trade in" their old wool suits for a discount
    of up to five percent on a new one. 

    "Wool has fantastic absorbency," said Hilton, adding the worn-out
    garments are ideal for soaking up oil used in traditional East Asian
    wok cooking. 

    A trend that started in the United States in the late 1980s of more
    casual office work clothes hurt the wool industry at every level.
    Traditional grey flannels and blue suits were replaced by open collars
    and cotton khaki trousers. 

    But there are signs people are dressing more formally for work again. 

    "Right now the trends is toward a more dressed up look," the product
    director of Giorgio Armani in Australia, Massimo Biscuola, said. 

    Sales of Armani's "Classico" brand 100 percent fine wool suits are
    rising as are other men's wool garments, he said. 

    "The more classic the suit, the better it is and that means pure wool,"
    he said. 

    WOOL COMFORTS 

    Comfort also plays a big role in consumer buying patterns. 

    Hilton said research in 11 countries showed that 72 percent of
    consumers wanted their clothes to be soft next to the skin. About 65
    percent sought garments made from natural fibres and 50 percent wanted
    clothes to be lighter weight. 

    Levis Straus and Co is weaving more wool into its upmarket "Slates"
    line and there's talk of wool in blue jeans. "That would be a wool
    grower's dream come true," Hilton said. 

    An upward trend in wool consumption is good news for Australia, the
    world's largest wool producer. 

    IWS data shows Australia's exports of wool between last July and
    January were up 21 percent in volume and five percent in value,
    compared with the same period a year earlier. 

    In Britain, wool apparel sales were up 13 percent last year and this
    year's sales should be even better, Hilton said. 

    The Australian industry has been shouldering the weight of a huge
    supply overhang of some 1.8 billion bales of wool since the collapse of
    the former Soviet Union, which once accounted for 20 percent of
    Australian wool purchases. 

    But those stocks are now receding, signalling higher wool prices could
    be on the way. Prices are up 10 percent this year. 

    "As raw wool stocks in Australia recede, the world supply of wool fibre
    will become much tighter and there is likely to be pressure for an
    upward correction in prices toward the end of the decade," Hilton said. 

    REUTER
7.1567IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0068
    RTw  01-May-97 00:43    

    New minute capsules offer better drug delivery

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, April 30 (Reuter) - U.S. researchers said on Wednesday they had
    developed an improved way to deliver drugs into the body using tiny
    cell-like bags. 

    The minute bags, which the researchers call "vesosomes," are based on
    technology that mimics cell structure. One expert said the method could
    be used to ensure better cancer treatment. 

    Normal cells are surrounded by a double layer of molecules known as
    lipids -- the components of fat. 

    Scientists have tried to mimic the way the body works by using
    vesicles, tiny artificial cell-like structures which have a dual lipid
    layer that can keep material inside. 

    The idea is that the little bags can get through the cell membrane to
    deliver a drug right where it is needed. 

    Joseph Zasadzinski and colleagues at the University of California,
    Santa Barbara said had they found a way to make the vesicles roll up
    inside a larger membrane known as a cochleate cylinder in what they
    called a "simple" process. 

    This creates, in essence, a set of bags inside a bag. Such a vesosome
    could be used to carry several different drugs at once in a standard
    drip such as those used in cancer chemotherapy. 

    "The compartmentalised vesosomes could provide vehicles for
    multi-component or multi-functional drug delivery," Zasadzinski's group
    wrote in a report in the journal Nature. 

    They said the vesosome could help make the system more permeable, or be
    used to make it more biocompatible with the body. 

    "Many of the recent advances in vesicle-based drug delivery can be
    incorporated into the vesosome structure," they wrote. 

    The process needed to be made more efficient, they added -- it only
    worked in about five to 15 percent of tries. 

    "This level is clearly good enough to show the general technique works,
    but probably not good enough to do economical drug delivery," they
    added. 

    Danilo Lasic of Liposome Consultations in Newark, California said the
    technology could be important in treating cancer, for example, by
    better targeting the toxic drugs used to fight tumours. 

    "Although the main goal was to decrease the leakage of encapsulated
    agents, their work is also an elegant way to encapsulate larger
    particles such as proteins or nucleic acids into liposomes -- a major
    problem for many applications," Lasic wrote in a commentary on the
    work. 

    "Moreover, vesicles with different functionalities can be combined in
    this structure. The larger liposome might deliver a load of highly
    active, smaller liposomes, perhaps containing highly toxic drugs, to a
    specific site, thus sparing other tissues from any side-effects." 

    REUTER
7.1568IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0030
    RTw  30-Apr-97 23:35    

    UK killer's watch sold for seven-times estimate

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, April 30 (Reuter) - A pocket watch that belonged to one of
    Britain's most notorious murderers, Dr Hawley Crippen, was sold for
    10,350 pounds ($16,840) on Wednesday, seven times its estimated price,
    auctioneers Christie's said. 

    David Gainsborough Roberts, a collector of crime artefacts bought the
    watch, an American Walthalm made of gilt metal, over the telephone
    after "frantic bidding," Christie's said. 

    Crippen gave the watch to his mistress, Ethel Le Neve, shortly before
    he was executed in 1910 for murdering his wife. 

    He had buried his wife's remains in the cellar of his home in Hilldrop
    Crescent, London and was caught trying to flee to the United States
    with Le Neve, who was dressed as a boy. 

    He was arrested on board ship after a radio message, making him the
    first criminal to be caught by radio. 

    "I collect a lot of crime-related items but Crippen is of particular
    interest as my mother was born only 100 yards (metres) away, and my
    uncle lived next door," Gainsborough Roberts said. 

    REUTER
7.1569IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:00117
    AP 1-May-1997 1:25 EDT   REF5527

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Secessionists Break Off Negotiations

    By MARK BABINECK

    Associated Press Writer

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- The leader of the holed-up Texas
    secessionists broke off negotiations just when it seemed a surrender
    was in sight, a state official said Wednesday as the standoff in the
    mountains reached its fourth day. 

    "For those of you who are not from Texas, we have a little expression
    here: 'Sometimes a wheel falls off.' Unfortunately, we've lost a
    wheel," said Mike Cox, spokesman for the Department of Public Safety. 

    Meanwhile, seven men carrying a variety of weapons were arrested as
    they apparently headed to Fort Davis to join the armed standoff. Three
    of them had Republic of Texas membership cards. And a sheriff said he
    thought more members of the secessionist group were on their way. 

    An agreement with the Republic of Texas group to end the siege had been
    drafted Tuesday night, but no final deal was signed, Cox said, refusing
    to provide details. As of Wednesday evening, nothing had been heard
    from Richard McLaren, leader of the group, Cox said. 

    McLaren's attorney Terry O'Rourke said authorities cut off power to the
    trailer McLaren calls his "embassy." Cox refused to discuss the state's
    tactics, saying that "the most important thing is for us to hear from
    Mr. McLaren. We can't make any progress at all until he gives us a
    call." 

    Earlier, O'Rourke told reporters that he hadn't talked to his client
    since Tuesday night, but he believed the agreement was still intact. He
    said he had prepared documents that were to be delivered to McLaren's
    headquarters. 

    "Here in Texas you don't have to sign agreements to have a deal. I
    would say that there's an understanding. And here, you know, they say a
    handshake is a deal and your word is your bond," he said. 

    Cox said authorities might be willing to allow a face-to-face meeting
    between McLaren and his attorney. 

    "Our bottom line is to get a peaceful solution," Cox said. "I am not
    guaranteeing anything, but we are certainly going to listen to
    reasonable requests ... We can't do anything until we hear from them." 

    O'Rourke said McLaren is not seeking diplomatic immunity but wants a
    hearing in federal court, although he faces state charges. Noting that
    Thursday was designated as a national day of prayer, O'Rourke also
    asked that people "say a prayer that peace works out." 

    Cox would not discuss methods negotiators were using to contact
    McLaren, but he did say they had exchanged faxes. McLaren's web site,
    which had been updated daily, was no longer accessible after Wednesday
    morning. 

    The standoff in the Davis Mountains, 175 miles southeast of El Paso,
    began Sunday after members of the Republic of Texas took two neighbors
    hostage in retaliation for the arrests of two followers. 

    Both hostages were released Monday in exchange for one of the jailed
    followers, a man arrested on weapons charges. The other follower, a
    woman, remained jailed on two contempt charges. 

    Cox said 13 people -- all adults -- are believed holed up in McLaren's
    trailer, including at least two women. He said authorities are
    interested only in the six members who had been charged with kidnapping
    or other offenses in the hostage-taking. 

    "This is not the Alamo. This is not San Jacinto. And I'm not Davy
    Crockett," Cox said. "We're just a state law enforcement agency trying
    to bring some folks to justice who need to get their day in court." 

    Nearly 100 state and federal officers stationed in the area were
    reinforced by two armored personnel carriers that were moved into place
    on Tuesday. Bloodhounds and horses were brought in on Wednesday. 

    The seven men arrested Wednesday were picked up at a truck stop near
    Pecos, 70 miles from Fort Davis. 

    Officers searching their vehicle found five semiautomatic rifles, one
    shotgun, one .45-caliber pistol and several hunting knives, said Texas
    Ranger Sgt. Steve Foster. They also had ammunition, military rations,
    fatigues, medical supplies and marijuana. 

    Officers had a theft warrant for one of the seven men. No immediate
    charges were filed against the six others. 

    Reeves County Sheriff Arnulfo Gomez said he believes more members of
    the group are coming because people identifying themselves as Republic
    members had been calling his office. 

    "I know they're headed this way. I'm hoping there's no confrontation,"
    Gomez said. 

    The Republic of Texas, which has splintered into three factions, claims
    Texas was illegally annexed by the United States and wants a statewide
    referendum on independence. 

    The leader of one of the other factions said he's considering reuniting
    with McLaren's group in light of the standoff. 

    "Texans are like any family," said Archie Lowe, president of one of the
    factions. "Every day I would fight with my brothers, but you don't let
    the guy come from next door and hit him." 

    Richard Johnson, leader of the other faction, said he won't support
    McLaren under any circumstances. 

    McLaren's group is willing to consider a truce, said his spokeswoman,
    Jeanette Kinman: "If they want to reunite, that's great. We have to
    work together." 
7.1570IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0127
    AP 1-May-1997 0:45 EDT   REF5330

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Charged for Shooting Squirrel

    EDGEWATER, Fla. (AP) -- A man was charged with cruelty to animals for
    allegedly shooting a squirrel to death with a bow and arrow after he
    saw it eating his tomatoes, guavas and papayas. 

    Sammie Parris, 67, was arrested after a neighbor called police to say
    he saw him trying to catch the squirrel as it climbed a tree. 

    "The squirrel had an arrow through it," the neighbor said in a written
    statement. 

    Parris said Tuesday his lawyer told him he was within his rights to
    destroy the squirrel as long as the animal was on his property. 

    Lt. Joy Hill of the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission said
    it isn't illegal to destroy a squirrel on private property if the
    animal is being destructive. But Robin Feger, an Edgewater animal
    control officer, said Parris was charged because of the cruel way in
    which the animal was killed. 

    Parris, who was arrested Friday, was released after posting $1,000
    bond. 
7.1571IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0163
    AP 1-May-1997 0:13 EDT   REF5156

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Women Get Mixed Messages

    By MICHELLE DeARMOND

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- On television, in the movies and in ads, men are
    more likely to be working while most women are preoccupied with romance
    and their looks, according to a study released Wednesday. 

    The analysis of entertainment and advertising frequently showed women
    as intelligent and good problem-solvers, but focusing heavily on dating
    and romance, the survey showed. 

    Random telephone interviews with 1,200 children aged 10-17 showed the
    children agreed with the conclusions, according to the groups that
    released the survey: Children Now, an advocacy group, and the Kaiser
    Family Foundation, a nonprofit health care philanthropy, 

    "What we're learning is that they're getting both some really positive
    images and also some messages that are limiting, and there's little
    doubt that this is part of the overall fabric of expectations that
    girls grow up with," said Lois Salisbury, president of Children Now. 

    The groups looked at several top-rated television shows, movies, three
    weeks of top 20 music videos and several issues of leading teen
    magazines in fall 1996 for the study. 

    They found that 41 percent of male television characters and 60 percent
    of men in the movies were shown at work, compared to 35 percent of
    women in the movies and 28 percent of female television characters. 

    Nearly two-thirds of female characters on television and movies talked
    about romantic relationships, while only 38 percent of male characters
    in movies and 49 percent in television talked about romance or dating. 

    The study will be presented at a conference entitled "Reflections of
    Girls in the Media" at the Los Angeles Public Library, where
    entertainment executives are meeting this week. 

    In the survey of boys and girls conducted in the first week of April,
    seven out of 10 girls said yes when asked if they have ever wanted to
    look like a television character. Only four out of 10 boys said they
    wanted to look like a television character. 

    "The media is a powerful tool to reinforce negative stereotypes or
    present strong role models for young girls and boys," said Matt James,
    senior vice president of the Kaiser Family Foundation. 

    Meredith Masters, 13, said it's difficult to find positive role models
    in the industry. 

    "I don't want to end up like a lot of women on TV," she said. "It's
    really confusing. Here in school they say go out there and be
    successful, but on TV we see women who have to pull their skirts up to
    get anything." 

    The survey of boys and girls had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5
    percentage points. It was conducted by Lake Sosin Snell & Associates. 
7.1572IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0154
    AP 1-May-1997 0:12 EDT   REF5144

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ill. Judge Censured for Misconduct

    By SANDRA SKOWRON

    Associated Press Writer

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -- Illinois' Supreme Court chief justice was
    censured for misconduct Wednesday for trying to use his position to
    avoid traffic tickets. 

    The Illinois Courts Commission said Chief Justice James Heiple, who
    wrote the controversial "Baby Richard" adoption ruling, had created a
    pattern of misconduct that "brought the judicial office into
    disrepute." 

    Heiple is in a three-year term as chief justice. 

    The censure is not expected to derail an impeachment investigation by
    the Illinois House. If impeached, the Senate would put Heiple on trial. 

    In a statement, Heiple said he was disappointed but accepted the
    censure "with humility." 

    "I apologize to the Supreme Court of Illinois, to the police officers
    for whom my conduct was troublesome and especially to the citizens of
    Illinois, who rightfully expect that their judges will conduct
    themselves in a manner befitting their position as public servants. I
    will continue to endeavor to do just that," Heiple said. 

    Of the options before the courts commission, censure was the second
    least serious. The lightest punishment would have been a reprimand, but
    the commission also could have suspended Heiple or even removed him
    from office. 

    The courts commission ruled Heiple should have known that telling
    police he was a justice or flashing his court identification would be
    perceived as an attempt to use his office to keep from being charged. 

    Heiple was charged in January 1996 with resisting arrest for driving
    away from police officers who stopped him on suspicion of drunken
    driving. He pleaded guilty to speeding and disobedience to police. 

    A state inquiry subsequently found that Heiple had evaded speeding
    tickets three times between 1992 and 1996 by flashing his judicial
    identification to the police officers who stopped him. 

    Heiple stirred controversy as the author of the 1994 decision in the
    case of Baby Richard, a 4-year-old boy who the state Supreme Court
    ordered taken from his adoptive parents and handed over to his
    biological father, whom the boy had never met. 
7.1573IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0140
    AP 30-Apr-1997 21:37 EDT   REF6050

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Six More Men Sue 'Frugal Gourmet'

    TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -- "Frugal Gourmet" chef Jeff Smith has been sued by
    six more men who say he molested them when they were teen-agers. 

    Smith, who already faces lawsuits by two other men, denied the
    allegations through his lawyer. The 58-year-old TV host, cookbook
    author and ordained minister has not been charged with any crime. 

    Smith's show is carried by Public Broadcasting Service stations across
    the country. 

    "The allegations are serious ones. We're monitoring their course
    through the courts and will take appropriate action if warranted," PBS
    spokesman Stu Kantor said Wednesday from Alexandria, Va. 

    Kantor said he was unaware of any local stations dropping "Frugal
    Gourmet" because of the allegations. 

    In the latest lawsuit, filed Tuesday, five men seek unspecified damages
    for what they say were sexual assaults in the 1970s. The men were then
    teen-agers, working at Smith's Chaplain's Pantry restaurant in Tacoma. 

    A sixth man and his parents also joined the suit, saying a drunken
    Smith raped him after picking him up as a hitchhiker in 1992. The man
    was then 14. 

    Smith has also denied similar allegations by two other men who used to
    work at the restaurant. The first case is scheduled for trial next
    January. 

    In all three lawsuits, Smith is accused of offering to pay $3 million
    to two men about five years ago to buy their silence. 

    The statute of limitations for filing criminal charges has run out in
    all of the cases. 
7.1574IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0136
    AP 30-Apr-1997 19:51 EDT   REF6009

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Developments in McVeigh Trial

    By The Associated Press

    WITNESS ATTACKED: Timothy McVeigh's attorney attacked star prosecution
    witness Lori Fortier, portraying her as a drug-using liar who changed
    her story to save her own skin and make a buck. The 24-year-old wife of
    one of McVeigh's Army buddies acknowledged that after the bombing she
    lied to the FBI by saying she didn't think McVeigh was involved. She
    later was granted immunity from prosecution and testified that six
    months before the Oklahoma City bombing McVeigh outlined his plans for
    the attack. 

    TIGAR SPEAKS: Breaking a long silence, the attorney for McVeigh's
    co-defendant, Terry Nichols, held an impromptu news conference both to
    attack Mrs. Fortier and contend her testimony helps his client.
    "Welcome to the dope-smoking, methamphetamine-swilling world of
    Kingman, Ariz. Terry Nichols had nothing to do with that world," Tigar
    said. Then he added "'Even by the admission of the government's own
    star witness, Terry Nichols isn't in it," Tigar said. 

    EXPLOSIVES EXPERT: Paul Rydlund, a mining engineer and an explosives
    expert, testified that building a bomb out of ammonium nitrate is easy.
    He also said the materials for such a bomb are readily available. He
    said a 50-pound bag of ammonium nitrate cost about $5. 

    WHAT'S NEXT: Greg Pfaff is someone that McVeigh ran into at various gun
    shows. Pfaff said he got calls from McVeigh, and said McVeigh asked him
    if he could get any "det cord," a detonator for a bomb. Also on the
    list is David Darlak, an old acquaintance of McVeigh's. Darlak received
    calls from McVeigh and recalls that McVeigh wanted him to get racing
    fuel.
7.1575IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0170
    AP 30-Apr-1997 23:18 EDT   REF5067

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
    
    Warships Block Illegal Toothfishing
 
    By RAY LILLEY

    Associated Press Writer

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- French forces have intercepted at least
    two fishing boats in Antarctic waters suspected of poaching toothfish,
    a white-fleshed fish imported by Southeast Asian countries. 

    "Toothfish has a very high value in Southeast Asia. In Japan, it is
    almost worth bars of gold," said Commandant Bernard O'Mahony, spokesman
    for France's Marine Nationale. 

    He confirmed that French forces had intercepted the two boats in the
    protected zone around its Antarctic Crozet Island. New Zealand
    newspapers and radio on Thursday reported that France had stopped a
    third boat. 

    France and Britain have sent warships to the Antarctic, and New Zealand
    is sending surveillance planes aloft, to stop an international fleet of
    ships from poaching the highly prized fish. 

    Strict controls were imposed on Antarctic fish resources last year
    under a 23-country fisheries control agreement, known as the Convention
    for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources. 

    But "reflagged" fishing vessels from Spain, Norway and even the United
    States -- all co-signers to the agreement -- are among those plundering
    toothfish, according to New Zealand government officials. 

    The poachers are raiding toothfish areas around France and Australia's
    Antarctic Heard and McDonald Islands. 

    More than 40 vessels have taken over 30,000 tons of toothfish in South
    Africa's Antarctic waters, Simon Upton, New Zealand's associate
    minister of trade and foreign affairs, said Wednesday. 

    Japan imports 12,000 tons of toothfish a year. Called "mero," it sells
    in supermarkets for about $6 a pound. It is usually boiled with soy and
    sugar or roasted. 

    On March 31, the Singaporean ship Belgie III was apprehended with
    toothfish. On April 19, the Portuguese ship Mar L'argo was caught. 

    Jean-Claude Nola, a spokesman for the French Foreign Ministry, said a
    frigate and two towboats were sent to the area. 

    South Africa is reported ready to send warships and maritime
    surveillance airplanes into its Antarctic waters to try to halt the
    illegal fishing. 

    Britain has already used gunboats to chase out fishing boats around its
    South Georgia islands in the Falklands by Spanish and Norwegian
    vessels. Those ships reportedly fly Chilean and Argentine flags. 

    Upton said the illegal fishing threatened the fragile Antarctic
    ecosystem. 

    "It may pose a threat to the waters south of New Zealand, if reports
    that this fishing is continuing to spread westwards into French and
    Australian Antarctic waters are borne out." 

    Toothfish was only identified as a rich commercial catch two years ago.
    It is a long fish with a large mouth and is believed to be
    bottom-dwelling, living off cod. It lives for up to 25 years. 
7.1576IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0125
    AP 30-Apr-1997 22:43 EDT   REF6061

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Swedish Teen Wreaks Havoc on Phones

    STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- A teen-age hacker who played havoc with
    emergency phone systems in the United States was fined $350 Wednesday
    for harassment. 

    The 19-year-old dialed into 11 Florida emergency-service systems on
    their confidential numbers, tying up lines dedicated for emergency
    calls, in January and March 1996. His name was not released, in line
    with Swedish practice. 

    Swedish authorities said the teen, from the western town of Goteborg,
    called one emergency switchboard claiming he had glued his genitals to
    a wall and needed help. The operator kept him on the line long enough
    for the call to be traced to Sweden, according to the Swedish news
    agency TT. 

    The prosecutor in the case, Gunnel Skeppholm, was quoted by TT as
    saying he would have liked to have tried the teen for the more serious
    crime of sabotage, but Swedish law limits that to crimes in Swedish
    territory. 
7.1577IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0151
    AP 30-Apr-1997 22:43 EDT   REF6062

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    South Korean Agents Arrest American

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Koreans arrested a U.S. businessman
    Wednesday, charging him with collecting classified information on the
    country's arms procurement plans. 

    Intelligence officials said Donald Ratcliffe, 62, identified himself as
    head of the Far Eastern operations for Litton Industry Inc.'s Guidance
    and Control Systems Division. The company is a U.S. defense contractor
    based in Woodland Hills, Calif. 

    Ratcliffe was accused of gathering the weapons secrets from a South
    Korean air force lieutenant colonel and others since 1995. 

    Jim Coles, spokesman of the U.S. military command in Seoul, said the
    businessman has no affiliation with U.S. forces in South Korea. 

    The national news agency Yonhap said the classified data Ratcliffe has
    allegedly acquired included information regarding South Korea's plan to
    buy early-warning aircraft within the next five years. 

    Ratcliffe turned himself in Wednesday after South Korean authorities
    began searching for him. The intelligence agency refused to give
    further details. 

    Litton spokesman Robert Stangarone said Ratcliffe has been a Litton
    employee for 20 years and is based in Thailand. 

    "We are aware that he has been arrested. We have not been informed of
    the charges, so it is premature to speculate," Stangarone said. "We are
    not aware of any wrongdoing and we plan to cooperate with Korean
    authorities." 

    Litton's Guidance and Control Systems Division is involved in the
    development and manufacture of navigation and guidance systems for
    military aircraft, land vehicles, missiles and ships. 

    Last week, South Korea's Defense Ministry arrested Lt. Col. Kim
    Taek-jun, 47, on charges of leaking military secrets to an arms broker,
    Kwak Jae-jin, who also was arrested. 

    Kwak, 57, was accused of having passed on the information to Ratcliffe,
    the agency said. The homes and offices of Kim and Kwak have been
    searched. 

    South Korea is a major arms buyer. It plans to spend $33.6 billion over
    the six years starting in 1998 on new weapons purchases. 
7.1578IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0140
    AP 30-Apr-1997 21:55 EDT   REF6053

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saddam's Son Shown Driving

    By WAIEL FALEH

    Associated Press Writer

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Saddam Hussein's eldest son appeared on Iraqi
    television Wednesday, driving a Red Porsche convertible in the
    neighborhood where he was shot during an assassination attempt in
    December. 

    The broadcast apparently was an attempt to show that Odai Hussein, the
    Iraqi president's heir apparent, was on the road to recovery. 

    On Dec. 12, he was shot about 10 times as he waited in his car in the
    posh Al-Mansoura suburb of Baghdad. Since then, he had been seen on
    television moving his arms but not his legs. Iraq has sought to dispel
    rumors that he was paralyzed. 

    Iraq's Youth Television, which is owned by Odai, showed a young man,
    apparently a bodyguard, also sitting in the car. The broadcast did not
    say when the film was made or make any comment. 

    Youth Television also showed Odai, 33, meeting with well-wishers,
    including popular Iraqi singer Kadhem al-Saher. Odai was shown sitting
    on a chair in what appeared to be a hospital room. Again, he moved his
    arms but not his legs. 

    After undergoing surgery on April 20, Odai told reporters that doctors
    had operated on his shattered left leg. But Western diplomats and
    opposition figures said surgeons had removed a bullet lodged near his
    spine. 

    After the surgery, Odai said he expected he'd be able to resume his
    usual activities in two to three months and play sports within six
    months. 
7.1579IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0151
    AP 30-Apr-1997 21:52 EDT   REF6052

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    How Britain Changed Past 18 Years

    LONDON (AP) -- In 18 years of Conservative rule, Britain was a nation
    in the throes of change: 

    PRIVATIZATION: Margaret Thatcher, prime minister from 1979 to 1990,
    talked of "rolling back the frontiers of the state." Conservative
    governments sold British Steel, British Airways, the telephone system,
    the water, electric and gas companies, the coal mines, the railroads --
    $100 billion sale which put more than four dozen businesses in private
    hands. Major's government considered selling the post office and
    pledged to sell the London subway system. 

    GOVERNMENT: Conservative governments increased power at the center,
    most dramatically in London where Thatcher abolished the
    Labor-controlled Greater London Council. 

    UNIONS: Thatcher crushed the power of labor unions. She forced secret
    pre-strike ballots, outlawed mass picketing and sympathy strikes, and
    made unions liable to lawsuits by employers. 

    WEALTH: The rich have gotten substantially richer, and the poor are
    still poor, according to the Institute of Fiscal Studies, an
    independent organization. It says that between 1979 and 1994 the
    wealthiest 10 percent of Britons enjoyed a 60 percent increase in net
    income; middle incomes grew by about a third, and the poorest 10
    percent were just one percent better off. 

    TAXES: For a party that makes tax-cutting an article of faith, the
    record was patchy. Britain's total tax burden is now higher than in
    1978-79. Conservatives did cut personal income taxes, lowering the
    basic rate from 33 percent to 23 percent on income up to $41,000, and
    the top rate from 83 percent to 30 percent. Government spending has
    dropped from 44 percent of GDP to 40.5 percent. But extra tax revenue
    has been used to reduce government debt, now 2.5 percent of GDP. 

    EUROPE: British ambivalence about the European Union was played out in
    often bitter divisions in the Conservative Party. Thatcher's
    confrontations with other European leader precipitated her downfall.
    Under her successor, John Major, Britain remained aloof. 

    THE OPPOSITION: After the Conservatives won their second election in
    1983 against a Labor party which had lurched well to the left, the main
    opposition party has shifted into the center. Labor Party leader Tony
    Blair, heading what he calls New Labor, has embraced Tory policies on
    privatization and curbing union power, and expressed admiration for
    Thatcher. 
7.1580IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0231
    AP 30-Apr-1997 22:48 EDT   REF5005

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    UFO Aficionados To Hold Camp Out

    ROSWELL, N.M. (AP) -- UFO aficionados could have a camping experience
    that's out of this world this summer when they sleep at the site where
    some believe an alien spacecraft crashed 50 years ago. 

    The camping will be part of a weeklong celebration commemorating the
    50th anniversary of the alleged sighting. Previous tours of the
    property have been limited to 30 minutes during the day. 

    "Ever since we first began letting people visit the site we've been
    asked if we'd allow them to camp overnight," said Roswell rancher Hub
    Corn. 

    Tickets for one night during the July 1-6 anniversary week cost $90,
    and are limited to 2,000 people, organizers said in a news release. 

    Organizers also plan to install a memorial stone sculpture garden
    featuring 20-foot-tall obelisks and a plaque dedicating the "sacred
    site" to "the beings who met their destinies near Roswell, New Mexico,
    July 1947." 

    A rancher near Roswell found debris on July 8, 1947, and an Air Force
    officer was reported to have discovered a flying disc, fueling UFO
    buffs' theories. A 1994 Air Force investigation found that the debris
    probably came from a once top-secret balloon designed to monitor the
    atmosphere for evidence of Soviet nuclear tests.
7.1581IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0285
    AP 30-Apr-1997 14:01 EDT   REF5586

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
    
    Genetic Switch Creates Supermice
   
    By MATT CRENSON

    AP Science Editor

    NEW YORK (AP) -- With a single genetic switch, scientists have created
    a strain of supermice two to three times more muscular than usual, with
    big, broad shoulders and massive hips. 

    The genetically altered giants can't outpace speeding locomotives, or
    leap much of anything in a single bound. But their creators believe the
    mice could spur a revolution in the treatment of muscular dystrophy and
    similar diseases, and perhaps even transform the livestock industry,
    where bigger muscles would mean more meat. 

    The supermice were made by Se-Jin Lee, Alexandra McPherron and Ann
    Lawler, molecular biologists at the Johns Hopkins University School of
    Medicine in Baltimore. The researchers created the mice by deleting a
    single gene that appears to limit muscle growth. 

    "They do look a little strange," McPherron said. She and her colleagues
    describe the mice in Thursday's issue of Nature, a British scientific
    journal. 

    Though they seem stronger than their peers, the supermice are gentle
    giants. "When I poke them they don't run away as fast as a normal
    mouse," McPherron said Tuesday. "They don't seem to be bothered by it."

    Aside from their musculature, the mice are physically identical to
    their scrawnier kin. 

    The Hopkins scientists created the burly beasts by knocking out the
    gene for a growth factor they discovered. Growth factors are proteins
    that either stimulate or suppress the growth and division of certain
    cell types, such as bone or nerve -- or muscle. 

    It turns out the growth factor the Hopkins researchers found,
    myostatin, inhibits muscle growth. The researchers found that out as
    soon as they saw the mice they had bred without the gene. 

    The result -- totally buff. And promising. 

    Drugs could be developed that block the action of myostatin, for
    example. Those drugs might counteract some of the muscle wasting that
    occurs in diseases such as muscular dystrophy and cachexia, a muscular
    deterioration that accompanies AIDS and some forms of cancer. 

    There's also the possibility that farmers could breed overdeveloped
    poultry and cattle, because the researchers have found a corresponding
    gene in chickens and cows. Not only would those animals produce really
    impressive cuts of meat, but it would be lean meat because eliminating
    myostatin affects only muscle. It does not increase fat production. 

    "We could end up with chickens with two to three times the amount of
    meat," Lee said. 

    It's a long road to reaping the benefits of myostatin, however. And a
    long shot, too. 

    The researchers still haven't shown that humans and other animals also
    have the mouse myostatin. They haven't shown that blocking the action
    of the protein has the same effect as genetically preventing its
    creation. And they haven't shown that bulking up muscle mass by
    blocking myostatin would actually help people with muscular dystrophy
    and other diseases. 

    "This is hypothesis, this is projection, this is a possibility raised
    by these studies," said Joan Massague, a research scientist at the
    Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and the Howard Hughes Medical
    Institute in New York City. "Only time will tell." 

    Could genetic engineers someday create people who would make Arnold
    Schwarzenegger look like Pee Wee Herman? 

    Yes, in principle anyway. But as Lee pointed out, there are already
    powerful drugs to increase muscle mass, and the vast majority of
    ethicists consider it wrong for athletes to use them. 

    "We would all have to work very hard to make sure that's not the group
    that would be targeted for those drugs," he said. 
7.1582IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:0227
    AP 30-Apr-1997 2:46 EDT   REF5472

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    World Weather Unusually Wet

    GENEVA (AP) -- Weather in many parts of the world last year was marked
    by unusually heavy rainfall that caused great death and destruction,
    according to the World Meteorological Organization. 

    Last year also was the eight-warmest on record since 1860, the U.N.
    weather agency said in its annual report. It was the second consecutive
    year with above-normal hurricane activity, making a near-record
    two-year total. 

    The heavy precipitation was partially explained by a continuation of
    the so-called "La Nina" effect -- colder-than-normal water in the
    Pacific Ocean west of Peru and Ecuador that began in 1995. La Nina
    caused above-normal rainfall in the Indian and Australian monsoons, the
    report said. 

    China last year experienced its worst spring and summer floods in 50
    years, which caused more than 1,000 deaths and property damage
    affecting 20 million people. 

    Despite the trend of heavy rainfall, 1996 was extremely dry from
    Britain across central Europe to Russia. 
7.1583IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 12:2192
    RTos 01-May-97 05:21    
    
    Labor's Blair Has Huge Lead in UK Polls

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Opposition Labor Party leader Tony Blair toured
    Britain Wednesday, fighting for every last vote even though
    election-eve opinion polls gave him a commanding lead over Prime
    Minister John Major. 
    
    The MORI poll for the Times newspaper showed Labor 20 points ahead and
    an election-day ICM poll for Thursday's Guardian newspaper gave the
    opposition party, which has held double-digit leads throughout the
    six-week election campaign, a 10-point lead. 
    
    An NOP poll for Reuters gave Labor, fighting to end 18 years of
    Conservative rule, a 22-point lead, while a Gallup poll for the Daily
    Telegraph gave Blair's party a 14-point lead. 
    
    Labor has consistently said its own surveys showed a much narrower gap
    between the two main parties than pollsters' figures. 
    
    Blair, whose Labor party last won an election in 1974, dismissed
    suggestions a Labor landslide was imminent and appealed to supporters
    not to be lulled into complacency. 
    
    "We know that it's not over until it's over," Blair said in northeast
    England. 
    
    Major, courting Britain's 44 million voters in the final 24 hours of
    campaigning, warned that the economic transformation of Britain
    achieved by his Conservatives was "too good to give up." 
    
    "I have not contemplated anything other than winning. I have a very
    positive attitude to this campaign," he said in a BBC interview
    Wednesday evening. 
    
    A leading firm of bookmakers said it had stopped taking bets on Labor
    gaining the most seats at the May 1 election. 
    
    William Hill said it took the decision after the odds on Labor winning
    most seats fell to just 1-12, the point where punters would pay more in
    tax than they would get in winnings. 
    
    The last time it closed its books on an election was in 1979 when the
    Conservatives swept to power under Margaret Thatcher and began the
    longest unbroken stretch in power this century. 
    
    Major also faced a stormy welcome when he visited Stevenage in central
    England, a key marginal seat. He was jeered by Labor supporters who
    chanted "One more day" as he arrived. 
    
    An egg was also thrown at his car, prompting Major to call the
    demonstrators the true face of Labor instead of Blair's sanitised
    version. Labor officials said the crowd was made up of ordinary voters
    and there were few party members present. 
    
    Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) Kenneth Clarke broke the
    unwritten rule of not mentioning defeat, warning the ruling party
    against tearing itself apart after a Labor victory. 
    
    Clarke, who has fought from within the cabinet to slow the party's
    drift to a more right-wing, anti-European stance, told Sky News: "I
    think the people who turn afterwards to post-mortems and scapegoating
    will make us look ridiculous. 
    
    "I have been in parties which have lost elections and the thing to do
    is pick yourself up and work out how you are going to win the next one
    and that is not by having internecine warfare and recriminations." 
    
    But the recriminations have already begun, with at least one
    Conservative activist blaming Major for being "complacent" and for
    failing to tackle a radically reformed Labor party. 
    
    "That ultimately has to rest at your door," Conservative activist
    Margaret Curtiss told Major on a radio phone-in. 
    
    Labor's lead has been steady for two years and has held up since Major
    called the election on March 17, hoping to wear Labor down with the
    longest campaign for more than 80 years. 
    
    No party has ever come back from such a deficit to win. 
    
    Major pulled off a surprise victory almost single-handedly in 1992 but
    a Conservative win Thursday would arguably be the biggest political
    sensation since 1945, when voters threw out wartime prime minister
    Winston Churchill in a Labor landslide. 
    
    This time Labor needs a vote swing of 4.3 percent from the
    Conservatives compared with 1992 figures to win an overall majority.
                                                                        
7.1584IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 13:5439
    RTw  01-lear May-97 10:33    

    Successful British anti-gun campaign wound up

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 1 (Reuter) - A major anti-guns campaign set up in the wake
    of last year's Dunblane massacre of 16 schoolchildren was wound up on
    Thursday after successfully lobbying for a ban on most handguns in
    Britain. 

    But Ann Pearston, coordinator of the Snowdrop campaign, said said that
    despite the campaigners' success it was still possible someone could
    try to imitate loner Thomas Hamilton, who killed the children and their
    teacher in the Scottish town of Dunblane in March 1996 before shooting
    himself. 

    Pearston told BBC radio that the founders of the Snowdrop campaign
    would in future support a London-based pressure group still fighting
    for a ban on all handguns. 

    "The risk is still there, albeit smaller, but the risk can be made
    smaller still by banning all these guns," she said. 

    The Snowdrop campaigners pressed for a total ban on handguns and
    launched a petition which attracted the signatures of 750,000 Britons. 

    The government, faced with protests from shooting organisations,
    compromised by banning all handguns with a calibre higher than .22 and
    paying compensation to gun owners forced to hand in their weapons. 

    "Our fear is that people will suddenly change...to .22s and there will
    be just as many of those guns available," Pearston told the BBC. 

    The opposition Labour party, which looks set to win Thursday's
    election, has promised to allow a free vote in the parliament on
    whether all handguns should banned. 

    REUTER
7.1585IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 01 1997 16:3690
    RTos 01-May-97 12:56    
    
    Blair, Major Cast Votes in UK Election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Britain was set to vote for change on Thursday and
    elect a Labour government under Tony Blair after 18 years of
    Conservative rule that transformed the country. 
    
    Opinion polls predicted Labour was heading for a convincing victory
    over the ruling Conservatives, who came to power in 1979 under Margaret
    Thatcher and have since won three elections. 
    
    The last poll of the campaign showed Labour on 47 percent, with an
    18-point lead over Prime Minister John Major's party. 
    
    A record 3,717 candidates are standing for 659 seats, eight more than
    in 1992 because of boundary changes. 
    
    Polling stations opened at 0600 GMT in bright sunshine but in the
    shadow of violence by the Irish Republican Army (IRA), which has
    disrupted the six-week campaign with a string of bombs and hoaxes. 
    
    Blair and his wife Cherie took their three young children to the
    polling station in Sedgefield, north-east England, giving them a
    glimpse of the media frenzy that awaits them if they change homes to
    Downing Street on Friday. 
    
    Blair, in shirt sleeves, crossed a soccer pitch belonging to a local
    coal mine for one last photo-call before voting. 
    
    He looked nervous but told an army of reporters and cameramen he felt
    fine. Aides said Blair was making no predictions of victory but
    anecdotal evidence was encouraging. 
    
    Police wearing bullet-proof jackets guarded Blair's redbrick house
    nearby. Voters were warned that their bags might be searched because of
    the IRA threat but early voters at polling stations near London said
    there were few signs of unusual security. 
    
    The Home Office (interior ministry) last week sent leaflets to 45,000
    electoral officers advising how to cope with bomb threats. If
    necessary, voting in affected areas would be continued Friday. 
    
    The IRA wants to oust Britain from Northern Ireland. Its political arm
    Sinn Fein hopes to win three constituencies at the election but would
    refuse to take its seats in the London parliament. 
    
    Major, dressed in Conservative blue tie, shirt and suit, looked relaxed
    when he voted in his constituency of Huntingdon, north of London, with
    wife Norma. 
    
    Smiling, he shook hands with journalists who had followed him during
    the longest campaign for 80 years. "I'm feeling entirely confident and
    very relaxed," he said. 
    
    The polls have shown that Blair has been heading for victory ever since
    he took over leadership of Labour in July 1994. 
    
    He has transformed his party, shedding many of its key socialist tenets
    in a move to the centre ground. But, remembering the bitter
    disappointment of Major's surprise win in 1992, he has warned voters
    not to be complacent and allow the Conservatives to snatch a record
    fifth successive win. 
    
    Voting finishes at 2100 GMT and exit polls, which can give a good
    estimate of the final result, are expected shortly afterward. 
    
    Analysts expect any Labour victory to be less conclusive than opinion
    polls suggest because of the vagaries of Britain's first-past-the-post
    electoral system. 
    
    The Conservatives have put together the longest stretch of single-party
    government in Britain this century and about one quarter of Britons
    cannot remember life under a Labour government. Labour last won an
    election in 1974 when Blair was a student at Oxford University. 
    
    Blair became a member of parliament in 1983 and will be Britain's
    youngest prime minister this century, in succession to Major, if he
    wins. 
    
    Major has called tne country's apparent desire for change his "phantom
    enemy," but voters have also become disillusioned with his perceived
    lack of leadership and his party's divisions over Europe. 
    
    No party has ever come back from such an opinion poll deficit to win. 
  
    REUTER
          
7.1586IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:11107
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 2-May-1997 1:02 EDT   REF5087

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    SEPARATIST-STANDOFF 

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Police negotiators have given a final offer
    to 13 besieged Texas secessionists, and will move in to arrest them if
    they don't accept, a lawyer for the group's leader said. The state
    confirmed the offer but would not elaborate. Attorney Terry O'Rourke
    said he advised Republic of Texas leader Richard McLaren to come out
    because police made it clear they will carry out the warrant. A police
    spokesman refused to discuss the agency's timetable. O'Rourke said
    police want to end the 5-day-old standoff because several sympathizers
    have been arrested in the area recently. 
   
    BRITAIN ELECTION 

    LONDON (AP) -- A generation of Conservative rule is coming to an end,
    as the Labor Party stormed to a landslide election victory that will
    make 43-year-old Tony Blair the youngest prime minister in 185 years.
    Labor clinched a majority in the House of Commons early Friday by
    gaining at least 342 seats in the 659-member House. Labor was projected
    to finish with 423 seats, the largest majority in the House in decades.
    The Conservatives had been in power since Margaret Thatcher ousted the
    last Labor government in 1979. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Prosecutors packed in 13 witnesses Thursday to show
    Timothy McVeigh went on a nationwide search for bomb materials in the
    months before the Oklahoma City blast. The witnesses included a
    publisher who said McVeigh bought an instruction manual for homemade
    bombs and a former arms dealer who said McVeigh was so eager for a
    detonator he was willing to drive thousands of miles to get it. In
    cross-examination, McVeigh's lawyers tried to show McVeigh was not
    alone in his interest in explosives. The April 1995 explosion killed
    168 people. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton and congressional leaders worked
    into the night Thursday polishing final details of a pact to balance
    the budget by 2002 while trimming taxes by about $135 billion. With a
    conclusive handshake seemingly near, both the White House and
    Republican leaders on Capitol Hill made plans for announcing a deal
    Friday. The GOP and White House negotiators were haggling over whether
    the current bargainers or Republican-dominated congressional committees
    later on would define the details of tax cuts. 
   
    JONBENET RAMSEY 

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- The parents of JonBenet Ramsey have broken four
    months of public silence, declaring that they did not kill their
    6-year-old daughter. John and Patsy Ramsey asked the public for help in
    finding the killer and called for the harshest penalty for anyone
    convicted. The girl was found strangled in the basement of the family's
    home after Mrs. Ramsey reported finding a ransom note. Prosecutors have
    said the parents are the focus of the investigation. 
   
    VIDEO-DOCTORS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Doctors with the nation's largest hospital company are
    starting to treat patients from afar with video cameras to save money.
    Columbia/HCA Healthcare's test of the "telemedicine" technology takes
    doctors one step further away from patients in the name of holding down
    medical costs. With a nurse at the patient's home, the video is beamed
    to the doctor through a camera-equipped laptop computer and telephone
    lines. 
   
    COSBY SON 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Two friends of Mikail Markhasev reportedly say he
    shot Ennis Cosby when they were high on drugs, and two other people
    told police they helped the 18-year-old Ukrainian immigrant look for a
    gun he threw away that night. USA Today cited court documents and a
    relative of one witness in its report. The report came as the
    arraignment for Markhasev was delayed so public defenders could take
    over the case from private lawyers he can no longer afford. 
   
    CHEMICAL CASTRATION 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Georgia became the second state in the nation to enact
    a chemical castration law, requiring child molesters to get hormone
    shots to lower their sex drives after they get out of prison. Offenders
    who refuse the treatment would stay in jail. California is the only
    other state that requires chemical castration of repeat sex offenders. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was quoted at 126.72 yen, down 0.66 yen. The
    Nikkei gained 71.60 points, or 0.37 percent, to 19,346.93 points to end
    the morning session. On Wall Street, the Dow closed down 32.51 at
    6,976.48. 
   
    HEAT-MAGIC 

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Penny Hardaway scored 41 points as the Orlando
    Magic staved off elimination from the playoffs Tuesday night with an
    88-75 victory over the Miami Heat. The Magic, blown out in the first
    two games of the matchup, will return to Miami Arena for the decisive
    game. The winner will advance to the Eastern Conference semifinals
    against the New York Knicks. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1587IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:11105
    RTw  02-May-97 04:08    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON - Tony Blair's new-look Labour party stormed back to power in
    Britain for the first time since 1979 with a landslide victory on a
    scale unseen for 165 years. Experts used words like "terrifying" to
    describe the extent of the defeat, which brings down the curtain on 18
    years of Conservative rule that have transformed the country. 

    DUNFERMLINE, Scotland - Gordon Brown, the British opposition Labour
    Party's finance spokesman, said a Labour government would stick to an
    inflation target of 2.5 percent and would set monetary policy to meet
    it. 

    PARIS - French Foreign Minister Herve de Charette hailed the apparent
    Labour Party victory in Britain's general election as a blow for
    "British Euro-scepticism." 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - South African officials worked into the early hours on
    Friday to try to keep planned peace talks between Zaire's President
    Mobutu Sese Seko and rebel leader Laurent Kabila on track, diplomatic
    sources said. The sources said South African mediators were battling to
    ensure Kabila attended the talks later on Friday with Mobutu aboard a
    South African naval ship off the Congolese coast. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russia and the United States said they had made progress in
    narrowing gaps over NATO expansion plans but that tough issues still
    had to be resolved to meet a May 27 target for signing a NATO-Russia
    charter. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Democratic President Bill Clinton and the Republican-led
    Congress hammered out the framework of a historic accord to balance the
    budget by 2002, but the White House said there was no final deal yet. 

    - - - - 

    ANKARA - Turkey's ruling Islamists won breathing space from an army
    assault in a struggle with the generals for the hearts and minds of the
    Moslem but secular nation. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania's interim prime minister Bashkim Fino has been invited
    to pay an official visit to Washington, his spokesman said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Moving to address growing criticism of the Pentagon and
    CIA, Defence Secretary William Cohen named a former U.S. senator to
    watch over an investigation into health problems of Gulf War veterans. 

    - - - - 

    BERLIN - Masked demonstrators hurled stones, bottles and beer cans at
    Berlin police and set fire to two builders' huts, as violence by
    right-wing and left-wing extremists marred May day rallies across
    Germany. 

    - - - - 

    BUCHAREST - Romania apologised for deporting tens of thousands of
    ethnic Germans to labour camps during communist rule or "selling" them
    by demanding cash from the Bonn government for emigration permits. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - High-tech bugging, spy planes and round-the-clock police guards
    at the site of Peru's 126-day hostage standoff have meant an estimated
    cost of up to $15 million for the government, analysts said. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - A gun dealer testified in the trial of Timothy McVeigh that
    the accused Oklahoma City bomber tried to buy detonating cord in the
    months before the deadly blast. 

    - - - - 

    MEXICO CITY - Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo was met by jeers and
    whistles of protest, upsetting a carefully staged pro-government May
    Day rally before the country's most powerful labour confederation. 

    - - - - 

    UNITED NATIONS -  Australia's U.N. ambassador, Richard Butler, was
    appointed as the new executive chairman of the U.N. commission in
    charge of Iraqi disarmament, the United Nations announced. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - Freedom and prosperity will continue in Hong Kong after
    China takes over on July 1, but the territory's links to the
    communist-ruled mainland will continue to grow closer, Hong Kong's
    future leader Tung Chee-hwa said. 

    REUTER
7.1588IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1232
    RTw  02-May-97 04:06    

    Right-winger Portillo loses seat in UK election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 2 (Reuter) - Defence Secretary Michael Portillo lost his
    parliamentary seat in the British election on Friday, ruling him out of
    any contest for the Conservative leadership which may result from the
    party's heavy defeat. 

    Portillo, a right-winger close to former prime minister Margaret
    Thatcher, was beaten in the London constituency of Enfield Southgate by
    Labour candidate Stephen Twigg. 

    Rifkind loses seat in UK election

    British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind lost his Conservative seat in
    a national election to the opposition Labour Party on a swing of 10
    percent, official results showed on Friday.    

    Rifkind, foreign minister since 1995, lost his seat in Edinburgh
    Pentlands, Scotland, by some 5,000 votes to Linda Clark of Labour. 

    Trade and Industry Secretary Ian Lang also lost his seat as has
    Scottish Secretary Michael Forsyth. The Conservatives now have no
    members of parliament in Scotland. 

    Rifkind is now unable to stand in any contest after the election for
    the leadership of the Conservative Party. 

    REUTER
7.1589IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1271
    RTw  02-May-97 03:39    

    Goldsmith, Minister of Fun clash in UK election

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    By Paul Majendie 

    LONDON, May 2 (Reuter) - Anglo-French billionaire Sir James Goldsmith
    and former Conservative minister David Mellor were involved in an
    unprecedented clash after both were beaten in the British election on
    Thursday. 

    Goldsmith chanted "Out! Out! Out!" as Mellor was toppled in the London
    seat of Putney he had held since 1979 by Tony Colman of the opposition
    Labour Party, which was heading for a landslide victory across Britain. 

    Mellor, quivering with anger, packed no punches. "He has shown his
    contempt for the democratic process by behaving as if he was boozed up
    at a rugby match," he said of Goldsmith. 

    "What Putney has said to him was go back to your hacienda'. The sooner
    he goes back to (one of his homes in) Mexico the better," he told ITN
    television news. 

    Goldsmith won just 1,500 votes as leader of the Referendum Party after
    warning of the dangers of Britain being swallowed up by a European
    superstate. He wants a referendum on whether Britain should cement
    links with the European Union or leave. 

    Goldsmith and Mellor rank as two of the most colourful figures in
    British politics, both exciting strong passions. 

    Mellor lost his job as National Heritage Secretary in 1992 after
    reports of his affair with actress Antonia de Sancha and links with
    Mona Bauwens, daughter of a Palestine Liberation Organisation official. 

    Mellor, who had styled his position as "Minister of Fun," was the first
    of a string of ministers and leading Conservatives to resign in sex and
    financial scandals that wounded the reputation of Prime Minister John
    Major's government. 

    He has since made a name for himself as a sports commentator and arts
    critic. 

    Referendum Party candidates were unable to make any major inroads in
    the election -- prompting more scorn from Mellor, who compared
    Goldsmith's campaign with the failure of his son-in-law, former cricket
    star Imran Khan, to win seats in the Pakistani election. 

    "As far as he is concerned he cannot buy the British political process.
    He can go off back to Mexico having failed almost as abysmally as his
    son-in-law did in Pakistan," he said. 

    Goldsmith invested millions in his campaign but lost the 500 pound
    ($813.5) deposit he put up for his seat by not polling enough votes. 

    But Goldmsith insisted in a statement afterwards: "We made Europe the
    number one election issue ... Now it will be more difficult for the
    politicians to abandon national sovereignty without consulting the
    people." 

    Mellor readily admitted the Conservatives were headed for crushing
    defeat after 18 years in power. 

    "It's become pretty apparent that a tidal wave has burst over the
    Conservative Party tonight. It wasn't a question of putting your hand
    in the dyke, it was a question of the sea wall collapsing all around
    you," he said. 

    REUTER
7.1590IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1248
    RTw  02-May-97 03:37    

    Australian state scraps anti-homosexual laws

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    HOBART, Australia, May 2 (Reuter) - Australia's only anti-homosexual
    laws, which carried a 21-year jail term, have been scrapped by the
    island state of Tasmania. 

    In a historic vote, the conservative upper house of the Tasmanian state
    parliament voted on Thursday night to repeal the two laws banning sex
    "against the order of nature" and "indecent practice between male
    persons." 

    Tasmania's homosexual lobby group on Friday hailed the vote as not only
    a major victory for Tasmanian homosexuals, but for gays across
    Australia. 

    "It marks the end of a 25-year campaign for gay law reform across the
    country," Tasmanian gay activist Rodney Croome told Reuters. 

    The last conviction under Tasmania's anti-homosexual laws was in 1991.
    The offender was fined A$50 (US$38.50). 

    Tasmania's anti-gay laws had attracted a barrage of criticism from
    human rights advocates, the United Nations and AIDS groups. 

    Tasmanian Health Minister Peter McKay, who previously supported the
    anti-gay laws, said before voting to scrap them, that the laws had
    fomented a climate of hate. 

    The conservative Tasmanian government's leader in the upper house, Tony
    Fletcher, agreed the laws' demise would encourage a more harmonious
    community. 

    "Tasmanian society, through its parliament, is prepared to look at a
    much more inclusive society," Fletcher said. 

    Anti-homosexual feeling in the small island community has been traced
    back to Tasmania's colonial past when the island was a remote penal
    colony early last century for convicts shipped here from Britain. 

    Sodomy was widespread in convict settlements in Tasmania, known in
    ballads of the time as the "Isle of Sodom," according to a local
    histrorian. 

    REUTER
7.1591IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1269
    AP 1-May-1997 21:59 EDT   REF5473

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Secessionists Finally Answer Phone

    By EDUARDO MONTES

    Associated Press Writer

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- The leader of the besieged Texas
    secessionists finally answered the phone and resumed negotiations
    Thursday after giving law officers the silent treatment for a day and a
    half. 

    By Thursday night, state police said talks had "gone beyond chitchat." 

    Armored personnel carriers also resumed carrying what participants in
    the 5-day-old mountain standoff called "diplomatic pouches" --
    documents exchanged between the leader of the Republic of Texas,
    Richard McLaren, and his lawyer. 

    An agreement to end the standoff apparently was in place Tuesday night,
    but then McLaren broke off communication with law officers and his
    attorney, Terence O'Rourke. Telephone contact resumed around noon
    Thursday when negotiators called McLaren and he finally answered. 

    McLaren might have responded because of his attorney's radio appeal or
    a letter from the Texas Rangers saying they had taken control of the
    telephone lines, said Mike Cox, spokesman for the state Department of
    Public Safety. 

    "If you are sincere about wanting to resolve this situation peacefully,
    please respond as soon as possible," the letter read. 

    Cox said initial talks weren't "much more than chitchat." But that had
    changed by Thursday evening, in part because of participation by
    O'Rourke and District Attorney Albert Valabez. 

    "I think that now that the lawyers are involved, we've gone beyond
    chitchat," Cox said. 

    McLaren and about a dozen Republic of Texas members have been holed up
    since Sunday. Six of them are wanted on charges of kidnapping or other
    offenses in connection with a hostage-taking that started the siege. 

    Earlier Thursday, law officers trying to step up the pressure said they
    would cut off the electricity at the trailer the Republic of Texas
    calls its "embassy." Cox said power was cut by Thursday night. 

    Neighbors expressed growing irritation over the standoff. "Rick has
    promised to fight to the death. I hope he is a man of his word," said
    Mike Smelley, who left his home at the urging of authorities. 

    Dozens of state troopers have ringed the area, while two armored
    vehicles, tracking dogs and horses also have been brought in. 

    A Republic of Texas hot line urged members to go to Balmorhea, about
    halfway between Fort Davis and Pecos, for a rally to support McLaren
    and his group. But there was no sign of such a rally. 

    The Republic of Texas, which has splintered into three factions, claims
    Texas was illegally annexed by the United States and wants a statewide
    referendum on independence. 

    The standoff, 175 miles southeast of El Paso, began Sunday after
    members took two neighbors hostage in retaliation for the arrests of
    two followers. Both hostages were released a day later in exchange for
    one of the jailed comrades. 
7.1592IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1233
    AP 1-May-1997 20:54 EDT   REF5448

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday McVeigh Trial Quotes

    By The Associated Press

    Quotes Thursday from the Oklahoma City bombing trial: 

    ------ 

    "He asked me if I could get him a detonation cord ... a high explosive
    used to set off the main explosive." -- Greg Pfaff, who met McVeigh at
    gun shows. 

    ------ 

    "He said it didn't matter, he needed it bad." Pfaff said was McVeigh's
    response when he told him he probably would have to drive cross country
    to get the detonator. 

    ------ 

    "He was very agitated about Waco, couldn't believe that it was
    happening, that the government had no right to do what they were
    doing." -- Pfaff, referring to McVeigh. 

    ------ 

    "It would be very frightening if it really did come to this." -- Kyle
    Kraus, McVeigh's second cousin, told McVeigh in discussing "The Turner
    Diaries." 
7.1593IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1298
    AP 1-May-1997 17:10 EDT   REF5858

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cancer Victim Tells Story On Tape

    By RON WORD

    Associated Press Writer

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Jean Connor, who smoked two to three packs
    of cigarettes a day for more than 30 years and died of lung cancer in
    1995, told her story from the grave. 

    In a videotape played for a jury, an ailing, bone-thin Mrs. Connor told
    how, as a teen-ager, she thought smoking was glamorous. 

    "They tell me that Salem's a good cigarette. That I should smoke it.
    That I'll enjoy it. I'll like it, and it's pleasant, and good things
    happen to you when you smoke Salem," she said. 

    Her family's effort to hold R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. liable for her
    death comes as the legal and regulatory tide has turned against the
    industry. A verdict against the nation's No. 2 cigarette maker could
    weaken the industry's hand in negotiations toward a multibillion-dollar
    settlement with state governments around the country. 

    "If tobacco loses this one, they could lose a lot more," said Melissa
    F. Ronan, an attorney with Litigation Analysis for Wall Street, who has
    attended the entire monthlong trial. 

    Mrs. Connor's legal team is led by Norwood "Woody" Wilner, who won a
    $750,000 verdict against Brown & Williamson last fall on behalf of
    another former smoker. It was only the second time a jury has ordered
    the industry to pay. The first verdict, in 1988 in New Jersey, was
    overturned on appeal. 

    In the latest trial, which is expected to go to the jury on Friday,
    Wilner and RJR's lawyers argued whether the company was negligent in
    not warning of the dangers of smoking. 

    The case is a test of the use of RJR internal documents, which Wilner
    introduced for the first time to show that the company was aware of
    links between smoking and lung cancer in the 1940s and early '50s. 

    Mrs. Connor's family says she became hooked on cigarettes. She died in
    1995 at age 49. They are seeking in millions in damages. 

    RJR's attorneys argue that Mrs. Connor chose to smoke and was not
    addicted because she was able to quit in 1993, two months before she
    was diagnosed with cancer. 

    In the videotapes, a dying Mrs. Connor, looking gaunt and wearing a
    wig, talked about seeing cigarette ads as a teen-ager in the 1950s. 

    The jury saw only 1 1/2 minutes of the 16-minute videotape because
    Circuit Judge Bernard Nachman ruled most of it was too prejudicial.
    During a hearing on the tape's admissibility, Nachman at one point told
    lawyers to stop the video because the images of Mrs. Connor were too
    disturbing to him. 

    Mrs. Connor said she started smoking one or two cigarettes a day when
    she was 14 or 15. At the time there were no health warnings on
    cigarettes. 

    Mrs. Connor first smoked Winston cigarettes, then switched to Salems
    because she liked the menthol taste. Both are made by R.J. Reynolds. 

    Taken alone, the trial is not that significant to the tobacco
    companies, which had $50 billion in revenue last year. 

    But the trial comes as the industry faces lawsuits by more than 20
    states and countless individuals and increasing regulatory pressure. A
    federal judge in Greensboro, N.C., ruled last week that the Food and
    Drug Administration could regulate tobacco as a drug. And the Supreme
    Court this week refused to hear a challenge of a Baltimore ordinance
    restricting cigarette billboards near schools. 

    Under pressure from all sides, RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp. and Philip
    Morris Cos. are in early talks with the attorneys general of several
    states in hopes of winning protection from lawsuits. 

    Dan Donahue, a senior vice president for RJR, said it's "too early to
    get into what-ifs" if the company loses. 

    A verdict in favor of Mrs. Connor's family could "accelerate the
    industry's willingness to fold their tent. The industry is plenty
    scared as it is," said Richard Kluger, who won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize
    for "Ashes to Ashes," a history of the tobacco industry. 

    Even if RJR prevails, there are hundred of others former smokers
    preparing to go to court against Big Tobacco. 

    "This is must-win, do-or-die, for the tobacco industry," said Dr. John
    Banzhaf III, executive director of Action on Smoking and Health in
    Washington. "If they lose this one, it would be a strong omen that they
    may lose to one or more of the states or one or more of the
    class-action suits, where the stakes are much higher." 
7.1594IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1270
    AP 1-May-1997 15:59 EDT   REF5784

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                     
    30-Yr-Old Murder Mystery Solved

    By TOM HAYS

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Lawrence Henry's neighbors in Brooklyn knew him as
    "the preacher." 

    But police say in another life, more than 30 years ago, Henry was a
    pimp mean enough to skewer an executive with a steak knife and put a
    bullet through a detective's fedora. 

    The past -- ushered back by a former prostitute turned born-again
    Christian -- caught up to Henry this week. 

    Police arrested Henry, 61, at a housing project Wednesday after the
    ex-prostitute came forward to unburden her conscience: Henry, she
    alleged, killed Lawrence Bart, 25. The pimp apparently had become
    enraged when he learned she had fallen for Bart, an executive in his
    family's printing business. 

    Police refused to detail exactly how the woman, now 60, helped break
    the case, or say if she witnessed the 1963 slaying. But a police source
    who spoke on condition of anonymity said the former prostitute turned
    in Henry because "she found religion." 

    Henry, who police said confessed, was ordered held without bail
    Thursday on murder charges. 

    The news stunned Henry's neighbors and friends. They described him as
    kindly and popular with children, who nicknamed him "the preacher." 

    The woman who lived with him, Barbara Crosby, knew nothing of his long
    criminal past. "My man ain't killed nobody," Ms. Crosby, the mother of
    Henry's five children, told The New York Times. 

    The case was opened on Nov. 29, 1963, when Bart's relatives --
    concerned because he had missed Thanksgiving dinner -- discovered his
    body. The scene in the bachelor's 11th-floor apartment in Manhattan was
    gruesome: A dog chain was wrapped around Bart's mouth, a 6-inch steak
    knife jammed in his chest. 

    Detectives later found the name and phone number of a woman among the
    victim's belongings. When they went to question her in 1964, they
    bumped into the woman leaving her home with her gun-toting pimp --
    Henry. 

    Henry, who had a rap sheet dating to 1958, opened fire on police. One
    bullet pierced a detective's fedora without wounding him. A Daily News
    photo from the time shows the cop still wearing the hat as he hauls off
    a grinning Henry. 

    Convicted in the shooting, Henry was sent to prison for 3 1/2 years.
    But he was never implicated in Bart's slaying. 

    Time passed. Henry went straight. The woman kept quiet. The murder case
    grew cold. 

    Then, without warning, the former prostitute decided to identify Henry
    as the killer, police said. Investigators said the woman, whose name
    has not been released, described Bart as a one-time customer who became
    a boyfriend. 

    Homicide investigations "are never closed," said Sgt. Robert Fiston of
    the detective squad. 
7.1595IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1265
    AP 1-May-1997 15:19 EDT   REF5758

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                   
    FDR's Railroad Car is Memorial, Too

    By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Franklin D. Roosevelt bedroom on the railroad
    car gives evidence that FDR slept here. A simple brass railing on the
    wall, running the length of the bed, was his hand-hold as he painfully
    pulled himself to a sitting position to read or write. 

    The Pullman car named the Marco Polo sits semipermanently at Gate A,
    Track 7, in Washington's Union Station. Tens of thousands of commuters
    pass every day without so much as a glance at the platform from which
    he rallied voters to his cause in the campaigns of 1932, 1936 and 1940.

    But with dedication of the FDR Memorial set Friday, Norfolk Southern
    railroad, which owns the car, is showing hundreds of people how the
    32nd president lived when he was on the road. 

    A few miles away, the Netherlands Embassy is honoring the president by
    naming a new orange-yellow rose for him. Roosevelt means rose field in
    Dutch: The family's founding father in America, Claes Martenszen van
    Rosenvelt, arrived in New Amsterdam from Holland before 1648. 

    Princess Margriet of the Netherlands, sister of Queen Beatrix and FDR's
    goddaughter, christened the rose Thursday as the embassy was host to
    "Roses for Roosevelt," a floral extravaganza of more than 10,000 roses. 

    At St. John's Church, across Lafayette Park from the White House, the
    annual Four Freedoms award ceremony took on special meaning. 

    Vice President Al Gore and Anne Roosevelt, a granddaughter of the
    president, presented the Franklin D. Roosevelt Freedom Medal to
    Katharine Graham, chairman of the executive committee of The Washington
    Post Co. 

    Roosevelt enunciated the Four Freedoms -- freedom of speech and
    expression, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from
    fear -- in a speech to Congress in 1941. 

    Roosevelt's memorial is only the fourth in the nation's capital
    commemorating a president. The others honor Abraham Lincoln, Thomas
    Jefferson and George Washington. 

    The memorial consists of four open-air rooms on a 7 1/2-acre site, each
    dedicated to one of the terms Roosevelt was elected to. President
    Clinton will participate in Friday's dedication. 

    Groups representing the disabled planned to protest the absence of any
    sculpture depicting Roosevelt in his wheelchair. Clinton has sent
    legislation to Capitol Hill seeking the addition of such a sculpture. 

    "We are going to do our own celebration," said Jim Dickson, who is
    blind. He said there will be speeches near the entrance of the memorial
    before the dedication and that a contingent from the "FDR in a
    Wheelchair" campaign will be positioned at the VIP entrance "so that
    when they go in, they'll know we are not satisfied." 

    Dickson said it is "a tragedy that the memorial is opening with such an
    omission." 
7.1596IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1281
    AP 1-May-1997 13:31 EDT   REF5610

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                      
    Friends Saw Suspect Kill Cosby

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The man accused of killing comedian Bill Cosby's
    son, Ennis, was with two friends who witnessed the shooting, according
    to court documents cited today by USA Today. 

    In court today, defendant Michael Markhasev was appointed two public
    defenders because his family cannot afford to pay private attorneys who
    were working the case. 

    According to USA Today: 

    Eli Zakaria, 23, and Sara Ann Peters, 21, both of Huntington Beach
    south of Los Angeles, told police they were driving around with
    Markhasev shortly after midnight on Jan 16. 

    Zakaria's uncle, Carlos Rodriguez, says Zakaria told him the three were
    high on drugs and looking for a drug dealer to find more. "He told me
    he was out of it and that they pulled over to use the phone," Rodriguez
    said. 

    According to their statements to police, Zakaria and Ms. Peters stopped
    with Markhasev at a telephone in a parking lot about 450 feet from the
    isolated spot where Cosby was shot to death on a road just off
    Interstate 405 as he fixed a flat tire on his Mercedes-Benz. 

    While Zakaria spoke on the phone, Markhasev headed up the street toward
    Cosby, the witness statements say. 

    Zakaria told Rodriguez that Markhasev was going to rob Cosby, but "just
    lost it," shot him and then came running back to the car and said,
    "Let's get out of here." The witnesses told police the same story. 

    Court papers show Christopher So and Michael Chang of Los Angeles told
    police that Markhasev called Chang days after the slaying and asked for
    help in finding the pistol he had thrown away the night of the
    shooting. 

    Chang, So and Markhasev searched for the gun without success, the
    newspaper said. So subsequently reported the incident to police and led
    them to Markhasev, the newspaper said. 

    "The USA Today story came as a surprise to me," outgoing defense
    attorney Charles Lindner said outside court. "I'm curious as to how
    they obtained the documents they claim to have." 

    Co-counsel Darren Kavinoky denied that the defense leaked the
    documents. 

    The attorneys' comments were limited because of a gag order in the
    case. 

    Markhasev, an 18-year-old Ukrainian immigrant, was arrested March 12
    and has been held since then pending trial. He pleaded innocent to
    initial charges of murder with special circumstances of attempted
    robbery and use of a firearm during a crime. 

    However, the district attorney's office subsequently obtained a secret
    indictment, which remained sealed pending Markhasev's arraignment in
    Los Angeles Superior Court. 

    Markhasev was brought to court today but his arraignment was postponed
    to May 13 to give his new lawyers time to prepare the defense. 

    Lindner had filed a motion this week seeking to have the court appoint
    him defense counsel because Markhasev's family could not pay. The
    motion, however, was withdrawn today and the court appointed two public
    defenders. 

    Lindner said outside court that Markhasev's trial would last three to
    six months and cost the family $300,000. 

    Markhasev will now be represented by Henry Hall, who has been a public
    defender 20 years and has worked many capital cases, and Harriet
    Hawkins, who has been with the county public defenders office since
    February 1994 and was a federal public defenders for six years
    previously. 
7.1597IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1336
    AP 1-May-1997 13:08 EDT   REF5482

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                   
    Huge Militia Explosives Cache Found

    YUBA CITY, Calif. (AP) -- Days after a Freemen militia sympathizer was
    seriously injured in an explosion at his home, a powerful cache of
    explosives was seized at the motor home of two of his associates. 

    If it had been detonated, the material taken Wednesday -- 500 pounds of
    an explosive called petrogel -- would have been felt for three miles,
    Yuba County Sheriff Gary Tindel said. 

    Taken into custody for questioning were Kevin Quinn, 37, and Vernon
    Weckner, 66, who lived at the motor home in this city 100 miles
    northeast of San Francisco, Tindel said. 

    Authorities said Quinn and Weckner are friends or associates of William
    Goehler, 34, who was seriously injured in an explosion Sunday that
    ripped through his home in nearby Olivehurst and broke windows two
    blocks away. 

    Goehler underwent surgery for a severe neck injury after Sunday's
    explosion. His 2-year-old daughter suffered a head cut. 

    Goehler was arrested for investigation of using a destructive device
    and child cruelty. 

    Last year, Goehler supported the anti-government Freemen during their
    three-month standoff with federal agents in Jordon, Mont. 

    He made several trips to the road just outside the Freemen compound, at
    one point displaying an American flag upside down in a traditional
    signal of distress. He was arrested for trespassing during one of the
    trips. 
7.1598IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1360
    AP 1-May-1997 16:39 EDT   REF5832

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Winnipeg Braces for Crest of Flood

    By JOHN MacDONALD

    Associated Press Writer

    WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) -- Putting their faith in a hastily constructed
    dike south of the city, people waited anxiously for word Thursday that
    the bulging Red River had finally crested. 

    The anxiety was relieved for many with news that, even if the dike
    broke, flooding in the city likely would be minimal. 

    Winnipeg officials on Wednesday told some 10,000 people in riverfront
    businesses and homes to be prepared to evacuate on short notice if
    there were breaches in the temporary dike. 

    On Thursday, that order was postponed. Mayor Susan Thompson said
    hydrologists now believe that even multiple breaches in the 25-mile
    earthen dike would not greatly increase the amount of water in the Red
    River, which cuts through Winnipeg. 

    Thompson said she felt "good and comfortable" with the city's
    preparations. 

    "I think the best way to describe today is it's a good, solid holding
    pattern that we're in," Thompson said. "There is a decidedly stronger
    confidence (because of) the better data that we have." 

    Floodwaters from the Red, which flows north, have devastated
    communities in North Dakota in the worst flooding in the region's
    history. In Winnipeg, the river on Thursday afternoon was only a few
    inches shy of its predicted crest of 24.5 feet. It was expected to
    crest by nightfall. 

    A huge, 30-year-old floodway built to divert much of the Red River east
    of the city was expected to spare most of Winnipeg from the flooding. 

    But crews also quickly built a 25-mile dike southwest of town to stop a
    lake of water moving over land toward the city. 

    Manitoba Premier Gary Filmon received a $25 million check from Canadian
    officials to help pay for the flood-protection efforts. 

    Canada's chief election officer, Jean-Pierre Kingsley, toured the
    Winnipeg area Thursday to see the flooding. Kingsley said he wanted to
    meet with local election officials before deciding whether to recommend
    postponing a June 2 election for 10 parliamentary districts affected by
    flooding. 

    The election would have to be rescheduled within six months. 

    Filmon said he is confident Kingsley will recommend a postponement. 

    "People are under tremendous stress," he said. "They can't even think
    about campaigning." 
7.1599IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1325
    AP 1-May-1997 16:38 EDT   REF5831

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                      
    Two Die in Denmark Train Crash

    COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -- Two people were killed and at least 18
    injured Thursday when two passenger trains crashed head-on in
    northeastern Denmark. 

    The crash occurred on a single-track stretch near Gilleleje, 35 miles
    north of Copenhagen, along the northern shore of Zealand island. The
    trains are owned by a private company that runs the coastal line
    between Gilleleje and Helsingoer, about 25 miles north of Copenhagen. 

    The Helsingoer-bound locomotive plowed under the other, driving it
    upward to a 30-degree angle. Two huge cranes were separating the
    wrecks. 

    One of those killed was a train driver and the other was a passenger.
    One of the injured passengers was listed in critical condition. 

    The was no immediate word on why both trains were using the track at
    the same time. It was the third accident on that section of track in
    three years. A total of 38 people were injured in those crashes. 
7.1600IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 02 1997 11:1337
    AP 1-May-1997 11:34 EDT   REF5071

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Evolution, Thought Slow, Moves Fast

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A recent study shows that evolution, commonly thought
    of as operating over eons, can happen over just a few years. 

    That's nothing new to biologists, who have witnessed remarkably rapid
    evolution in bacteria, snails, moths and a host of other creatures
    since Charles Darwin first documented the process in finches.

    But nobody had ever demonstrated rapid evolution in an actual
    experiment before researchers took lizards from the Bahamian island of
    Staniel Cay and introduced them to 14 even-smaller islands nearby. 

    The smaller islands had sparser, shorter vegetation than Staniel Cay.
    And since these particular lizards, of the species Anolis sagrei, spend
    a lot of time sitting on branches, the biologists predicted that the
    smaller vegetation would lead to correspondingly shorter hind limbs in
    the lizard. 

    Which is exactly what happened. Generally, the smaller the island, the
    smaller the vegetation, the smaller the hind limbs on the lizards,
    Jonathan Losos of Washington University in St. Louis, Kenneth Warheit
    of the University of Washington in Seattle and Thomas Schoenert of the
    University of California at Davis report in today's issue of the
    British journal Nature. 

    After introducing lizards to 11 islands in 1977 and to three others in
    1981, the researchers returned in 1991 to find exactly what they
    expected. 

    "Although rates of evolution as rapid as observed in this study are not
    uncommon in introduced populations, rarely has the adaptive nature of
    this change been so clear-cut," the researchers wrote. 
7.1601IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2298
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 5-May-1997 1:05 EDT   REF5427

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, May 5, 1997
   
    ZAIRE 

    POINTE NOIRE, Congo (AP) -- A face-to-face meeting between Zaire's
    ailing president and the rival who controls nearly three-fourths of his
    country has resolved little -- only that they plan to meet again.
    President Mobutu Sese Seko did not announce his resignation, as had
    been predicted by diplomats aboard the South African naval vessel where
    talks were held Sunday. Mediators fear the talks were the last chance
    to secure a truce and prevent the rebels from marching on Zaire's
    capital, Kinshasa. All indications were that the rebels intend to keep
    advancing. 
   
    CANADA-GOLD-SCAM 

    TORONTO (AP) -- The Indonesian jungle tract touted by Bre-X Minerals as
    a monumental bonanza is instead the site of one of history's biggest
    mining scams, an independent testing company says. Strathcona Minerals,
    a consulting firm hired to determine the value of the Busang site on
    the island of Borneo, said its tests showed no evidence of any gold
    worth mining. Reacting to the Strathcona report, the Toronto Stock
    Exchange said it will halt trading in Bre-X shares. A similar freeze,
    of indefinite duration, will reportedly be imposed on the Nasdaq and
    other exchanges. 
   
    RECALLING-HOLOCAUST 

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israeli flags flew at half-staff, more than 2,000
    teen-agers marched to the ruins of the gas chambers at Auschwitz, and
    Germans read aloud the names of nearly 56,000 Nazi victims in a tribute
    to 6 million Jews who died in the Holocaust. Jewish communities in many
    nations commemorated the Holocaust Sunday, the anniversary of the
    Warsaw Ghetto uprising during World War II. 
   
    COMPUTER CHESS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Deep Blue has defeated World Chess Champion Garry
    Kasparov in game two of a six-game chess rematch that pits one of
    history's best players against the most powerful computer ever to be
    programmed for the sport. After winning the first match Saturday
    Kasparov had said human error would be the only way for a computer to
    beat a human at the top levels of the game. Kasparov resigned after the
    computer's 45th move, which put Deep Blue in position for a winning
    endgame. The match lasted just short of four hours. 
   
    SEPARATIST-STANDOFF 

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Authorities used planes and helicopters to
    scour miles of rugged terrain for two armed members of a Texas
    secessionist group who fled into the mountains before their leader
    ended a weeklong standoff. 
   
    GUATEMALA-ALBRIGHT 

    TULUCHE, Guatemala (AP) -- Secretary of State Madeleine Albright toured
    a camp for former anti-government rebels to show support for efforts to
    implement a peace accord that ended a 36-year civil war. Flanked by
    Guatemala Foreign Minister Eduardo Stein and former rebel commander
    Raul Barrera, Albright told the former combatants that she had come to
    visit "because we are all one family." 
   
    INTEL-NEW CHIP 

    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Intel, the world's largest maker of computer
    chips, is set to introduce its latest microprocessor, the Pentium II.
    The processor, running at speeds of up to 300 megahertz and sporting a
    unique cartridge design, is Intel's latest attempt to extend its most
    advanced technology into the mainstream. The sixth-generation Pentium
    II, to be unveiled in New York Wednesday, will greatly improve programs
    rich in sound, video and three-dimensional images, such as
    videoconferencing and development for the Internet's World Wide Web. 
   
    LAKERS-JAZZ 

    SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- The Utah Jazz defeated the Los Angeles Lakers
    93-77 in the opener of their second round series. Karl Malone had 23
    points and 13 rebounds. Malone, 9-of-21 from the floor, also had two
    blocked shots and a pair of steals for the Jazz, who will try for a 2-0
    lead in the best-of-7 series Tuesday night. Shaquille O'Neal shot just
    6-of-16 for 17 points -- his lowest production of the playoffs. 
   
    MIGHTY DUCKS-RED WINGS 

    DETROIT (AP) -- Vyacheslav Kozlov scored a power-play goal 1:34 into
    the third overtime to lift the Detroit Red Wings to a 3-2 victory over
    Anaheim and a 2-0 lead in their Western Conference semifinal series
    with the Mighty Ducks. Steve Yzerman and Doug Brown also scored for
    Detroit, which hasn't won a Stanley Cup in 42 years. The loss was the
    second straight overtime loss for the Mighty Ducks. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1602IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:22113
    RTw  05-May-97 04:09    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - Rebels were advancing on Zaire's capital of Kinshasa after
    President Mobutu Sese Seko refused to bow to a demand by their leader,
    Laurent Kabila, for his immediate resignation. South Africa's President
    Nelson Mandela said fresh talks would take place within eight to 10
    days after the three men met on a South African ship but failed to
    broker a deal. 

    KISANGANI, Zaire - More than 100 Hutu refugees from Rwanda suffocated
    or were crushed to death in a train carrying them from a refugee camp
    in Zaire to be airlifted back to their country, U.N. officials said. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - The supercomputer Deep Blue, playing like a human, defeated
    world chess champion Garry Kasparov on Sunday to tie their six-game
    re-match at one victory each. 

    - - - - 

    CAIRO - Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said Israel's construction
    of Jewish settlements was a main issue behind the current deadlock,
    which U.S. and European Union envoys will try to break, in Middle East
    peace negotiations. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The FBI said that mechanical failure likely brought down
    TWA flight 800 last July, killing all 230 people aboard. 

    - - - - 

    DALLAS - Cigarette makers and state attorneys general are scheduled to
    resume negotiations aimed at resolving how to handle mounting
    litigation against the tobacco industry and other issues. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - The new Labour government of Prime Minister Tony Blair opens
    its first full week in power by starting to repair Britain's relations
    with the European Union and deciding what to do about the country's
    strained finances. 

    LONDON - New British Prime Minister Tony Blair will have his first
    face-to-face talks with U.S. President Bill Clinton during an
    international meeting in the Netherlands on May 28, a government
    spokesman said. 

    BELFAST -  Gerry Adams, head of the IRA's political arm Sinn Fein,
    urged Britain's incoming Labour government to forge a new peace in the
    divided province of Northern Ireland. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - An Albanian refugee ship with up to 1,500 people on board limped
    into the southern Italian port of Bari , one of two crowded ships
    racketeers attempted to send across the Adriatic. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Radical Chechen rebel commander Salman Raduyev has claimed
    responsibility for two recent bomb attacks in southern Russia in which
    four people died. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - British police were battling to halt a riot early in the
    eastern English city of Scunthorpe, the Press Association news agency
    reported. 

    - - - - 

    SARAJEVO - Twenty-five homes formerly inhabited by Bosnian Serbs were
    put to the torch in Croat-controlled territory over the weekend in an
    apparent attempt to discourage refugees from moving back, an
    international official said. 

    - - - - 

    DUSHANBE - Five gunmen suspected of being involved in last week's
    assassination attempt on Tajikistan's leader were killed in a shoot-out
    with police. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - A second opinion poll in 24 hours showed French left-wing
    parties catching up on the ruling centre-right majority ahead of a May
    25-June 1 general election. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised that a strong
    Israel would always ensure the atrocities of World War II, when Nazis
    exterminated six million Jews, never recur. 

    - - - - 

    DUBAI - Iran will boost its oil exports to China by 43 percent to
    100,000 barrels per day (bpd) over the next two years, Iranian
    television said. 

    - - - - 

    GUATEMALA CITY - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright praised
    Guatemala for ending its bloody 36-year civil war and said recent peace
    accords had finally given the strife-torn nation a shot at happiness. 

    REUTER
7.1603IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2283
    RTw  05-May-97 05:30    

    Macau police hunt motorcycle hitmen after killings

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Harald Bruning 

    MACAU, May 5 (Reuter) - Heavily armed police fanned out across
    Portuguese-run Macau on Monday in search of drive-by hitmen who gunned
    down three men in the latest wave of gangland warfare. 

    A senior police officer said the victims were "pretty well known
    triads" -- or members of Chinese criminal fraternities. 

    He said the trio, who were travelling in one car, were prominent
    members of the 14K triad and were believed to be associates of the
    triad's local "dragonhead," or leader, nicknamed Broken Teeth Koi who
    police believe has fled Macau. 

    The three were riddled with bullets by gunmen riding pillion on three
    motorcycles on Sunday evening. 

    A wave of gangland violence has shocked once-sleepy Macau located 60 km
    (40 miles) west of Hong Kong on the mouth of the Pearl River estuary. 

    Motorcycle hitmen have targeted gang kingpins, senior law enforcers and
    intelligence agents in recent months. 

    The then vice-director of the Macau government's gambling inspection
    department, Lieutenant-Colonel Manuel Apolinario, was shot twice in the
    face and neck last November at a spot close to the scene of Sunday's
    triple murder. 

    He survived and in March was sworn in as director of the gambling
    inspectorate. His attacker remains at large. 

    Police sources say Macau's two main triad societies, the 14K and the
    Soi Fong, are locked in a turf war over profits from casino
    loansharking, smuggling, prostitution and drug-trafficking. 

    "This was one more professional execution-style killing," a senior
    police official said. 

    Police are unsure whether the attack, which followed a wave of arson
    across Macau, was an act of revenge of the Soi Fong by the 14K or an
    internal battle within the 14K. 

    They suspect the killers may have been imported from China to carry out
    the hit. 

    Armed police wearing bullet-proof jackets manned road blocks on the
    Macau peninsula and its two nearby islands -- popular crossing points
    into China. 

    China has rebuked Macau law enforcement agencies for failing to quash
    the gang-related shootings, bombings and arson attacks that have raised
    the murder rate to 14 this year against 21 in all 1996. 

    Macau reverts to China in 1999, two and a half years after Britain
    relinquishes sovereignty over Hong Kong to China. 

    Border controls between Macau, a Portuguese outpost for more than 400
    years, and China are lax in comparison with those in Hong Kong. 

    Macau derives most of its revenues from its casinos and related tourism
    which attract thousands of gambling-mad Hong Kong people -- and draw
    criminal activity. 

    Hong Kong police say more mainland Chinese, most of them from affluent
    southern towns in the Pearl River delta, are operating in Macau and
    competing with home-grown triads. 

    Hong Kong triads -- police say there are more than 50 active in the
    British colony -- find pickings easier in Macau, police said. 

    They say they do not see the violence spilling over into Hong Kong. 

    Gambling, other that on horse racing and a twice-weekly lottery, both
    strictly controlled by the Hong Kong Jockey Club, is banned in Hong
    Kong. 

    REUTER
7.1604IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2231
    RTw  05-May-97 04:19    

    Police halt riot in British city, two injured

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 5 (Reuter) - British police battled hundreds of rioters for
    more than two hours overnight before restoring order in the eastern
    English city of Scunthorpe, the Press Association news agency reported
    on Monday. 

    At least 19 people were arrested and two were taken to hospital with
    injuries, the agency said. 

    Police had to call in reinforcements from surrounding areas when they
    came under attack from the rioters. 

    "The police officers found themselves under attack from bottles, coins
    and similar missiles," a police spokeswoman was quoted as saying. 

    "In the course of the disturbance a police car was overturned and set
    on fire," she added. 

    The Press Association said the trouble started in a fast-food shop in
    the city centre on Sunday night and spread when revellers from a nearby
    nightclub joined in. 

    Police said the cause of the rioting was unclear and an investigation
    was being launched. 

    REUTER
7.1605IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2274
    RTw  05-May-97 02:14    

    Blair government to start repairing ties with EU

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By David Ljunggren 

    LONDON, May 5 (Reuter) - The new Labour government of Prime Minister
    Tony Blair opens its first full week in power on Monday by starting to
    repair Britain's relations with the European Union and deciding what to
    do about the country's strained finances. 

    Minister for Europe Doug Henderson will go to Brussels to take the
    first step towards signing the EU's Social Chapter, set up to regulate
    working conditions in the 15-nation bloc. 

    Former prime minister John Major refused to sign up to the chapter,
    saying it could cost 500,000 jobs, but Labour pledged to join as soon
    as it won power. 

    "We do not think that the British people should be second-class
    citizens with less rights than employees on the continent," said
    incoming Foreign Secretary Robin Cook. 

    Labour is keen to show Brussels a more friendly face than the outgoing
    Conservatives, many of whom accused the EU of secretly trying to build
    a federalist superstate. 

    Blair spent Sunday putting the finishing touches to his cabinet, which
    he vowed would hit the ground running to take advantage of the momentum
    created by his overwhelming election victory last Thursday. 

    "He wants to see a new kind of Britain going into a new millennium and
    he'll have as much effect on British political life as he's had on the
    Labour Party in the last two or three years," said Deputy Prime
    Minister John Prescott. 

    "Quite frankly, it may well be a bumpy ride but I'm looking forward to
    it," he told BBC television. 

    One of Labour's priorities is to reform the country's much-criticised
    welfare system which pays out around 100 billion pounds a year in
    benefits. 

    The Sun tabloid newspaper said Social Security Minister Frank Field
    planned to clamp down on benefit fraud and wanted to provide free child
    care for a million single mothers to help them to find jobs. 

    A government spokesman declined to comment on the report, which said
    Field would raise 1.2 billion pounds ($1.93 billion) to pay for the
    scheme by scrapping subsidence grants for university students, who
    would survive by taking out low-interest loans. 

    Blair also has to fill a black hole in the country's public finances
    which some experts put at 10 billion pounds. 

    The head of a powerful British industry lobby group said Labour should
    prevent the economy from overheating by raising taxes, a suggestion
    which seemed to find favour with at least one senior party figure. 

    "We would be crazy not to exploit the euphoria of our victory by taking
    potentially unpopular measures now," one minister told the Financial
    Times. "Some tax increases -- aimed at public health or for green
    reasons -- might even be popular." 

    Chancellor of the Exchqeuer Gordon Brown is due to announce an
    emergency budget by the middle of June. 

    A government spokesman said Blair would have his first face-to-face
    talks with U.S. President Bill Clinton during an international meeting
    in the Netherlands on May 28. 

    REUTER
7.1606IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2262
    RTw  05-May-97 01:23    

    Study finds evidence of viral cause of cancer

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Maggie Fox 

    LONDON, May 5 (Reuter) - British scientists said on Monday they had
    found more evidence that a virus could cause certain types of cancer. 

    They said cases of acute lymphocytic leukaemia (ALL), the biggest cause
    of leukaemia in children, clustered in the summer in their study of
    4,200 people. 

    "Whatever is causing this cancer is also seasonal," said Padmanabhan
    Badrinath of Cambridge University, who worked on the study. "We think
    the potential candidate is a viral infection." 

    The study, published in the Cancer Research Campaign charity's British
    Journal of Cancer, found that ALL was 40 percent more likely to be
    diagnosed between May and October than in other months. 

    Their study covered all cases of cancer reported in a region of eastern
    England between 1971 and 1994. 

    Other studies have tried to find a seasonal link to cancer but have had
    mixed results. Badrinath said the pattern was only clear in ALL. 

    This made sense, he added, as ALL had been identified as a possible
    candidate for having a viral cause. 

    ALL affects one in 100,000 children. Victims are lethargic and
    feverish, pale, irritable and have joint and bone pain. They are
    anaemic and their immune systems are damaged. 

    A few cases seem to have genetic factors and there was a six-fold
    increase in leukaemia, mostly ALL, in Japanese children exposed to
    radiation from atomic bombs in World War Two. 

    Several studies have shown a small increase in ALL among children
    living near power plants or nuclear reprocessing plants. 

    One British researcher, Dr Leo Kinlen, has suggested this could be due
    to workers coming in to relatively isolated communities to build the
    plant and carrying a virus with them. 

    Other studies have linked ALL to human t-cell lymphotrophic virus
    (HTLV-1). But Badrinath said: "We do not know what virus it is and
    viral infection is only one possible cause." 

    He added: "The next step should be to confirm this and identify the
    possible agent." 

    Badrinath said ALL was clearly seasonal and there could be no other
    explanation for the cluster of cases in summer. 

    "ALL is quite sudden in onset," he said. "It only takes a week or two
    weeks for them to present. We found a 40 percent summer excess which
    can't be due to chance." 

    REUTER
7.1607IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2256
    RTw  04-May-97 23:59    

    UK plans free child care for single mothers-paper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 4 (Reuter) - Britain's new Labour government is planning
    far-reaching reforms of the country's welfare system that include
    providing free child care for a million single mothers to help them get
    back to work, the Sun newspaper said. 

    Monday's edition said Social Security Minister Frank Field proposed
    raising 1.2 billion pounds ($1.93 billion) to pay for the scheme by
    scrapping subsistence grants for university students, who will survive
    by taking out low-interest loans. 

    New Prime Minister Tony Blair has told Field to "think the unthinkable"
    and find a way of cutting the 100 billion pounds which are spent on
    welfare a year. 

    Field wrote in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper that the government had
    to radically overhaul the welfare system to avoid damaging public
    finances, but he gave no details. 

    Britain has the largest number of single mothers under 21 in the
    European Union and recent statistics showed a quarter of children grew
    up in households without a working adult. 

    Many single mothers say they are prevented from working because they
    cannot afford to pay for child care. 

    "We want to make it the norm in Britain for single mothers to work.
    This country needs to get back to work and off its knees," an official
    at the department of social security told the newspaper. 

    "No one wants childen growing up with just one parent who has never
    seen work." 

    No one was immediately available in the government press office to
    comment on the report. 

    The newspaper also said Field planned to step up the fight against
    benefit fraud and would make everyone earning more than 100 pounds a
    week take out a second pension in addition to the basic state scheme. 

    The pensions would be run by non-profit-making building societies and
    insurance companies which would not charge administration fees. 

    Those claiming unemployment benefit would lose part of their weekly
    payments unless they agreed to sign up for training courses, the Sun
    said. 

    "There is no way we will encourage people to sit at home and watch
    television at the taxpayer's expense," one minister told the newspaper. 

    REUTER
7.1608IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2229
    RTw  04-May-97 18:45    

    Blair's campaign supremo gets UK ministerial post

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 4 (Reuter) - New British Prime Minister Tony Blair on
    Sunday handed a ministerial post to Peter Mandelson, the man who
    meticulously plotted the Labour Party's crushing election win last
    week. 

    A government spokesman said Mandelson would become minister without
    portfolio to help implement government policies and present them
    effectively to the public. Blair also appointed Doug Henderson to be
    the new Minister for Europe. 

    Henderson was due to meet Blair and Foreign Secretary Robin Cook later
    on Sunday to discuss a European Union meeting on Monday when Britain is
    set to take the first step towards signing the EU's Social Chapter on
    workers' rights. 

    Geoffrey Robinson, former chief executive of British car maker Jaguar,
    was appointed Paymaster-General at the Treasury with responsibility for
    luring private cash into public infrastructure projects. 

    Former Scottish affairs spokeswoman Helen Liddell was made a minister
    of state at the Treasury. 

    REUTER
7.1609IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2321
    RTw  04-May-97 15:06    

    Saudi Arabia beheads two Filipinos for robbery

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBAI, May 4 (Reuter) - Saudi Arabia on Sunday beheaded two Filipinos
    convicted of robbery, state-run Saudi radio said. 

    The two, Artil Ibil Itran and Robil Gilda, were executed in Riyadh for
    robbing a shop and striking one of its employees on the head with an
    iron bar during the crime, said the radio monitored by the British
    Broadcasting Corporation. 

    The beheadings raised to 25 the number of people put to death in the
    conservative Islamic kingdom this year. 

    Saudi Arabia enforces Islamic sharia law by publicly beheading
    convicted murderers, drug smugglers, rapists and other criminals.

    REUTER
7.1610IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:23107
    RTw  04-May-97 14:45    

    Defeated UK Conservatives too stunned to regroup

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Robert Woodward 

    LONDON, May 4 (Reuter) - The smoke over the election battlefield has
    cleared and Tony Blair is enjoying the spoils of victory, sharing out
    ministries to his Labour lieutenants and preparing to impose his
    "radical centrist" ideas on Britain. 

    But the routed Conservatives resemble a leaderless rabble. Many are
    still too stunned by the scale of their defeat at Thursday's poll to
    think clearly about the future. 

    The Conservatives can now claim only to represent rural England, having
    been wiped out in the major cities, Scotland and Wales. After 18 years
    in power, the shattering loss is especially hard to take for
    Conservatives who had boasted they were the natural party of
    government. 

    For the next five years, and perhaps far longer, opposition will be
    their fate. 

    John Major has retreated to his country home, accepting that as leader
    of the party he must bear some responsibility for the disaster. The
    former prime minister has said he will resign, probably within weeks,
    as party leader. 

    But Major, and everyone else in the country, knows that division and
    open dissent in his party over how closely Britain should tie itself to
    Europe poisoned its electoral chances. 

    "The troubles of the last two or three years have entirely been caused
    by Europe. It is a kind of cancer at the heart of the party. Some
    people are quite obsessed by it, they are quite incapable of agreeing
    upon it," former finance minister Kenneth Clarke said on Sunday. 

    Clarke was the first to recover from the election debacle and declare
    himself a candidate to succeed Major. He epitomises the problem facing
    his party in its darkest hour -- should it choose someone who may unify
    the party or someone potentially divisive who may give the party a new
    and distinctive image? 

    To most non-Conservatives, Clarke would seem a logical choice -- he has
    headed a number of ministries, has presided over the best economic
    statistics in Britain for decades and was the Conservative government's
    best parliamentary performer. 

    But Clarke was also the cabinet's most fervent pro-European, who
    persuaded Major to stick by a "wait and see" policy towards joining the
    single currency rather than rule it out. 

    For Conservative Eurosceptics his obstinacy helped cause the defeat and
    rules Clarke out as a future leader. 

    Political analysts say well over half of the remaining 165 Conservative
    members of parliament are Eurosceptics. 

    But those MPs who support close ties with Europe are determined that
    the damage Eurosceptics caused in government will not be repeated in
    opposition. 

    It will require the wisdom of Solomon to persuade both wings to unite
    in the party's interest. 

    "If the party is led by a Europhile he is not going to persuade the
    Euro-sceptics to agree with him. If the party is led by a Eurosceptic
    he is not going to persuade the Europhiles to take the whip (follow
    party policy) on the big issues," Clarke said. 

    Right-wing Eurosceptic Peter Lilley, another former cabinet minister,
    announced his candidature on Saturday and John Redwood, who stood
    against Major in a leadership battle in 1995, is almost certain to
    throw his hat in the ring. 

    Lilley, a low profile Social Security minister, believes he could unite
    the party but said on Sunday he opposed joining a single currency in
    this five-year parliament. 

    More likely unity candidates include former Health Secretary Stephen
    Dorrell and the youngster in the pack, William Hague, the 36-year-old
    former Welsh Secretary. 

    The old warhorse of the party, former deputy prime minister Michael
    Heseltine, has ruled himself out after suffering angina pains probably
    due to the pressure of campaigning. 

    Dorrell said on Sunday the task facing the next leader was to "rebuild
    the Conservative coalition, so that those former voters feel the party
    once again speaks for them." 

    Dorrell and Clarke believe the leadership election should concentrate
    on areas other than Europe so as to put a stop to the public feuds that
    split the party in government. 

    But the quasi-religious zeal of the Eurosceptics, and media obsession
    with the European issue, almost guarantee that such hopes will be
    dashed. 

    So another bloody battle awaits the weary Conservative troops, taking
    the pressure off Blair as he and his new government tackle the problems
    of power.

    REUTER
7.1611IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2392
    AP 5-May-1997 0:51 EDT   REF5419

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Manhunt Held for Secessionists

    By EDUARDO MONTES

    Associated Press Writer

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- Authorities used planes and helicopters
    Sunday to scour miles of rugged terrain for two armed members of a
    Texas secessionist group who fled into the mountains before their
    leader ended a weeklong standoff. 

    The air search went on while explosives and booby traps were cleared
    from around the trailer and cabin that the Republic of Texas group had
    declared its "embassy" in remote western Texas. 

    Officials seemed confident the two men could not last long in the
    hills. 

    "Eventually, they're going to get real hungry and thirsty," said Mike
    Cox, Department of Public Safety spokesman. He said the operation was
    becoming a "routine manhunt." 

    Richard McLaren, the self-styled ambassador of the group, was in
    custody along with five of his followers who held off state troopers in
    an armed siege that began with a brief hostage-taking on April 27. 

    In a telephone interview from jail with NBC News, McLaren said the
    group would continue to wage its legal war to win independence for
    Texas. 

    "We're still moving forward. We've not stopped it," he said, adding
    that he had a large team of "legal experts" working on his group's
    case. 

    McLaren and three others left their mountain hideaway after McLaren
    signed a "cease-fire document" with the Texas Rangers on Saturday
    afternoon. McLaren's wife had given up earlier in the day and another
    member left Friday. 

    Before the standoff ended, authorities watched as two armed members of
    the group disappeared separately into the mountains. Troopers didn't
    pursue them, not wanting to jeopardize the negotiations with McLaren. 

    Cox said at least 60 pipe bombs and 12 gasoline containers had been
    found at the encampment. The gasoline containers were apparently set up
    so they could be set on fire, then poured down a roadway, he said. 

    He said the discoveries have reinforced "how good the decision was not
    to pursue them." 

    McLaren and three followers have been charged with organized criminal
    activity. The felony is punishable by up to life in prison and a
    $10,000 fine. McLaren's wife, Evelyn, is awaiting arraignment on
    federal charges unrelated to the standoff. 

    One of the two missing men, Richard Frank Keyes, is charged with
    organized criminal activity and aggravated kidnapping in connection
    with the hostage-taking that sparked the standoff. No charges have been
    filed against the other man, Mike Matson. 

    The stalemate began when several McLaren followers stormed the home of
    two neighbors and held the couple hostage to protest of the arrest of a
    group member. Robert Scheidt was exchanged for the hostages last
    Monday, but the standoff continued. Scheidt later surrendered and was
    taken into custody. 

    McLaren heads one of at least three factions calling themselves the
    Republic of Texas. They believe Texas was illegally annexed by the
    United States in 1845 and are seeking independence. 

    Residents of the Davis Mountains Resort subdivision, the isolated
    development where McLaren set up his erstwhile nation, tried to return
    to normal life Sunday as the police presence began to dwindle. 

    Although residents were being issued identification cards allowing them
    to return to their homes, state authorities warned that some areas were
    still closed because of hidden pipe bombs and booby traps. 

    "You can't even tell what's going on," said Kenneth Tucker, who
    returned home Saturday after spending much of the week in a tent with
    his mother. "It's just a normal day, really." 

    Other neighbors fear they haven't heard the last of McLaren.  "I think
    the standoff is over, but it's all just starting," said Randall Kinzie.
    "We haven't seen the last of Rick McLaren." 

    "I expect appeals, appeals, appeals. It's going to cost us millions.
    He's a very dedicated paper shuffler," added resident Malcolm Tweedy. 
7.1612IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2330
    AP 4-May-1997 23:08 EDT   REF5242

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Prosecutor May Leave Bomb Trial

    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- The lead prosecutor in the Oklahoma City bombing
    case is leaving after Timothy McVeigh's trial and won't participate in
    the trial of co-defendant Terry Nichols, according to news reports. 

    Joseph Hartzler's decision to step down from the case he volunteered
    for two years ago means other federal prosecutors must step in and
    prepare the star witnesses for Nichols' trial, The Sunday Oklahoman and
    Los Angeles Times reported. 

    "I'm a little disappointed that he's quitting after the easy case,"
    said Oklahoma City defense attorney Mack Martin. "We've never dealt
    with anyone but him for trial preparation." 

    Hartzler, 46, an assistant U.S. Attorney from Springfield, Ill., was
    chosen by Attorney General Janet Reno to lead the bombing prosecution
    team in May 1995. 

    Hartzler, who has multiple sclerosis and uses a wheelchair, declined to
    comment on his reasons for leaving. He also is one of three nominees
    for a federal judgeship in the Central District of Illinois, U.S. Sen.
    Carol Moseley Braun's office said Sunday. 

    Prosecutors have refused to discuss theng trial because of a gag order.
    There are eight other attorneys on the government's team. 
7.1613IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2329
    AP 4-May-1997 12:49 EDT   REF5412

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Phone Satellite Launch Delayed

    VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) -- The launch of a rocket
    carrying five satellites was postponed Sunday for the third day in a
    row after an alarm sounded three seconds before liftoff, officials
    said. 

    It was unclear what triggered the alarm, which automatically caused the
    liftoff to be aborted just before the scheduled 8:01 a.m. launch, said
    Christine Nelson, a spokeswoman for McDonnell Douglas, which made the
    Delta II rocket. 

    The blastoff tentatively was rescheduled for Monday morning. 

    The launch is for the Iridium global communications system, led by
    Illinois-based Motorola Inc. The consortium wants to place 66
    satellites into orbit to allow mobile telephone users to call anywhere
    in the world as easily as they now place cellular calls in cities. 

    The $5 billion project has suffered a series of delays. 

    The initial launch was twice scrubbed because of problems with ground
    equipment. Another attempt was canceled when it was discovered that a
    cork layer between the rocket's first stage and its liquid oxygen fuel
    was thinner than it should have been. 
7.1614IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2354
    AP 4-May-1997 22:55 EDT   REF5227

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thai Ferry Carrying 600 Sinks

    BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- A ferry carrying 600 tourists hit a reef and
    sank Sunday near an island off the beach resort of Phuket. All
    passengers were rescued. 

    One passenger suffered a broken back, and there were several cases of
    shock, but most injuries involved only scrapes and bruises, authorities
    said. It was not clear how many people were hurt. 

    A number of foreigners were among the passengers, though most were
    Thais out on a long holiday weekend. Phuket, 430 miles southwest of
    Bangkok, is Thailand's most popular island resort with foreign
    tourists. 

    The King Ferry hit Moo Sang reef near Flower Island, 15 miles from
    Phuket, at about 10 a.m., while traveling to Phi Phi, a nearby smaller
    resort island. 

    Peerapat said disaster was averted because there were enough life
    jackets for everyone and it took almost an hour for the boat to sink,
    allowing fishermen from Flower Island to come to the rescue. 

    "I felt a big bump when it hit," said Tiffany Gibbs, 24, of Hong Kong.
    "People were very quiet. Some people were running and there was a
    scramble for the life jackets because the boat began to tilt very
    quickly, but people didn't panic." 

    Radio reports said the ferry captain fled the scene after being
    rescued, but police said they believed he had reached Phi Phi in a
    fishing boat and was helping in rescue attempts from there. 

    Boonriang Chuchaisangrat, chief public health officer in Phuket, said
    at least 15 of the rescued travelers were Westerners or Japanese. None
    of the passengers told him they had seen anyone drown, he said. 

    Doctors and rescue teams from 10 of Phuket's hospitals treated
    passengers at Phuket Harbor, Boonriang said. They suffered minor
    injuries including bruises and scratches and were frightened, Peerapat
    said. 

    Some of the rescued tourists told local radio they had been separated
    from family members and didn't know where they were. 

    Phuket is popular with local and foreign tourists, and several
    Hollywood movies, including the James Bond film "The Man with the
    Golden Gun," have been shot there. But the waters of the Andaman Sea
    turn rough and currents become extremely strong from May until October.

    The King Ferry sank in about 100 feet of water, police said. 
7.1615IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:23120
    AP 4-May-1997 20:02 EDT   REF5078

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. Report: People Living Longer

    By CLARE NULLIS

    Associated Press Writer

    GENEVA (AP) -- Medical advances mean more people around the world are
    living longer lives, but bad habits mean they aren't necessarily
    healthier and happier ones, a new U.N. report says. 

    The U.N. World Health Organization warns that so-called "diseases of
    the rich" -- cancers, heart attacks, strokes and other illnesses in
    which diet and exercise are often believed to play a part -- will
    increase as the customs of industrialized nations spread around the
    globe. 

    "Longer life can be a penalty as well as a prize. A large part of the
    price to be paid is in the currency of chronic disease," WHO says in
    its World Health Report 1997. 

    Thanks to medical progress, life expectancy is averaging 64 years in
    developing countries and reaching 80 years in some industrialized
    nations, WHO says. 

    But, it says, millions of people throw away the chance of a healthy old
    age because of sedentary lifestyles, bad diet and indulgences like
    smoking and alcohol abuse. 

    Trying to improve the health of the elderly is of crucial economic
    importance, WHO says. In the next 25 years, the population of people
    older than 65 is likely to grow by 82 percent, compared to 46 percent
    in the working age population and only 3 percent in newborns. 

    Still struggling with ailments linked to poverty, developing countries
    are also paying the price for mimicking Western lifestyles, WHO says. 

    Heart disease and strokes, which killed 15.3 million people last year
    and are the leading cause of death in many industrialized nations, are
    on the increase in poorer countries. 

    Cancers killed 6.3 million people in 1996 and there were 10 million new
    cases -- not all of them fatal. This is expected to at least double in
    most countries in the next 25 years. 

    WHO concedes that's partly due to the elimination of other fatal
    diseases, which increases the odds of getting cancer. 

    But it says much of the blame lies with diet and, above all,
    cigarettes. Smoking is on the increase throughout the developing world
    and accounts for one in seven cancer cases worldwide, it says. 

    Long the leading cancer killer among men in industrialized countries,
    lung cancer is now the top cause of cancer death among women in the
    United States. The number of female cases in the European Union is
    expected to increase by a third in less than 10 years. 

    WHO is also concerned about the increase in breast cancer, which killed
    375,000 women in 1996. White or Hawaiian women in the United States are
    most vulnerable, while risks in developing countries are smaller but
    growing, it says. 

    The agency is unsure of the exact reasons for the rise, although the
    main factor is age. Childless women or those who had children late;
    obese women; and those who took oral contraceptives at an early age or
    estrogen replacement therapy at menopause are also believed at
    increased risk. 

    Between 1995 and 2025, the number of people with diabetes will rise
    from 135 million to 300 million, with a resulting increase in kidney
    failure and blindness, it says. Again, that's due to an increase in
    obesity and sedentary habits in developing countries, WHO says. 

    On a brighter note, WHO says real progress is being made toward cancer
    prevention and cure. 

    Already, there are vaccines against hepatitis B, which causes liver
    cancer. A vaccine against the virus which leads to cervical cancer is
    on the horizon, and there are hopes for one against a key virus in
    stomach cancers, WHO notes. 
                    
    Key U.N. Health Facts and Figures

    Key facts and figures from the U.N.'s World Health Report 1997: 

    -- World population was 5.8 billion in 1996, 80 million more than 1995. 

    -- For every baby born in an industrialized country, there are 10
    people over 65, increasing to 15 by 2020. 

    -- Life expectancy averaged 48 years in 1955 and 65 years in 1995. 

    -- 5 million babies born in developing countries in 1995 died in their
    first month. 

    -- 17 million deaths from infectious or parasitic diseases in 1996.
    Included 3 million from tuberculosis, 2.5 million from diarrhea, and
    1.5 million from AIDS. 

    -- 15 million deaths from circulatory diseases, about half from heart
    disease. Six million deaths from cancer -- mainly lung, stomach, colon,
    liver and breast. 

    -- 400 million people suffer from mental disorders. In the United
    States, annual cost of depression estimated at $44 billion, equal to
    cost of cardiovascular disease. 

    -- Accidents at work kill 200,000 and injure more than 120 million each
    year. 

    -- In the United States, 65 people killed per day and more than 6,000
    wounded in violence. Lifetime chance of being murder victim in the
    United States is 1 in 240 for whites and 1 in 45 for blacks and other
    ethnic groups. 

    -- More than 800,000 suicides reported worldwide in 1996 -- thought to
    be a big underestimation. Elderly men living alone most at risk. 
7.1616IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2466
    AP 4-May-1997 15:44 EDT   REF5512

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    100 Rwanda Refugees Die on Train

    By HRVOJE HRANJSKI

    Associated Press Writer

    KISANGANI, Zaire (AP) -- At least 100 Rwandan Hutus were killed and 50
    injured late Sunday when panic erupted on a train packed with thousands
    of refugees hoping to be airlifted home from central Zaire. 

    Paul Stromberg, a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for
    Refugees, said the cause of the tragedy was not immediately clear, but
    that the victims appeared to have been trampled or had suffocated. 

    "Despite the fact the doors of the wagons were open, there was
    obviously a panic and people died," he said in Kisangani. 

    Rebel forces in control of the Kisangani area have been packing all the
    refugees they can find onto trains and dumping them on aid workers at a
    transit camp, where the United Nations is rushing to fly the Rwandans
    home. 

    "This will not stop repatriation, but we need more control over the
    movement of people," said Stromberg. The UNHCR has flown about 5,000
    refugees to Rwanda since the airlift started a week ago. 

    It was not clear whether the refugees died in a stampede to board the
    train, whether they were crushed or suffocated in the overcrowded
    boxcars, or both, said Stromberg. 

    The dead were discovered when the train reached Kisangani, and the
    injured were being treated at a Kisangani hospital, he said. 

    Rebels, who control three-fourths of the country, agreed last week on
    the biggest refugee airlift even attempted in Africa. Rebels gave aid
    workers until June 30 to clear out the refugees or rebels would handle
    it themselves. 

    At Biaro, a squalid refugee camp 25 miles south of Kisangani, about
    30,000 Rwanda refugees have gathered. They are desperate to get away
    from the filth and disease of the camp, and fear new attacks by Zairian
    villagers and rebel troops. 

    The majority of 80,000 Rwanda refugees believed to be south of
    Kisangani are still accounted for, more than a week after they fled
    into the jungle. Refugees who have come out of hiding consistently tell
    of Zairian villagers with machetes attacking the camps, and of rebel
    troops firing into the camps. 

    About 1 million Rwanda Hutus, fled into Zaire to escape retaliation for
    the Hutu government-led slaughter of 500,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus
    in 1994. Most have since returned to Rwanda. 

    The train on which the refugees were found dead Sunday was bound from
    Biaro to the Kisangani transit camp. In recent days, refugees have
    swarmed onto any U.N. truck or rebel train they see in hopes of making
    out of the camps, where at least 60 people a day are dying of disease
    and starvation. 

    Last week, rebel troops, many using whip-like bamboo sticks, and aid
    workers pushed back dozens of refugees trying to climb aboard an
    already-full U.N. truck bound for the transit camp. 
7.1617IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 11:2457
    AP 4-May-1997 14:28 EDT   REF5471

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Australians Protest Anti-Asian Pol

    PERTH, Australia (AP) -- Protesters hurled tomatoes, eggs and insults
    Sunday at a right-wing politician who has angered many Australians with
    her comments blaming Asians and Aborigines for the country's problems. 

    About 1,000 protesters -- some of them of Asian descent -- lined both
    sides of a street as independent legislator Pauline Hanson drove up for
    a fund-raising breakfast with about 300 supporters. 

    Police and protesters scuffled and demonstrators threw placards,
    sticks, tomatoes and eggs at Hanson and her supporters. Others blew
    whistles and chanted "No racists here" and "Keep the racist out."
    Nothing thrown appeared to hit Hanson. Two protesters were arrested for
    disorderly conduct. 

    Hanson gained attention at home and in Asia with a provocative maiden
    speech in Parliament in September calling for an end to Asian
    immigration. 

    She blames Asian immigrants and Australia's indigenous people, the
    Aborigines, for unemployment, crime and social division in the country.
    She wants welfare programs for Aborigines eliminated and supports the
    highly discredited theory that Aborigines were cannibals. 

    "I'm not afraid because I stand up for what I believe in, and they
    (protesters) are not going to change my mind or the minds of the
    majority of Australians (who) believe that this country is going down
    the drain," Hanson told reporters after the breakfast. 

    "If anything, it makes me more determined," she said. 

    Hanson encountered a similar protest Saturday night, when she addressed
    about 1,000 supporters at a stadium. Protesters booed and hissed at the
    crowd as they arrived, hurled tomatoes and hammered on the fire exits
    from outside. 

    Hanson's talk has been blamed for a rise in racial attacks on Asian
    immigrants and revived fears in Asia that Australia is a racist
    country. Australia has been promoting multiculturalism since
    dismantling its policy of accepting only European immigrants about 25
    years ago. 

    The opposition Labor Party called on Prime Minister John Howard to
    forcefully reproach Hanson. Failure to do so will harm Australia's
    trade with Asia, divide the country and encourage bigotry, Labor
    spokesman Simon Crean said. 

    Finance Minister Peter Costello accused Hanson of aiding people who
    "stand for things that the Australian public would be horrified about."

    "It is time to say Pauline Hanson is out of excuses, her ideas are
    bankrupt," Costello said in a television interview Sunday. 
7.1618IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:3737
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 5 May 1997 Issue 710
                                        
    By Nigel Reynolds, Arts Correspondent 
           
    THE return of the Elgin Marbles to Greece was ruled out by the
    Government yesterday, ending years of uncertainty about Labour's
    intentions over treasures held in Britain.
           
    Chris Smith, the National Heritage Secretary, said the marble carvings
    were "an integral part" of the British Museum's collections. The
    marbles, once part of the 534ft frieze of the Parthenon, in Athens,
    were acquired by the British government in 1816.
           
    Neil Kinnock, while Labour leader, argued that the marbles should be
    returned. He said: "The Parthenon without the marbles is like a smile
    without a tooth."
           
    A year ago, Mark Fisher, then Labour's arts spokesman, said that if the
    party won power it would open talks with the Greek government about
    returning the treasures. He said that it would be "churlish" not to
    discuss the issue with Greece and he believed that the Greek government
    had met British objections to the marbles' return, namely standards of
    curatorship, reducing pollution in Athens and building a suitable
    museum.
           
    Yesterday, Mr Smith, speaking on BBC Radio, said of the marbles: "They
    are an integral part of the British Museum's collections. It would make
    no sense at all to split up the British Museum's collection in that
    way."
           
    The Greek media reacted with disappointment and anger. The
    pro-government Flash Radio called the news a "cold shower". It pointed
    out that the announcement "paradoxically coincided" with a message of
    congratulations to Tony Blair from Greece's socialist Prime Minister,
    Costas Simitis, expressing his hope of "stronger co-operation with
    Britain into the new millennium, both on a European and bilateral
    level".
7.1619IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:4245
7.1620IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:4553
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 5 May 1997 Issue 710
                                                     
    Farmers 'ripping out hedgerows to beat new rules'
    
    By Charles Clover, Environment Editor                         
    
    FARMERS are ripping out hedges before rules come into effect next month
    requiring them first to seek permission from local authorities,
    conservationists said yesterday. 
                                                                  
    Some of the hedges being destroyed are ancient or contain rare species
    and would have been saved by the legislation, one of the last acts of
    the Tory Government. But under present guidlines many would not and it
    appears that they are being removed on the off-chance they might be
    protected.
                                                                  
    One of the first decisions for John Prescott, Environment, Transport
    and Regions Secretary, will be whether to reissue guidelines to local
    authorities on how to implement the hedgerow regulations. A seven-day
    public consultation on the subject ends tomorrow. 
                                                                  
    The Council for the Protection of Rural England said that it has
    received reports of accelerated hedgerow removal in the past six months
    in Lincolnshire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Dorset, Lancashire,
    Herefordshire and the West Country.
                                                                  
    Herefordshire, which has many traditional mixed farms, has some of the
    worst examples of destruction as farmers respond to high EU subsidies
    and world market prices for growing arable crops. One of the most
    dramatic examples is at Fenhampton Farm, Weobley, near Leominster, a
    pastoral landscape of small fields, hedgerow trees and small streams.
                                                                  
    Around 1,300 metres of hedge has been uprooted, a 200-year-old orchard
    ripped out and a section of brook canalised on the former stock farm
    which was recently taken in hand by the Garnstone estate after the
    death of the tenant. David Lovelace, of the Council for the Protection
    of Rural England, said: "The whole pastoral ambience has been
    destroyed. If you want to alter the windows in the village you will
    need planning permission in writing but if you want to plough up 250
    acres of beautiful landscape you can just go out and do it."
                                                                  
    Mrs Norma Forrest, 53, used to watch her father laying hedges on
    Fenhampton Farm when she was a girl in the Fifties. She said: "My
    father laid those hedges so that someone in 50 year time would maybe
    relay them. Now the whole area has had its heart ripped out. It's been
    vandalised."
                                                                  
    James Verdin, who owns the estate, said that the new legislation was "a
    factor" in ripping out the hedges but said this "would not have made
    much difference" as the fields were too small for large agricultural
    machinery. He said: "The estate recognises there is a duty to have
    hedges around but they do have to exist around a profitable arable
    enterprise. We have retained 7.5 miles of hedges on the farm."
7.1621IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:4764
7.1622IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:4923
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 5 May 1997 Issue 710
                                             
    Study undermines fumes link to cot deaths
                            
    CHEMICALS in babies' mattresses are unlikely to contribute to cot
    deaths, according to a study published today.
                         
    A controversial theory has claimed that cot death victims had higher
    levels of antimony in their blood and liver tissue which were inhaled
    from fumes from their mattresses.
                         
    But research, funded by the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths,
    has found antimony in the blood of day-old premature babies who had no
    opportunity to take up the chemical from mattresses.
                         
    The survey, reported in the Archives of Disease in Childhood, also
    found no increase in antimony levels in babies from five weeks to two
    years old. If the mattress theory was correct, levels of antimony would
    be expected to rise over time, it said.
                         
    Joyce Epstein, secretary-general of the foundation, criticised The Cook
    Report television programme which created a cot death scare by using
    unpublished research.
7.1623IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:5126
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 5 May 1997 Issue 710
                                 
    Two bodies found in Highlands
                                            
    TWO bodies have been discovered in the Scottish Highlands in the space
    of 24 hours, police said last night.
                                            
    A woman's remains were found by a hill walker beside a stream on the
    slopes of Creag An Fhithich, in Shieldaig Forest, near Loch Maree, late
    on Saturday.
                                            
    Only hours earlier, a man's body had been recovered from the mountain
    between Ben Nevis and Aonoch Mor, near Fort William.
                                            
    Both bodies appeared to have been where they were found for "some
    considerable time", said a police spokesman. Neither had been
    identified.
                                            
    Police believe that one body was John Winship, 53, a Bristol widower,
    who went missing on Christmas Day and was never traced despite a search
    involving 60 people, sniffer dogs and an RAF helicopter.
                                            
    Recently, Highland police issued an alert for Anna Jones, a 32-year-old
    former riding instructor, who went missing from her Liverpool flat
    early in February. She was last seen on Feb 15 in the Wester Ross
    village of Laide, not far from Ullapool.
7.1624IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:5361
7.1625IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:5651
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 5 May 1997 Issue 710
                              
    200 killed in US road rage
    
    By David Sapsted in New York 
    
    ROAD rage in America has reached alarming proportions, with at least
    218 people being killed over a five-year period and 12,000 injured,
    according to research by the American Automobile Association.
    
    "What used to be just two people screaming at each other is now one
    person losing it and pulling the trigger," said Lou Mizell, whose
    survey shows a 51 per cent increase in road rage incidents in 1990-95.
    He says the study shows only the tip of an iceberg because few of the
    50 states keep records of road violence and his statistics are based on
    "only" 10,037 provable instances over the period.
    
    Motorway violence is so common in southern California - where drivers
    are as likely to carry spare cartridges as spare tyres - that it has
    been parodied in such films as LA Story, starring Steve Martin. The
    survey shows that, while there is no such thing as a typical driver
    involved in the incidents, most tend to be men aged 18-26. A lot had
    criminal records, histories of violence or drug and alcohol problems.
    Many had also suffered recent emotional or professional setbacks.
    
    Leon James, professor of psychology at the University of Hawaii, who
    has studied the phenomenon, says: "What is common is the feeling of
    hostility. As soon as that is generated among millions of drivers, you
    have the potential for open warfare."
    
    Only four per cent of aggressive driving cases involve women and 70 per
    cent of them use their cars as weapons in any attack. An Ohio woman ran
    who into the back of a man's car drove off with him clinging to the
    bonnet after he came to check her licence.
    
    In California, psychiatrists and psychologists offer counselling to
    drivers who find themselves involved in road rage incidents.
    
    Recent incidents include:
    
     A young mother who jumped from a bridge in Detroit and drowned after
    being chased by a 21-year-old man who was angry that she had bumped
    into the back of his car. There was no damage to either vehicle.
    
     A driver cross about being "cut up" by another motorist in McLean,
    Virginia, chased him at speeds of up to 80mph before crashing into
    oncoming traffic, leaving three people dead.
    
     A 25-mile chase between a lorry driver and a motorist along a motorway
    near Cicero, New York, which ended only when the car driver opened up
    with a .45-calibre, semi-automatic handgun.
7.1626IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 05 1997 14:5940
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 5 May 1997 Issue 710
                                                          
    Scientists shed light on the origins of our body clock
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
                
    SCIENTISTS have found the "missing link" behind the origins of the
    so-called body clock, providing new clues to the disorienting effects
    of jet lag and late nights.
                
    Research in America suggests that primitive bacteria billions of years
    ago developed a body clock from molecular machinery that responds to
    light, so they could anticipate the first rays from the morning sun and
    gear up their metabolism accordingly.
                
    The sequence of amino acids comprising two body clock proteins newly
    discovered in a fungus indicates ties to light-sensitive proteins in
    bacteria and plants.
                
    They are also tied to time-keeping proteins in the fruit fly, evidence
    that all biological clocks may share common molecular components. The
    findings of a Dartmouth Medical School Team in New Hampshire published
    in the current issue of Science, suggest a link in the evolutionary
    spectrum from light perception to time keeping that paves the way for
    detailing the gears of the body clock of modern creatures, including
    humans. "Biological clocks are the cellular basis of the commonly-known
    circadian rhythms that determine many of our body's functions,
    including when we go to sleep and wake up," said Dr Jennifer Loros, who
    worked on the research with Prof Jay Dunlap and a Briton, Dr Susan
    Crosthwaite. 
                
    In Science, they detailed the actions of two clock proteins, White
    Collar-1 and White Collar-2, which regulate light responses.
                
    They found that the two white collar proteins are also essential to the
    circadian clock and that they work in the dark without light
    stimulation.
                
    "Their involvement in time-keeping came as a complete surprise," said
    Prof Dunlap.
7.1627IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:53106
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 6-May-1997 1:01 EDT   REF5670

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
   
    SEPARATIST STANDOFF 

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- The hunt goes on in west Texas for the last
    Republic of Texas gunman on the run. The other separatist who fled
    Saturday before the group surrendered is dead after a gun battle with
    authorities. Officials say he'd been shooting at search dogs and a
    police helicopter, and was killed when officers returned fire. The
    group's leader and half a dozen others have been named in a federal
    fraud indictment. 
   
    MCVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's sister took the stand against him and
    recalled his festering hatred for the government and his statement that
    he was "in the action stage" just months before the Oklahoma City
    bombing. In calm, matter-of-fact testimony that came under immunity
    from prosecution, Jennifer McVeigh also spoke of her brother's fear of
    private eyes and wiretaps, his use disguises and an alias, and his
    anecdote about transporting 1,000 pounds of explosives. 
   
    WHITEWATER-HUBBELL 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The White House denied a published report suggesting
    the Clintons knew that ex-federal aide Webster Hubbell was facing
    possible criminal charges when their associates started lining up work
    for him. President and Mrs. Clinton were aware of some allegations
    against Hubbell, based on news reports in early 1994, but did not know
    "the full nature and seriousness" of the case, said White House
    spokesman Mike McCurry. 
   
    ARMY SEX 

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- A drill sergeant facing life in
    prison for raping six female trainees suffers from a personality
    disorder that leads him to believe he's "entitled to certain things in
    life," an Army psychiatrist has testified. Staff Sgt. Delmar Simpson
    was convicted last week of 18 counts of rape involving six trainees and
    29 other offenses, mostly sexual misconduct. At a sentencing hearing,
    Col. Raymond Lande said he examined Simpson in March and determined he
    suffers from a narcissistic personality disorder. 
   
    FUHRMAN PROBE 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Police investigating former Detective Mark
    Fuhrman's alarming boasts to a screenwriter have confirmed that four
    male officers did indeed form a group to sexually harass their female
    colleagues. Twenty nine allegations Fuhrman made on the tapes had some
    basis in fact, but most were exaggerated, Police Chief Willie Williams
    said. Another 17 claims appeared to be fabricated. The department
    released a summary of its months-long, $800,000 investigation into
    allegations of police brutality, harassment and lying about evidence
    that Fuhrman made in interviews with a screenwriter. 
   
    CLINTON-MEXICO 

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Hoping to ease tensions between neighbors,
    President Clinton began a goodwill trip to Mexico by pledging "to find
    common solutions to common problems," including drugs, immigration and
    trade. "We must cooperate as never before," Clinton declared. In a
    modest symbol of the administration's support, the State Department
    announced shortly before his arrival that it would give Mexico $6
    million to help fight drug trafficking. 
   
    ZAIRE-REFUGEES 

    KISANGANI, Zaire (AP) -- As rebels in Zaire move within striking
    distance of Kinshasa, U.S. officials are worried undisciplined soldiers
    could pose a danger to Americans. The Pentagon has troops and equipment
    in the area should an evacuation be necessary. An estimated 500
    Americans are in Zaire. Ninety-one refugees were suffocated or crushed
    to death Sunday aboard railway boxcars that the rebels had crammed full
    in their eagerness to expel the Rwandans from Zaire. 
   
    MARKETS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Dow Jones industrial average completed its speedy
    recovery and soared into the record books with a 143-point surge that
    lifted the indicator above 7,200 for the first time. The Dow gained
    143.29 points to close at 7,214.49. The previous high was 7,085.16. In
    Tokyo, the Nikkei rose a sharp 488.85 points to 20,003.60 points. The
    dollar was traded at 126.73 yen, up 0.05 yen. 
   
    SUPERSONICS-ROCKETS 

    HOUSTON (AP) -- The Rockets held off the Seattle SuperSonics 112-102
    for a 1-0 lead in their second-round NBA playoff series. The Rockets
    came into the game with five days rest after sweeping Minnesota in the
    first round, while Seattle finished up a rough five-game series against
    the Phoenix Suns on Saturday. 
   
    ABL DRAFT 

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Yolanda Griffith, a 6-foot-4 center who played
    professionally in Germany since 1993, was the first pick in the
    American Basketball League draft by the expansion Long Beach team.
    Griffith, out of Florida Atlantic, was the top scorer and rebounder in
    the European League this year, averaging 24.7 points and 16 rebounds
    per game. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1628IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5373
    RTw  06-May-97 03:52    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA, Zaire - Military and diplomatic pressure mounted on Zaire's
    President Mobutu Sese Seko, now resting at a military camp in the
    capital Kinshasa, to allow a peaceful transfer to Laurent Kabila's
    rebels. U.S. officials in Washington said it might be only one or two
    days before Kabila's forces took the city. "He'll be coming. There's no
    doubt about it," one official told Reuters. 

    KISANGANI - Some 55,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees have almost reached
    Zaire's border with Congo after walking 1,600 km (1,000 miles), the
    U.N. World Food Programme said. 

    - - - - 

    MEXICO CITY - The United States promised Mexico new funds to help fight
    drug smuggling as the two countries played down differences over the
    issues that threaten to cloud this week's visit by President Bill
    Clinton. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - International troops in Albania to oversee aid deliveries have
    helped calm the situation but can do little to stop the flood of
    Albanians fleeing the country, the head of a multi-national force said. 

    - - - - 

    DUBLIN - Irish Prime Minister John Bruton announced he will have talks
    on troubled Northern Ireland with Britain's new Prime Minister Tony
    Blair in London on Thursday. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - The sister of accused Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh
    testified against him, calling him a man who wanted to take action
    against a tyrannical government depriving Americans of their rights. 

    - - - - 

    JACKSONVILLE, Florida - A jury found that R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. was
    not negligent in a closely watched wrongful death lawsuit against the
    tobacco giant. 

    DALLAS - State attorneys general resumed settlement talks with
    cigarette makers with the aim of tackling the difficult issue of
    whether there can be a cap on the industry's liability without cutting
    off lawsuits. 

    - - - - 

    SANTIAGO - Hundreds of unemployed coal miners clashed with police
    outside Chile's presidential palace in a furious street protest in
    which 10 people were injured and about 35 arrested, police said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - U.S. Mideast envoy Dennis Ross planned to leave on Tuesday
    on a new mission to revive stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace
    negotiations, concerned about the climate between the two sides, a U.S.
    official said. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 7,200 points
    for the first time on hopes that a balanced federal budget deal would
    keep the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates later this month. 

    REUTER
7.1629IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5390
    RTw  06-May-97 06:11    

    Grand finale to mark handover of Hong Kong

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    HONG KONG, May 6 (Reuter) - The grand finale marking the historic
    handover of the British colony of Hong Kong to China will last for
    about 45 minutes, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

    More than 4,000 invited guests will attend the finale in the grand hall
    of Hong Kong's new Convention and Exhibition Centre, which will begin
    at around 11:30 pm (0330 GMT) on June 30, Xinhua reported from Beijing
    on Monday. 

    More than 150 years of British rule draws to a close at midnight after
    which Hong Kong will become a Special Administrative Region of China
    (SAR). 

    As the midnight deadline approaches, the British flag and the colonial
    Hong Kong flag will be lowered slowly. 

    "At midnight, the Chinese national flag and the Hong Kong Special
    Administrative Region flag will be hoisted," Xinhua added. 

    The VIPs attending the formal ceremony will enjoy a banquet hosted by
    the outgoing British authorities ahead of the flag change and
    afterwards will be feted by the incoming sovereign at a reception. 

    A few hours later as dawn breaks on Tuesday, July 1, the Chinese army
    will begin deployments across the border into Hong Kong in a public
    display of the resumption of Chinese sovereignty over the wealthy
    community of 6.4 million people. 

    An advance guard arrived late last month to prepare the way. 

    At 10 a.m. (0200 GMT) on July 1, the new Hong Kong SAR government, led
    by shipping magnate Tung Chee-hwa, is to be inaugurated at the Hong
    Kong Coliseum on the Kowloon peninsula. 

    The final countdown has been bumpy, with Britain and China often at
    loggerheads over transitional issues, including the nature of handover
    ceremonies. Relations were so cool at one point that many feared the
    two would hold separate ceremonies. 

    Public parties are scheduled during the afternoon of June 30 at the
    race course on Hong Kong island and at nearby Victoria Park -- soon to
    be renamed Hong Kong Central Park. 

    The official celebrations will actually begin shortly after dusk on
    June 30, which Britain has declared a public holiday. 

    Fireworks will light up the sky over Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour --
    named after the queen who reigned when the British seized Hong Kong in
    1841 -- to bid "farewell to the old and welcome to the new," Xinhua
    said. 

    As yet, there have been no plans announced to change the name of the
    harbour or most of the street signs and landmarks bearing colonial
    names. 

    Another fireworks display is scheduled for July 1, and a host of public
    street parties, Buddhist prayer meetings, folk concerts and a symbolic
    freeing of 10,000 pigeons are planned. 

    The following two days have also been declared public holidays.

    The British side has already issued 80 to 100 invitations to VIPs from
    about 40 countries to witness the sovereignty transfer, a Hong Kong
    government spokesman said. 

    Included in the guest list is U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
    Albright, who was invited by both sides. 

    Britain's new Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, propelled into office
    following his Labour Party's landslide general election victory last
    week, has also said he would attend. 

    Britain's Prince Charles is expected to preside over the British party
    ahead of the flag change alongside Chris Patten, Hong Kong's 28th and
    last British governor. 

    The Chinese-language Ming Pao newspaper said Chinese President Jiang
    Zemin and Premier Li Peng would also attend. 

    The Hong Kong newspaper said Jiang would leave immediately after the
    ceremony and return to Beijing to preside over official celebrations
    there. 

    REUTER
7.1630IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5380
    RTw  06-May-97 01:10    

    Blair turns 44 hoping to transform Britain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Majendie 

    LONDON, May 6 (Reuter) - Tony Blair, Britain's youngest prime minister
    since 1812, celebrated his 44th birthday on Tuesday at the head of a
    team of ministers hoping to transform the country. 

    After leading the Labour Party to the biggest election victory in its
    history, Blair immediately sent one of his new ministers, Doug
    Henderson, to Brussels promising a fresh start in relations with the
    European Union. 

    "Europe, for the new government is an opportunity, not a threat,"
    Henderson said, striking a tone which contrasted sharply with the
    ousted Eurosceptic Conservatives fearful of a federal Europe. 

    Henderson, a marathon runner and mountaineer who faces an uphill climb
    reversing two decades of distrust, confirmed that Labour would end the
    British opt-out from the EU's Social Charter on worker rights. 

    Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, also adopting a much more Euro-friendly
    stancew, said: "If we just shout all the time as the Conservatives did,
    then eventually people will ignore you." 

    On his first working day at the Foreign Office, Cook also said he was
    keen to ensure a smooth handover when Hong Kong returned to China next
    month after 156 years of British colonial rule. 

    Blair, whose party won a 179-seat majority in the 659-member parliament
    in last Thursday's elections after 18 years in the political
    wilderness, put the finishing touches on Monday to his government. 

    A modernist who dumped much of the party's socialist dogma to woo back
    voters, he included a record 19 women in Labour's first government
    since 1979. 

    They included left-winger Dawn Primarolo as financial secretary to the
    treasury and dual Hollywood Oscar winner Glenda Jackson as junior
    environment and transport minister. 

    The biggest surprise was the choice of maverick left-winger Tony Banks
    as sports minister. Banks, a fervent supporter of Chelsea football club
    in London, once called former premier Margaret Thatcher "a poor, half
    mad old cow." 

    In his first week in office, Blair will immediately be confronted with
    two of the thorniest foreign policy issues. 

    On Thursday, Irish Prime Minister John Bruton arrives for talks aimed
    at reviving the flagging Northern Ireland peace process, which stalled
    amid inter-party wrangling and the Irish Republican Army's guerrilla
    war against British targets. 

    On Friday, Blair meets Prime Minister Wim Kok of the Netherlands, the
    current EU president and host for a crucial summit next month that
    could decide the EU's future direction. 

    The shell-shocked Conservatives, demoralised by their worst electoral
    drubbing for 150 years, are now feuding over a replacement for defeated
    prime minister John Major. 

    The latest contender to pitch his hat into the ring was right-winger
    John Redwood, who unsuccessfully challenged Major in a 1995 leadership
    contest. 

    Insisting that he could pull together a party split down the middle
    over Britain's role in Europe, Redwood wrote in the London Times: "I
    can't defend the past, I can unite the party." 

    Kenneth Clarke, a pro-European former finance minister, and
    right-winger Peter Lilley are already candidates for the Coinservative
    leadership and former interior minister Michael Howard is expected to
    join the field. 

    REUTER
7.1631IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5378
    RTw  05-May-97 23:21    

    Ireland's Bruton to meet new UK leader Blair

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBLIN, May 5 (Reuter) - Irish Prime Minister John Bruton announced on
    Monday that he will have talks on troubled Northern Ireland with
    Britain's new Prime Minister Tony Blair in London on Thursday. 

    It will be their first meeting since Blair's Labour Party was swept to
    power in a landslide victory last Thursday, defeating John Major's
    Conservatives. 

    Officials in London said it would be Blair's first face-to- face
    discussions with a foreign leader in his new role. 

    "Co-operation in relation to Northern Ireland should I believe have the
    utmost priority for both governments," Bruton said in a statement. 

    A joint Anglo-Irish peace drive led by Major and Bruton has been bogged
    down for more than a year under a resurgent campaign by IRA guerrillas,
    retaliatory attacks by pro-British extremists and local inter-party
    wrangling. 

    Irish Republican Army fighters, bidding to end British rule over
    Northern Ireland, disrupted Britain's six-week election campaign with
    bombs and hoaxes that threw the national transport system into chaos. 

    Tension in the British province has been high since the IRA abandoned a
    truce last year and returned to a bomb and bullet onslaught on security
    forces. 

    Two members of the IRA's Sinn Fein political wing won landmark
    victories last week for two Northern Ireland seats in the British
    parliament. 

    Bruton who will also be meeting leaders of Ireland's large emigrant
    community in Britain during his trip said they were embarrassed by
    Irish guerrilla violence. 

    "This community has been embarrassed and damaged in an unfeeling and
    cynical way by the recent actions of the IRA in Britain," said Bruton. 

    "My meeting with the Prime Minister is particulary important, as it is
    my first with Tony Blair as Prime Minister. 

    "I am very much looking forward to it, as I believe we can develop many
    new possibilities for co-operation in regard to Northern Ireland,
    bilaterally and within Europe." 

    Bruton, who will also address the Oxford University Union debating
    society, said Anglo-Irish relations were on the threshold of a new
    century and Ireland was approaching the previously "unequal" relations
    in a creative and innovative way. 

    "There are many things we want to achieve - an end to political and
    sectarian violence being the first," he said. 

    In Northern Ireland a Protestant majority want to retain London rule
    while the Catholic minority want an all-Ireland state ruled from
    Dublin. 

    Irish deputy prime minister Dick Spring, who is also a key figure the
    drive for a political path to peace in Northern Ireland will accompany
    Bruton. 

    It is expected that Mo Mowlam, the woman appointed by Blair as his
    Northern Ireland Secretary will also be there. 

    Multi-party talks on the future of the province are due to resume on
    June 3 chaired by former U.S. senator George Mitchell. 

    Britain and Ireland share a common policy that Sinn Fein will not be
    given a seat at the talks until the IRA declares a ceasefire, a demand
    that the guerrillas have repeatedly spurned. 

    REUTER
7.1632IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:53105
    RTos 05-May-97 22:44    

    French Election Race Tightens

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    PARIS (Reuter) - Conservative President Jacques Chirac prepared Monday
    to intervene in France's parliamentary election campaign as Prime
    Minister Alain Juppe acknowledged the race was tightening three weeks
    before the first-round ballot. 

    "I have always thought that the vote would be close," Juppe told France
    Inter radio, adding that it would be natural for the president to
    declare his preference. 

    With the center-right government's lead shrinking in opinion polls,
    political sources said Chirac aides would announce on Tuesday his
    intention to speak out for the first time since he called the early
    election two weeks ago. 

    The daily newspaper Le Monde said he had decided to pen an opinion
    article to appear in regional newspapers Wednesday, the second
    anniversary of his own election. The Elysee presidential palace did not
    deny the report. 

    Writing an article would shield him from the questioning he would face
    if he agreed to a televison interview. 

    Socialist opposition leader Lionel Jospin, campaigning in Britanny,
    said worried conservatives turned to Chirac for help. 

    "Personally, I cannot see in the current situation what he could tell
    us that could weigh on the election," he said. 

    Far-right politician Jean-Marie Le Pen said Chirac had turned the
    election into a plebiscite and should resign if his supporters were
    defeated. 

    Conservative politicians, citing the precedents of all his Fifth
    Republic predecessors since 1958, urged Chirac to enter the fray and
    help tip the race in the center-right's favor as left-wing leaders
    scented a possible upset victory. 

    "I think the left can win it," Communist Party leader Robert Hue told
    Radio Monte Carlo. 

    "We are in truth the best armed to bring about change" in France,
    Socialist leader Lionel Jospin told a rally in Brittany, saying his
    party would rely on "controlled boldness." 

    Socialist former premier Michel Rocard, a one-time classmate of
    Chirac's, invited French voters to steer Europe to the left following
    Labor leader Tony Blair's landslide win in Britain. 

    "The right today governs only in Germany, Spain, Belgium and Ireland,"
    he wrote in Le Monde. "Ten on one side, four on the other, and between
    the two camps is France. It is France which will make Europe pitch to
    the left." 

    More than 6,300 would-be deputies signed up to run in the two-round
    election set for May 25 and June 1, including 29 in a single Paris
    constituency, that of Gaullist mayor Jean Tiberi, who is the target of
    a corruption probe. 

    The total was 20 percent higher than the last parliamentary election in
    1993 and almost double the number who stood in 1988. 

    A series of polls released since Saturday have shown the left catching
    up on the ruling coalition. 

    "The left and right neck and neck," the BVA polling institute said in a
    statement after its latest survey found the combined center-right with
    40 percent of the first-round vote to 39.5 percent for the combined
    left. The extreme-right National Front and ecologist candidates shared
    the rest. 

    The poll projected the opposition Socialists and Communists would win
    258 of the 555 National Assembly seats in metropolitan France to 294
    for the center-right, with two seats going to the ecologists and one to
    the National Front. 

    A Louis Harris poll for LCI television found that 45 percent hoped the
    left would win, up from 42 percent the previous week, while an
    unchanged 43 percent hoped for a center-right victory. 

    But 63 percent believed the conservatives were more likely to win while
    just 21 percent expected the left to triumph. 

    The polls found considerable volatility, with three to four of every 10
    voters saying they could yet change their minds. 

    French financial markets were calm Monday with stocks closing higher
    and debt markets steady on low volumes. The markets had tumbled last
    month on news the Socialists might be gaining on the center-right. 

    Hue warned that Chirac's entry into the campaign carried risks as well
    as possible benefits. 

    "He is going to involve himself to defend his outgoing majority," the
    Communist leader said. "Why has the parliament been dissolved? Because
    the president is preparing a terrible austerity plan so that the nation
    can meet the Maastricht criteria (for a single European currency)," Hue
    said.

    REUTER
7.1633IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5370
    RTw  05-May-97 20:31    

    Paul McCartney faces million Internet questions

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Majendie 

    LONDON, May 5 (Reuter) - Former Beatle Paul McCartney is taking to the
    internet for a live chat and one million fans have queued up to ask him
    questions on the information superhighway. 

    "It's an awful lot to ask of anyone," he said on Monday. "I don't think
    we'll get through all the questions but we will give it a go." 

    McCartney agreed to his first live online chat, which will be televised
    live in Britain, Germany and the United States, because of critical
    acclaim for "Flaming Pie," his first album for four years, which was
    released on Monday. 

    A spokesman for the rock television channel VH1 which will screen
    McCartney's website debut on May 17, said: "The total is rising all the
    time. 

    "We have had questions sent through every medium. In the first few days
    after the announcement, we received 7,000 phone calls alone. People are
    trying every way to put a question to Paul although we have not had any
    by carrier pigeon yet." 

    "God alone knows where it will end by the time Paul goes live on the
    net" said the spokesman of McCartney's 90-minute planned appearance. To
    answer all the questions could take up to two years, the channel
    calculated. 

    Anyone still wanting to join the electronic queue and put a question to
    one of the most successful composers of the 20th century can send it to
    http:/vh1.com or http:/flamingpie.com. 

    McCartney's wife Linda, who is recovering from breast cancer, has
    appeared on the promotional video for the new album whose tunes are a
    deliberate return to the Beatles' early sound. 

    In a rare interview before the release of "Flaming Pie," McMCartney
    spoke movingly of his grief after fellow Beatle John Lennon was
    murdered by a crazed fan in New York 17 years ago. 

    "I loved him," he told Reuters Television at his recording studio in
    southeastern England. 

    McCartney said he and Lennon could produce chart-topping tunes in three
    hours and rarely came away from a session without a new song. "The
    memories are really great. It's terrible what happened to him." 

    McCartney wrote most of 14 songs featured on the album, a family affair
    featuring Linda, his 19-year-old son James and former Beatles drummer
    Ringo Starr. 

    The singer, who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth this year, paid tribute
    to Linda, who has rarely been seen in public since she was diagnosed
    with cancer almost two years ago. Their marriage is one of the most
    enduring in show business. 

    "I went for her in a big way," he said about their first meeting.
    "We've never looked back. 

    The album is also tinged with melancholy. The song "Little Willow" was
    written the day he heard Maureen Starkey, Ringo Starr's first wife, had
    died of cancer. "It is certainly heartfelt," McCartney said. 

    REUTER
7.1634IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5430
    RTw  05-May-97 19:09    

    UK Conservative Heseltine to see heart specialist

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 5 (Reuter) - Britain's former deputy prime minister Michael
    Heseltine, hospitalised with chest pains after the Conservatives'
    crushing election defeat last week, is going to see his heart
    specialist for an angiogram. 

    "The doctors are delighted with Mr Heseltine's progress and expect him
    to be home by the end of the week," Conservative Central office said in
    a statement on Monday. 

    It said Heseltine, who has opted out of the race to succeed former
    prime minister John Major as Conservative leader, would be leaving
    hospital on Monday night for the angiogram in London's Harley Street
    clinic. 

    The 64-year-old Heseltine, one of the most powerful figures in the
    party and the man who helped topple former prime minister Margaret
    Thatcher, had long harboured ambitions to lead the Conservatives. He
    was regarded as a front-runner in the leadership contest after Major
    decided to stand down. 

    Heseltine suffered a mild heart attack in 1993 while holidaying in
    Venice. 

    REUTER
7.1635IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5420
    RTw  05-May-97 18:30    

    Britons betting on next election - in 5 years

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 5 (Reuter) - British gamblers are already betting on the
    result of the next election in five years' time. 

    After Labour's landslide victory on May 1, bookmakers are making the
    new ruling party odds-on favourite at 8/13. 

    The odds on the Conservatives, crushed in their worst election defeat
    for more than 150 years, have lengthened to 6/5. 

    Bookmakers William Hill said on Monday they had already taken one bet
    of at least 10,000 pounds ($16,000) on Labour winning the next
    election. 

    REUTER
7.1636IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5431
    RTw  05-May-97 17:32    

    Spraying aircraft ``aims at malaria, not Moroccans''

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    RABAT, May 5 (Reuter) - Spraying inside aircraft flying from the
    Moroccan city of Casablanca to London was not aimed at "disinfecting
    Moroccan passengers," the British embassy said in a statement on
    Monday. 

    Two Moroccan newspapers had expressed outrage at the practice which
    they said reflected on the dignity of those travelling. 

    "Coming from a country well known for its mad cows, the joke is truly
    in very bad taste," said l'Opinon, a newspaper owned by the old-guard
    Istiqlal opposition party. 

    The embassy said on Monday it agreed that "disinfecting passengers"
    would be a grave attack on the dignity of the Moroccan people. 

    But spraying the aircraft was to meet international recommendations for
    planes leaving countries where a risk of malaria existed. "This rule
    applies to 90 countries throughout the world, including Morocco," it
    said. 

    Neither the embassy or the newspaper said which airline carried out the
    practice. Only two fly direct to London, Royal Air Maroc and British
    Airways.

    REUTER
7.1637IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:54106
    RTw  05-May-97 17:04    

    SAP blots model record with insider probe

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Catherine O'Mahony 

    FRANKFURT, May 5 (Reuter) - Software manufacturer SAP AG , whose
    dizzying ascent on the German bourse has made it one of the market's
    most popular stocks, on Monday emerged at the centre of an insider
    trading probe 

    Armed with a list of names of suspected offenders, Frankfurt
    prosecutors said they were investigating allegations that a large group
    of SAP staff and associates dealt illegally in its shares in a phase of
    extreme price volatility last year. 

    The probe concerned more than 100 individuals in its early stages, a
    spokesman for Germany's stock market watchdog told Reuters, and could
    become the most serious case since insider trading was criminalised
    here in 1994. 

    Investors showed their disapproval by sending SAP's DAX-listed
    preferred shares plummeting as much as five percent in early trade on
    Monday, but the shares regained ground in a booming bourse session and
    closed up 3.10 marks at 324.50, a rise which still lagged clearly
    behind the broader market. 

    Some dealers said the often-volatile SAP might face more pressure once
    the U.K. market reopens on Tuesday although this would probably be
    short-lived. While any potential cost resulting from the probe is
    likely to be limited, some investors could be put off by a perceived
    breach of faith. 

    "This does have an impact on sentiment, at least in the short term.
    After all people don't like to think of prosecutors in the boardroom,"
    said Josh Waiblinger, assistant vice president of equities at
    Frankfurt's BHF Bank. 

    But if its past is anything to go by, SAP, whose R/3 business software
    is used to keep track of purchasing, manufacturing and sales data, will
    bounce back fast. 

    SAP's stock market record has been meteoric -- it has tripled in value
    since early 1995, when news that its was to join the DAX fanned a
    flurry of buy interest. 

    The biggest blip, and the focus of the insider probe, came after news
    last October of an unexpected slowdown in third quarter growth. That
    news slashed SAP's shares by a quarter, although they have risen to new
    record highs since. 

    The Federal Securities Trading Supervisory Authority, the BAWe, the
    linchpin of Germany's crackdown on insider deals, began an
    investigation into the price drop and found enough evidence to pass on
    the case to the prosecution office. 

    "The investigation is looking at the use of insider information in the
    trading of shares," prosecution spokesman Job Tilmann said. 

    "This is probably the most serious case we have seen here," said BAWe
    spokesman Juergen Oberfrank. 

    The BAWe said over 100 "primary and secondary insiders" were named in
    the initial probe -- the first category implies staff at SAP and banks
    and the second their relatives or friends -- making it one of the
    largest it has ever handled. 

    "But we expect that this number will fall as time goes by," Oberfrank
    added. 

    "We provided documents for the BAWe back in October," an SAP spokesman
    confirmed. The company is expected to address the matter at its
    shareholder meeting on Wednesday. 

    Insider dealing was outlawed in Germany in 1994 as part of a drive to
    clean up the financial markets and make them more attractive to
    international investors. 

    The maximum punishment for insider trading here is five years in jail,
    but so far authorities have stuck to fines. 

    This year saw Germany impose its toughest penalty yet for the offence,
    with a single fine of 3.6 million marks in total, of which one million
    marks ($579,000) had to be paid immediately and the rest is suspended
    pending a probation period. 

    The BAWe has been continually stepping up its fight against insider
    activity since it began operations with a handful of staff in 1995. 

    Now with some 100 employees and an electronic system which allows it to
    monitor around 400,000 trades taking place in Germany daily, it
    believes its teething problems are over. 

    The BAWe passed on 11 cases to prosecutors in the first quarter of
    1997, compared with seven for the whole of 1995. 

    "It's not that there are more black sheep out there, it is more a
    question of our technical capacity," said Oberfrank. 

    The initial probe into SAP could be completed in a month, according to
    public prosecutors but the case will likely drag on for considerably
    longer, should it go to court. 

    REUTER
7.1638IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5451
    RTw  05-May-97 17:01    

    Porto sues Portugal TV station for drugs allegation

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Alberto Pontes 

    LISBON, May 5 (Reuter) - Portuguese soccer champions Porto said on
    Monday that they would sue the SIC television channel over allegations
    that some Porto players took drugs and entertained prostitutes before
    an international match. 

    The action, the latest in a series of scandals rocking Portuguese
    soccer, was triggered by an SIC programme on Friday in which a
    Brazilian woman claimed she went to a party for Portuguese players in
    their hotel rooms before a Euro '96 qualifier against Northern Ireland
    in November 1995. 

    The woman, identified only as "Paula," said that she and four friends
    had been roughed up by the players who she said had been smoking
    hashish. 

    She named two of the players during the late-night programme, "Owners
    of the Ball," in which pundits and personalities usually debate soccer
    issues of the day. 

    Porto said in a statement that it was taking action over the "vile
    accusations against its players concerning the consumption of drugs." 

    The club's legal department said it would be seeking damages in view of
    the "harm suffered by the club, by its athletes and its technical
    staff." It said it would send a copy of the programme to the Prosecutor
    General for him to take "appropriate action." 

    There was no immediate response from SIC, the country's most
    widely-watched television station. 

    At least one of the players named in the programme denied the incidents
    and the Portuguese players union said it would press for an
    investigation into the affair. 

    Portuguese soccer has been hit by a series of scandals in recent
    months, ranging from allegations of attempts to bribe referees to an
    incident in which a former international striker, Ricardo Sa Pinto of
    Sporting, knocked national coach Artur Jorge to the ground after being
    excluded from the national team. 

    No disciplinary action has so far been taken against him.

    REUTER
7.1639IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:54108
    AP 6-May-1997 0:54 EDT   REF5666

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Republic of Texas Member Shot Dead

    By MARK BABINECK

    Associated Press Writer

    FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) -- A fugitive member of the Republic of Texas
    was killed Monday in a gunbattle with police who had been tracking him
    since he fled the secessionist group's hideout. 

    A second man remained at large in the rugged Davis Mountains, where the
    two had headed separately before the rest of the militant group laid
    down their arms over the weekend. Authorities called off the search at
    dark and planned to start again Tuesday. 

    The group's leader and several other people were named Monday in a
    federal fraud indictment. 

    The gunfire took place at a bunker about a mile from the group's
    "embassy" headquarters in a sparse mountain development, state
    officials said. 

    The dead man had apparently been shooting at police tracking dogs and a
    helicopter that were searching for the pair, said Sherri Deatherage
    Green, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety. 

    "Shots were fired from the helicopter and from the ground at the
    suspect," she said. 

    The dead man's name was not immediately known, although a spokesman for
    the state Department of Public Safety said he was middle-aged. The two
    men being sought were identified as Richard Keyes III, 21, and Mike
    Matson, 48. 

    Matson's brother, Ralph Matson of Colorado Springs, Colo., said he
    believed the dead man was his brother even though officials had not
    contacted him. 

    "It's very much what I expected," Ralph Matson told The Associated
    Press by phone. "He went down there to be McLaren's bodyguard to the
    end. He told me, 'I'll never surrender."' 

    Ralph Matson said his brother had been with Richard McLaren, leader of
    the faction involved in the standoff, no longer than 12 weeks when the
    siege began. 

    He said his brother was embittered toward the government since he lost
    a probate case in California several years ago and hitchhiked to Texas
    after hearing about McLaren's group. 

    Of the two, only Keyes was charged with a crime. He was accused of
    organized criminal activity and kidnapping related to an April 27
    hostage-taking that started the group's seven-day standoff, which ended
    peacefully Saturday. 

    Earlier Monday, three dogs unleashed to track the fugitives were shot.
    One died and the other two were in good condition. A fourth dog was
    missing. 

    Dogs and troopers on horseback initially were held back from the search
    because of possible booby traps left behind by McLaren's group.
    Authorities found more than 60 pipe bombs and 12 gasoline cans in the
    area, as well as several fortified bunkers. 

    The Republic of Texas, which has split into three factions, believes
    the formerly independent state was illegally annexed by the United
    States in 1845. 

    After Saturday's surrender, McLaren, 43, was held without bail in the
    Presidio County Jail in Marfa, about 20 miles to the south, and three
    others were held in lieu of $500,000 bail each. All faced charges of
    organized criminal activity. 

    On Monday, a federal fraud and conspiracy indictment unsealed in Dallas
    accused McLaren, his wife, Evelyn, and five other people of issuing
    more than $1.8 billion in bogus Republic of Texas financial documents
    or "warrants" and using them to pay legitimate bills and to open bank
    accounts. 

    Actual losses were estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
    "But we don't know where all the monies went," said U.S. Attorney Paul
    Coggins. 

    Coggins said the warrants, which look like cashier's checks, were
    redeemed for receipts. 

    "Creditors who complained about having received a worthless warrant and
    then getting a worthless receipt on top of that were threatened with
    so-called 'marks of reprisals' by the defendants," Coggins said, adding
    he didn't know what the reprisals would be. 

    Coggins called them "paper terrorists. They're not revolutionaries, but
    ripoff artists. They're not patriots, but parasites. In short, they're
    bullies." 

    Names of the five others charged with the McLarens were not released
    because they are not in custody. 

    No court date was set for McLaren. Mrs. McLaren appeared before a
    magistrate Monday in Alpine, 20 miles southeast of Fort Davis. 

    If convicted of the various federal charges, McLaren faces a maximum of
    725 years in prison and fines totaling $24.25 million. Mrs. McLaren
    faces up to 155 years in prison and fines totaling $5.2 million. 
7.1640IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:54326
    AP 5-May-1997 23:54 EDT   REF5547

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Excerpts From McVeigh Trial

    By The Associated Press

    Excerpts from transcripts of Monday's court session in the trial of
    Timothy McVeigh, as prepared by the official court reporter. Transcript
    excerpts are furnished by WESTLAW(R) and are used with the permission
    of West Group. 

    Jennifer McVeigh testifying against her brother Timothy McVeigh.
    Prosecutor Beth Wilkinson is handling the questioning ... 

    Q. Tell the jury about a time when you watched a videotape of Waco with
    your brother ... 

    A. It was called 'Day 51.' It was about -- it depicted the government
    raiding the compound, and it implied that the government gassed and
    burned the people inside intentionally and attacked the people. 

    Q. After you watched the videotape, did you have a conversation with
    him about Waco and what the videotape depicted? 

    A. I think while we were watching it, yes. 

    Q. And were you also familiar with your brother's views based on the
    documents that he had sent you? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. Based on those conversations and the documents, what did you
    understand your brother to believe about the -- what occurred at Waco? 

    A. He was very angry. I think he thought the government murdered the
    people there, basically gassed and burned them. 

    Q. And did he tell you who he thought was responsible for that? Which
    agency? 

    A. ATF, FBI, whoever was involved in it, the ones involved in it. 

    Q. Did he tell you what he thought should have happened to those agents
    that he believed were responsible? 

    A. I think he felt that someone should be held accountable. 

    Q. And did he believe that the government would hold those agents
    accountable? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Did he tell you whether he believed that it was justified for
    citizens to hold those agents accountable? 

    Defense attorney Robert Nigh Jr.: I'm going to object as to the
    leading. 

    U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch: Sustained. 

    Ms. Wilkinson: I'll rephrase it. 

    Q. What did he tell you about who could hold those agents accountable? 

    Nigh: I'm going to object as assuming that he told her anything about
    it, your honor. 

    Judge Matsch: Overruled. 

    Ms. McVeigh: I'd say based on the literature -- I don't know that he
    told me, but based -- 

    Judge Matsch: Well, the question is what did he tell you. 

    Ms. McVeigh: Ok. I can't be sure. 

    Q. Now, during this same November time period, November-December time
    period when your brother was home, did he use your word processor?

    A. Yes, he did. 

    Q. What type of word processor do you have? 

    A. It's a Brother word processor. 

    Q. And how do you know that he used it? 

    A. I was there when he was typing a letter to the American Legion on
    it. 

    Q. Did you see the letter that he drafted? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. Did you read it while he was writing it, or after he completed it? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. And do you know whether he sent it to the American Legion? 

    A. Yeah. He did, I think. ... 

    Q. Do you see Government's Exhibit No. 8? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. And could you read that to yourself and see if you recognize that
    document. 

    A. Yes, I do. 

    Q. Is that the letter that your brother wrote to the American Legion? 

    A. Yes. ... 

    Q. Ms. McVeigh, can you read this letter in its entirety into the
    record. 

    A. Constitutional Defenders. We members of the citizen's militias do
    not bear our arms to overthrow the Constitution, but to overthrow those
    who pervert the Constitution; if and when they once again, draw first
    blood (many believe the Waco incident was first blood). 

    Many of our members are veterans who still hold true to their sworn
    oath to defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and
    domestic. As John Locke once wrote 'I have no reason to suppose that he
    who would take away my liberty, would not, when he had me in his power,
    take away everything else; and therefore, it is lawful for me to treat
    him as one who has put himself into a state of war against me, and kill
    him if I can, for to that hazard does he justly expose himself, whoever
    introduces a state of war, and is aggressor in it. 

    The (B)ATF are one such fascist federal group who are infamous for
    depriving Americans of their liberties, as well as other
    Constitutionally- guaranteed and inalienable rights, such as one's
    right to self defense and one's very life. One need only look at such
    incidences as Randy Weaver, Gordon Kahl, Waco, Donald Scott -- it says
    '(et ILL)' -- those are capital letters -- to see that not only are the
    ATF a bunch of fascist tyrants, but their counterparts at the USMS,'
    comma, FBI, and DEA (to name a few), are, as well. 

    Citizen's militias will hopefully ensure that violations of the
    Constitution by these power-hungry stormtroopers of the federal
    government will not succeed again. After all, who else would come to
    the rescue of those innocent women and children at Waco? Surely not the
    local sheriff or the state police! Nor the Army -- whom are used
    overseas to restore democracy, while at home, are used to destroy it
    (in full violation of the Posse Comitatus Act), at places like Waco. 

    One last question that every American should ask themselves: Did not
    the British also keep track of the locations of munitions stored by the
    colonists; just as the ATF has admitted to doing? Why? Does anyone even
    study history anymore? 

    Q. All right. During the time he was home in November- December of
    1994, did you have a conversation with him about explosives? 

    A. Yes, I did. 

    Q. Do you recall when that was? 

    A. Sometime in November, '94 ... 

    Q. Tell us how the conversation began. 

    A. I think we were talking about like traffic jokes, near-accident
    jokes, things like that. And Tim brought up -- do you want me to tell
    the whole conversation? 

    Q. Sure. 

    A. A time when he was traveling with explosives and nearly got into an
    accident. That's basically how it went ... 

    Q. Did he tell you which car he was driving? 

    A. No. 

    Q. In other words, was he driving his own car, or was he driving some
    other car? 

    A. I don't -- I don't know. 

    Q. Did he tell you what type of car the other vehicle was? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Did he tell you how much explosives he was carrying? 

    A. I really don't remember. He implied it was a large amount. 

    Q. Ms. McVeigh, after the bombing in Oklahoma City, you cooperated with
    the FBI and made sworn statements, didn't you? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. And do you recall making a sworn statement on May 2? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. And in that statement, did you tell agents of the FBI how much
    explosives your brother had told you he was carrying that day? 

    A. Yes, I did. In the statement, I have 'up to a thousand pounds.' 

    Q. Now, did he tell you how he almost got in an accident? 

    A. I think they were going downhill. There was a traffic light,
    couldn't stop in time, almost ran into each other or ran into something
    else. It's vague, but it was something like that. 

    Q. But he and the other vehicle did not get in an accident; is that
    correct? 

    A. That's true. 

    Q. Did he tell you why he was carrying a large quantity of explosives? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Did he tell you what he was going to do or what he had -- excuse me
    -- what he had done with those explosives? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Did you ask him why he was carrying those explosives? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Why not? 

    A. I don't think I wanted to know. 

    Q. Did he ever mention explosives to you ever again? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Had you ever heard him discuss explosives before that time? 

    A. No. 

    Q. When he was home during that time, did he also discuss with you the
    use of aliases and disguises? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. What did he tell you?  Defense attorney Robert Nigh Jr.: I object to
    this, your honor, under Rule 402 and 403. 

    Judge Richard Matsch: Overruled. 

    Nigh: Relevance. 

    Matsch to Ms. McVeigh: You may answer. 

    Ms McVeigh: It was just in relation to a picture I had of him. It was
    his picture, actually. And he was dressed up like a biker; and I asked
    him what that was. And he replied one of his disguises. 

    Q. Could you describe for us what the picture showed? How was he
    dressed, exactly? 

    A. Just biker garb. I can't -- I couldn't tell you exactly. 

    Q. Did he tell you why he needed to use a disguise? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Did he ever tell you or are you aware of him ever using an alias,
    false name? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. And what name did he use? 

    A. Tim Tuttle. 

    Q. And how do you know that he used that false name? 

    A. He had written me a letter and asked me to send some political
    literature to a few other people. And next to each name, there was an
    address to send it to and then a return address. And some of the return
    addresses -- not some -- there were only a few, but at least one of
    them had Tim Tuttle as a return address. 

    Q. So Tim Tuttle was a name he gave for you to use to send literature
    on his behalf. Is that correct? 

    A. Yes. 

    Q. On how many occasions did you do that? 

    A. I think I sent things for him about three times. 

    Q. When he was home in November-December of 1994, did you ever discuss
    with him why he used a false name? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Now, before he left -- well, let's go to that. Do you remember when
    he left home in 1994? 

    A. I think it was at the end of November, beginning of December. 

    Q. He wasn't -- he didn't spend Christmas with you and your father in
    1994. Is that right? 

    A. No, he didn't. 

    Q. Do you recall before him leaving a conversation with him about
    leaving the propaganda stage? 

    A. Yes. At one point -- I'm not sure if it was in a letter or
    conversation -- he indicated that he was not in the propaganda stage,
    which is like passing out papers; that he was now in the action stage. 

    Q. Did he explain what he meant when he said he was now in the action
    stage? 

    A. No. 

    Q. Did you ever ask him about that? 

    A. No ... 
7.1641IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5432
    AP 5-May-1997 23:50 EDT   REF5529

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Judge Withdraws From Molest Case

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -- A judge withdrew Monday from the case of two
    women convicted of molesting children at their day-care center, and
    defended his 1995 decision to grant them a new trial and free them. 

    Superior Court Judge Robert Barton said he could no longer preside in
    the case against Violet Amirault and her daughter Cheryl Amirault
    LeFave after the state's highest court overturned his decision and
    cleared the way for their return to prison. 

    "Although not affirmed, I believe I am right," Barton said looking
    straight ahead at a packed court gallery. "These women did not receive
    a fair trail and justice was not done." 

    The case was transferred to another judge, who will review the women's
    request for a new trial and to remain free on bail. Prosecutors want
    the women back in prison to complete their sentences. 

    "It's waiting for the axe to fall, the guillotine to come and chop your
    head off," Violet Amirault, 73, said afterward. 

    The Amiraults claim their trial was constitutionally flawed because
    they were not allowed to face their young accusers, who testified
    facing the jury or by videotape. 

    The women were convicted of molesting children at their Fells Acres day
    care center in Malden in the 1980s. 
7.1642IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5467
    AP 5-May-1997 23:40 EDT   REF5523

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Furman Screenwriter Stories Probed

    By SCOTT LINDLAW

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Police investigating former Detective Mark
    Fuhrman's alarming boasts to a screenwriter confirmed Monday that four
    male officers did indeed form a group to sexually harass their female
    colleagues. 

    But all of his other stories were "bigger, bloodier and more violent
    than the facts turned out," Police Chief Willie Williams said. 

    The department released a summary of its months-long, $800,000
    investigation into allegations of police brutality, harassment and
    lying about evidence that Fuhrman made in a series of taped interviews
    with screenwriter Laura Hart McKinney. 

    Fuhrman, who investigated the slayings of Nicole Brown Simpson and
    Ronald Goldman, has said the statements were exaggerations meant to
    impress the screenwriter. 

    O.J. Simpson's lawyers brought the tapes to light in successfully
    defending him against murder charges. The tapes showed the ex-detective
    repeatedly using a racial epithet that, as a prosecution witness, he
    had denied using. He later pleaded no contest to perjury. 

    Williams said that a dozen of 29 allegations Fuhrman made on the tapes
    had some basis in fact, but most were exaggerated. The other 17 claims
    appeared to have been fabricated, Williams said, acknowledging that
    time -- some of the purported cases are over 20 years old -- hampered
    the probe. 

    The report confirmed one of Fuhrman's most inflammatory allegations:
    that his male colleagues at the West Los Angeles station formed a group
    "for the purpose of sexually harassing female officers who they felt,
    as an entire group (women), were unqualified to be police officers." 

    The informal group, "Men Against Women," not only fostered a "hostile"
    work environment, it prevented some women "from safely and effectively
    performing their duties and created fear in many women that these male
    officers would not provide back-up if they requested it in the field,"
    the report stated. 

    The report said four officers founded the group, but did not name them.
    Asked at a news conference whether Fuhrman was among them, Williams
    said he was legally barred from answering. 

    Investigators concluded that a 1985-86 probe into "Men Against Women"
    was "narrow and superficial" and fostered a perception that managers
    would look the other way at such allegations. 

    The Feminist Majority Foundation said that sexual harassment and
    intimidation against women remains a problem, and called for an
    independent citizen's panel to investigate. 

    LAPD investigators concluded that one of Fuhrman's most startling
    claims -- that he beat four suspects until their faces were "mush," and
    that one died -- was "ludicrous" and "completely fictional." 

    Fuhrman's spokesman, Richard Vigilante, did not immediately return a
    phone call Monday. 
7.1643IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5429
    AP 5-May-1997 23:06 EDT   REF5486

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Guard Co. Charged in Fake Training

    MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) -- The co-owner of a Long Island company was charged
    with providing fake training for armed security guards, Nassau County
    District Attorney Denis Dillon said on Monday. 

    Jerome Davis, 34, of Amityville, was arrested Monday on charges of
    offering a false instrument for filing and making a false statement,
    the prosecutor said. 

    Davis, co-owner of Statewide Protective Services in West Hempstead, was
    accused of providing certificates to people who did not complete a
    state-mandated training course, Dillon said. 

    Dillon said an undercover officer made an appointment to take the
    47-hour course required for armed security guards. But the applicant
    was shown three videotapes for three hours and then had a 15-minute
    shooting test at a local shooting range. The applicant was then given a
    10-question exam on deadly force. 

    Dillon added the entire training took four hours and his undercover
    officer was given a diploma, certifying that he completed a 47-hour
    course. 

    If convicted, Davis faces up to four years in prison, Dillon said. 
7.1644IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5516
    AP 5-May-1997 19:28 EDT   REF5645

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    W.V. Computers Too Slow To Abuse

    CHARLESTON, W.V. (AP) - Well, it's one way to keep employees from
    abusing their computer access privileges at work. West Virginia's
    Administration Secretary said the state's computers are so slow, it's
    unlikely a worker will use it to download improper material. Jim Teets
    said the state computers operate at a snail-like 96-hundred bits per
    second -- compared to the 28-eight modems most personal computers have
    today. The slower modem speed makes it unlikely the computers will be
    used to download pornographic pictures. Teets' remarks came days after
    officials in Charleston found out someone in the Human Rights
    Commission had been using a city computer to download porn. 
7.1645IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5520
    AP 5-May-1997 16:54 EDT   REF5503

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Turk Killed for Religious Tattoo

    ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -- Gunmen killed a bartender on Monday because he
    had the word "Allah" tattooed on his back, which they said was
    blasphemous. 

    The two men admitted to killing Oguz Atak, 42, saying "he had made fun
    of people's spiritual values," the private television channel TGRT
    reported. The men were gang members but did not belong to any radical
    Islamic group. 

    Atak was shot while walking his dog near a park in downtown Istanbul.
    He died on the way to the hospital. 

    Atak's tattoo had recently been shown on television news programs in
    footage of a police raid on the bar where he worked. 
7.1646IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5587
    AP 5-May-1997 15:32 EDT   REF5237

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Palestinian Land-Sellers May Die

    By SAMAR ASSAD

    Associated Press Writer

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Palestinians who sell land to Israelis face
    execution, Yasser Arafat's government announced Monday -- a move aimed
    at blocking further Israeli expansion into areas where Palestinians
    want to create an independent state. 

    "The death penalty will be imposed on anyone who is convicted of
    selling one inch to Israel," Justice Minister Freih Abu Medein told The
    Associated Press. "Even middlemen involved in such deals will face the
    same penalty." 

    Abu Medein said the penalty was intended to prevent projects like the
    Har Homa housing complex being built on land sold to Jews after Israel
    captured the area in the 1967 Middle East War -- a fact used by Israel
    to justify construction. 

    The groundbreaking in March for the new 6,500-home Jewish neighborhood
    caused a breakdown in peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians.
    However, the new law will not affect that housing project since it will
    not be retroactive. 

    David Bar-Illan, a top adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu, called the decision "an indication peace is not leading the
    Palestinian Authority to understanding of what peace is about." 

    But Palestinians say such an aggressive position is the only way to
    counter the expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, Gaza
    Strip and Jerusalem. Jewish groups and individuals who support
    expanding the settlements are often willing to pay exorbitant prices to
    buy Palestinian property. 

    "We want to put an end to the phenomena of selling land to Israelis,"
    Abu Medein said. 

    Ahmed Qureia, the speaker of the Palestinian legislative council, said
    the council has been working on legislation on regulating land sales
    and purchases for months. 

    "Our struggle is about land," he told the AP. "The current situation
    makes it necessary that there be strict legislation." 

    Arafat said the law will be discussed by the Palestinian Legislative
    Council later this week. It will then take several weeks before the law
    is passed. 

    Also Monday, Palestinian officials also demanded a freeze on Jewish
    settlement building as a condition for restarting peace negotiations. 

    Israel said it was ready to resume talks if Arafat arrested militants
    and restored intelligence cooperation with Israel. 

    The two sides staked out their positions in advance of a meeting
    Tuesday between Arafat and Israeli President Ezer Weizman and the
    arrival Wednesday of U.S. envoy Dennis Ross. 

    "If (Ross) wants the peace process to return to its normal track ..
    there is a magic word for this: the immediate stopping of settlements,"
    said Arafat spokesman Marwan Kanafani. 

    The Yediot Ahronot newspaper said the Clinton administration has warned
    Israel that if the current round of talks does not succeed, the United
    States will reconsider its involvement in the Israeli-Palestinian peace
    process. 

    Israel's Channel 2 TV said Netanyahu was meeting with Weizman to
    discuss what messages would be passed to Arafat. 

    The TV said Netanyahu was offering concessions including a timetable
    for progress on the Gaza ports and for construction of housing for
    Palestinians in Jerusalem, as well as renewing a past offer of a speedy
    negotiation to reach a final peace settlement by year's end. 

    In the West Bank town of Hebron, an Israeli army bulldozer demolished
    four illegally built Palestinian houses and a shed near the Jewish
    settlement of Kiryat Arba, leaving 28 Palestinians homeless. 

    In a letter to Israeli officials, Hebron Mayor Mustafa Natche called
    the demolitions "an irresponsible act negating the spirit of peace." 
7.1647IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5558
    AP 5-May-1997 14:21 EDT   REF5109

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    No Agreement on Food Aid for Korea

    By JOHN LEICESTER

    Associated Press Writer

    BEIJING (AP) -- Even the threat of famine could not get Red Cross
    officials from the rival Koreas to resolve logistical problems about
    delivering South Korean food aid to the Communist North. 

    The North Koreans refused Monday to discuss ways to transport South
    Korean food aid after Seoul would not say how much it plans to deliver.

    But, at the end of their first talks in nearly five years, the Red
    Cross officials did agree to meet again. 

    Aid workers fear mass starvation if large-scale food relief does not
    reach North Korea soon. Floods devastated the reclusive state's
    harvests in the last two years, pushing its faltering economy into
    ruin. 

    However, the Red Cross chapters in North and South Korea are closely
    allied with their governments and political tensions have stymied
    previous talks. 

    The two sides met for two hours Saturday and again Monday in Beijing,
    but the South Koreans never proposed an amount or a time for aid
    deliveries, the North Koreans said. 

    "I expected they would have something in their hands to deliver to us,
    but when we arrived and met together, I came to know that they came
    with no firm pledge," said Paek Yong Ho, head of the North Korean Red
    Cross. 

    "Without knowing the quantity and the timing, how can we discuss
    transportation of relief goods?" he said. 

    The South Koreans said they would provide aid but could not say how
    much because that depended on public donations. 

    Saying they wanted food to reach North Korea "efficiently and
    promptly," the South Koreans sought to discuss detailed methods for
    delivering aid, but the North Koreans refused, said Chang Moon-ik,
    spokesman for the South Korean Embassy in Beijing. 

    Still, the two sides "are very keen on meeting very soon again," Red
    Cross official Lasse Norgaard said. Negotiators were returning to their
    respective capitals Tuesday for consultations. No date was set for the
    next talks. 

    Johan Schaar of the international Red Cross said the South Korean Red
    Cross wants aid marked to show it came from South Korea and to monitor
    its distribution -- proposals that are difficult for North Korea to
    accept. 
7.1648IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5542
    AP 5-May-1997 13:17 EDT   REF5411

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Court Upholds Deportation of Saudi

    OTTAWA (AP) -- A court ruling Monday cleared the way for the
    deportation of a Saudi man suspected of being involved in the June 1996
    truck bombing that killed 19 U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia. 

    Canada's Federal Court said the government had reasonable grounds to
    designate Hani al-Sayegh, 27, as a member of a terrorist group. He
    allegedly drove the car that signaled a bomb-laden truck to enter the
    grounds near the targeted U.S. barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. 

    Doug Baum, al-Sayegh's lawyer, said the ruling ensures that al-Sayegh
    will be deported, but his destination remains unclear. Both Saudi and
    U.S. authorities want to question him. 

    The next step will be an immigration hearing, where Monday's ruling
    will serve as evidence that al-Sayegh should not be allowed to stay in
    Canada. No date for that hearing was set, but Baum said he expected it
    to occur in the next three weeks. 

    Al-Sayegh, who came to Canada in August on a tourist visa, was arrested
    in March after American and Saudi authorities linked him to the Dhahran
    blast. He has been in custody since then. 

    Al-Sayegh says he was in Syria at the time of the explosion and claims
    he is being persecuted by the Saudis because of his involvement in a
    pro-democracy movement. He did not testify at Monday's hearing, Baum
    said. 

    Baum tried to call a Middle Eastern expert to testify on discrepancies
    in the government's documents, but the judge rejected the request,
    saying only al-Sayegh could address the allegations against him. 

    After a closed-door hearing in March, the Federal Court released a
    summary of the allegations against al-Sayegh, including claims that he
    belongs to the Saudi Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim fundamentalist group,
    and that he conducted reconnaissance at Khobar Towers, the targeted
    apartment building in Dhahran. 
7.1649IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5532
    AP 5-May-1997 17:17 EDT   REF5537

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Nicotine Patches Can Poison Kids

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Now that nicotine patches are available over the
    counter, doctors warn they may pose an increased poisoning hazard to
    children. 

    Fourteen children got sick after putting new or used nicotine patches
    on their skin or in their mouths, according to a two-year study of
    poison centers. The findings appear in the May issue of Pediatrics,
    released Monday. 

    Patches can retain up to three-fourths of their nicotine after use, the
    equivalent of four to seven cigarettes, said the authors, led by Dr.
    Alan Woolf of Harvard Medical School and Children's Hospital of Boston. 

    Sixteen million people are expected each year to buy patches, which
    became available over the counter in 1996. The authors urged users to
    keep patches out of the reach of youngsters. 

    Children exposed to nicotine can suffer abnormal blood pressure or
    heartbeat, slowed or interrupted breathing, general sluggishness,
    seizures and coma. 

    In the study, 36 children under age 16 were reported to have exposed
    themselves to the patches. Most of the 14 who became ill suffered
    nausea or vomiting, weakness, dizziness or rashes. Ten were taken to
    hospital emergency rooms and two were kept overnight. All recovered
    fully, authors said. 
7.1650IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 10:5556
    AP 5-May-1997 14:10 EDT   REF5074

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    FDA Approves Nicotine Inhaler

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Smokers trying to kick the habit are getting a new
    source of help: The Food and Drug Administration approved the first
    smokeless nicotine inhaler Monday. 

    The Nicotrol Inhaler, to be sold by prescription only, allows smokers
    to suck nicotine through a plastic tube, letting the chemical be
    absorbed into the body through membranes in the mouth. 

    The inhaler, developed by Pharmacia & Upjohn Inc. but marketed by
    McNeil Consumer Products, will be on pharmacy shelves later this year.
    McNeil said it had not yet set a price. 

    Currently, would-be quitters can buy nicotine patches or chewing gum
    over the counter, or a nicotine nasal spray with a doctor's
    prescription. 

    The FDA said clinical trials showed the inhaler worked about as well as
    these other products. Compared to no help, McNeil said, the Nicotrol
    Inhaler as much as doubled the likelihood that users would abstain from
    smoking for a year. 

    Each puff of the inhaler contains eight to 10 times less nicotine than
    a puff of a cigarette -- and none of the dangerous tar and other toxins
    cigarettes deliver. Also, because the nicotine is absorbed gradually
    through mouth tissue, users don't get the quick jolt that smokers feel
    when the chemical hits their lungs. 

    The inhaler also provides a sensation in the back of the throat similar
    to the feeling of inhaling a cigarette, and the ritual of bringing
    hand-to-mouth that many smokers report they miss when trying to quit,
    McNeil said. 

    However, the FDA warned that the psychological component of the
    Nicotrol Inhaler is not yet proved to carry any benefit. 

    To use the Nicotrol Inhaler, would-be quitters insert a foil-wrapped
    nicotine cartridge into a tube that looks like a fat, white cigarette. 

    Side effects include mouth or throat irritation or cough. The inhaler
    can be used six to 16 times a day at first, tapering off after the
    first three months. But it should not be used for more than six months,
    McNeil said. 

    About 46 million Americans smoke, and the government says smoking kills
    400,000 a year. Surveys indicate three-fourths of smokers want to quit
    but have failed or are afraid to try. 
7.1651IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:25117
7.1652IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:2734
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
    
    Kasparov is mesmerised by Deep Blue
    
    By Barbie Dutter 
    
    THE chess world was in deep shock last night after Garry Kasparov, the
    world chess champion, was defeated unnecessarily by the IBM
    supercomputer Deep Blue in their $1.1 million rematch.
                                      
    Kasparov could have drawn the second game but resigned too early. With
    one move, he could have placed his queen at the heart of the computer's
    position, forcing perpetual check.
                                      
    Instead, the Russian resigned, believing that he had lost the game. The
    audience at New York's Equitable Centre - including 20 Grandmasters -
    concurred with his decision and the millions monitoring the game's
    progress on the Internet did not question the outcome.
                                      
    It was not until half-an-hour later that a computer programme called
    Ferret, which was analysing the game on the Internet, suggested that it
    should have been a draw. Kasparov, 34, was asleep as the news filtered
    through last night and was yet to be made aware of his faux-pas.
                                      
    Malcolm Pein, The Daily Telegraph chess correspondent, said from New
    York: "Kasparov could have obtained a draw. He is going to go
    absolutely nuts when he realises. He was completely psyched out by the
    computer because he believed that it sees everything, as did all the
    experts in the audience and all the millions watching on the Internet.
    It is almost an incidence of mass hypnosis."
                                      
    Joel Benjamin, the Deep Blue chess consultant, said: I am sure that if
    Garry had been playing a human player he would have looked deeper. I
    guess he just believed Deep Blue."
7.1653IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:3151
7.1654IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:3229
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
                                                                             
    Investigation at ICI after spills                                        
    
    ENVIRONMENT Agency officials are seeking urgent talks with the senior
    management of ICI after two separate chemical leaks within hours of
    each other at the company's plants in the North.
                                                        
    In the first incident, roads were closed and residents told to stay
    indoors when highly inflammable naptha gas escaped from the company's
    Seal Sands site, at Seaton Carew, Cleveland, at 4am on Sunday.
                                                        
    Three-and-a-half hours later, there was a spill involving the
    dry-cleaning chemical trichloroethylene at the ICI plant in Runcorn,
    Cheshire. The chemical spilled into a nearby canal.
                                                        
    A spokesman for the watchdog Environment Agency said that samples were
    being taken at both sites and investigations would continue before any
    decisions were made on what action to take.
                                                        
    Archie Robertson, the agency's director of operations, said: "The
    agency is extremely concerned by the frequency of potentially serious
    incidents at ICI plants in recent months.
                                                        
    "The agency is seeking an urgent national meeting with the senior
    management of ICI to review what action they will be taking to prevent
    any further incidents of this type."
                                                        
    No one was immediately available for comment at ICI.
7.1655IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:3429
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
                                  
    Pollution wipes out river life
    
    By Peter Birkett         
    
    THOUSANDS of fish and young eels were killed yesterday by pollution
    that destroyed all aquatic life in a five-mile section of the River
    Medway in Kent.
                             
    The Environment Agency scrambled every available emergency worker it
    could contact over the bank holiday to trace the source of the
    pollution in the tidal section between New Hythe, near Maidstone, and
    Wouldham Marshes, near Rochester.
                             
    "In that section everything is dead," said Ray Kemp, agency spokesman.
    "This is a very serious incident. We have the added difficulty in
    tracking the source because whatever is in the river is colourless and
    odourless."
                             
    The dead fish were mainly flatfish, flounders and elvers, said Mr Kemp.
    "There are many thousands dead. It is particularly tragic because the
    quality of the Medway has improved so much in the past few years.
                             
    "Salmon have returned and the Allis Shad, a rare herring-like fish
    thought to be extinct in the river, has come back," he said.
                             
    Agency officials said they hoped that the tide would eventually flush
    the pollutant out to sea.
7.1656IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:3847
7.1657IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:4049
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
                                   
    Drivers told of car phone peril
    
    By Michael Fleet                                              
    
    MOBILE telephones could carry warnings about the danger of using them
    while driving under proposals being put before the Government and the
    cellular phone industry.
                                                                  
    Every year around 3,000 motoring incidents are put down to the use of
    mobile phones by drivers, ranging from cars being driven erratically to
    fatal accidents.
                                                                  
    Gregory Smith, one of Britain's leading experts on the mobile phone
    industry and a witness used by both the Crown and defence in cases
    concerning mobile phones and computers, will next month submit a report
    on the problem to the Department of Trade and Industry. Mr Smith is
    calling for mobiles to carry a warning similar to that carried on
    cigarette packets. It would have words to the effect: "Warning. Using a
    mobile phone whilst in control of a moving vehicle may be dangerous".
                                                                  
    He is not backing calls from some pressure groups for mobile phones to
    be banned for use by drivers, but the warning will make it clear to
    users that it is potentially dangerous and could lead to spot fines for
    motorists using the phones in unsuitable circumstances.
                                                                  
    "There are occasions when I would consider it safe for a mobile phone
    to be used by a driver, for instance if he was on an otherwise empty
    motorway early in the morning," he said. "But the message must be made
    that, in heavy traffic or on unsuitable roads, using a mobile phone can
    be dangerous."
                                                                  
    There is a warning in the Highway Code about using a mobile phone while
    driving but it is not banned. Prosecutions can be brought only if the
    use of the phone leads to an offence of careless, reckless or dangerous
    driving.
                                                                  
    Mr Smith also advocates wider use of hands-free kits in cars, or
    drivers subscribing to an answering service while on the road. "Greater
    emphasis should be made by dealers to encourage people to buy
    hands-free kits," he said. "Using a mobile phone while driving can be
    distracting and measures need to be taken to reduce the risks without
    banning them altogether." 
                                                                  
    Mr Smith's report is being sent to Oftel, manufacturers and suppliers
    of mobile phones and the Telecommunications Managers Association.
    "There is a lot of interest in the proposal and I hope it becomes a
    legal requirement for mobiles to carry this warning," he said.
7.1658IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:4229
7.1659IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:4436
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
                                   
    Arctic blast brings snow in May
    
    By A J McIlroy. 
                                                
    SNOW has been forecast across most of Britain today, with London
    expected to experience its first falls in May for 35 years. 
                                                
    The London Weather Centre said last night that the snow would coincide
    with this morning's rush hour, making driving conditions hazardous for
    commuters returning from the bank holiday weekend. 
                                                
    The unseasonal weather is due to a cold front from the Arctic that has
    proved too strong for more moderate conditions coming in from the west,
    a spokesman said. The clash between the fronts was the reason for
    unpleasant weather almost everywhere over the holiday. This would lead
    to temperatures, which had reached 27C in the London area last week,
    plunging to eight or nine degrees by today.
                                                
    The spokesman said: "The snow, which will be a centimetre or so in
    London and other low-lying areas, will be more significant over high
    ground, particularly in Scotland and the North, as well as the Welsh
    mountains, the Chilterns, the Cotswolds and the South Downs.
                                                
    "Central London has recorded snowfall only four times in May this
    century - 1917, 1953 and 1963. It happens, but it is very unusual -
    certainly not your desired bank holiday weather." In the Lake District
    yesterday, police warned people to stay off the hills after a weekend
    in which two died and 11 others needed hospital treatment.
                                                
    The police said that with sleet, snow and gale-force winds forecast for
    the Lakeland hills, no one should venture out unless they were
    experienced and well equipped. The weather centre said conditions would
    "warm up by just a few degrees" over the next few days but everywhere
    would be "unsettled" with cloud and showers.
7.1660IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:4647
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
                                              
    Paedophile in Megan's Law case is on trial
    
    By David Sapsted in New York                               
    
    THE man accused of a brutal child-murder that led to the introduction
    of "Megan's Law", requiring that communities across America be informed
    when a convicted paedophile moved into the area, went on trial in New
    Jersey yesterday. 
                                                               
    Despite fears that Jesse Timmendequas, 36, will find it impossible to
    get a fair trial after the national publicity generated by the rape and
    murder of seven-year-old Megan Kanka in 1994, the trial judge in
    Trenton has refused defence applications to impose an unprecedented
    anonymity order on the trial.
                                                               
    "No one knows his name, but everyone knows Megan," said Barry Slotnick,
    a prominent New York criminal lawyer. "Everyone thinks about this
    sweet, sad little girl. And that's his problem."
                                                               
    More than 40 states have so far adopted versions of Megan's Law and
    President Clinton signed into law a federal version last May. Civil
    liberties' challenges to the laws have kept the issue, and the actual
    case, to the fore of public debate.
                                                               
    According to the prosecution case, Timmendequas, a twice-convicted
    paedophile, moved into a house with two other convicted sex offenders
    in the township of Hamilton three years ago.
                                                               
    He allegedly lured Megan into the house by inviting her to see a puppy,
    then raped her, strangled her and dumped her body three miles from her
    home. Though he allegedly confessed to police and led them to the park
    where the body was, Timmendequas is pleading not guilty to first-degree
    murder, which carries the death penalty in New Jersey.
                                                               
    The case attracted media attention after a decade of mounting concern
    over the increase in the number of abductions, murders and sexual
    assaults of children. Because it happened in a quiet, suburban street -
    Timmendequas lived almost opposite Megan's home - the case challenged
    people's fundamental assumptions about safe, middle-class
    neighbourhoods.
                                                               
    It has taken three months to select a jury from outside the area for
    the trial, which is expected to last six weeks, and Timmendequas's
    lawyers have not made any of the pre-trial motions that are necessary
    for a defence of insanity or other psychological disorders.
7.1661IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:4926
7.1662IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:5135
7.1663IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:5346
7.1664IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:5562
7.1665IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 14:5857
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 6 May 1997 Issue 711
                                             
    Robert Uhlig on technology for the battlefield
                                             
    The infantryman of 2005 will go into battle wearing a video-watch to
    receive orders from headquarters, according to a plan hatched by the
    Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
                                             
    With most Western forces likely to be part of an international
    peace-keeping force, military strategists are seeking ways to ensure
    that commands can be sent to the frontline reliably, regardless of the
    soldier's native tongue.
                                             
    A research project at dpiX, a subsidiary of Xerox, has developed a
    high-resolution display that uses next to no power and can resolve
    images with the detail of a paper document. The intention is to use
    these displays to put digital maps, real-time video and other strategic
    and tactical information directly into the hands of battlefield
    soldiers.
                                             
    The multi-million dollar research project uses a classified technology
    called organic liquid crystal. Where liquid crystal displays on today's
    laptops have around 500,000 pixels, these active matrix organic liquid
    crystal displays have more than seven million pixels in the same area.
                                             
    Soldiers already use strengthened laptops and other computer
    technologies on the battlefield, but these are large, heavy and,
    because the displays have to be backlit to be seen, voracious power
    consumers.
                                             
    Organic LCDs are paper-thin and contain a reflective layer to
    illuminate the display using ambient light. Prototypes are said to have
    the same contrast ratio and range of colours as a piece of printed
    paper, and use little power. In darkness, infra-red or visible light
    panels, powered by penlight batteries, can be placed behind the organic
    LCD to make it visible.
                                             
    "Instead of picking up a radio telephone, orders are transmitted
    silently in encrypted packets via satellite or high-flying aircraft,"
    says David Rose of dpiX. "In tests, we are finding it's quicker and
    safer."
                                             
    The first versions of the displays have been fitted to US Navy Hornet
    and Harrier and British Hawk aircraft. These have the same high
    resolution as the battlefield systems, and some of the reflective
    qualities - including wide viewing angles, high contrast and low
    susceptibility to glare - but are bulkier and backlit.
                                             
    The next stage of the research, expected to be completed early next
    year, is to incorporate the displays into a portable device for
    infantrymen. Field tests will follow, with the aim of introducing the
    system within five years.
                                             
    There are also potential commercial applications, such as electronic
    newspapers - like newsprint, the screens can be rolled up - and
    wall-hung televisions. Before then, says Rose, organic LCD is likely to
    be the next generation of laptop display.
7.1666IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 06 1997 15:0039
7.1667IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 10:59112
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 7-May-1997 1:01 EDT   REF5548

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    MOMENT OF SILENCE 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Georgia students can continue the state-mandated moment
    of silence that starts each school day. A federal appeals court
    rejected a challenge claiming the law was an illegal attempt to return
    prayer to public schools. The 1994 Georgia law is the first in the
    country to survive a constitutional review by a federal appeals court,
    said Harlan Loeb of the Anti-Defamation League. 
   
    UNABOMBER 

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Prosecutors were ordered Tuesday to turn
    over an array of documents to Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski's
    defense team, including DNA test results and handwriting analyses.
    Prosecutors also were cautioned against destroying any documents,
    noting that an FBI analysis of Kaczynski's writings included the
    notation "destroy when no longer needed." Kaczynski's attorneys have
    sought a wide range of investigative documents that they believe could
    help show that he was unfairly singled out as a suspect. They have said
    some of the evidence, such as the results of some DNA testing, actually
    tends to rule out Kaczynski as a suspect. 
   
    BAYER PAYOUT 

    LEVERKUSEN, Germany (AP) -- The Bayer chemical group expects to pay
    $267.4 million to 6,200 hemophiliacs in the United States who were
    infected by AIDS-tainted blood products between 1978 and 1985, a
    spokeswoman says. Bayer, one of four companies involved in the case, is
    close to an agreement to pay the victims or their survivors,
    spokeswoman Christina Sehnert said. Bayer AG, Baxter International,
    Rhone-Poulenc Rorer and Alpha Terapeutics had agreed in April 1996 to
    pay $100,000 to each victim's family. But the settlements were held up
    as the U.S. government and several states sought reimbursement for
    medical treatment. 
   
    CLINTON-MEXICO 

    MEXICO CITY (AP) -- In a show of harmony after stormy disputes,
    President Clinton and Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo pledged closer
    cooperation on immigration and drug fighting. Clinton and Zedillo
    signed a declaration committing their nations for the first time to
    devise a joint strategy for combating drugs. The leaders also signed an
    immigration document designed to better manage their 2,000-mile border
    with new checkpoints. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh wrote his sister weeks before the
    Oklahoma City bombing that "something big is going to happen," she
    testified. Jennifer McVeigh broke down during cross-examination at her
    brother's trial, describing how FBI agents had threatened to charge her
    with treason unless she cooperated with the government. Later, a
    witness to the bombing, federal agent Luke Franey, told of the horror
    inside the federal building during the April 19, 1995 blast that killed
    168 people. 
   
    COMPUTER CHESS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Man and machine played to a draw. It was advantage no
    one after Game 3 of world chess champion Garry Kasparov's match against
    IBM's Deep Blue computer. It left their series tied at 1 1/2 win each.
    Kasparov offered the draw after his 48th move and Deep Blue immediately
    accepted. 
   
    ROCK-HALL OF FAME 

    CLEVELAND (AP) -- The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductions, a road
    show for their entire 12-year history, finally came home to the
    Cleveland museum. The list of honorees read like a 1970s pop chart: the
    Jackson 5, Bee Gees, Joni Mitchell, Crosby, Stills and Nash, and
    Parliament-Funkadelic. The Young Rascals and Buffalo Springfield round
    out the performers honored this year. 
   
    NORTH KOREA FAMINE 

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- North Korea's food shortage is becoming so
    intense people are scavenging for scrap metal and rocks to sell for
    money to buy food, the head of the World Food Program says. People in
    northern areas of the country also are grinding rice stalks, corn cobs
    and empty pea pods to make into a nutritionless mix simply to fill
    their stomachs, WFP Executive Director Catherine Bertini said. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was traded at 125.29 yen on the Tokyo foreign
    exchange market at 9 a.m. Wednesday, down 0.55 yen. The Nikkei shed
    20.10 points, dropping to 20,160.82. In New York, the Dow gained 10.83
    points to close at record high of 7,225.32. The Nasdaq closed at
    1328.30, down 10.94. 
   
    HAWKS-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Scottie Pippen's 3-pointer with 43.9 seconds left was
    the go-ahead basket as the Chicago Bulls opened the Eastern Conference
    semifinals with a 100-97 victory over the Atlanta Hawks. Michael Jordan
    scored 34 points. 
   
    DEVILS-RANGERS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Wayne Gretzky and Esa Tikkanen scored in the first 5
    1/2 minutes, and New Jersey had a potential tying goal disallowed for
    the second straight game as the New York Rangers beat the Devils 3-2.
    The Rangers take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference
    semifinal series. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1668IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 10:5994
    RTw  06-May-97 16:29    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LUBUMBASHI, Zaire - Zairean rebels appealed for government troops in
    Kinshasa to surrender to their approaching forces to avert a bloody
    takeover of the capital. 

    KINSHASA - Zaire's President Mobutu Sese Seko, under pressure to resign
    as rebels close in on Kinshasa, will leave the capital for talks in
    Gabon but intends to return, Cable News Network reported. 

    KISANGANI, Zaire - Nearly 1,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees flew home from
    Zaire and a train left to pick up more refugees two days after 91 died
    in a stampede. 

    GENEVA - The U.N. Children's Fund reported a rise in the number of
    Rwandan Hutu refugee children with bullet and machete wounds in
    rebel-held east Zaire amid mounting allegations of violence by its
    Tutsi-dominated troops. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Jordan snubbed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as
    Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat prepared to meet Israel's president in
    an attempt to pull Middle East peacemaking out of deep crisis. 

    JERUSALEM - The Palestinian Authority will sentence to death
    Palestinians who sell land to Israelis through unauthorised agents to
    counter expansion of Jewish settlements, Justice Minister Freih Abu
    Meddein said. 

    - - - - 

    AMMAN - Musa Abu Marzook, political leader of the militant Palestinian
    movement Hamas, flew back to Jordan a free man after two years in a New
    York jail accused of "terrorist activity," Jordanian officials said. 

    - - - - 

    CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh - More than 50 people were wounded in bomb
    blasts, clashes and an attack on a train during an opposition-led
    general strike in Chittagong port and neighbouring areas, police said. 

    - - - - 

    DIYARBAKIR, Turkey - More than 100 people have died in two days of
    fighting between Turkish troops and Kurdish guerrillas that has spilled
    just across the border into northern Iraq, security officials said. 

    - - - - 

    BUJUMBURA - Burundi state radio said the army killed more than 100
    rebels in fighting in the south of the country. 

    - - - - 

    STRASBOURG, France - Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov said he
    hoped to complete a draft agreement on future partnership between NATO
    and Russia in talks with the alliance's secretary-general. 

    - - - - 

    THE HAGUE - U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan opened the inaugural
    conference of a new agency charged with enforcing a global ban on
    chemical weapons. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain said it was ready to host an international conference
    on what to do about reserves of Nazi gold looted from victims during
    World War Two. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - Italy said it had repatriated a total of 2,712 Albanian
    "undesirables" -- almost one fifth of all those who have fled to Italy
    to escape recent chaos in their impoverished Balkan state. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - China unveiled a plan for lavish celebrations marking Hong
    Kong's return on July 1, and future leader Tung Chee-hwa prepared to go
    to Beijing to discuss the remaining handover hurdles. 

    - - - - 

    CAIRO - Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak met Iran's Foreign Minister
    Ali Akbar Velayati in Cairo for high-level talks after years of
    strained relations between the countries. 

    REUTER
7.1669IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 10:5987
    RTos 07-May-97 05:35    

    Kasparov in Awe of Chess-Playing Computer

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    NEW YORK (Reuter) - World chess champion Garry Kasparov has called
    supercomputer Deep Blue an "alien opponent" but Tuesday he said it was
    playing like a god. 

    The best player in the history of the ancient game has suffered the
    double embarrassment of needlessly resigning to the IBM system on
    Sunday and then being held to a draw in Tuesday's third game of their
    six-game re-match despite the advantage of the white pieces. 

    "The scientists are saying that Deep Blue is only calculating, but it
    has showed signs of intelligence," said Kasparov, who had no advance
    information on his opponent and has labeled it alien. 

    The $1.1 million match is tied at 1 1/2 points each and Kasparov will
    have to play with the black pieces in two out of the three remaining
    games. One point is awarded for a win and a 1/2 point for a draw.
    Playing with white has the advantage of the first move, much like
    holding serve in tennis. 

    The revelation that the Russian gave up on Sunday in what was in fact a
    drawn position, dominated and overshadowed the third game of the
    contest, a closely fought draw out of an English Opening that ended
    with Deep Blue's programmers accepting Kasparov's draw offer after
    almost 4 1/2 hours at the board. 

    "It reminds me of the famous goal that Maradona scored against England
    in 86. He said it was 'the hand of God'," stated Kasparov, referring to
    a goal one of the world's greatest soccer players, Diego Maradona of
    Argentina, scored in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico.

    Maradona illegally used his hand to punch the ball into the net but the
    infraction was not spotted by the referee and the goal counted. 

    "Suddenly you know it played like a god for one particular moment (in
    the second game)," an animated Kasparov told hundreds of spectators
    after Tuesday's game. It was unclear whether he was accusing the IBM
    team of cheating or just awed by the computer's performance. 

    The Russian's remarkable and rare oversight was a reminder to human
    players that their emotions can be a handicap in clashes with machines. 

    Several leading grandmasters admitted that they too had initially
    missed the continuation that would have saved the day for Kasparov. It
    was left to an untitled player in an Internet chat room to claim the
    credit for unlocking the problem. 

    Deep Blue's programmers also said it had not calculated the moves
    correctly during the game, something Kasparov described as "very human
    from my point of view." 

    Grandmasters intensely debated how the strongest player in chess
    history overlooked a sequence of moves that would have forced a draw
    Sunday and maintained his lead in the match. 

    Instead, the 34-year-old Russian resigned the position after Deep
    Blue's 45th move and the match was tied at one win each. Kasparov
    defeated the machine Saturday in the first game. 

    Chess experts, almost without exception described Sunday's game as the
    best performance ever by a computer, likening it to the style of top
    human players. 

    Kasparov was forced by Deep Blue to defend with his black pieces for
    almost four hours and looked tired and demoralized. 

    "The computer has an advantage, it does not have this body of emotions.
    We humans get depressed," grandmaster Yasser Seirawan of the United
    States said. "The computer doesn't get depressed." 

    Subsequent analysis showed that Kasparov could have played a series of
    moves to force what is known in chess as "perpetual check" -- one
    player repeatedly attacking his opponent's king, ensuring none of his
    other pieces can make further moves and thus a draw is the only
    outcome. 

    The analysis began within hours of the game ending in "chat rooms" run
    by the Internet Chess Club. Surprisingly, it was an untitled player who
    first suggested the drawing sequence, according to Internet Chess Club
    director Gregory Belmont.

    REUTER
7.1670IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 10:5964
    RTw  07-May-97 01:21    

    Historic British Commons chamber sees sea-change

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Gerrard Raven 

    LONDON, May 7 (Reuter) - Britain's new members of parliament who arrive
    on Wednesday to take their seats after Labour's landslide election win
    will find a building designed for another era and a different political
    reality. 

    From the provision of toilets to the shape of the debating chamber, the
    facilities at the Palace of Westminster are ill-suited to the needs of
    the 659 MPs elected on Thursday. 

    It is not merely the scale of the Labour victory which will cause
    problems. There is also the fact that an unprecedented number of MPs
    are women -- almost double the 62 in the last parliament. 

    Unlike most modern parliamentary debating chambers, the Commons,
    designed in the mid-1800s, is not hemispherical in shape, but consists
    of two tiers of benches facing each other. 

    The front benches of each tier are exactly two swords' length apart, a
    reminder that two sides of roughly equal strength are expected to do
    verbal, if not physical, battle. 

    So a House containing a ruling party of 418 members, a Conservative
    opposition with just 165 and a substantial third force in the Liberal
    Democrats with 46 does not fit easily. 

    Already plans are being laid for some Labour members to sit on what
    would normally be opposition benches to alleviate the squash on the
    government side. 

    Already the Liberal Democrats have queried whether, following the
    Conservatives' failure to win a single seat in Scotland, they should
    occupy the opposition front bench when Scottish issues are being
    discussed. 

    Architecture seemingly designed to promote confrontation rather than
    cooperation is also unlikely to suit a House with almost a fifth of its
    members women. 

    "Women are more co-operative in the way they work. They're not so into
    scoring points, and more interested in hearing different points of
    view...I think it's time to modernise Westminster," said new Labour MP
    Julia Drown. 

    New Prime Minister Tony Blair has already canvassed ideas for making
    debate more constructive, including reform of Prime Minister's question
    time, twice-weekly confrontations notorious in Britain for their
    bluster and lack of content. 

    The new intake of women is also sure to criticise the facilities in
    parliament, where there is a shooting range but no creche for children. 

    Other members who may find the "mother of parliaments" conceived in a
    Christian age a difficult place to operate include Labour's Mohammad
    Sarwar, elected Britain's first Muslim MP. 

    REUTER
7.1671IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 10:5962
    RTos 06-May-97 23:06    

    Queen Expands Website to Meet Big Demand

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - About 12.5 million Internet surfers have accessed
    Queen Elizabeth's website since the British monarch took to the
    information superhighway two months ago, Buckingham Palace said on
    Tuesday. 

    Her 165-page world of crowns, corgis and castles attracted one million
    hits on the opening day and the site is now being expanded with another
    85 pages to sate the appetite of enthusiasts. 

    "Hopefully it is demonstrating we are pitching it at the right level
    and covering the subjects people are interested in," a palace
    spokeswoman told Reuters. 

    "We see this as a very encouraging start to the website. But we are not
    going to be complacent. We will keep updating. Like all websites, they
    have to be weeded and upgraded to encourage return." 

    The new website pages of royal history are illustrated with 30
    paintings, photos and hitherto unseen prints from the royal collection,
    she said. 

    Queen Elizabeth launched the website on March 6 with a wealth of
    information about today's monarchy, how it works, its members, its many
    palaces and the huge royal art collection. 

    A page listing the members of today's royal family includes Diana,
    Princess of Wales, divorced last year from heir to the throne Prince
    Charles. But Sarah, Duchess of York, who divorced the Queen's second
    son Andrew, is not on show. 

    The website has also been updated since Conservative Prime Minister
    John Major was unseated last week in a landslide election victory by
    Labour leader Tony Blair. 

    A photo caption of the queen with Major refers to him as former prime
    minister. 

    Since the launch, 50,000 people have recorded their electronic comments
    in the website "visitors book." 

    "There is a very high interest from America which would of course
    reflect pc (personal computer) ownership. There is a very wide spread
    internationally, from Iceland to Japan to Brazil," the palace
    spokeswoman said. 

    "The vast majority take the opportunity to make their views known on
    the monarchy. The vast majority are supportive, which is a morale
    booster," she said. 

    The 1,000-year-old British monarchy's popularity has been dented by the
    highly publicised marital splits of the young royals. 

    Accessing the history of the British crown costs the price of a local
    telephone call. The website address is http://www.royal.gov.uk.

    REUTER
7.1672IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:00114
    RTos 06-May-97 20:01    

    Sex, Scandal Still Plague Kennedys

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BOSTON (Reuter) - America's royal family, the Kennedys, appear to come
    up short when it comes to "family values" after a week that saw one
    member accused of sleeping with a teen-age babysitter and another
    apologizing to his ex-wife for his bad behavior. 

    "Life sometimes is a bit of a struggle for everybody, and our family is
    no different from any other. It just gets a little more attention I
    guess, as you can kind of see," Rep. Joseph Kennedy, the son of slain
    Sen. Robert Kennedy, told reporters who questioned him about his
    brother Michael's alleged affair with a 14-year-old. 

    Their glamor and their tragedies may have caused Americans to take the
    Kennedy family into their hearts, but the litany of assignations,
    alcohol and drug abuse associated with their name may be causing at
    least some Massachusetts voters to have a change of heart. 

    The latest polls show the congressman, who is preparing a bid for the
    1998 governor's race, has lost the huge lead he enjoyed four months ago
    over an almost unknown lieutenant governor and the state's treasurer as
    a result of the recent scandals. 

    "For generations ... Kennedy men were brought up to prove their manhood
    by going out and having sexual conquests. I thought that pattern was
    broken, but alas maybe it isn't," Lawrence Leamer, author of "The
    Kennedy Women," said in an interview. 

    The litany of extramarital affairs can be traced back to the
    congressman's grandfather, millionaire businessman Joseph P. Kennedy,
    for whom he was named. 

    That Kennedy, who made part of his vast fortune through riding a wild
    stockmarket during the 1920s Prohibition era, was romantically linked
    to actresses Gloria Swanson, Constance Bennett and Nancy Carroll among
    others while married to Rose, the family's matriach, who raised the
    couple's four sons and five daughters. 
     
    CONTROVERSIAL PRIVATE LIVES 

    The couple's oldest son, Joe Jr., died in World War II, but the others
    survived to become elected officials with reputations not only as
    masters of the political arts but for womanizing as well. 

    The late President John F. Kennedy, sharing his father's taste in
    actresses, reportedly had affairs with Marilyn Monroe and Gene Tierney.
    He also kept Judith Campbell Exner, the alleged mistress of Chicago mob
    boss Sam Giancona, as a mistress. 

    His brother, Robert, who was gunned down while making his own bid to
    occupy the White House, reportedly shared Monroe with the president,
    according to Nellie Bly, author of "The Kennedy Men." 

    Sen. Edward Kennedy, the only surviving brother, also has a reputation
    for womanizing and drinking. He was the driver of a car that missed a
    bridge on Chappaquiddick Island in Martha's Vinyard, off Massachusetts,
    and as a result, a young woman with him drowned. The accident raised
    numerous questions about his lifestyle and helped crush his
    presidential aspirations. 

    And it was the senator who took his son Patrick, now a congressman from
    Rhode Island, and his nephew William Kennedy Smith, the son of the U.S.
    Ambassador to Ireland Jean Kennedy  and the late Stephen Smith, to a
    Palm Beach, Fla., nightclub on Good Friday in 1991. Smith would later
    be accused and acquitted of raping a young woman he met there. 

    The litany of men in the third generation of Kennedys that have had
    drug problems can begin with David Kennedy, a son of Robert's. He was
    found beaten and robbed while trying to buy heroin in Harlem, and
    eventually died over a drug overdose two years later in 1984. 

    His cousins Christopher Lawford, Patrick Kennedy, the R.I. congressman,
    Ted Jr., the senator's son, and Robert Kennedy, Jr. have all been
    arrested on drug related charges. 

    "The boys in the family were always brought up to think ... that they
    had some special mandate and entitlement because they were Kennedys,"
    Leamer said. 

    He termed the excesses of alcohol and drugs a "generational problem,"
    noting many American families have had similar problems. 
    
    WHO CAN USE COCAINE? 

    But as one of Patrick Kennedy's GOP opponents in his 1994 U.S. House
    race said during the campaign, "In the real world, if I broke the law
    by using cocaine, I could never have seriously considered running two
    years later to become a lawmaker for the state. Such behavior simply
    would not be tolerated in ordinary mortals." 

    It appears some ordinary voters in Massachusetts, a state where no
    Kennedy has ever lost an election, are tiring of the saga as Joe
    Kennedy's popularity has plummeted in the polls. 

    In late-April congressman Kennedy apologized to his ex-wife, Sheila
    Rauch Kennedy, who is on a national tour promoting her book "Shattered
    Faith," the story of how he mistreated her and his attempts to get the
    marriage annulled. 

    At about the same time, Michael Kennedy and his wife, Victoria Gifford,
    daughter of sports commentator Frank Gifford, announced they were
    separating. Then came reports that a Massachusetts District Attorney
    was beginning a preliminary inquiry into allegations that he began a
    sexual relationship with the family's babysitter when she was 14. 

    Joe Kennedy, indeed, expressed support for his brother Michael while
    denying any knowledge of the alleged tryst. "I love my brother," he
    told reporters. "And that's all I think I should say at this time." 

    REUTER
7.1673IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0034
    AP 7-May-1997 0:35 EDT   REF5422

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    4th Chicago Alderman Indicted

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A federal grand jury Tuesday indicted a City Council
    member on charges of extortion and lying to the FBI in a wide-ranging
    investigation of corruption among Chicago area officials. 

    Rafael Frias, 36, became the fourth Chicago City Council member and the
    11th person indicted over the last 16 months in the government's
    Operation Silver Shovel. 

    "This is another sad day," U.S. District Attorney James Burns said. 

    Frias, then a state representative, was charged with taking $500 in
    1994 in exchange for his promise to get a dummy company set up by a
    contractor certified as a minority-owned business, then help it get
    contracts. 

    He also allegedly volunteered to do more in exchange for $25,000, which
    he said he would need in an upcoming congressional campaign, officials
    said. 

    Officials said the contractor, John Christopher, asked Frias at a
    meeting a few days before the exchange of cash: "What do you think
    you're a legislator for?" 

    "Make money," Frias was quoted as saying. "...That's what life is
    about, making money." 

    His spokeswoman, Susan Mendoza, said Frias "firmly believes that he
    neither committed nor is responsible for any federal offense." 
7.1674IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0035
    AP 7-May-1997 0:34 EDT   REF5421

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Californians May Buy Own Power

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Ten million California utility customers will
    have the option next year to bypass the utilities and buy electricity
    directly from power generators and other providers, state regulators
    decided Tuesday. 

    The Public Utilities Commission voted for rapid implementation of a
    plan approved by the Legislature, which had given the PUC until 2002 to
    give all customers direct access to the electricity market. 

    But the commission said customer movement from utilities to other
    electricity sources was likely to be gradual. One critic of the plan
    said the PUC's rate structure would discourage most residential and
    small-business customers from switching right away. 

    In Tuesday's order, the PUC said customers will be able to maintain
    current service by taking no action, but will also have the choice of
    negotiating contracts with electric generators or buying from
    intermediaries, such as electricity brokers, individually or in groups.

    Other options involve billing according to hourly electrical use. 

    Because prices in the new system will vary by the hour, residential and
    small-business customers who want to buy power directly from suppliers
    should have meters that register hourly electrical rates, the PUC said. 

    However, it would take years to install such meters in all homes. So
    customers who want direct access in the meantime can be billed
    according to a "load profile," which estimates the hourly electric use
    of a class of customers, the commission said. 
7.1675IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0034
    AP 7-May-1997 0:32 EDT   REF5419

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Unabomber Info Must Be Turned Over

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Prosecutors were ordered Tuesday to turn
    over an array of documents to Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski's
    defense team, including DNA test results and handwriting analyses. 

    Federal Magistrate Gregory Hollows also cautioned prosecutors against
    destroying any documents, noting that an FBI analysis of Kaczynski's
    writings included the notation "destroy when no longer needed." 

    Kaczynski's attorneys have sought a wide range of investigative
    documents that they believe could help show that Kaczynski was unfairly
    singled out as a suspect. They have said some of the evidence, such as
    the results of some DNA testing, actually tends to rule out Kaczynski
    as a suspect. 

    Prosecutors argued that they have already turned over all of the
    material they are required to surrender. 

    Last month, Hollows denied defense lawyers wide-ranging access to case
    files. But he said he would review a handful of documents to determine
    whether they should be made available to the defense. That process
    resulted in the order issued Tuesday. 

    Kaczynski, 54, has pleaded innocent to a 10-count indictment involving
    four California explosions that killed two people and injured two
    others. He also has pleaded innocent to separate charges involving a
    New Jersey death. 

    He was arrested last April at his remote Montana cabin. 
7.1676IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0067
    AP 7-May-1997 0:01 EDT   REF5369

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bodies of Two Young Girls Found

    By ANNE GEARAN

    Associated Press Writer

    SPOTSYLVANIA, Va. (AP) -- The bodies of two young girls found Tuesday
    were tentatively identified as sisters who vanished five days earlier
    from their home after getting off a school bus. 

    The bodies and clothing matched the description of the missing girls,
    said Sheriff's Capt. Patricia Sullins. 

    The girls, 15-year-old Kristin Lisk and 12-year-old Kati Lisk,
    disappeared from their home last Thursday. A massive search over the
    weekend near the girls' home found no trace of them. 

    Authorities said the girls were unlikely to have run off, but there was
    no evidence they had been abducted. 

    The bodies were found about 40 miles south of their home, Ms. Sullins
    said. She would not say under what circumstances the discovery was
    made. The bodies will be taken to the medical examiner's office in
    Richmond for formal identification. 

    State highway workers found the bodies Tuesday afternoon. WRC-TV in
    Washington said the bodies were discovered partly submerged in water,
    and officials told the Richmond Times-Dispatch they were under a bridge
    that crosses the South Anna River. 

    Earlier Tuesday, police and the FBI said the girls' parents were not
    considered suspects in their disappearance. 

    Ron and Patti Lisk have remained secluded in their home since the girls
    disappeared and have not commented publicly. Lisk owns a photography
    studio, and Mrs. Lisk is a nursing instructor at a community college. 

    Compounding fears about what happened to Kristin and Kati in this
    growing suburban community 70 miles south of Washington is the
    disappearance seven months ago of 16-year-old Sofia Silva. 

    Sofia's body was later found in a muddy creek. A former neighbor is
    awaiting trial. 

    "It's scary. Parents are very concerned and many, many of them are
    making other arrangements for their kids this week," said Walter P.
    McWhirt, principal at Kati's junior high school. 

    Earlier Tuesday, police and the FBI released a description of a white
    pickup truck reported near the girls' home at about the time they got
    off their school buses. Authorities want to talk to the driver in hopes
    he or she saw something, Ms. Sullins said. 

    Kristin, a high school freshman, and Kati, a sixth-grader, got off
    separate buses as usual Thursday afternoon and walked up the sloping
    driveway to the family's house. 

    The alarm system was turned off, and both girls apparently went into
    the house at some point. When the girls did not call their father at
    work as usual, he began calling the house, police said. He left work
    early and drove home when he could not get an answer. 

    After calling friends and neighbors, the Lisks called police. 
7.1677IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0082
    AP 6-May-1997 23:08 EDT   REF5160

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ziff-Davis To Launch Computer TV

    By DAVID BAUDER

    AP Television Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Betting they can lure PC users back to television
    screens -- at least some of the time -- the media firm Ziff-Davis said
    Tuesday it will launch a TV network for computer users. 

    The 24-hour network would be known as ZDTV: Your Computer Channel.
    Network officials said they hoped to begin operating by the end of
    March 1998. 

    With about half of the nation's cable television homes also equipped
    with computers and many more people also using them at work, Ziff-Davis
    executives said programming about computers is an unfilled niche. 

    "This is a huge audience and it will only get bigger," said Eric
    Hippeau, Ziff-Davis chairman and CEO. 

    The company, a division of Softbank Corp., is the world's largest
    computer trade publisher, putting out PC Magazine, Computer Shopper and
    other publications. It also co-produces "The Site," a computer-oriented
    show broadcast on MSNBC week nights. 

    ZDTV intends to offer consumer information about buying computers, tips
    on investing in high-tech stocks, a nightly show about computer games
    and reports on interesting Web sites and the people who use them.

    For the weekend, ZDTV even plans "The Mouse's Tale" and "Surf," two
    programs for children. 

    Unlike cable networks that can run tapes of old movies or cartoons,
    ZDTV will have to keep its programming fresh in a rapidly changing
    industry to survive, said Richard Fisher, ZDTV executive vice
    president. 

    "The editorial requirements here are deep and move like the wind," he
    said. 

    ZDTV faces the same daunting challenge as other fledgling cable
    networks: how to force its way onto cable systems already crammed to
    capacity with channels. 

    Fisher would not say whether Ziff-Davis would pay cable operators in
    order to be carried on their systems. But he said the company would
    offer an attractive package, including helping cable companies design
    and run their own Web sites. 

    Hippeau said the company was prepared to spend at least $100 million to
    get ZDTV operating. The company is projecting ZDTV would be seen in at
    least 20 million homes within three years. 

    "We know it's hard and we know it's going to take a long commitment to
    make it work," Fisher said. 

    Ziff-Davis will need those deep pockets and patience, said Larry
    Gerbrandt, a cable industry analyst for Paul Kagan and Associates. 

    He said it's an interesting idea and a natural step at a time
    computers, with improved audio and video capabilities, are beginning to
    act more like television sets and TVs are used for access to the Web. 

    "The first battle is not will anybody watch," Gerbrandt said. "The
    first battle is will anybody carry it." 

    The second part may also be a battle, too. Television viewing has
    dropped by as much as 30 percent among frequent computer users --
    ZDTV's target audience, said Jeffrey Billowe, Ziff-Davis president of
    interactive media. 

    But he said they are turning away from comedies and dramas on broadcast
    networks, not necessarily information-oriented shows. 

    An accompanying Web site to complement much of ZDTV's programming will
    be set up and will start running later this year. ZDTV's production
    facilities will be in San Francisco. 
7.1678IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0037
    AP 6-May-1997 23:02 EDT   REF5145

    Technology Summit a Security Risk

    SEATTLE (AP) -- A technology summit hosted by Microsoft Chairman Bill
    Gates is posing some unique security concerns because of the guest
    list: Vice President Al Gore and more than 100 chief executives from 40
    countries. 

    The three-day summit gets under way Wednesday night. Of special concern
    is a Thursday night dinner hosted by Gates at his yet-unfinished
    waterfront mansion in Medina, east of Seattle across Lake Washington. 

    "For a sleepy town like ours, it's pretty exciting," said Medina Police
    Chief Joe Race. "We've never had a presidential visit, or even a vice
    presidential visit." 

    Police and federal agents will secure the area around the mansion.
    Microsoft's own security force will patrol Gates' compound. 

    The Mercer Island Marine Patrol will have two boats plying the waters
    in front of the mansion, said Sgt. Dennis Wheeler of the Mercer Island
    Police Department. 

    They will be joined by boats carrying Seattle police officers and
    Secret Service agents. 

    While Gore gets a Secret Service escort, several executives are
    expected to bring their own security details. 

    Bodyguards working for publisher and former presidential candidate
    Steve Forbes have talked with Medina police about safety. Forbes is
    scheduled to speak to the group Thursday afternoon and also may meet
    with Boeing executives and Machinists union representatives that day. 

    Others on the guest list include executives from United Airlines, GTE,
    Wells Fargo Bank, Safeco, Sprint, Boeing and Group Health. 
7.1679IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0080
    AP 6-May-1997 22:58 EDT   REF5128

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                     
    Cops Hurt Testing Patrol Vehicle

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- San Francisco police testing a sport utility
    vehicle as a replacement for the traditional patrol car found last week
    the experts are right -- the vehicles are more likely to roll in
    high-speed chases. 

    Two officers were injured when they flipped a new Ford Explorer while
    whipping through cone markers at 40 mph in the 3Com Park parking lot
    last Thursday. The Explorer was totaled. 

    "Their speed was consistent with speeds (police drive) in the city
    during pursuit driving -- the same speed they use when they are in the
    Ford Crown Victorias," said San Francisco Deputy Chief John Willett,
    referring to the department's normal patrol car. "And the (Crown
    Victorias) did not turn over." 

    Lt. Henry Parra, who was riding in the Explorer's passenger seat,
    suffered the more serious injuries. His head slammed into the vehicle's
    windshield and roof when the shoulder portion of his seat belt
    apparently malfunctioned, police said. 

    Police officials were so concerned about what happened to Parra and his
    partner, Sgt. Bill Dwyer, that they sent a statewide teletype message
    to police agencies warning them about using sport utility vehicles as
    chase cars. 

    Preliminary tests have ruled out driver error or problems with the road
    surface, Willett said. 

    Safety organizations -- such as the Insurance Institute for Highway
    Safety in Arlington, Va., and the Center for Auto Safety in Washington,
    D.C. -- warn that the top-heavy nature of sport utility vehicles make
    them five times more likely than cars to flip during high speed turns. 

    "If I were a police officer, the last thing I'd want to drive in a
    high-speed chase is a sport utility vehicle," said Clarence Ditlow,
    executive director of the Center for Auto Safety. 

    Ford spokesman Jim Bright also said Explorers are "not recommended,
    certified or engineered for police pursuit. The only vehicle we sell
    for pursuit is the Crown Victoria." 

    And a federally mandated sticker on Explorer sun visors warns drivers
    about abrupt turns. 

    Still, Willett said San Francisco police were unaware of safety expert
    reports. 

    "If this is true, I wonder why we were even testing that vehicle in the
    first place, and why we weren't told about the (dangers)," Willett
    said. 

    Chrysler -- which once built the Dodge patrol cars favored for years by
    the California Highway Patrol -- abandoned fleet police sales eight
    years ago. 

    Chevrolet, another big competitor, stopped making the Caprice and its
    police version in December, although many departments, including the
    CHP, are still driving late-model Caprices. 

    Volvo has made a pitch to sell the CHP its fast 850 turbo sedan or
    station wagon, according to CHP sources. But a Volvo spokeswoman said
    that because of a recent company reorganization, Volvo is "not
    aggressively pursuing" these sales. 

    That leaves the Ford Crown Victoria. 

    Ford officials say they have no plans to stop making the car, and last
    year Ford sold 108,000, of which 50,000 went to police agencies. 

    CHP Deputy Commissioner Bill Kelly said the department "still needs a
    high-speed pursuit vehicle" and is studying its options should Ford
    pull out of the market. 

    But, he added, the "safety issue is of utmost concern." 
7.1680IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0085
    AP 6-May-1997 22:54 EDT   REF5126

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    NTSB Asked To Check Air Force Crash

    By BOB BAUM

    Associated Press Writer

    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Oregon's two U.S. senators want the civilian
    National Transportation Safety Board to review the Air Force's
    investigation into the plane crash that killed 10 Portland-based
    reservists. 

    Sens. Ron Wyden and Gordon Smith requested the unusual inquiry in a
    letter this week to NTSB chairman Jim Hall. 

    The widows of five reservists killed in the Nov. 22 crash asked the
    senators for assistance after the Air Force investigation failed to
    determine why the HC-130 aircraft crashed. 

    "The tragedy, and the uncertainty surrounding the actual cause of the
    crash, have caused great pain and suffering for the families of the
    crew members," Wyden and Smith wrote. 

    Gayle Schott, whose husband was killed in the crash, said she and other
    relatives of those who died had talked for 1 1/2 hours with Wyden and
    members of his staff last Thursday night. 

    "I think it's wonderful," Mrs. Schott said. "This is exactly what we
    asked for and I'm extremely grateful to see that Sen. Wyden is
    committed to following this through." 

    She said it is important for an agency outside the military to review
    the investigation. She also said she was grateful that Smith had joined
    in the request, making it a non-partisan issue. 

    Mrs. Schott said she was "somewhat hopeful" that the Air Force and NTSB
    would go along with the senators' request. 

    "I think if there's nothing to hide, they will go forward," she said. 

    Betty Scott, spokeswoman for the NTSB in Washington, D.C., said her
    agency had yet to receive the letter and therefore could not comment on
    whether the agency would agree to the review. 

    Wyden and Smith asked that the NTSB analyze both the adequacy of the
    Air Force investigation and the accuracy of its conclusion. They asked
    the board to submit its findings by Aug. 15. 

    After a five-month investigation, the Air Force found that fuel stopped
    flowing to all four of the HC-130's engines simultaneously, but did not
    determine why. The plane, a cargo aircraft refitted for search and
    rescue work, crashed in 5,180 feet of water, and only a small portion
    of the wreckage could be recovered. 

    Only one of the 11 crew members survived, and the remains of seven of
    those on board never were recovered. 

    The possibility of an NTSB review was discussed when Wyden and Smith
    met with Maj. Gen. Lanny Trapp, director of the Air Force Office of
    Legislative Liaison. 

    In a follow up letter to Trapp, Wyden and Smith asked that the Air
    Force join in the call for an NTSB review, noting that the board "has a
    reputation for independence, fairness and thoroughness." 

    The senators also asked the Air Force to consider altering its
    procedures for providing information to the families of crash victims.
    The widows also complained that the Air Force was not forthcoming
    quickly enough with information about its investigation. 

    "They didn't have the correct policies and procedures in place to
    handle the families in their grieving process," Mrs. Schott said. "It
    started with the notification process and continued throughout." 

    Maj. Dewey Ford of the Air Combat Command at Langley Air Force Base in
    Virginia said Tuesday that he knew of no other instance when the NTSB
    had participated in an investigation of a military crash. He said he
    could not comment on whether the Air Force would go along with the
    Oregon senators' requests. 

    "We'll provide an answer to the senators," Ford said. "We just received
    the letters today." 
7.1681IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:00107
    AP 6-May-1997 19:45 EDT   REF5811

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Army Drill Sergeant Gets 25 Years

    By DAVID DISHNEAU

    Associated Press Writer

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- An Army drill sergeant who faced
    life in prison for raping six trainees was sentenced Tuesday to 25
    years in a case that led to investigations of sexual misconduct at U.S.
    military bases worldwide. 

    Staff Sgt. Delmar G. Simpson stood calmly to hear his sentence and
    hugged his mother, Edna, after it was imposed. He left the courtroom
    with his arm around his wife's shoulders. 

    His attorney, Frank J. Spinner, said he will appeal the sentence in the
    case, which has rekindled debate about whether the Army should continue
    to mix men and women in basic training. 

    Simpson's defense team blamed the verdict on false claims by the female
    trainees -- saying the sex was consensual -- and undue influence by top
    Army commanders. They also suggested racial bias played a role,
    although race was barely mentioned during the court-martial. 

    "If you're an African-American drill sergeant in the Army, you're an
    endangered species," Spinner said. "If you're an African-American drill
    sergeant, any woman who you go behind closed doors with can turn into a
    rape claim." 

    Simpson is black and most of his accusers are white. Most of the drill
    sergeants at Aberdeen, 30 miles northeast of Baltimore, are black, as
    are 11 other staff members charged with sexual misconduct. 

    The jury of two black men, three white men and one white woman
    convicted Simpson a week ago and took about 2 1/2 hours to reach a
    decision on his sentence for 18 counts of rape and 29 other offenses,
    mostly other forms of sexual misconduct. 

    The jury also ordered Simpson dishonorably discharged at the reduced
    rank of private, forfeiting all pay and pension benefits. 

    Maj. Gen. John E. Longhouser, commander of Aberdeen Proving Ground
    where Simpson worked, must approve the sentence. He may reduce it but
    not add to it. The sentence also will be automatically reviewed by the
    U.S. Army Court of Criminal Appeals. 

    Some women's advocates considered the sentence lenient. 

    "If he were a civilian, he would not be sentenced to 25 years. He would
    be considered a serial rapist and would receive life in prison," said
    retired Air Force Lt. Col. Karen Johnson, vice president of the
    National Organization for Women. 

    Others said the verdict sent a message that the military won't tolerate
    sexual misconduct. 

    "This should be a flare in the night," said Lt. Col. Gabriel Riesco,
    chief of staff for the school at Aberdeen. "Those sergeants and
    instructors out there trolling instead of training should think twice."

    The case prompted investigations into sexual misconduct at U.S.
    military bases worldwide. A sexual harassment hot line set up by the
    Army last November received more than 1,243 complaints by late April. 

    Of those, 325 complaints have resulted in ongoing criminal
    investigations, 498 have been closed, 310 were referred to other Army
    agencies because they didn't involve criminal allegations and 110 were
    in the preliminary investigative phase. 

    At a congressional hearing in February, Army Secretary Togo West also
    defended continuing the Army's practice of mixed-gender training, begun
    in 1974, telling senators that the solution to sexual harassment cases
    is not to stop training women with men. 

    Simpson's sentence also covered five lesser charges to which he had
    already pleaded guilty. He could be eligible for clemency in five years
    and eligible for parole after serving one-third of the sentence, or
    eight years and four months. He will be given credit for serving nearly
    14 months. 

    In closing arguments, the prosecutor, Capt. David Thomas, asked for the
    maximum penalty of life in prison "to send a message, not only to him
    but to drill sergeants past and future that what he did will not be
    tolerated." 

    Defense attorney Capt. Edward Brady had asked the jury to sentence
    Simpson to no jail time, saying the panel had already sent a message of
    deterrence with its guilty verdicts. 

    "The first step toward rehabilitating a broken, humbled, defeated man
    is compassion," Brady said. 

    He later told reporters the sentence and verdict were signals that
    mixed-gender basic training should be reconsidered. 

    "It's not working. It's a catastrophe and no one wants to say that,"
    Brady said. 

    Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said Defense Secretary William Cohen
    has visited training bases and has heard the arguments that "it makes
    sense to have mixed-gender training." 

    "The Army believes that they should train as they fight," Bacon said. 
7.1682IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:0082
    AP 6-May-1997 17:29 EDT   REF5752

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Baxter Claims Fake Blood Success

    By CLIFF EDWARDS

    AP Business Writer

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A blood substitute that looks like the real thing and
    carries oxygen just like it, but is safer and easier to store, has been
    successfully used in heart surgery patients, a company reported
    Tuesday. 

    Baxter Healthcare Corp. said it hopes to get permission to market the
    blood substitute in Europe within a year, and expects to apply for
    permission in this country in about a year. 

    The company said its product, called HemAssist, may be the end of a
    quest for artificial blood that dates to the 17th century, when doctors
    unsuccessfully tried transfusions with animal blood, wine or even milk.

    HemAssist is a "very, very significant advance," said an expert in the
    blood-substitute field, Dr. Bob Winslow of the University of California
    at San Diego. 

    "It's very impressive," Winslow said of Baxter's work. "It's going to
    mean a tremendous advance in health care worldwide. The big winners are
    going to be the less developed countries that don't have good blood
    bank systems." 

    He cautioned, however, that long-term effects still are not known and
    said costs could prohibit wide use. A liter of blood typically costs
    $150 to $300, while substitute blood could cost much more as companies
    work to recoup hundreds of millions spent on research, he said. 

    "Whether the patient receives drug A or drug B is as much a cost issue
    nowadays as an effectiveness issue," he said. 

    Baxter, a subsidiary of Baxter International Inc., said it conducted
    clinical trials in Europe with 209 cardiac-bypass patients who required
    blood transfusions following surgery. 

    They were given up to three units, or 750 milliliters, of HemAssist in
    the first 24 hours following surgery. By one day after surgery, 39
    percent had not required any transfusions of real blood, and 20 percent
    still did not need transfusions after seven days, Baxter reported. 

    Trials in trauma and surgery are underway in the United States with
    about 1,300 patients at 35 medical institutions, said Mary Thomas, a
    company spokeswoman. 

    Baxter, based in Deerfield, Ill., has been in competition with about 20
    other companies for a market that potentially could be worth billions
    of dollars. 

    A usable substitute could eliminate the time-consuming need to
    cross-match blood with a patient before a transfusion, and also could
    wipe out the risk of blood contamination. The quest gained urgency in
    the 1980s when thousands caught the AIDS virus from tainted blood. 

    Although blood supplies now are largely safe, with the risk of AIDS
    infection at less than one case per 450,000 pints of blood, blood stays
    fresh only six or seven weeks after donation. 

    HemAssist, a result of more than a decade of research, uses
    oxygen-carrying hemoglobin, extracted from human red blood cells. It is
    chemically modified to stay fresh longer than whole blood and is
    treated to reduce infection and rejection. 

    One of the researchers involved in the project, Maurice Lamy, a
    professor of anesthesia and intensive-care medicine at Belgium's
    University of Liege, said studies found no increased illness or
    mortality with HemAssist. 

    "Morbidity and mortality were the same for treatment and control
    groups, which is a good indication of safety," Lamy said. "Clinical
    results at 24 hours are particularly compelling." 

    Lamy reported no major side effects other than temporary yellowing of
    the skin. 
7.1683IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 11:00100
    AP 6-May-1997 2:27 EDT   REF5015

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
                      
    Deep Blue Does More Than Chess

    By JIM FITZGERALD

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Sure, Deep Blue can analyze 200 million chess moves a
    second. But did IBM spend all that time on a supercomputer just to win
    bragging rights over Garry Kasparov? 

    Not really. 

    The computer, currently engaged in a chess match with the Russian
    champion, is a better machine for all of its chess training. But it is
    already being used throughout the world in more practical ways. 

    A chain of Midwest department stores is using it as perhaps the world's
    fastest stock clerk. It's reducing the number of nuclear test
    explosions. It may even be responsible for some of your junk mail. 

    "But it's a better class of junk mail," says Eric Rosencrans, marketing
    operations manager for the IBM division that sells the RS/6000SP
    supercomputer, which was warming up to take on Kasparov in Game 3 in
    Manhattan tonight. 

    "Just like in chess, the computer goes through all the possibilities,"
    Rosencrans said. "The better it is at picking out potential customers,
    the less people get mail they don't want." 

    On a higher level of service to humanity, the computer can cut years
    off the time needed to test drugs by analyzing all potential effects,
    good and bad, of a new medicine, Rosencrans said. 

    "The information just explodes as you get into something like that and
    the computer just goes far beyond what humans can do in the same time,"
    he said. 

    Despite winning one of two chess games so far against Kasparov, the
    computer is not really thinking on its own, Rosencrans said. 

    "Even a supercomputer only knows what we program it for," he said. "It
    really learns what it's taught." 

    Others are a bit more blunt. 

    "That's a dumb computer," says Lawrence Fogel, a former National
    Science Foundation researcher who develops computer programs. "You
    can't call it artificial intelligence because it's nothing like human
    intelligence. It just follows one set of rules." 

    Although the chess games smack of showmanship, IBM says the match is a
    way of measuring the computer's progress. 

    Even if Kasparov beats Deep Blue -- as he did a year ago, before its
    programming was refined -- "We win," said Mark Bregman, general manager
    of the supercomputer division. 

    "By taking on these very tough challenges, we reach further and further
    to produce better computers," he said. 

    Deep Blue is a 32-node version of the RS/6000, which means it's like 32
    computers working at once. IBM sells versions with as few as one node
    -- for $150,000 -- or as many as 512, which cost tens of millions of
    dollars. 

    The federal government is paying $94 million for an enhanced version --
    DOE Option Blue -- to simulate nuclear explosions so it can test atomic
    bombs without blowing them up. 

    Deep Blue is among IBM's fastest growing products, with about 2,500
    installed worldwide, Rosencrans said. 

    Oil companies use RS/6000s to analyze the best places to drill. A
    brokerage company uses one for assessing thousands of stocks and
    accounts. 

    At ShopKo Stores, based in Green Bay, Wis., an RS/6000 analyzes
    inventory of 300,000 items at each of ShopKo's 125 stores in ways other
    than just keeping track of what's on the shelves. 

    The computer lets ShopKo know "if people buy flashlights and then come
    back for batteries or if they buy them together," said Daniel Olp, the
    company's technical director. "With inventory, it helps us decide what
    to feature on the front cover of an advertising circular." 

    IBM suggests its supercomputer could someday also be used in weather
    forecasting, medical care and even sports, helping an NBA coach quickly
    analyze possible strategies. 

    In chess, the computer has the advantage of sensing deviations in
    previous patterns of play, which lends itself to other applications
    like detecting credit-card fraud. 

    "I once got called by my credit card company because I made a phone
    call from an airplane," Rosencrans said. "I hadn't done that before,
    and the computer said, "Maybe it's not him."'
7.1684IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:26109
7.1685IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:3175
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                                               
    Tory Dame sees off robber with a short, sharp shock
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 
    
    LADY Ridsdale, the 75-year-old former chairman of the Conservative MPs'
    Wives Group, described yesterday how she delivered a well-aimed kick to
    the groin of a robber who was trying to wrench her wedding ring from
    her finger.
              
    Lady Ridsdale and her husband Sir Julian, the former MP for Harwich,
    were confronted as they drove into the garage of their Kensington home
    after a dinner party. "Lady Ridsdale may be of retirement age but she
    was not prepared to submit to such indignity without response," said
    Robin Griffiths, prosecuting, at Southwark Crown Court. "So she leant
    back, raised her right leg and kicked the intruder in a place where it
    appeared to hurt."
              
    Lady Ridsdale was the war-time assistant of Ian Fleming, the James Bond
    author, and is said to have been the model for Miss Moneypenny. She
    told the jury that as she began to get out of the car, "suddenly, right
    on top of me, was this stocky man wearing a crash helmet and visor so I
    could not see him".
              
    The man snatched a gold filigree watch from her wrist and then began
    pulling at her rings, scratching her hand. "He said, 'make it easy for
    me or I will hurt you'. That was too much for me. I had a good solid
    pair of high heels on and I kicked," she told the court, slapping her
    right thigh to demonstrate.
              
    Lady Ridsdale, who was made a Dame in 1991 for political services, said
    she believed that she connected with his groin because he "doubled up
    in pain and stepped back" before fleeing. The attacker's accomplice,
    who had tried to rob the Ridsdales' friend, the art restorer Peter
    Bennett, as he opened the garage doors, also ran off.
              
    Sir Julian, 81, who limped into court leaning on a walking stick, spoke
    of his distress at not being able to defend his wife. He thought of
    hitting out but did not believe this would be effective because the
    robber had a crash helmet and visor over his face. He could not get out
    of the car because of his bad legs. "It is not a very pleasant
    experience seeing your wife being assaulted and not being able to do
    anything about it," he said. "I do not know whether it is her Irish
    blood, but when she is attacked, she attacks back."
              
    While his wife launched her kick, Sir Julian called out for his
    grandson, Rupert, who lives in a mews next to the garage. "The only
    thing I could do was shout at the top of my voice," he said. 
              
    Mr Bennett, who has lived in the couple's home for 30 years, said he
    had not noticed anyone when he opened the garage doors even though he
    had looked around. He said he was always mindful of security because
    the Ridsdales had been on an IRA hit list. He had told the man who
    attacked him and tried to grab his watch that it was a fake and so when
    it fell to the ground it was left there.
              
    The prosecution has alleged that the two robbers were Christopher
    Wynter, 18, unemployed, of West Hampstead, north London, and David
    Stephenson, 20, an office worker from Wood Green, north London. They
    both deny conspiracy to rob in January this year.
              
    The court had been told earlier that the two men were apprehended by
    two policemen patrolling nearby who heard the sound of a motor bike
    engine revving loudly. As the officers approached, the engine revved
    even more, the front wheel rose in the air and then the bike fell over,
    tipping the two men on to the road.
              
    They tried to pick up the bike, dropped it, then split up and ran off
    in different directions. The officers caught both men after a chase.
    The court was told that it was only after the arrests that police knew
    of the attack on the Ridsdales. The officer who apprehended Wynter then
    retraced the route of the chase and found the gold watch, which had
    recently been given to Lady Ridsdale on a visit to Japan. The trial
    continues.
7.1686IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:3481
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                                
    WPc 'threatened to kill her chief constable'
    
    By Michael Fleet 
                           
    A POLICEWOMAN who claims her career was ruined by sexual discrimination
    threatened to kill her chief constable and have the legs of a senior
    officer broken, an industrial tribunal was told yesterday.
                           
    Pc Kay Kellaway told a friend that she had been to the village where
    Charles Pollard, Chief Constable of Thames Valley Police, lived and
    planned to stab him to death. She also said she planned to take her
    knife to the industrial tribunal and that "no one would be safe" unless
    her claim was successful, the tribunal at Reading, Berkshire, was told.
                           
    Pc Kellaway allegedly made the remarks to Siobhan Walsh, a former
    officer with the Metropolitan Police. Miss Walsh had accompanied Pc
    Kellaway to the tribunal in its early stages and was one of a
    consortium of police and service women lending each other support in
    cases alleging sexual discrimination.
                           
    Yesterday, appearing as a witness for Thames Valley Police, Miss Walsh
    said she had felt "duty bound" to report the matter after Pc Kellaway
    repeatedly insisted she was going to kill Mr Pollard and have Supt
    Peter Hanks's legs broken. Supt Hanks has been accused during the
    tribunal of telling Pc Kellaway that women did not belong in the force
    and that she was "taking jobs from the boys".
                           
    The policewoman also claimed that male colleagues called her names such
    as "whore, bitch and slag" but Miss Walsh said Pc Kellaway had told her
    she had fabricated some of the comments. Miss Walsh told the tribunal
    that she had been an officer in the Metropolitan Police for nine years
    but left in December 1995 for medical reasons after withdrawing a claim
    of sexual harassment. She had supported Pc Kellaway for 17 months until
    last month, when she began talking about killing Mr Pollard.
                           
    Miss Walsh said: "She said to me she was going to kill the chief
    constable. She kept repeating this. She said she had been to the
    village where he lives and there were only 15 houses. I felt I should
    inform the Thames Valley Police so they could prevent Kay from doing
    anything against the chief constable.
                           
    "Kay was saying the chief constable had ruined her life. She also said
    that Peter Hanks would not enjoy retirement. Her ex-boyfriend, named
    Paul, has either been convicted or charged with GBH and she said she
    would ask his mates to do something to Peter Hanks's legs so he could
    not enjoy his retirement. 
                           
    "On April 7, 1997, she telephoned me at 6.30pm. She started the
    conversation by saying she was taking her cat to the vet and then she
    said she was going to kill the chief constable. She was talking calmly.
    I told her she was not going to do such a thing. She said she was
    serious. She said she wanted the chief constable dead and she wanted to
    kill him.
                           
    "I told her she was stupid but she repeated it for 15 minutes. She said
    she had a knife and she was going to stab him. She said if she didn't
    get what she wanted no one would be safe at the hearing because she was
    taking the knife and she would use it."
                           
    The former officer said that on another occasion Pc Kellaway admitted
    she had fabricated Supt Hanks's alleged comments. She said: "She said
    to me that 'that fat bastard Hanks' had deserved it."
                           
    Miss Walsh said that Pc Kellaway had also told her she had tried to get
    herself admitted to a psychiatric hospital because she felt it would
    improve her case and she would get a bigger pay-out. She said: "It was
    a turning point for me. I thought I had to go to Thames Valley Police
    when I realised that Kay felt serious about her threats to kill. I am
    genuinely fearful for those that Kay Kellaway has threatened and feel
    it is wrong for the tribunal to carry on."
                           
    Pc Kellaway, who arrived at the hearing wearing dark glasses, cried
    gently at the back of the room as she clutched a Bible. John Horan, for
    Pc Kellaway, insisted that none of the statements that Miss Walsh had
    made were true and that Pc Kellaway stood by all her claims.
                           
    Pc Kellaway has been on sick leave from the police since 1995. 
    
    The hearing continues. 
7.1687IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:4158
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
    
    Minister quits Blair regime after three days
    
    By Jon Hibbs, Political Correspondent    
    
    THE gloss was taken off Tony Blair's new Government yesterday when a
    minister resigned three days after being offered a more junior post
    than he had expected.
                                             
    Derek Foster, 59, said he had been promised a Cabinet post by Mr Blair
    when he agreed to stand down as Labour's former Chief Whip two years
    ago.
                                             
    But after accepting a lesser post as Minister of State in the Office of
    Public Service over the weekend, Mr Foster decided not to take it up
    after all.
                                             
    Instead, he is now expected to put his name forward for one of the
    three vacant posts as Deputy Speaker of the Commons.
                                             
    Until the general election, Mr Foster, MP for Bishop Auckland, was
    shadow spokesman on the civil service, responsible for preparing
    Labour's transition to power. He could not be contacted last night but
    a statement was put out on his behalf by Downing Street.
                                             
    According to this, he told Nick Brown, the new Chief Whip: "On
    reflection, after Saturday's appointments, I felt I might have more to
    offer in other ways and I will have an announcement to make in due
    course. I am perfectly happy with the outcome." Sources close to Mr
    Blair would not confirm that any offer of a Cabinet post was made to Mr
    Foster.
                                             
    The Speaker, Betty Boothroyd, will be re-elected today in the
    traditional ceremony in which she is dragged to the chair in a show of
    reluctance, but her deputies will not be named until the State Opening
    of the new Parliament next Wednesday. The ministerial vacancy in the
    Cabinet Office was filled by Peter Kilfoyle, a former education
    spokesman, but at the most junior rank of Parliamentary
    Under-Secretary.
                                             
    The mini-reshuffle represents the third occasion on which Mr Blair has
    appeared to backtrack from his party's pre-election stance. Having
    defied Labour party rules by excluding from full Cabinet rank two
    elected shadow cabinet members, Michael Meacher and Tom Clarke, he also
    failed to fulfil a promise made in March by Gordon Brown to create a
    jobs minister with a seat in the Cabinet.
                                             
    The task of implementing Labour's manifesto proposal to get 250,000
    young people off benefits and into work went instead to Andrew Smith, a
    Minister of State at the Department of Education and Employment. It
    emerged yesterday that Mr Smith will also be Minister for the Disabled
    after responsibility was transferred from the Social Security
    Department.
                                             
    Harriet Harman, the Social Security Secretary, will double-up as
    Minister for Women in a further scaling down of Labour's proposals,
    which once envisaged a separate ministry.
7.1688IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:4451
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                                      
    Boxer Nigel Benn 'smashed ashtray into man's face'
    
    By Sue Clough, Courts Correspondent 
    
    THE former world boxing champion Nigel Benn smashed an ashtray into a
    man's face, causing a "fearful amount of damage" which needed a
    three-hour operation and 100 stitches, a jury was told yesterday.
    
    Benn, 33, looked "really angry and was gritting his teeth" during the
    assault on Ray Sullivan at a nightclub in Mayfair, Middlesex Crown
    Court was told. Each time his victim tried to struggle to his feet he
    was knocked back by the boxer, who was eventually pulled off by
    bouncers, said Paul Dodgson, prosecuting.
    
    He said that Mr Sullivan, 33, a ticket agent, was a regular customer at
    the Legends nightclub. On that night, he had passed Benn, who was
    sitting at a nearby table. Although they knew each other, not a word
    passed between them. 
    
    Mr Dodgson said that Mr Sullivan heard the sound of breaking glass as
    he returned to his table. "The next thing he knew was a crunching pain
    to his face, and it seems from other witnesses that it was caused by a
    fist wielding an ashtray. Mr Sullivan fell to the floor," Mr Dodgson
    said. "He tried to get up but all he could recollect was being knocked
    back down. He could not see anything. All he could feel was the
    excruciating pain. He thought wrongly, but perhaps understandably, that
    he was going to die."
    
    Mr Dodgson told the jury that one witness, Katie Gill, said she saw
    Benn, looking stern and annoyed, slam his arm down on a table. She
    heard glass smashing and saw him rushing across to a group of people
    and lashing out with his fists at a man who fell to the floor. He then
    started to kick him and stopped only when doormen tried to drag him
    off. Mr Dodgson said that another witness would recall how Mr Sullivan
    tried to roll up into a ball as the boxer lashed out with his feet.
    
    Samantha Pettifer, Mr Sullivan's girlfriend and a waitress at the
    nightclub, "noticed Benn seemed a little moody. He did not want to
    talk, so in her capacity as a waitress she got him a bottle of
    champagne. She then became aware of a scuffle and could clearly see
    Benn kicking someone three or four times." Mr Dodgson said that she
    would say that Benn's face showed real anger and that he was gritting
    his teeth.
    
    Benn, the former super-middleweight titleholder, of Beckenham, Kent,
    denies wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and unlawful
    wounding. 
    
    The trial continues.
7.1689IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:4923
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                  
    Scientist attacks legal system
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor, and Amit Roy
    
    BRITAIN'S most respected forensic entomologist said today that he will
    no longer work for the prosecution or defence in criminal trials.
                                                   
    Dr Zakaria Erzinclioglu is withdrawing his services as a consultant
    because he believes the system is being corrupted by market forces. "I
    am not interested in the customer's needs but in justice," he said
    yesterday.
                                                   
    A Forensic Science Service spokesman said its scientists "are there to
    uncover the truth". The Royal Society of Chemistry is considering an
    inspectorate of forensic sciences, following a report by Prof Brian
    Caddy on a contamination incident at the Forensic Explosives
    Laboratory.
                                                   
    Yesterday, Prof Caddy, of Strathclyde University, said: "What he is
    saying is that a solicitor will go round and round to find an expert
    who will give him an answer he is looking for."
7.1690IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:5232
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                
    Dolphins' image takes a dive
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 
               
    THE reputation of the dolphin, long regarded as an intelligent
    ambassador for the animal kingdom, has suffered a blow with the
    recording of violent behaviour in Scottish waters.
               
    Bottlenose dolphins in the Moray Firth, and more recently in the Firth
    of Forth, have been photographed attacking and killing small harbour
    porpoises. Scientists admitted yesterday that they were baffled by the
    behaviour, in which dolphins repeatedly rammed the porpoises and tossed
    them into the air.
               
    Bob Reid, of the Scottish Strandings Unit, said the motive could be
    territorial, or related to competition for food. "This kind of
    behaviour is relatively common in nature between other species, and one
    shouldn't be surprised if bottlenose dolphins do it. After all, nobody
    is surprised that lions do it," he said.
               
    The result of the contest between the 600lb dolphins and the 100lb
    harbour porpoises is a foregone conclusion in most cases. The
    strandings unit has examined dead porpoises from both firths, and has
    found injuries including broken ribs, severe bruising, punctured lungs
    and fractured spines.
               
    "The attacks were first recorded three years ago," Mr Reid said. "But
    the public don't want to believe it. Dolphins have a cuddly image and
    wouldn't be used so often in advertising if they were seen to be
    ferocious."
7.1691IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:5433
7.1692IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 14:5934
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                              
    Foxhounds 'to be licensed'
    
    By Charles Clover and David Brown 
                    
    PACKS of foxhounds could be licensed to control foxes even if hunting
    for pleasure is banned, Dr Jack Cunningham, the Minister of
    Agriculture, suggested yesterday.
                    
    Hunt enthusiasts accused Labour of approving hunting "as long as those
    who take part in it do not wear red coats, ride thoroughbred horses or
    enjoy it". Dr Cunningham, whose Copeland constituency in Cumbria has
    two packs of fell hounds, gave a new refinement to Labour policy on
    hunting at his first ministerial press conference. He said that
    "whatever was done about hunting with hounds generally, packs might be
    licensed to control foxes. Shooting might be licensed. But there would
    have to be some control."
                    
    Dr Cunningham said farmers believed that foxes needed to be controlled
    because they attacked lambs. "Opponents of fox hunting say foxes don't
    take lambs. I would like to see a review of the arguments," he said.
    Fell hunts, which are followed on foot because the terrain is too
    difficult for horses, have traditionally included many Labour
    supporters. Labour's manifesto commitment is to give Government support
    to legislation if a free vote in the Commons goes against hunting.
                    
    Janet George, of the British Field Sports Society, said: "What Dr
    Cunningham is suggesting is Labour's classic evasion whenever the
    realities of fox control are pointed out to them. It would make hunting
    all right as long as you don't wear red coats, ride a thoroughbred
    horse or enjoy it. The trouble about the fells is that using a
    high-powered rifle to control foxes can be highly dangerous. Hunting is
    the safest way."
7.1693IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 15:0438
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                     
    Flu spray could replace injection
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
                       
    THE flu injection could be replaced by a vaccine administered to the
    nose as drops or a spray, which has been found to be safe and
    effective.
                       
    The vaccine is also more acceptable to children than injections,
    according to a study led by Dr James King, of the University of
    Maryland in Baltimore. He will present his findings today at the
    Paediatric Academic Societies' annual meeting in Washington.
                       
    "The vaccine delivered good antibody responses, whether it was given
    through nose drops or the nasal spray," said Dr King. "It proved not
    only to be safe but much more accepted by children because they did not
    need to have a flu shot. The advantage of the nasal vaccine is that it
    sets up immunity at the site where most people get the infection." 
                       
    As soon as a person begins to breathe in the real virus "they've got
    soldiers there ready". Dr King said that if more children received this
    type of flu protection, it could help to prevent the disease spreading.
    "Children can easily spread the flu virus," he said. "If we can prevent
    them from getting sick, we may have a profound impact in breaking the
    chain of transmission."
                       
    Dr King said the new vaccine could be on the market by the end of the
    decade. The elderly are likely to be the next group for testing.
    
                       
     Diseases like polio and measles are becoming so rare that parents may
    think there is no longer any need to have their children immunised, the
    British Medical Association said yesterday. Constant vigilance was
    essential to keep such diseases at bay, it said. That could be achieved
    only if high levels of immunisation were maintained against a range of
    childhood diseases.
7.1694IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 15:0630
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                            
    Solent wreck may be oldest boat in world
    
    By Michael Fleet 
                                     
    TIMBERS thought to be from the oldest vessel uncovered anywhere in the
    world have been found on the seabed of the Solent.
                                     
    The 6,000-year-old find suggests man first went to sea up to 2,000
    years earlier than experts thought. Remains were found off Eastoke near
    Hayling Island, by members of the same team of divers who first located
    Henry VIII's flagship, the Mary Rose, 30 years ago.
                                     
    Members of the Mary Rose branch of the British Sub Aqua Club sent the
    wood to Queen's University, Belfast, for carbon dating, expecting to
    find it came from a boat of the Roman period. The discovery that it
    dates from the earliest period of the Bronze Age shocked the club. Don
    Bullivant, chairman, said: "We now have to ask ourselves if this is the
    oldest boat ever found."
                                     
    During a routine scan of the seabed, a sonar image revealed a 40ft
    hull-shaped depression and wood from the structure was later brought to
    the surface. Mr Bullivant said: "There were quite distinctive timbers
    and planking but it is too early to say what the ship might look like."
                                     
    Dr Margaret Rule, a maritime archaeologist involved in the raising of
    the Mary Rose, said: "This may be a raft and if so that would be
    exciting. I am keeping an open mind but think it is more likely to be
    from a walkway across mud flats."
7.1695IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 15:0922
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                   
    Heavy May snow shuts many roads
    
    By A J McIlroy 
                                                 
    ARCTIC conditions gripped much of Britain yesterday, turning spring
    into winter only days after the country was basking in sunshine and
    temperatures of 27C.
                                                 
    Heavy snowfalls closed roads in the Scottish Highlands and north Wales
    while sleet and rain combined with plunging temperatures to bring
    hazardous driving conditions almost everywhere. Parts of the South-East
    and eastern England recorded 12mm of rain, the highest since February.
    More rain fell in London than during March and April.
                                                 
    The London Weather Centre said last night the unsettled cold spell was
    set to continue until early next week. The Royal Society for the
    Protection of Birds said the cold snap was killing insects vital to
    breeding birds. "Migrating swifts are arriving to find they are still
    in winter." The unseasonal weather is being caused by a cold front from
    the Arctic forcing out the warm westerly air.
7.1696IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 15:1154
7.1697IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 15:1546
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                                                    
    Dutch plan gives Britain permanent opt-out on control of borders
    
    By Toby Helm, EU Correspondent, in Brussels                   
    
    BRITAIN'S right to retain its own border controls would be enshrined in
    European Union law under plans tabled yesterday by the Dutch presidency
    of the EU.
                      
    Recognition of British demands will be welcomed by the new Government
    which, like John Major's administration, has insisted on an opt-out
    from the policy on free movement. It also increases the chances of a
    deal on a new Treaty of Amsterdam due to be signed by EU leaders on
    June 16.
                      
    But other parts of the Dutch plan, submitted to ministers and diplomats
    in Brussels yesterday, will alarm Euro-sceptics. Under the proposals,
    the Schengen accords, through which all countries except Britain and
    Ireland have agreed to abolish frontier controls between them, will be
    integrated into the new treaty in the form of a protocol. The EU would
    become responsible for Europe's "open borders" policy, for the first
    time, greatly increasing its powers.
                      
    Schengen also requires signatories to apply common, tough standards on
    external border controls, to harmonise visa requirements and to
    increase co-operation in fighting crime, which would include setting up
    a common police database.
                      
    Michiel Patijn, the Dutch representative in the treaty talks, said he
    hoped to win agreement for the whole Dutch plan in Amsterdam. He said
    the main benefit would be that Schengen would be bought under some form
    of control by the European Parliament, with a role also for the
    European Court of Justice in disputed cases.
                      
    Under the proposed agreement, Britain and Ireland would have the right
    to sign up to Schengen or any part of it at any time. But Euro-sceptics
    will see the plan as evidence of the expanding power of the EU.
                      
    Confirmation that Holland would back British demands to retain controls
    came the day after the Labour Government pledged to sign the Social
    Chapter. The timing fuelled speculation that this was the first "trade
    off" in negotiations leading to the signing of the Amsterdam treaty.
    Doug Henderson, the Minister for Europe, said on Monday that Britain
    wanted "explicit recognition" in the treaty of its right to maintain
    frontier controls.
7.1698IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 07 1997 15:1947
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 7 May 1997 Issue 712
                                             
    Man jailed for abducting his own daughter
    
    By Barbie Dutter 
                                           
    A SCOTTISH scientist who abducted his four-year-old daughter after a
    lengthy wrangle over custody rights was jailed by a Norwegian court
    yesterday.
                                           
    Mark Burkitt, 34, a cancer research biochemist, admitted snatching the
    child from Grimstad, about 150 miles south of Oslo, in February. He
    used his former wife's car to drive his daughter, Emma, to Oslo where
    they flew to Amsterdam and then travelled to Germany.
                                           
    Burkitt laid a false trail to confuse the Norwegian authorities but
    finally gave himself up in Berlin and the girl was returned to her
    mother, Bjoerg Knutson.
                                           
    Yesterday, Burkitt, of Turriff, Aberdeenshire, was sentenced to six
    months, four of which were suspended. He has already served a month in
    custody awaiting trial, so will be free in a month.
                                           
    Speaking from her home, Miss Knutson, 29, said: "He didn't consider our
    daughter's wellbeing and I spent six weeks not knowing where she was.
    It was very upsetting for me and for Emma."
                                           
    Burkitt had disputed the decision of Aberdeen Sheriff Court in August
    1995 to grant full custody rights to Miss Knutson. He decided to abduct
    his daughter after exhausting all legal options to reverse the court's
    ruling.
                                           
    But Miss Knutson, who was married to Burkitt for five years, said she
    had made every effort to facilitate his access rights. "He visited her
    regularly. He came as often as he wanted," she said.
                                           
    "But he didn't respect my having custody and wanted to make a point
    that he had been unfairly treated. He used Emma to get publicity for
    his case. "
                                           
    Burkitt has said he regretted snatching the child, but claimed he had
    no idea that it would be considered a criminal offence. He admitted his
    actions were an attempt to draw attention to his demand for better
    rights for fathers.
                                           
    His mother, Patricia Burkitt, 51, said yesterday all her son had ever
    wanted was to see his daughter grow up.
7.1699IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:45102
    AP Top News at 1 a.m. EDT

    AP 12-May-1997 1:03 EDT   REF5094

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, May 12, 1997
   
    MARINES-MISSING 

    CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (AP) -- The search has been called off for a
    helicopter with four Marines aboard that crashed into the Pacific
    during an amphibious military exercise. It was not clear whether the
    effort would continue on Monday morning. The CH-46 Sea Knight
    helicopter, which took off from the transport ship USS Juneau, crashed
    in the ocean late Saturday and sank. None of the crew members had been
    found by Sunday afternoon. "We found a portion of the fuselage, but
    that's it," said Marine Capt. Perry Mulcrone. The names of those on
    board weren't released. 
   
    CUBA SWIM 

    HAVANA, Cuba (AP) -- At the twelve hour mark in her trip, an Australian
    distance swimmer was 47 miles off Cuba on her second try to cross the
    Florida Straits. Susie Maroney is trying to become the first person to
    swim from Florida to Cuba. She tried to make the swim last June, but
    gave up after 38 1/2 hours and 107 miles because of seasickness and
    dehydration. The sky was cloudy but the sea was calm as she jumped into
    the water from Havana's Malecon sea wall, but conditions grew rougher
    some time into the trip. There have been 50 official attempts to cross
    the straits. 
   
    DEEP BLUE 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- IBM's Deep Blue computer demolished world chess
    champion Garry Kasparov in an hourlong game and won the six-game chess
    match between man and machine. The final score was 3 1/2 points for the
    computer and 2 1/2 points for Kasparov. The 34-year-old Russian and the
    computer split the first two games, then played to draws in Games 3, 4
    and 5. Kasparov resigned after the computer's 19th move in Game 6.
    Visibly upset, he bolted from the table, shrugging his shoulders. He
    later lashed out at IBM for programming the computer specifically to
    beat him. 
   
    ZAIRE-U.S. 

    KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) -- The United States is rehearsing plans to
    evacuate at least 300 Americans believed to be in Kinshasa, the capital
    of Zaire. Rebel leader Laurent Kabila claims his fighters are as close
    as 30 miles from the city. A second face-to-face meeting between
    President Mobutu Sese Seko and Kabila is planned for Wednesday. Kabila
    has said Mobutu must resign and surrender power to a transition
    authority led by himself, or face a rebel attack on Kinshasa. But
    Mobutu has refused to quit, saying he would give up the presidency only
    after elections to choose a new leader. 
   
    BRITAIN-RACISM 

    LONDON (AP) -- The number of racial incidents per year in Britain has
    nearly tripled in the past eight years, Human Rights Watch reports.
    Nearly 12,200 race-related incidents were reported in Britain for the
    year that ended April 1996, the report said. That represented a nearly
    threefold increase over 1988, when 4,383 such incidents were reported,
    the group said, quoting government figures and studies by a British
    research group. It said government figures show racial incidents are
    generally carried out by white males, ages 15-25, acting in groups. 
   
    IRAN-EARTHQUAKE 

    QAEN, Iran (AP) -- Military aircraft rushed food, clothes and medicine
    to remote mountains in northeastern Iran, where a powerful earthquake
    killed at least 2,400 people. About 155 aftershocks have rocked what
    the initial quake left standing, making it difficult for people to
    return home. Several countries, including Afghanistan, France and
    Switzerland, have begun sending in relief supplies. 
   
    BRITAIN-GULF WAR 

    LONDON (AP) -- Britain's new Labor government says it will fund
    additional research into "Gulf War Syndrome," the ailments plaguing
    Persian Gulf War veterans that include muscle aches, fatigue and
    sleeplessness. The government also will provide new funding for an
    existing program that tests veterans for the symptoms, an official
    said. A new investigation reportedly will look into possible side
    effects from vaccines and drugs Gulf War forces took to protect them
    from disease and chemical and biological weapons. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was traded at 119.02 yen in Tokyo on Monday,
    down 3.77 yen. The Nikkei fell 222.02 points to 19,580.76 points in
    early trading. 
   
    BULLS-HAWKS 

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Scottie Pippen had 26 points and Michael Jordan scored
    27 to lead the Bulls to an 89-80 victory over the Atlanta Hawks.
    Chicago has a 3-1 lead in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference semifinals
    and can wrap it up when the teams return to the United Center on
    Tuesday night. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1700IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4575
    RTw  12-May-97 04:07    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LUBUMBASHI, Zaire - Laurent Kabila's rebels said they were resuming
    their march on Zaire's capital, abandoning a pledge to South African
    President Nelson Mandela to halt their advance to give diplomacy a
    chance. 

    - - - - 

    QAEN, Iran - Iranian rescue workers made last ditch efforts to find
    survivors as Iran appealed to the United Nations to help victims of a
    powerful earthquake which killed nearly 2,400 people. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it would "take some
    time" before a U.S. envoy would get Israel and the PLO to talk peace
    again. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Four bombs exploded in Algiers and the neighbouring Bordj el
    Kiffan town, killing at least six people and wounding 72 others,
    Algerian security forces said. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - The kidnapping of a Russian television crew in Chechnya posed
    a new challenge for the region's separatist leaders and further soured
    the atmosphere before planned talks with President Boris Yeltsin. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Conservative President Jacques Chirac dropped in on the Cannes
    film festival to rub shoulders with stars as new polls showed his
    centre-right gaining strength in a parliamentary election campaign. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - Italy's main centre-right opposition Freedom Alliance bloc
    looked set to win the mayoral race in the country's second city Milan,
    polls and early projections showed after voting ended in second round
    local elections. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov said talks between
    Moscow and NATO this week would show whether the former Cold War foes
    can narrow their differences in time to sign a security deal on May 27. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich said there
    was less support this year than last for renewing China's trade
    privileges because of concerns over human rights and civil rights in
    Hong Kong. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - Irish Prime Minister John Bruton, preparing for elections,
    vowed to retain a ban on ministerial talks with Sinn Fein until its IRA
    military ally called a ceasefire. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - Garry Kasparov's legendary resolve broke down in a defeat by
    the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue that created chess history -- the first
    time a programme has triumphed over a reigning world champion in a
    classical chess match. 

    REUTER 
7.1701IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4587
    AP 12-May-1997 1:29 EDT   REF5131

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Arizona Governor Goes on Trial

    By JERRY NACHTIGAL

    Associated Press Writer

    PHOENIX (AP) -- J. Fife Symington III was a political newcomer when
    elected governor in 1991, promising to use his skills as a developer to
    revive the Arizona economy. 

    Six years later he is presiding over an economy humming like an air
    conditioner in August, and fighting for his financial and political
    life as he prepares for trial Tuesday on charges of bank fraud,
    attempted extortion and perjury. 

    Symington supporters claim the charges are an attempt to destroy the
    governor's political career and amount to nothing more than a few
    unintended bookkeeping errors. 

    Prosecutors say Symington is just the latest in a long line of Arizona
    politicians who played footloose with banking laws to line their own
    pockets. 

    "He says he's not guilty, but it looks pretty threatening -- a 23-count
    indictment," said former Gov. Evan Mecham, who himself was kicked out
    of office in 1988 when the state Senate impeached him over a
    questionable campaign loan. "On the other hand, you don't know. A jury
    has to make that decision." 

    The two-term Republican faces hundreds of years in prison for
    allegations that stem mostly from his developer days. Conviction on a
    single count would require him to resign. 

    Prosecutors allege that before he became governor, Symington used
    creative bookkeeping to keep his gleaming office buildings and shopping
    centers afloat in Arizona's boom-to-bust real estate economy in the
    late 1980s and early '90s. 

    He is accused of repeatedly lying about the value of his crumbling
    empire on personal financial statements to get loans. He's also accused
    of using extortion and perjury to keep things together while governor. 

    "Here's s,mebody who ran for office, a strong, successful, millionaire
    businessman, who knew at the time he was broke or near broke and
    managed to pull it off," said attorney Michael Manning, who represents
    Symington's largest creditor in his bankruptcy case. "It's a
    fascinating story." 

    Symington's lawyers insist he is innocent. Any errors and omissions on
    his personal financial statements were unintended, they said. 

    "None of (Symington's) mistakes caused any harm or loss to any lending
    institution," attorney John Dowd said. 

    Symington, 51, joins a long list of Arizona politicians who have been
    swept up in scandal in the past decade. 

    In 1991, three years after Mecham was impeached, seven state
    legislators were indicted for taking cash from an undercover agent
    posing as a crooked lobbyist in the "AzScam" sting. Six resigned from
    the Legislature and the seventh was removed. 

    That same year, Arizona Sens. Dennis DeConcini and John McCain were
    among five U.S. senators dubbed the "Keating Five" for their ties to
    financier Charles Keating, the notorious figure of the 1980s savings
    and loans scandals. Both men were rebuked by their fellow senators and
    returned large campaign contributions received from Keating and his
    associates. 

    Symington may have appeared immune from temptation, given that he
    campaigned as a millionaire. But in about one year's time he filed for
    bankruptcy and was indicted. 

    He's about $15 million in debt, owed mostly to a consortium of labor
    unions whose pension funds loaned him $10 million for an ill-fated
    development in downtown Phoenix. 

    But he's learned a little about politics during his ups and downs.
    Despite facing ruination, he made it known he is still showing up at
    his job ready to do the peoples' work. 

    "Getting ready for the war that's coming, but it's never diverted me
    from my public duties, and I won't let it," he said. 
7.1702IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4541
    AP 12-May-1997 1:26 EDT   REF5121

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Aerospace Defense Center Had Scares

    By The Associated Press

    NORAD's publicity materials brag about its "flawless" record as
    watchdog of North America's airspace, but in fact it has sounded some
    false alarms. 

    Two wrong calls in 1980 produced scares in the White House, according
    to Robert Gates, the former CIA director who wrote about the incidents
    in his memoirs last year. 

    In the first case, William Odom, the military assistant to
    then-national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, overheard NORAD
    describing to the Pentagon's crisis center a missile being tracked from
    the Soviet Union toward Oregon. 

    Odom said NORAD and Pentagon officials debated whether this really was
    a missile attack long past the time when the secretary of defense
    should have been notified. In the end, they decided the missile
    indication was merely a computer glitch. 

    In the second case, Odom awakened Brzezinski in the middle of the night
    to tell him 220 Soviet missiles had been launched at the United States.
    Brzezinski told Odom to confirm that U.S. bombers had been launched for
    a counterattack. 

    Odom called back to say NORAD was reporting 2,200 missiles had been
    launched -- an all-out attack! 

    One minute before Brzezinski was set to call President Carter, Odom
    called again to say other warning systems had detected no missiles.
    False alarm. As it turned out, someone had mistakenly fed military
    exercise tapes into NORAD's computer system. 

    NORAD officials say they have made changes to ensure such mistakes are
    not repeated. 
7.1703IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:45105
    AP 12-May-1997 1:19 EDT   REF5102

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    T-Shirts Dyed With Coal Taking Off

    By ALLISON BARKER

    Associated Press Writer

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- There's a lot of coal in them there hills,
    and a hairdresser and a deli owner found that an old wringer washer can
    turn the black rock into a hip line of T-shirts. 

    "I just went outside and got some coal and put it in a pot to boil,"
    hairstylist Sandra White said. "I got some of my husband's T-shirts and
    threw them in the pot. They came out a perfect black. My husband
    thought I had lost my mind." 

    Black Gold Creations as White's business is called has struck a vein in
    T-shirt sales as it mines the latest trend in casual tops.
    Entrepreneurs from all over are selling T-shirts dyed from nature's
    goodness. 

    In Hawaii, shirts are dyed with Kona coffee and red volcanic soil. In
    Georgia they're using Vidalia onions, peanut skins and kudzu vines. 

    "I had read a lot of articles on coal and I wear a lot of T-shirts,"
    White said. "It just came to me one day to dye a T-shirt with coal." 

    White teamed up with sister-in-law Linda Knowles -- co-owner of an
    amusement machine company and a delicatessen -- to make the T-shirts
    and sweatshirts in Bluefield, about 80 miles south of Charleston. 

    White said she has nearly doubled her initial investment of $3,000 in
    less than six months and has sold about 2,000 T-shirts and sweatshirts
    at $21.95 for T-shirts and $34.86 for sweatshirts. 

    "Natural dye processes sound good. They have a ring to them that
    sells," said Nolan Etters, a professor at the University of Georgia's
    Textiles, Merchandising and Interiors Department in Athens, Ga. 

    The shirts, solid back, smell like most new unwashed clothing. They are
    now mass-dyed and come with a tiny bag of coal and the story of the
    rock, used mostly by energy plants. 

    "Three hundred million years ago, coal was being formed," it reads.
    "Coal is pure energy, and was known in the Appalachian fields as 'Black
    Gold.' The unique coloration of this garment is produced by genuine,
    pure Appalachian coal. Legend has it that the coal's energy is
    transferred to the wearer of this shirt." 

    Mary Belle Rowe of Bluefield bought 36 shirts for family and friends. 

    "When I first saw them, I thought, 'How unique, how different,"' Rowe
    said. "I bought one for each male member of our family. When I gave it
    to my son for Christmas, he joked, 'It's probably just a bag of coal.'
    Was he surprised when he opened the gift and found a bag of real coal." 

    Other companies are doing the same with other parts of nature.  Crazy
    Shirts, based in Aiea, Hawaii, uses the island's famous Kona coffee as
    a dye. 

    "The shirts become a warm tan color and smell like coffee," said Louann
    McNulty, merchandising manager. 

    The shirts are printed with various coffee logos and are sold in 50
    stores and through the company's mail order catalog. 

    The red volcanic soil found on the island of Kauai gives Red Dirt
    Shirts and Red Lava Shirts an orange-red color, said Terry Benedict,
    whose Sacramento, Calif.-based Island Wear Clothing makes Red Lava
    Shirts. 

    "The soil has a high-staining quality to it because of the iron oxide
    in it. It stains like rust and turns everything red," he said. 

    The Red Dirt Shirt gave Robert Crisp in Atlanta the idea for a
    rust-colored shirt dyed with Georgia red clay. 

    Crisp's American Imprints followed the dirt shirt with a pale
    yellow-tan one dyed with Vidalia onion skins, a brownish-purple shirt
    dyed from peanut skins and a green shirt made with kudzu, a prolific
    vine found throughout the South. 

    "We just added a new peach shirt," Crisp said. "It's made with a juice
    concentrate that we get from a cannery." 

    Using natural dyes is not new. Ancient Egypt had brilliant dyes made
    mostly from berries and plants. Synthetic dyes have only been used
    since the early 1900s, Etters said. 

    White and Knowles started out like the old days last winter, hauling
    boiling water from an upstairs kitchen to an old-fashioned wringer
    washer. They now sell T-shirts and sweatshirts in gift shops and on
    their own web page. 

    The result is a "comfortable, loose-fitting shirt," said Chet Rhodes,
    of Nashville, Tenn., who received the shirt as a gift. 

    White hopes to add other coal-dyed apparel to the Black Gold line and
    market the products as environmentally-friendly. 

    "We want to do a hat and eventually a jacket," she said. "We're just
    getting started." 
7.1704IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4563
    AP 12-May-1997 0:28 EDT   REF5067

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Girl, 10, Coped Without Her Mother

    By JEAN PAGEL

    Associated Press Writer

    SAND SPRINGS, Okla. (AP) -- A 10-year-old girl whose mother left four
    months ago -- on her birthday -- went to school and ate dog food in a
    trailer without water or gas while waiting for her mother to return. 

    Police learned about the plight of Ashton Denice Saylor on Mother's Day
    after she turned to a neighbor, asking if she could stay with him. 

    John Kame said Sunday the girl arrived at his door crying several days
    ago. 

    "She said her mother was nowhere around," Kame told the Tulsa World.
    "She was scared. She was hungry." 

    Kame said he fed the girl and let her stay at his house for a few days.
    "She took a bath here," he said. "There's no water or gas in the
    trailer." 

    Tulsa County sheriff's deputies began investigating after other
    neighbors called. The girl told police Sunday she didn't want to tell
    anyone her mother was missing because it might get her mother in
    trouble. 

    Sand Springs Police Sgt. Larry Early described the girl as intelligent
    and respectful. 

    "Politest little girl you would ever want to meet," Early said. "Like I
    say, you wouldn't think she was from a dysfunctional family." 

    Authorities said they had not been able to locate the girl's mother,
    Audrey Saylor, who reportedly comes and goes at the trailer. Neighbors
    said they had never seen the girl's father. The girl was placed in
    state custody. 

    The girl said her mother hadn't been living at home since Jan. 9 -- the
    child's birthday -- although she had seen her once or twice since then,
    the sheriff's department said in a release. 

    Ashton said she had been going to school every day but was alone in her
    trailer home at night, first eating up all the food in the house and
    then turning to puppy chow and dog biscuits, sheriff's officials said. 

    The trailer, sheriff's reports said, "was found to be filthy with
    clothing and trash on the floors." 

    Neighbors who declined to give their names said lots of children had
    recently been seen going in and out of the trailer, located in an
    impoverished area near the city limits of this Tulsa suburb. 

    The brown-and-white trailer has some broken window screens, and a red
    sign on the door reads "No Trespassing." 

    The girl had made her mother a Mother's Day gift for Sunday, sheriff's
    officials said, but gave the gift to a friend's mother instead. 
7.1705IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:45103
    AP 12-May-1997 0:16 EDT   REF5015

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Deep Blue Is World Chess Champ

    By MARCY SOLTIS

    NEW YORK (AP) -- In a dazzling, hourlong game Sunday, the Deep Blue IBM
    computer demolished world chess champion Garry Kasparov and won the
    six-game chess match between man and machine. 

    The final score was 3 1/2 points for the computer and 2 1/2 points for
    Kasparov. The 34-year-old Russian and the computer split the first two
    games, then played to draws in Games 3, 4 and 5. 

    Kasparov resigned after the computer's 19th move in Game 6. Visibly
    upset, he bolted from the table, shrugging his shoulders. 

    At a news conference later, he lashed out at IBM for programming the
    computer specifically to beat him. 

    "It was nothing to do about science. ... It was one zeal to beat Garry
    Kasparov," he said. "And when a big corporation with unlimited
    resources would like to do so, there are many ways to achieve the
    result. And the result was achieved. 

    "I feel confident that the machine hasn't proved anything yet,"
    Kasparov added. "It's not yet ready, in my opinion, to win a big
    contest." 

    The statement left it hard to imagine what a big contest might be after
    a week in which worldwide attention focused on the best human chess
    player and his losing duel with an overgrown PC. 

    "We on the IBM Deep Blue team are indeed very proud that we've played a
    role in this historic event," said C.J. Tan, the scientist who headed
    the Deep Blue effort. 

    "This is a match that will benefit everyone, from the students who sat
    in the audience learning from Garry and Deep Blue to many consumers
    outside of this building who will be deeply affected by this advance in
    technology," 

    But grandmaster Ilya Gurevich said the computer's win could take the
    challenge out of the game. 

    "Bobby Fischer once said chess is getting to be solvable," he said.
    "This computer event could eventually bring the whole thing to a
    solution. It may eventually mean the end of the game. It's possible." 

    A friend of Kasparov's, Michael Khodarkovski, said this was the first
    time Kasparov has ever lost a chess match. A 1984-85 championship match
    between Kasparov and then-champion Anatoly Karpov was suspended without
    a winner being declared. 

    Gurevich said Sunday's game was "a stunner. Kasparov got wiped off the
    board." 

    In Sunday's game, Deep Blue played white and Kasparov played black. In
    the opening move, Gurevich said, Kasparov was "trying to create a quiet
    positional game. But he mixed up his move order and allowed the
    computer to make a knight sacrifice." 

    The computer gave up a knight for a pawn at its eighth move. 

    Gurevich said that after the knight sacrifice, "this is not a position
    (Kasparov) wanted to get into. It's a pure calculating position where
    the computer has a big advantage. The computer's strength is tactics." 

    International master David Levy said Kasparov "should never have played
    a main line," a popular series of moves commonly played in grandmaster
    games, in his opening. "It makes it easy for the computer to get a good
    position out of the opening." 

    On move 18, Kasparov lost his queen for a rook and a bishop. This,
    along with the knight he had already taken, is normally enough
    compensation for the queen, which is the strongest piece on the board.
    But it looked like he was about to lose another bishop or knight, and
    he resigned after the computer's 19th move. 

    Kasparov, who many feel is the greatest chess player ever, had beaten
    an earlier version of the computer in Philadelphia in February 1996.
    Since then, IBM engineers have upgraded the machine, which can now
    examine twice as many positions per second, or 200 million. 

    Kasparov said before this match that man would always beat the machine,
    barring human error or loss of concentration. 

    But the stress of the match seemed to be getting to him. After the
    third straight draw Saturday, he said, "I'm not afraid to admit that
    I'm afraid," he said. "It definitely goes beyond any chess computer in
    the world." He increasingly gave his silicon opponent human
    characteristics. 

    Kasparov gets $400,000 for his loss. Had he won, he would have taken
    home $700,000. IBM, which staged the match and put up the purse, will
    put the winning stake toward continued research. 

    On Sunday, Kasparov said he still doubted the computer's capability,
    but blamed his performance for the loss. 

    "I am ashamed about what I did at the end of this match," he said. 
7.1706IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4530
    AP 11-May-1997 20:04 EDT   REF5408

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Teacher Arrested on Sex Charge

    SLIDELL, La. (AP) -- A biology teacher was arrested in a motel sting
    after two 16-year-old girls alleged he had offered A's for sex. 

    Forest Luc Jr., 45, a teacher at Slidell High School, was arrested
    Friday after officers watched on closed-circuit television as he kissed
    one of the girls, Police Chief Ben Morris said. Her parents were with
    police for the sting. 

    The students said Luc invited them to his house for a baby-sitting job
    on May 2. They said he offered them beer, bragged of killing four
    people, fondled and kissed them and offered A's in class if they had
    sex with him, Morris said. 

    The girls quickly left. 

    The chief said Luc invited them back Friday and one of them asked Luc
    to meet her at the motel. 

    Luc was booked with three counts each of indecent behavior with a
    juvenile, sexual battery and contributing to the delinquency of a
    juvenile, and with one count of illegally carrying a gun, Morris said.
    Bail was set at $500,000. 

    If convicted, Luc could face a maximum of 25 years in prison. 
7.1707IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4625
    AP 12-May-1997 0:27 EDT   REF5056

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    2 Hurt After Jet Engine Caught Fire

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -- One of the engines of a British Airways
    jet caught fire Sunday as it was preparing to take off and two
    passengers suffered minor injuries while evacuating the aircraft. 

    Flight BA4508 was on the taxiway at San Juan's Luis Munoz Marin
    International Airport when the fire was reported Sunday evening and the
    pilot ordered an emergency evacuation through ramps of the DC-10
    aircraft. 

    The 249 passengers and 14 crew members were evacuated without serious
    injury, said the airline's press officer in London, Kate Gay. She said
    the fire "was quickly extinguished" but two passengers were taken to
    the hospital as a precautionary measure. 

    The overnight flight, headed for London's Gatwick airport, was canceled
    and passengers were taken to hotels for the night. 

    Cause of the fire was not immediately known. The Federal Aviation
    Authority and British Airways were investigating. 
7.1708IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4652
    AP 11-May-1997 23:33 EDT   REF5488

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Voting Under Way in Italy Elections

    ROME (AP) -- The president forgot his ID at the voting booth and a
    former premier cast his ballot in his hospital room Sunday in local
    elections to elect 77 mayors and five provincial presidents. 

    The vote was seen as a test of the governing center-left coalition's
    strength as it prepares to do battle over reforming Italy's costly
    welfare state. 

    The key contests were in the northern industrial cities of Milan, Turin
    and Trieste, where candidates of the governing Olive Tree coalition and
    the opposition Freedom Alliance squared off. 

    Early projections showed the Freedom Alliance candidate for Milan's
    mayoral seat, Gabriele Albertini, winning about 52.4 percent of the
    vote, state television said. 

    Olive Tree's incumbent in Trieste won easily; his opponent conceded
    after the first projections were in. Turin was too close to call,
    although early projections showed the Olive incumbent with a slim lead.

    Official results were expected Monday. 

    The ANSA news agency said Italian President Luigi Scalfaro was
    distracted by a chat with polling officials after voting in Novara and
    left his voter identification behind. The head of the polling station
    sprinted after the president's car to return the credentials. 

    In Milan, the leader of the Freedom Alliance, media mogul and
    ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi, cast his ballot from a hospital, where he
    was undergoing treatment for a stone in his urinary tract. 

    ANSA said election officials brought him a ballot, then left
    Berlusconi's hospital room so he could vote privately. 

    Candidates from his alliance did well in Milan and Turin in the first
    round of voting on April 27, and Berlusconi has said these elections
    could be the beginning of the center-right's return to power.

    According to most analysts, many candidates from the Olive Tree
    coalition needed swing voters from the hard-line Communist Refoundation
    Party to win. Refoundation opposes any deep cuts in welfare, a key
    element in Premier Romano Prodi's economic program, and its support
    will carry a price. 

    Prodi wants Italy to become part of the common European currency system
    in 1999 and needs further belt-tightening to meet the criteria. 
7.1709IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4693
    AP 11-May-1997 22:22 EDT   REF5470

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Grenada PM's Visit to Cuba Rapped

    By RICHARD SIMON

    Associated Press Writer

    ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP) -- Fourteen years ago, with the Cold War
    raging, American forces invaded this Caribbean island and ousted its
    pro-Cuba regime. 

    So when Grenada's prime minister decided last month to pay a visit to
    the communist island -- the first by a Grenadian head of state since
    the invasion -- reason suggests Washington would have been irked. 

    However, the trip generated little reaction from the Clinton
    administration. Instead, it was Grenadans who criticized their
    government. 

    Before leaving, Prime Minister Keith Mitchell had said he and his
    27-member delegation were seeking to provide "help in bridging the gap
    between the Americans and Cuba." 

    But coming just two weeks before President Clinton's meeting with
    Caribbean leaders in Barbados this past weekend, Mitchell's trip seemed
    inappropriate to opponents at home who feared a Washington backlash. 

    "American soldiers died on our soil trying to return democracy to
    Grenada because we were following the Cuban revolutionary model,"
    former Attorney General Lloyd Noel said Sunday. "Now that we are on our
    feet again, we are going back to Cuba to repeat the same situation." 

    Noel served in the administration of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, who
    was ousted by leftist hard-liners in 1983 and executed -- prompting the
    U.S. invasion. 

    Noel had been jailed in the early 1980s after criticizing other
    government officials for turning to socialism and cultivating closer
    ties with Cuba. 

    He was freed when 6,000 Marines and paratroopers, along with a token
    Caribbean force, toppled the pro-Cuba regime and installed a multiparty
    system. 

    At the time, Cuba had been helping to build an airport runway in
    Grenada, and U.S. officials feared the communist government was trying
    to project its military power into northern South America, using
    Grenada as a jumping-off point. 

    In the wake of the invasion, scores of Cubans who were working on the
    airport were expelled. 

    Relations between Cuba and Grenada soured after Cuba refused to
    recognize the new Grenadian government, accusing it of being a
    U.S.-puppet. 

    Mitchell's New National Party has sought to improve ties with Havana
    since taking office in 1995, with support from several former army and
    government officials from Bishop's government. 

    A victorious Mitchell returned home from the April 22-26 visit with
    promises of Cuban aid in building a national stadium and scholarships
    for Grenadian students -- and no harsh words from Washington. 

    But the concerns remained, even among some members of Mitchell's
    delegation. 

    Leslie Pierre, editor of the pro-government Grenadian Voice newspaper,
    accused his fellow delegates of seeking bribes from potential Cuban
    investors. 

    Mitchell's is not the only Caribbean government to seek expanded
    economic ties with Cuba, whose 11 million people comprise the largest
    market of any Caribbean nation. 

    The 14-member Caribbean Community, which long has opposed the U.S.
    embargo on Cuba, has sent several trade delegations there in recent
    years. Jamaica sent a delegation last week to promote economic ties. 

    "Cuba is a Caribbean territory. We would like to see steps taken that
    would integrate Cuba fully not only in the Caribbean family, but into
    the hemispheric family of nations," Jamaican Prime Minister P.J.
    Patterson told reporters after the Barbados summit Saturday. 

    U.S. officials at the meeting acknowledged the issue would not easily
    be resolved. 

    "I think that there's obviously a variety of viewpoints on the question
    of how to proceed with Cuba," Jim Steinberg, deputy U.S. national
    security adviser, said at a reporters' briefing Saturday. 
7.1710IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4654
    AP 11-May-1997 21:23 EDT   REF5450

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    British Studies 'Gulf War Syndrome'

    LONDON (AP) -- Britain's new government said Sunday it will fund
    additional research into the ailments plaguing Persian Gulf War
    veterans, including muscle aches, fatigue and sleeplessness,
    collectively dubbed "Gulf War Syndrome." 

    Tony Blair's Labor government, which took office at the beginning of
    the month, also will provide new funding for an existing program that
    tests veterans for the symptoms, Armed Forces Minister Dr. John Reid
    said. 

    Reid said a new investigation will look into possible side effects from
    the cocktail of vaccines and drugs Gulf War forces took to protect them
    from disease and chemical and biological weapons. 

    "We have an obligation to investigate sympathetically and thoroughly
    any illness suffered by those who have served their country and to
    provide all the resources necessary to treat them," Reid said Sunday
    night. 

    "We must ensure we have their trust by being open and honest in all our
    dealings with them," he said. "No stone must be left unturned." 

    During the 1991 war, allied soldiers were given vaccines against polio,
    hepatitis B, anthrax, yellow fever and cholera. They also took tablets,
    called NAPS, to counteract the effects of chemical and biological
    warfare. 

    Since then, thousands of American and British veterans have complained
    of lethargy, numbness, sleep disturbances and other ailments. Veterans'
    associations say a high number of children born to Gulf War veterans
    suffer disabilities and physical abnormalities. 

    But both the U.S. government and Britain's previous Conservative
    administration said there is no evidence of a unique, previously
    unknown illness. 

    In December, the Conservative government announced a $2 million study
    into so-called Gulf War Syndrome and appointed two leading independent
    scientists to conduct studies into whether the veterans are in worse
    health than they would be if they had not served in the region. 

    Blair's Labor Party ousted the Conservatives in May 1 elections. 

    Tony Flint, spokesman for the Gulf War Veterans' and Families'
    Association, welcomed Reid's announcement. 

    "We have been asking for this work to be done for four years now. This
    is the best bit of news we have heard for years," he said. 
7.1711IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4629
    RTw  12-May-97 07:19    

    Britain's Prince Andrew begins San Francisco visit

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    SAN FRANCISCO, May 11 (Reuter) - Britain's Prince Andrew began a
    five-day visit to San Francisco on Sunday to take part in a festival
    celebrating the area's ties to Britain. 

    The British Consulate in San Francisco said the Duke of York would
    participate in several "Britain Meets the Bay" events. The festival
    celebrates the close political, commercial, educational and cultural
    ties between Britain and the San Francisco Bay area. 

    As part of the royal visit, Prince Andrew will open a technology
    exhibition and meet Silicon Valley civic and hi-tech business leaders,
    the consulate said. 

    Prince Andrew was scheduled to attend a San Jose Clash soccer match
    against English club Aston Villa, and participate in the British
    American Chamber of Commerce's annual golf tournament in Palo Alto. 

    He will also attend the Royal Shakespeare Company's premier San
    Francisco performance of "The Comedy of Errors," and was scheduled to
    visit a school to answer questions from students studying U.S.-British
    ties. 

    REUTER
7.1712IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4650
    RTw  12-May-97 06:43    

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, May 12 (Reuter) - British sports good companies, major buyers
    of Indian exports, should push for better wages and working conditions
    and an end to child labour on the subcontinent, a charity said on
    Monday. 

    Christian Aid, an agency of British and Irish churches which works with
    the poor in 60 countries, claimed Indian children as young as seven
    spend days stitching footballs and boxing and cricket gloves for export
    to Britain. 

    Most of the estimated 30,000 child workers in India are paid a pittance
    and work long hours in hazardous conditions. 

    "British companies have unparalleled power to propose a positive
    solution. Together they account for nearly a third of the Indian sports
    goods industry's export revenue," the charity said. 

    "Big companies like Mitre, Umbro and Adidas have the money and the
    muscle to persuade their existing suppliers to implement codes of
    conduct pledging basic minimum labour standards, with independent
    monitoring to ensure compliance." 

    Rather than ditching their Indian suppliers or imposing a consumer
    boycott or trade sanctions which would hurt the people it is trying to
    help, Christian Aid said British business, the new Labour government
    and international agencies should work together to protect the
    interests of children and their families in India. 

    In a report entitled "A Sporting Chance" the charity detailed the case
    of 11-year-old Sonia who stitches Manchester United footballs showing
    the face and autograph of midfielder Eric Cantona for the equivalent of
    six pence (10 cents) an hour. 

    "The Umbro Copa, a football selling for 14.99 pounds ($24.43)...is
    stitched by home-based workers earning only two-and-a-quarter percent
    of that amount, 34 pence (54 cents) per ball," the report said. 

    Christian Aid wants a similar agreement to the one struck by the
    Pakistan government, the sports goods industry and children's charities
    to phase out child labour there. 

    It is also urging the government and industry to work with NGOs (non
    governmental agencies) and local communities to ensure that children
    are not exploited. 

    REUTER
7.1713IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:46109
    RTw  12-May-97 03:23    

    FEATURE - Six contend for Major's tarnished crown

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Gerrard Raven 

    LONDON, May 12 (Reuter) - The race to become leader of Britain's
    Conservative party, battered and demoralised after its massive May 1
    election defeat, has attracted a crowded field of six candidates. 

    The six, all cabinet ministers under former prime minister John Major,
    are battling to head a shrunken band of 164 members of parliament, the
    smallest group of Conservative MPs since 1832. 

    But the outcome of the June leadership election, in which only the MPs
    will vote, could determine whether for the first time a major British
    party turns its back on the European Union. 

    Here are short profiles of the contenders -- 

    FORMER WELSH SECRETARY WILLIAM HAGUE (Born 26/3/61) 

    A wunderkind who took the Conservative Party conference by storm with a
    bravura speech while still in his teens, Hague is now the bookmakers'
    favourite to take over from Major. 

    He is making a virtue of his youth and his humble background -- he went
    to a state school and still speaks with a distinct Yorkshire accent --
    in a party with a mainly ageing, middle-class membership. 

    Hague joined the cabinet only in 1995, replacing fellow right-winger
    John Redwood as Welsh Secretary despite his lack of connections with
    the principality. 

    But that means he can claim more convincingly than some of his rivals
    to offer "a fresh start" in which the party can review both its
    policies and its approach with an open mind. 

    FORMER FINANCE MINISTER KENNETH CLARKE (Born 2/7/40) 

    Clarke, Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1993 until the election, is
    the candidate of the party's pro-European left wing, but is reviled on
    the right. 

    Some senior party figures believe he threw away the Conservatives' last
    chance of victory at the polls by refusing to make huge pre-election
    tax cuts and by his insistence on not ruling out British membership of
    the European Union's planned single currency. 

    But Clarke may be the contender best equipped to re-establish the
    Conservatives as a party for ordinary people. 

    Behind his image as a beer-drinker careless of his appearance, he
    possesses a sharp political mind and a firm grasp of how policy
    initiatives will be received by voters. 

    FORMER INTERIOR MINISTER MICHAEL HOWARD (Born 7/7/41) 

    Howard, Home Secretary from 1993 to 1997, is a right-wing contender,
    but not so far to the right that his leadership would be a recipe for
    continued division within the party. 

    He established a reputation as a ruthless crimefighter during his years
    at the Home Office, where he frequently offended the liberal
    establishment, and some of his proposals even fell foul of the judges. 

    The son of a Romanian Jewish refugee who has risen from humble origins
    in south Wales, Howard has used his training as a lawyer to become a
    formidable parliamentary debater. 

    But some will doubt whether his combative character is appropriate for
    leadership of a party still ruing the splits which brought it electoral
    disaster. 

    FORMER SOCIAL SECURITY SECRETARY PETER LILLEY (Born 23/8/43) 

    Lilley, a former investment adviser on the right wing of the party, has
    the intellect for the job, but there are doubts about his political
    astuteness. 

    As Social Security Secretary, he chipped away at the 85 billion pound
    ($138 billion) annual budget of the welfare state and became a
    favourite with the party faithful for his attacks on single mothers and
    on the European Union. 

    His proposals, announced just before the election, for a huge shake-up
    in Britain's pensions system, giving private pension funds a much
    greater role, were widely praised for their boldness. 

    But Labour claimed his plans heralded the end of the state-provided old
    age pension, and forced the Conservatives onto the defensive. That
    raised doubts as to Lilley's wisdom in unveiling them so soon before
    voters went to the polls. 

    FORMER HEALTH SECRETARY STEPHEN DORRELL (Born 25/3/52) 

    Dorrell is seen by some as the best left-wing contender, but
    suggestions that Major considers him his natural successor may not help
    him after the Conservatives' electoral drubbing. 

    He claims he would be well placed to "rebuild the Conservative
    coalition" by regaining the support of groups such as farmers, nurses
    and teachers alienated by the last government. 

    A cabinet minister only from 1994 until the election, 

    REUTER
7.1714IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4658
    RTos 11-May-97 21:07    

    Gingrich Says Support Slipping for China MFN

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    WASHINGTON (Reuter) - House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Sunday there was
    less support this year than last for renewing China's trade privileges
    because of concerns over human rights and civil rights in Hong Kong. 

    "I don't know if it'll pass or not right now," Gingrich, Republican of
    Georgia, said on the NBC program "Meet the Press" in reply to a
    question. 

    "I think that it is certainly a weaker vote today than it was a year
    ago, and people are very concerned about the early indications of Hong
    Kong," he added. 

    But Gingrich cited what he called a "powerful countervailing argument"
    in favor of renewing most-favored-nation status advanced by Hong Kong
    leaders such as Martin Lee. 

    "We want to have MFN.  We want to have most favored nation status for a
    year," he said. MFN is the normal trade status enjoyed with the United
    States by virtually every country except Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam and
    a few others. 

    The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, said in a
    separate television interview that the Clinton administration strongly
    favored continuing MFN for China to help integrate it more closely into
    the international community and maintain China's support on other
    issues. 

    "The MFN debate comes up in July. We believe it's important to continue
    it," Richardson said on the CNN program "Late Edition." 

    Gingrich urged President Clinton to reconsider a Republican suggestion
    that the congressional vote be delayed or the trade privileges renewed
    for less than a full year to see how Beijing treats Hong Kong when the
    British colony reverts to China at midnight June 30. 

    "I think that the president would be well-served to look for a signal
    of flexibility to send to the Chinese that he is concerned about human
    rights, that he is paying attention to Hong Kong," Gingrich said. 

    He said he had been "a little disappointed" that the White House had
    promptly said Clinton would veto any effort to delay a vote. "I think
    that's the wrong signal to China," he added. 

    Gingrich said he favored stepping up broadcasts by Radio Free Asia, a
    U.S. government-funded radio station that serves as an Asian
    counterpart to Radio Free Europe. 

    He said Radio Free Asia should begin broadcasting 24 hours a day in
    Mandarin and all major Chinese dialects, not just the two hours he said
    it was broadcasting in Cantonese. 

    REUTER
7.1715IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 11:4624
    RTw  11-May-97 13:37    

    British government rejects post office privatisation

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 11 (Reuter) - Britain's industry secretary Margaret Beckett
    on Sunday ruled out any privatisation of the Post Office. In a
    statement Beckett, who is President of the Board of Trade, said that
    privatising the Post Office "fails the public interest test." 

    The Mail on Sunday newspaper reported that the Post Office had drawn up
    plans to sell off 49 per cent of the state-owned service, raising
    around 2 billion stg. It said Post Office managers planned to present
    the proposals to Beckett in the next few weeks. However, Beckett said
    there had been "a number of unsubstantiated stories over recent weeks
    about the future of the Post Office. "The privatisation of the Post
    Office fails the public interest test. We will look at opportunities to
    give the Post Office greater commercial freedom." An attempt by the
    previous Conservative administration to privatise the service failed
    amid opposition from many of its own supporters and members of
    parliament.

    REUTER
7.1716IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:1772
7.1717IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:1846
7.1718IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:2064
7.1719IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:2396
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 12 May 1997 Issue 717
                                        
    Blair faces Lords clash over gun ban
    
    By Rachel Sylvester 
                                            
    TONY Blair is heading for his first confrontation with the House of
    Lords over the Government's proposals to introduce a complete ban on
    handguns.
                                            
    Backbench peers from both sides of the Upper Chamber are planning to
    throw down the gauntlet by voting against Labour legislation outlawing
    the ownership of the weapons.
                                            
    Hereditary peers, who look set to lose their voting rights under the
    Blair administration, say they are determined to "go out fighting" with
    full-scale opposition to a Bill, about which they feel passionately.
    Their resolve to mount an assault on one of Mr Blair's key manifesto
    commitments has been strengthened by signs that Labour's plan to reform
    the House of Lords is unlikely to be in the first Queen's Speech on
    Wednesday, which peers believe gives them more room for manoeuvre.
                                            
    Mr Blair has decided to press ahead with the outright abolition of
    handguns at the earliest opportunity. He told Cabinet colleagues that
    ministers owed it to the people of Dunblane, who have been mourning the
    massacre at their school. A Bill to extend the ban on weapons to
    include those of .22 calibre and below - given exemption in the
    Conservatives' Firearms Bill - will be included in the Queen's Speech. 
                                            
    Mr Blair has agreed to give MPs a free vote on the issue. But peers are
    planning vigorous opposition and there are so many in favour of the
    rights of shooters that they could cause severe delays to the Bill. 
                                            
    Earlier this year, the House of Lords inflicted a triple defeat on
    Michael Howard's Bill. Although the amendments were overturned by the
    House of Commons, the move was embarrassing to the Tory government.
                                            
    Peers voted to let gun owners keep their weapons at home so long as the
    active part was kept in a club; agreed to extend compensation to gun
    dealers; and backed a centralised police register of licensed gun
    holders. 
                                            
    The Earl of Shrewsbury, chairman of the Firearms Consultative
    Committee, said peers would be equally stringent with Labour's proposed
    legislation. "I shall oppose it," he said. "There is absolutely no need
    to ban [handguns]. I think that the legally held handgun is not the
    cause of the problem; they should be making inroads to try to stop the
    illegally held gun - that is where the main problem lies."
                                            
    Lord Shrewsbury said peers would not be deterred by Mr Blair's plans to
    reform the Upper Chamber. "You have to stand by your principles. If
    they are going to do away with the hereditary principle in the Lords,
    we would rather be seen to be going down fighting."
                                            
    Lord Pearson of Rannoch, a senior Tory life peer who got the amendment
    on disassembly through the Lords earlier this year, said he too would
    seek to alter Labour's Bill. "We have to raise the issues again and
    subject them to rational argument," he said. "Public opinion is moving
    against the knee-jerk reaction to the Dunblane tragedy in favour of
    something sensible."
                                            
    Lord Stoddart of Swindon, a Labour peer, condemned the legislation as
    "unjust" and "undemocratic". He said: "I think the House of Lords
    should throw it out. I do not believe that we should penalise a whole
    group of people simply and solely because one man has used a handgun to
    kill a number of people. It is sheer hypocrisy."
                                            
    Lord Stoddart, a former Labour spokesman on energy in the Lords, said
    he did not mind speaking against his party's manifesto commitment. "I
    have never worried about getting into trouble with the Front Bench and
    I am certainly not worrying about it now."
                                            
    Michael Howard, the former Home Secretary, condemned the Bill as "a
    totally unnecessary and vindictive piece of legislation". He said: "The
    legislation introduced by the last government provided some of the
    toughest gun control laws in the world, protecting the public while
    allowing an element of competitive shooting. There is no case for
    extending the ban."
                                            
    The shooting lobby condemned the proposal, accusing the Government of
    "political correctness" and "authoritarianism". "I think the shooting
    community is being offered up as a pagan sacrifice by the incoming
    Government," said Mike Yardley, spokesman for the Sportsman's
    Association. 
                                            
    But the decision was warmly welcomed by organisers of the Snowdrop
    petition, which had called for the ban as the only way to prevent a
    repetition of the Dunblane and Hungerford massacres. Ann Pearston, a
    founder of the campaign, said: "Ordinary people are walking with a
    spring in their step. They feel that they have been listened to."
                                            
    Jacqueline Walsh, another Snowdrop founder, said: "Thomas Hamilton, who
    was responsible for Dunblane, and Michael Ryan at Hungerford were both
    members of gun clubs. We are not saying other members are going to do
    the same thing, but there is the risk that one could, and that is a
    risk we should not be prepared to take."
7.1720IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:2553
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 12 May 1997 Issue 717
                                                   
    11-year-olds get drinking habit with 'alcopops'
    
    By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent 
                                      
    ALCOPOPS are getting children as young as 11 into the habit of drinking
    alcohol, according to a report published today.
                                      
    A survey of more than 3,300 children under 16 says that one in 10 of 11
    and 12-year-old boys, and one in 13 girls of the same age, say they
    drink alcoholic soft drinks at least once a week. By the time they
    reach 15 and 16, the girls overtake the boys, with nearly one in three
    girls saying that they drink alcopops at least once a week compared
    with one in four boys. 
                                      
    The report, by the publicly-funded Health Promotion Wales, shows that
    while alcohol use has increased across a range of products, including
    beer, cider and wine, it is alcopops that account for about half the
    consumption of youngsters. It shows that in 1996, 65 per cent of boys
    and 54 per cent of girls aged 15 and 16 reported drinking alcohol on a
    regular weekly basis - an increase of 16 per cent on 10 years ago.
                                      
    Of those, 30 per cent of girls and 24 per cent of boys drank alcopops
    at least once a week. Only four per cent of the girls drank alcohol
    other than alcopops.
                                      
    The figures are based on answers by children in 48 schools in Wales for
    the Welsh Youth Health Survey which is carried out every two years. It
    shows that children are getting drunk more frequently. In 1986, 38 per
    cent of boys and 24 per cent of girls said they had been drunk four or
    more times. By 1996 the figures were 53 per cent of boys and 43 per
    cent of girls.
                                      
    Virginia Blakey, head of development at Health Promotion Wales, said
    that alcopops had gained a sizeable market among under-16s and were
    fuelling the problem of under-age drinking and producing serious health
    dangers. She called on manufacturers to be aware that their products
    were widely consumed by under-16s and to change their marketing
    strategies to reduce the appeal of the drinks to children.
                                      
    She said: "It is important that their parents and other adults
    appreciate that alcopops, because they are more palatable to children
    than conventional alcoholic drinks, can help to establish behaviour
    likely to be very damaging to the health of children."
                                      
    The report is released in the same week as a Channel 4 programme which
    claims that hospitals are having to deal with a rising number of
    youngsters suffering from alcohol poisoning. The programme, Health
    Alert: Mine's an Alcopop, to be transmitted on Thursday, will show
    doctors' concerns at the teenage trend. It says that 200 children were
    admitted to one Liverpool hospital last year with alcohol overdoses - a
    ten-fold increase since the 1980s.
7.1721IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:2658
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 12 May 1997 Issue 717
                                                
    Water firms summoned to drought crisis talks
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 
                                               
    WATER companies are to be called by the Government to an emergency
    summit to discuss how to deal with an impending drought crisis.
                                               
    Ministers are expected to urge organisations to take more action to
    prevent leaks in order to compensate for the driest first four months
    of the year since 1929. Michael Meacher, the environment minister, is
    likely to recommend that the companies carry out free household leak
    repairs and improve their efficiency at fixing mains leaks.
                                               
    The head of the water regulatory body Ofwat has said he wants to see
    financial penalties set for water companies failing to meet leakage
    repair targets. Ian Byatt, the director general, tells BBC1's Panorama
    tonight that he believes such action will force companies to tackle the
    problem.
                                               
    The Department of the Environment will also invite consumer groups to
    the summit on water resources and supply, which will take place in the
    next few weeks, to put their views about what should be done.
                                               
    Britain has been suffering from low rainfall for two years. Restrictive
    measures will have to be taken even if average rainfall resumes before
    the summer. The Environment Agency stressed that consumers would have
    to play their part if the crisis was to be avoided. 
                                               
    "We have already made it clear that we want water companies to tackle
    leakages, especially the worst companies," a spokesman said. "But
    companies have done a great deal over the past two years, and they
    should be in a better position to meet demands this year."
                                               
    Dilys Plant, a spokesman for Ofwat, said it was not surprising that the
    summit, promised by Labour during the election campaign, had been
    called so soon into the new administration. "We are keen to take an
    active role in the meeting. We have kept on saying that water companies
    need to make progress in reducing leaks," she said. "There is a role
    for monitoring and demand management such as through metering,
    especially for people who use a lot of water."
                                               
    Mr Byatt says on tonight's Panorama programme that some companies have
    been slow in reducing leaks. "I think they have been trying to save
    costs and are in danger of cutting corners," he says. "If they do not
    meet those leakage targets which they all have for this financial year,
    then enforcement action will be taken against them."
                                               
    The programme points out that under current regulations it is more
    profitable for companies to build new reservoirs than to fix leaks and
    reduce consumption.
                                               
    The system of regulation must be changed, according to Dr Stephen
    Glaister, of the London School of Economics. He tells the programme:
    "You have to give financial incentives to companies to make the effort
    to save water rather than making the effort to supply more water and
    that's a fundamental change in the system."
7.1722IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:2844
7.1723IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:2928
7.1724IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:3127
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 12 May 1997 Issue 717
                                       
    Green argument 'causing starvation'
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 
    
    ENVIRONMENTALISTS who bicker about sustainable agriculture have
    paralysed attempts to prevent starvation in the Third World, the
    pioneer of the green revolution has said. 
    
    The Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr Norman Borlaug, giving his first
    lecture in Britain, said that an "anti-science and technology" movement
    in the Western world was so influential that it was denying African
    farmers access to improved seeds, fertilizers and crop-protection
    chemicals. 
    
    Dr Borlaug, a scientist whose work with plant breeding allowed food
    production to boom in the Sixties, described a "debilitating debate
    between agriculturalists and environmentalists about what constitutes
    so-called 'sustainable agriculture' in the Third World". 
    
    "This debate has confused - if not paralysed - policy-makers in the
    international donor community who, afraid of antagonising powerful
    lobbying groups, have turned away from supporting science-based
    agricultural modernisation projects so urgently needed in sub-Saharan
    Africa and parts of Latin America and Asia." 
    
7.1725IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 12 1997 17:3349
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 12 May 1997 ure>Issue 717
                                      
    Clue to failure of artificial hips

    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
                             
    AN important clue to why thousands of artificial hips fail every year
    has been found by scientists.
                             
    Arthritis can, in severe cases, damage joints to the extent that a
    replacement made from hard-wearing metal and plastic is needed. But
    nearly one fifth of implant operations currently carried out are to
    replace failed artificial joints.
                             
    A computer model developed at Queen Mary and Westfield College,
    reported in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery by Dr Liz Tanner and
    Mark Taylor, suggests that the designers of the 40 or so types of
    artificial hip now on the market may have taken too little interest in
    internal, so-called cancellous, bone.
                             
    Bones have a hard, compact exterior and a porous interior of cancellous
    bone. By studying the stresses in the joint using a computer model of
    the upper thigh bone, the team found that the implants that created the
    highest stresses in weaker cancellous bone were most likely to fail
    early.
                             
    Some implants developed recently were found to be at risk of working
    their way into the soft bone and becoming loose. "The reason that
    artificial hips fail in between five and 10 years is to do with the
    failure of the spongy bone supporting them," said Dr Tanner. "Implant
    movement and thus failure rate correlate beautifully with this. This
    will be useful to assess whether a design will fail or succeed."
                             
    In other work, Dr Harry Rubash and colleagues at the University of
    Pittsburgh Medical Centre have found that a bone-building osteoporosis
    drug, sodium alendronate, may reduce the need for costly repeat surgery
    by preventing the loosening of hip joints common after total hip
    replacement surgery.
                             
    "Based on our animal study with alendronate, we believe we may have
    found a way to control the bone destruction around failed joint
    implants, a previously unsolvable problem that has led to devastating
    consequences for the nearly 50,000 patients who must undergo revision
    joint replacement surgery each year in America alone," said co-author
    Dr Arun Shanbhag.
                             
    The research, the first on the effect of alendronate on animal hip
    joint replacements, shows that the oral prescription drug can prevent
    this destructive process.
7.1726IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 10:55105
    AP 13-May-1997 1:07 EDT   REF5685

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, May 13, 1997
   
    GM-STRIKE 

    WARREN, Ohio (AP) -- A union representing about 8,500 hourly workers
    have struck at a General Motors parts subsidiary in a dispute over
    pension and pay differences. Bob Sutton, shop chairman for Local 717 of
    the International Union of Electric Workers, said the walkout at Delphi
    Packard Electric Systems began when no contract was reached by the
    union's 12:01 a.m. deadline. A spokesman for Delphi Packard said it was
    too early to comment on when GM and other automakers that use Delphi
    Packard products might be affected by the walkout. 
   
    PENTAGON REVIEW 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Defense Secretary William Cohen, in his first
    extended preview of a sweeping Pentagon study of strategy and weapons,
    said the months-long review has resulted in few major changes. "We have
    chosen ... to largely sustain the current force," Cohen said in a
    speech to the board of the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based
    think tank. Cohen did not say so, but reports have put the number of
    cuts expected to result from the "Quadrennial Defense Review" at around
    60,000 active duty troops. At present, there are 1.4 million men and
    women on active duty. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh cased the Oklahoma City federal building
    before the 1995 blast and was so bent on triggering a "general uprising
    in America" that he considered crashing his truck bomb through the
    front doors in a suicide attack, a former Army buddy testified. Michael
    Fortier, testifying under a plea bargain as the government's star
    witness, said he was privy to many of McVeigh's plans. But he insisted
    he didn't think McVeigh would carry them out. "If you don't consider
    what happened in Oklahoma, Tim was a good person," said Fortier. 
   
    MIAMI-TORNADO 

    MIAMI (AP) -- A tornado stormed past Miami's high-rise buildings in the
    middle of the day, forcing terrified city-dwellers to rush for cover.
    No serious injuries were reported; there were numerous minor injuries.
    The funnel cloud touched down on Miami's Coral Way, blew east five or
    six miles toward the Miami Arena and then moved out over the bay. Along
    the way, it uprooted trees, shattered glass facades and hurled debris. 
   
    USAIR TRIAL 

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- The federal government, acknowledging that air
    traffic controllers contributed to the crash of a USAir flight that
    killed 37 people, agreed to pay $25 million toward the airline's
    settlements with survivors and victim's relatives, according to
    documents. The government will pay 30 percent of settlements with
    victims' families and 70 percent of settlements reached with airline
    employees, according to documents the Justice Department released on
    its October 1996 agreement with the airline, now known as US Airways. 
   
    OXYGEN BARS 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Smogged out Southern Californians will soon be able
    to seek refuge in new bars where they can hang out, relax and suck in
    pure oxygen. Actor Woody Harrelson plans to open a West Hollywood
    oxygen bar in June, and a Canadian entrepreneur will open two more in
    Southern California this fall. Recreational oxygen blasts, plain or
    fruit-scented, eases headaches, boosts alertness, fights fatigue and
    reduces stress, proponents claim. Oxygen bars have become popular in
    Tokyo and Beijing, where airborne pollutants are much more serious than
    in Los Angeles. 
   
    WALL STREET 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street stocks soared as investors, cautiously
    optimistic about the outlook for inflation and interest rates, focused
    on the biggest and best-known names. The Dow Jones industrial average
    rose 123.22 to close at a new high of 7,292.75, blowing past last
    Tuesday's record close of 7,225.32. Advancers outnumbered decliners on
    the NYSE, with 1,798 up and 765 down. The Nasdaq rose 9.14 to 1,344.19.
   
    IRAN-EARTHQUAKE 

    HAJIABAD, Iran (AP) -- International aid is trickling into Iran's
    earthquake-devastated northeast. Trucks rumbled into the mountain
    villages carrying tents, blankets, clothes and food for many of the
    100,000 people made homeless. The government said the quake killed at
    least 2,400. 
   
    JAPAN-MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Tokyo stock prices rose in early trading Tuesday. The
    dollar was weaker against the yen. The 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average
    rose 154.12 points to 20,297.63. 
   
    HEAT-KNICKS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Knicks forced Miami into another dreadful shooting
    performance and finally got an offensive boost from John Starks in
    their easiest victory of the series, 89-76. The series returns to Miami
    for Game 5 on Wednesday, and the Heat will need to rediscover their
    offense in order to have any hope of extending their season. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
                                  
7.1727IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 10:5853
    World News
    
    Updated at Monday, May 12, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.
    
    Reuters World News Highlights 
    
    KINSHASA - Archbishop Laurent Monsengwo returned from abroad to cheers
    from onlookers who see him as a key peacemaker in Zaire's civil war. 
    
    South African Deputy President Thabo Mbeki said in Cape Town that this
    week's planned meeting between President Mobutu Sese Seko and rebel
    leader Laurent Kabila could be the last chance to avoid a bloody
    showdown. Witnesses said Monsengwo, who has been nominated to return to
    the post of parliamentary speaker, crossed the Zaire River from
    neighbouring Congo. 
    
    JERUSALEM - Palestinian officials will attend a meeting with Israelis
    now being arranged by U.S. envoy Dennis Ross but doubt it will lead to
    a resumption of peace talks, PLO officials said. 
    
    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin and Chechen leader Aslan Maskhadov
    signed a peace accord promising an end to 400 years of intermittent
    conflict between Moscow and the independence-minded north Caucasus
    region. 
    
    KURUMBA, Maldives - India and Pakistan agreed at their highest-level
    talks in four years to free each others' nationals held in prison and
    create a telephone hotline between their leaders to ease tensions.
    Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Indian counterpart, Inder
    Kumar Gujral, decided to establish working groups to address issues
    dividing the South Asian rivals, which have fought three wars since
    independence in 1947. 
    
    INCHON, South Korea - Two North Korean families staged a daring escape
    by boat to the South in what was thought to be the first defection of
    its kind from the hunger-stricken communist nation. The 14 escapees
    included a two year-old child. 
    
    BUJUMBURA - A typhus epidemic has infected some 20,000 people in
    north-west Burundi, the world's worst outbreak in more than 50 years,
    the World Health Organisation reported. 
    
    ROME - The opposition took control of Milan, Italy's second city, in
    local elections but wins for the governing centre-left in Turin and
    elsewhere pointed to a political draw ahead of key decisions on Europe
    and the economy. 
    
    PARIS - French President Jacques Chirac, speaking 13 days before a
    parliamentary election, pledged to work to stamp out child sex abuse
    and protect the young from threats ranging from drugs to religious
    sects. 
    
    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
7.1728IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 10:5851
    AP 12-May-1997 23:24 EDT   REF5662

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    DA Backs Ad Placed by Ramsey Couple

    By JENNIFER MEARS

    Associated Press Writer

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- The district attorney on Monday backed an
    advertisement bought by JonBenet Ramsey's parents asking for
    information about a man approaching children around the time their
    daughter was killed. 

    On Friday, the district attorney's office refused to comment on reports
    that the ad would appear in Sunday's (Boulder) Daily Camera, leading to
    speculation that the ad reflected a lead developed by private
    investigators hired by the Ramseys. 

    Some experts also accused the Ramseys of using the ad to turn attention
    away from themselves. 

    But in a letter Monday to the newspaper, District Attorney Alex Hunter
    said an attorney in his office authorized the wording used in the ad,
    wording that was "based on information developed in my office."

    "We believed the suggestion that Boulder families be asked to recall
    whether they had seen anything unusual at the time of the murder was
    reasonable," Hunter wrote. 

    In his letter, Hunter apologized for misunderstandings that may have
    led to the belief that the ad was the work solely of the Ramsey family.

    Ramsey attorney Hal Haddon appreciated the clarification. 

    "It is unfortunate that the immediate reaction of some people is that
    this is somehow a (public relations) ploy," Haddon said. 

    Six-year-old JonBenet was found strangled in her family's basement Dec.
    26, about eight hours after her mother, Patsy Ramsey, discovered a
    ransom note demanding $118,000. 

    Meanwhile, county authorities have requested that the sealed portions
    of JonBenet's autopsy report remain closed until criminal charges are
    filed or the investigation is closed. 

    A judge released portions of the report Feb. 14, but ordered the rest
    sealed for 90 days or until an arrest. The court said Monday the sealed
    portions would remain closed until a ruling is made on the extension. 
                                                                          
7.1729IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 10:5861
    AP 12-May-1997 22:45 EDT   REF5644

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    S.C., Mo. Join Tobacco Lawsuit

    By MONA BRECKENRIDGE

    Associated Press Writer

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- South Carolina and Missouri on Monday joined 26
    other states in suing the nation's biggest tobacco companies. 

    The action would allow the states to share in what could be an
    estimated $300 billion settlement with tobacco makers who are
    negotiating to have the smoking-related lawsuits dropped in return for
    submitting to federal regulation. 

    South Carolina Attorney General Charles Condon said he also wants to
    ensure the tobacco-growing state would have a say in the closed-door
    talks. 

    "The tobacco companies are well-represented. I want to make sure that
    the farmers also have a voice," said Condon, whose state ranks third in
    the nation with $200 million annually in tobacco production. 

    Earlier, Condon had said people should be responsible for their own
    health-damaging behavior and that he would seek money only if the
    states won or tobacco companies settled. 

    Condon said he changed his mind after being told that only states with
    lawsuits pending would be part of the negotiations. He said Monday he
    anted to ensure that South Carolinians with legitimate claims would
    receive their fair share of any settlement. 

    Missouri attorney general Jay Nixon said he sued because the cigarette
    makers violated the state's consumer protection laws, targeting
    children in advertising and lying to consumers about nicotine's
    addictiveness. 

    Messages seeking comment from R.J. Reynolds and Philip Morris, the two
    largest tobacco companies, were not immediately returned. 

    A March settlement by the tobacco company Liggett Group Inc. with 22
    states improved the chances of winning the case, Nixon said. 

    In return for protection from litigation, Liggett agreed to label its
    cigarettes addictive, provide potentially incriminating evidence
    against other tobacco companies and testify against its competitors. 

    In related news Monday, attorneys for flight attendants suing tobacco
    companies over secondhand smoke dropped requests to use the Liggett
    documents, which other tobacco companies are fighting to keep sealed. 

    "We'd love to have the documents, but we know this would be used as a
    device to delay this trial," attorney Stanley Rosenblatt said. 

    The $5 billion case was filed in 1991 on behalf of 60,000 non-smoking
    attendants who claim cigarette smoke circulated in aircraft cabins made
    them sick. The trial is scheduled to begin June 2. 
                                                       
7.1730IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0171
    AP 12-May-1997 22:20 EDT   REF5630

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Supercomputer Center Opened in Ohio

    By JAMES HANNAH

    Associated Press Writer

    DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -- A supercomputer center designed to help the
    military build planes and weapons systems better and faster by
    crunching numbers at lightning speed was dedicated Monday at
    Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. 

    "It's a great day for the Department of Defense, and it's a great day
    for the nation," said Maj. Gen. Richard Paul, commander of the Air
    Force Research Laboratory. "We're here to cut the ribbon on an almost
    unbelievable computational capability." 

    The Major Shared Resource Center boasts the computing and memory power
    of 32,000 personal computers working together. It is part of a $1.6
    billion program and one of four such centers in the United States. The
    Army and Navy operate the other centers in Mississippi and Maryland. 

    "This vision was to put in the hands of scientists and engineers
    computational capability that most people only dream about," Paul said.
    Such computer power would be too expensive for most individual
    researchers, he said. 

    The center features computers working together to perform complex
    calculations in such areas as structural mechanics, chemistry and
    electronics. The ultimate goal is to produce weaponry that creates
    maximum advantage on the battlefield. 

    Paul Shahady, director of the center, said the supercomputers will help
    speed up the design and testing of planes, missiles and other weapons.
    For example, the computers can reduce the time it takes to design
    combustion engines from eight months to four weeks, he said. 

    "You absolutely have to have the speed," he said. 

    The center will enable more than 450 military scientists and engineers
    from around the country to do their calculations faster. It will allow
    for more military research and avoid costly duplication of projects
    because it is part of the Army and Navy's supercomputing systems,
    Shahady said. 

    More importantly, he said, it will save taxpayers money by enabling
    scientists to simulate testing of their weapon designs. 

    The military's use of supercomputers got high marks from the Center for
    Defense Information, a Washington-based research group often critical
    of defense spending. 

    "As the force becomes smaller and costs become prohibitive, computer
    design is going to become more and more important," said Chris Hellman,
    a senior research analyst for the center. "The more you can do before
    you start bending metal, the better off you're going to be in the long
    run." 

    The center also has formed partnerships with businesses and
    universities, including Ohio State and Central State, to boost military
    research. 

    "We wanted a way to go out and capture innovation that is occurring in
    academia and industry," said Kate Howell, director of the Pentagon's
    High Performance Computing modernization program. "We've already picked
    universities that are leading in particular areas that we know that we
    need expertise in." 
                        
7.1731IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0156
    AP 12-May-1997 22:17 EDT   REF5629

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Va. Recalls Offensive License Plate

    NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -- Virginia recalled a license plate Monday reading
    "ZYKLON B" -- the gas used in Nazi death camps -- that was issued to a
    man convicted two years ago of painting slurs on a black church. 

    Zyklon B was used in the sham showers at Auschwitz and other Nazi
    concentration camps to kill hundreds of thousands of Jews and other
    prisoners. 

    The state will send the owner, Ryan Maziarka, a new plate later this
    week. 

    The recall came after the Anti-Defamation League complained that the
    plate violated state guidelines prohibiting "offensive" and
    "disparaging" content on license plates. 

    "It takes a pretty warped mind to display something like this on their
    plate," said Samuel Kaplan, director of the league's Virginia and North
    Carolina office. 

    "Whatever this person's intentions would have been, this is not a
    joke," Kaplan said. 

    Maziarka, 21, reached at his home Monday night, said he couldn't give
    the plates back even if he wanted to. He said they were stolen off his
    car Monday when he was at work. 

    He also said knew the significance of Zyklon B to the Holocaust, which
    he maintain never occurred, when he requested the plates. 

    "When I see (displays) of black pride or black power, I don't go
    running to my senator," he said. "But as soon as I get something that
    represents my race's dominating spirit, I get put down for it. 

    "Apparently I lost all civil rights in this community," he said. 

    Maziarka was convicted in 1995, when he was 19, of painting racial and
    religious slurs on the New Bethel Cathedral in Hampton. He was
    sentenced to five years in prison, with three suspended, for the 1994
    attack. 

    Requests for personalized licensed plates are screened by a state
    committee that uses dictionaries in several languages, researchers and
    even mirrors to see if requests are potentially offensive, Department
    of Motor Vehicles spokeswoman Jeanne Chenault said. She said Maziarka's
    request probably slipped through because it is an obscure term. 

    Last month, the agency canceled the license plate of a lesbian couple
    because a motorist complained their plate -- "2 DYKES" -- was
    offensive. 
               
7.1732IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0154
    AP 12-May-1997 21:21 EDT   REF5556

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Testimony Stuns Bomb Victims' Kin

    By PATRICK CASEY

    Associated Press Writer

    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- For hours, bombing survivors and relatives stared
    in disbelief as Timothy McVeigh's former Army buddy testified that he
    knew detailed plans for the Oklahoma City blast and did nothing to stop
    it. 

    "It brought tears to my eyes to know that a person could know as much
    as he knew and made a deliberate, conscious choice not to let others
    know," said bomb survivor Paul Heath, who was among 70 victims who
    watched a closed-circuit telecast of Michael Fortier's testimony Monday
    from Denver. 

    Fortier, who has pleaded guilty to knowing about the plot, testified he
    helped McVeigh case the Alfred P. Murrah federal building five months
    before the blast. He also said McVeigh was so bent on triggering a
    "general uprising in America" that he considered crashing his truck
    bomb through the front doors in a suicide attack. 

    Jacque Walker, who lost her 26-year-old niece in the bombing, said:
    "This is another idiot who could have done something or said
    something." 

    "Just like Jennifer McVeigh and Lori Fortier, they could have ... saved
    all these deaths and they didn't. That makes me angry," she said,
    referring to other witnesses who testified about knowing about
    McVeigh's plans. 

    Ms. Walker took particular exception to Fortier describing McVeigh as a
    good guy "'if you don't consider what happened in Oklahoma." 

    "This is not an OK guy," she said. "This is a murderer of 168 people.
    ... How can this be an OK guy?" 

    McVeigh, a 29-year-old Gulf War veteran, could get the death penalty if
    convicted in the April 19, 1995, blast, the deadliest act of terrorism
    on U.S. soil. Co-defendant Terry Nichols is to be tried later. 

    Heath said he was also bothered to hear Fortier describe McVeigh's
    anti-government views, particularly that "somebody should be held
    accountable" for the government's deadly siege at Waco. 

    "It is heartbreaking, heart wrenching," he said, "to think there is not
    a better way to have political dissent in this country than to build a
    truck bomb." 
                 
7.1733IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0356
    AP 12-May-1997 20:46 EDT   REF5504

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Comedian a Suspect in College Rapes

    By ROBYNN TYSVER

    Associated Press Writer

    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- A comedian who worked the college circuit is a
    suspect in a string of campus rapes across the Midwest in which the
    attacker spit on his victims, quizzed them about their sex lives and
    asked them to pray for him. 

    Vinson Horace Champ, 35, of Los Angeles was charged with attempted rape
    after he allegedly attacked a student May 6 in a piano room at Pasadena
    City College. 

    His arrest prompted a flurry of inquiries from police departments in
    the Midwest, where a rapist targeted women in college computer labs and
    music rooms in February and March. 

    FBI agent Tom Richardson in Omaha said police departments in at least
    four states -- Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois and Wisconsin -- are
    investigating Champ in connection with four rapes and two attempted
    rapes. 

    The entertainer, who drove a BMW and lived in an apartment in
    Hollywood, performed in at least nine states during the first three
    months of this year, Pasadena College police Officer Ralph Evans said
    Monday. 

    He was arrested Wednesday, the day after two witnesses heard student's
    screams and got Champ's license plate number as he fled, police said.
    Champ was freed from jail Friday on $75,000 bail. A preliminary hearing
    was scheduled June 10 in Pasadena. 

    He did not return calls for comment Monday. 

    Champ was in Nebraska March 5, the day a teacher was raped in a
    computer lab at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Earlier that day,
    Champ had performed at Mid-Plains Community College in North Platte,
    four hours away by car. 

    Gil Rocha, an art instructor at the college, said Champ's comedy act
    got mixed reviews. "Some of the kids said it was kind of raunchy," he
    said. 

    Omaha Officer Jim Murray called Champ a "strong suspect." 

    The other attacks took place at Union College in Lincoln, Knox College
    in Galesburg, Ill., Carthage College in Kenosha, Wis., St. Ambrose
    University in Davenport, Iowa, and Augustana College in Rock Island,
    Ill. 
         
7.1734IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0360
    AP 12-May-1997 20:44 EDT   REF5495

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Paternity Test: Neither Man Is Dad

    DETROIT (AP) -- Two men awarded temporary custody of a boy they each
    believed was their own learned Monday that blood tests show neither is
    the father. 

    "I looked at the reports over and over. I thought there was some kind
    of mistake. I can't believe it," Darryl Fletcher told WXYZ-TV. 

    "I felt like I was dying," said Brandon Ventimeglia. 

    The boy's mother, India Scott, 25, had dated both men when she told
    them separately that she was pregnant in late 1993, then moved in with
    Fletcher before the boy's birth in June 1994. 

    A few days after the birth, Ms. Scott told Ventimeglia about the boy
    and said she was living with a friend, Ventimeglia said. 

    Ventimeglia said he saw Ms. Scott and the boy, whom he has known as
    Jordan DeVante, on most weekends when Fletcher was working. Fletcher
    said he thought she was visiting friends or family. 

    The two 26-year-old men, fearing Ms. Scott would move to Virginia and
    take the boy with them, filed separate custody suits. A court clerk
    noticed that both suits named the same mother and the same birth date
    for the child, and called Ventimeglia's attorney. 

    The two men were awarded temporary custody of the boy last month and
    their custody lawsuits have since been joined. A hearing is scheduled
    for Thursday, but the judge said he hoped a settlement could be reached
    by then. 

    Ms. Scott's lawyer, Geoffrey Fieger, said it doesn't matter who the
    boy's father is because he has a fit mother. He urged Fletcher and
    Ventimeglia to drop their fight and return the boy, Darryl Alan Scott,
    to his mother. 

    "Darryl has been kidnapped by two strangers that have absolutely no
    relationship to him," he said. 

    "She hasn't abused her child," he said. "They shouldn't have been given
    this child. Did you think in America that if a close friend or family
    member is affectionate with your child they can take him?" 

    Fletcher said whoever the father turns out to be, he and Ventimeglia
    will continue to fight for permanent custody of the boy they consider
    their son. 

    When asked what he wanted to say to Ms. Scott after the test results
    were announced, Fletcher told WXYZ: "Please don't take him out of my
    life. We are and we always will be (his dads). Let him know he's got
    two guys who will love him." 

    Ms. Scott married in March, just weeks before losing custody of her
    son. 
         
7.1735IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0478
    AP 12-May-1997 17:45 EDT   REF5598

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mother of Abandoned Girl Found

    By JEAN PAGEL

    Associated Press Writer

    TULSA, Okla. (AP) -- Investigators located the mother of a 10-year-old
    girl who says she was left to fend for herself in a trailer for four
    months, surviving at times on dog biscuits. 

    Audrey Saylor, who was found by deputies on Sunday, was questioned but
    not immediately arrested. 

    Sheriff's Capt. Jerry Griffin said he did not know where the mother had
    been during the past four months other than that "she's been around."
    He would not say how or where she was located. 

    Ms. Saylor's daughter, Ashton Denice Saylor, was placed in state
    custody while authorities question other relatives and neighbors in
    Sand Springs, a city of about 15,000 people just outside Tulsa. 

    "It may be that the girl maybe was unsupervised instead of abandoned,
    which is still bad, but it's not quite as bad as being abandoned,"
    Griffin said Monday. 

    Police learned about the third-grader's plight Sunday -- Mother's Day
    -- after she turned to a neighbor, asking if she could stay with him.
    John Kame said Ashton arrived crying at his door several days before. 

    The girl told police that her mother had not been home since Ashton's
    birthday Jan. 9. She said she ate all the food at home and then began
    eating dog food. She attended school during the day. 

    Neighbors said they never saw the girl's father, but Griffin said other
    relatives might have looked in on Ashton. The girl said she had seen
    her mother once or twice in the past four months. 

    "We think that the girl has had contact with numerous people," Griffin
    said, adding that "other family members were aware and were reluctant
    for whatever reason to report their concerns." 

    Ashton's adult cousin, Kima Soles, lives with Kame and knew the girl
    was alone at night. But the cousin said she did nothing because she was
    trying to gain custody of the 10-year-old and didn't want to call
    police. 

    Deputies got involved Sunday when other neighbors called about the
    situation. 

    Sheriff's deputies who inspected the trailer found it filthy and
    littered with trash and clothes on the floors. But Central Elementary
    School Principal Mary Carter said the trailer was clean and at least
    one adult was present when school representatives visited at an earlier
    date. 

    Ashton ate breakfast and lunch at school, her principal said. 

    "There must be a misunderstanding of some type -- I don't know if it's
    with the child," Ms. Carter said. "Perhaps there was a little
    embellishment. I think that's a possibility, especially for a needy
    child." 

    Ms. Carter said Ashton was clean, bright and friendly at school. 

    But the principal said signs of problems at home surfaced in January.
    The school notified the Department of Human Services and made two or
    three home visits as late as March, Ms. Carter said. 

    The principal said friends of the family came to school often to check
    up on the girl, who has an older brother at another school. Ms. Carter
    said she knows their mother. 

    "She's doing the best she can. It's not problem-free," Ms. Carter said. 
                                                                            
7.1736IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0444
    AP 12-May-1997 23:44 EDT   REF5666

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bank Says It Got Stolen Nazi Gold

    BASEL, Switzerland (AP) -- A key international bank disclosed Monday
    that some of 15 tons of gold it received from Nazi Germany during World
    War II had been plundered from foreign banks and stamped with phony
    prewar dates. 

    Nearly one-quarter of the gold had been stolen from the central banks
    of the Netherlands, Belgium and Italy, the Bank for International
    Settlements, or BIS, said in a report. 

    The institution was in a unique position during the war. Known as the
    central banker's central bank, it has acted as the main international
    clearing house for bank transactions since 1930 and thus handled much
    of the gold that moved between governments during the war.

    The report left open whether any of the gold was taken from
    concentration camp victims, such as wedding rings or gold teeth
    fillings, but General Manager Andrew Crocket refused to exclude the
    possibility during an interview with Swiss radio. 

    The BIS report said the German Reichsbank deposited 15 tons of fine
    gold -- worth $154 million today -- from September 1939 to May 1945.
    This was in addition to about 8 tons of gold Germany had on deposit
    before the war. 

    Germany had melted down and recast much of the plundered gold so that
    it bore phony Reichsbank stamps with prewar dates, it said. 

    After the war, 4 tons of the new gold was identified as having been
    stolen from the central banks of Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy,
    the report said. 

    It was handed over to the victorious Allies -- the United States,
    Britain and France -- to be returned, and the Allies cleared BIS of any
    further obligations, it said. 

    "The facts are there, and we would prefer for others to judge whether
    the BIS' behavior was appropriate during the war," Crocket said. 
                                                                     
7.1737IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:05108
    AP 12-May-1997 22:38 EDT   REF5641

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Korea Defectors Arrive in South

    By J.H. AHN

    Associated Press Writer

    INCHON, South Korea (AP) -- Fourteen North Korean defectors -- the
    first to flee by sea from their communist homeland -- arrived in South
    Korea on Tuesday saying that North Koreans were starving for freedom as
    well as food. 

    "I have been listening to South Korean radio for seven years and have
    come to know that there is real freedom here," Ahn Sun-kuk, 49, leader
    of the group, said early Tuesday upon arrival in this port west of
    Seoul. 

    "It's miserable," Ahn shouted when reporters asked about the food
    situation in North Korea, which U.N. officials say could face famine in
    weeks. 

    The five men, five women and four children -- the youngest age 2 --
    were immediately taken away by intelligence officials for
    interrogation. 

    A South Korean navy patrol rescued the North Koreans from their leaking
    boat off the western coast of the Korean Peninsula on Monday afternoon. 

    After a 27-hour voyage through rough seas, the defectors looked tired
    but smiled constantly. Ahn, with his 68-year-old mother on his back and
    holding an umbrella in the drizzling rain, led others in shouting
    cheers to dozens of reporters. 

    Defense Ministry officials said Ahn and five of his family members had
    left Friday from Shinuiju, a North Korean port city on the border with
    China. He kept emergency food, a radio and a portable phone he had
    bought in China to prepare for the defection. 

    Disguised as a Chinese fishing boat, Ahn's 32-ton ship stopped by
    Dongchun, a small fishing village south of Shinuiju, to pick up a
    friend's family. On Sunday, the 14 began their voyage to freedom. 

    On the way, they mixed with a fleet of Chinese fishing boats operating
    near the border to avoid detection by North Korean patrols. 

    Their boat was found near Paekryong-do, the westernmost South Korean
    island, the Defense Ministry said. As South Korean navy boats
    approached, Ahn's vessel broke away from the Chinese fishing boats, and
    the North Koreans signaled their intention to defect. 

    The Defense Ministry said they were the first North Korean "boat
    people" to defect to South Korea. 

    About 150 North Koreans have defected to South Korea in the past three
    years, all through China or across the demilitarized zone separating
    the two Koreas. 

    International aid organizations have said hunger is widespread in North
    Korea, and that many people are eating grass and tree bark to survive. 

    A U.N. aid official who visited North Korea this month said Monday he
    did not see people dropping dead of hunger but "the situation is what I
    would depict as almost a famine in slow motion." 

    In response to the hunger, the communist regime has told North Koreans
    to "fend for themselves," said Tun Myat of the World Food Program. 

    That has led some provincial authorities to organize collections of
    scrap metal for sale to neighboring countries in exchange for rice and
    grain, he said. 

    North Korea's official radio station, Korean Central Radio, reported
    Sunday that the military would join the fight against hunger by
    assisting farm villages, an action the radio said would "certainly
    bring about a great harvest this year." 

    The broadcast provided no details. It was reported Monday in Tokyo by a
    Japanese monitoring agency, Radiopress. 

    The report said troops from all branches of the military, officials
    from regional branches of the Worker's Party, government and
    administrative organs, and labor groups have met recently in a bid to
    make the harvest successful. 

    International relief groups have said the next three months, before the
    grain harvest begins, could pitch North Korea into widespread famine
    unless massive relief begins. 

    "How long this process can last before the dire effects of protracted
    malnutrition take place? We don't know. I think the challenge to all of
    us would be to ensure that we don't ever find out," Myat said. 

    North Korea's chronic food shortage was aggravated by devastating
    floods in 1995 and 1996. U.N. aid workers say the country faces famine
    without immediate outside aid. 

    The two countries have said that large-scale government aid is possible
    only when North Korea agrees to enter four-party peace talks that would
    also include China. The talks would discuss ways to formally end the
    1950-53 Korean War, which ended in an armistice. 

    The Koreas have been divided since 1945 into the communist North and
    the capitalist South. Their border is sealed, with nearly 2 million
    troops deployed on both sides. 
                                   
7.1738IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0537
    AP 12-May-1997 22:23 EDT   REF5632

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Italy Reopens Palermo Theater

    PALERMO, Sicily (AP) -- It had to be one of the longest intermissions
    in theater history. 

    Twenty-three years and three months after Palermo's Massimo Theater
    closed for what was supposed to be a brief period to improve the
    electrical system and conduct other repairs, the city's pride and joy
    reopened to the public Monday night. 

    Political squabbling and bureaucratic snafus kept the Massimo's Murano
    glass windows dark for all those years. The long closure of the
    theater, with its art nouveau touches, became a symbol of frustration
    for the city which has been laboring to undo its reputation as the
    capital of the Sicilian Mafia. 

    Playing opera songs by Verdi, whose music filled the hall during its
    last performance in 1974, Sicily's symphony orchestra was the gala
    night's warmup. 

    But the main billing went to Claudio Abbado and the Berlin
    Philharmonic, with a program of Brahms symphonies. 

    Palermo's well-heeled turned out in jewels, chiffons and, despite
    temperatures in the 70s, even furs. VIPs from the Italian mainland
    included Deputy Premier Walter Veltroni, who also is culture minister,
    and Fiat chairman Cesare Romiti, the Italian news agency ANSA reported.

    Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando welcomed the guests. When he became mayor
    in the mid-1980s, he vowed to end two of the city's biggest
    embarrassments: the seemingly eternal closure of the theater and
    Palermo's practically being synonymous with the Mafia. 
                                                           
7.1739IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0656
    AP 12-May-1997 18:59 EDT   REF5089

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Yeltsin Calls for Housing Fund Cuts

    By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

    Associated Press Writer

    MOSCOW (AP) -- President Boris Yeltsin, pushing to invigorate Russia's
    ailing economy, called Monday for the government to slash the $21
    billion it spends annually on housing and utility subsidies. 

    The sweeping reform efforts envisaged by Yeltsin gradually would
    increase Russia's traditionally low housing fees and prices for
    electricity, gas and water. But he called on his Cabinet to carry out
    the change without hurting the poor, who must "only benefit from it." 

    "We don't have the right to make mistakes here, since they would be too
    expensive," Yeltsin said at a government meeting. 

    Yeltsin said the cash-strapped government no longer could afford to pay
    $21 billion a year in subsidies -- which account for about one-third of
    all regional budget expenditures. 

    "These funds are distributed ineffectively and unjustly," he said. 

    The government has been unable to pay months-overdue wages and pensions
    to millions of Russians. Yeltsin repeatedly has promised -- and failed
    -- to solve the problem. 

    The reform plan drafted by First Deputy Premier Boris Nemtsov would
    have Russians -- who are used to low Soviet-era prices and now pay just
    slightly more than a quarter of actual housing and utilities costs --
    be paying in full by 2003. 

    Critics, including powerful Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, have insisted
    that the approach be softened. He and others warn that a hasty increase
    in prices might anger impoverished Russians and spark broad social
    unrest. 

    At a separate meeting Monday, Yeltsin and Nemtsov discussed his
    campaign to modernize the economy. 

    Yeltsin intends to soon sign Nemtsov's proposals aimed at fighting
    corruption, tightening control over Russia's natural gas giant Gazprom
    and removing state money from commercial banks, the Interfax news
    agency said. 

    The anti-corruption decree would require federal officials and their
    families to declare their incomes and property. 

    The order concerning Gazprom is aimed at tightening the government's
    control over the monopoly, now under fire for failing to pay taxes. 
                                                                        
7.1740IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0687
    AP 12-May-1997 18:52 EDT   REF5069

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Britain Toughens Human Rights Stand

    By MAUREEN JOHNSON

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- Declaring that human rights are central to its foreign
    policy, Britain's new Labor government said Monday it will be stricter
    about arms sales and may seek economic sanctions against Nigeria. 

    But Foreign Secretary Robin Cook made no specific reference to the
    United States in his four-page statement on the new government's
    foreign policy, instead stressing Britain's membership in the European
    Union. 

    Such declarations from Previous Conservative administrations, in
    particular those of Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, have stressed the
    "special relationship" between Britain and the United States. 

    "I strongly believe that Britain will be a more valuable and a more
    valued ally of America if we do actually emerge as a leading partner
    within Europe," Cook said. "Because a Britain which does not have
    influence in Europe will be of less interest to Washington." 

    Cook, expected to visit Washington soon, said there is a "strong
    personal chemistry" between Prime Minister Tony Blair and President
    Clinton. 

    Cook's policy presentation, in an ornate ballroom at the Foreign
    Office, was preceded by a video extolling British exports, from the
    Rolls-Royce engine to the arts. 

    On Europe, Cook said the Labor government will reverse the increasing
    isolation of the previous Conservative government, whose right wing
    strongly opposed closer integration of the 15-nation EU. 

    "Some other nations are beginning to be more frank about their
    reservations (on closer union) than they needed to be when they could
    rely on Britain blocking everything anyone thought of," Cook said. 

    The Labor government, which ousted the long-governing Conservatives in
    a landslide election victory May 1, immediately signed on to
    Europe-wide regulations on labor rights, rejected by the Conservatives.

    Labor does share many of the Conservatives' reservations about closer
    ties to the European Union, however. For example, Cook reiterated
    Monday that it is unlikely Britain will be among the initial group of
    EU countries adopting the new single currency, the euro, due to start
    in January 1999. 

    The currency, being driven by Germany and France, will be the most
    significant step yet in European integration. 

    Labor says it will wait and see how the final negotiations go and hold
    a referendum on any decision to adopt the currency. Polls show most
    Britons favor keeping the pound. 

    On the issue of arms, Cook said Britain, one of the world's top four
    weapons exporters, will be stricter in the future about arms exports to
    countries with dubious human rights records. 

    But he gave no specifics, and said a first step would be to seek a
    common EU stance so that a contract turned down by Britain did not get
    snapped up by one of its European partners. 

    France and Britain often vie for major arms contracts. 

    The Conservatives were embarrassed after a 1992 trial of three British
    executives showed that the government bent its own rules to send
    defense-related equipment to Iraq in the late 1980s. 

    Signaling a tougher stance against Nigeria's military government, Cook
    said the international community "must be prepared to use economic
    sanctions ... until there is a return to democratic governance." 

    Cook said Nigeria will be a prime topic at a summit of the
    Commonwealth, the 53-nation association of Britain and ex-colonies,
    hosted by Britain in Edinburgh, Scotland, in October. 

    Nigeria was suspended from the Commonwealth in November 1995 after the
    execution of author Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other minority-rights
    activists. 
               
7.1741IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0636
    AP 12-May-1997 18:43 EDT   REF5062

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Biker Shooting Erupts in Denmark

    COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -- Three men connected to warring Nordic biker
    gangs were wounded in northern Denmark on Monday when the car they were
    riding in was fired on by gunmen in another car. 

    The incident happened on a central street in Aalborg, 120 miles
    northwest of Copenhagen, and one of the flashpoints in the bloody feud
    between the outlawed Bandidos and Hells Angels motorcycle clubs, police
    said. 

    No official information was available on the condition of the wounded
    men, but Denmark's TV2 said their injuries were serious. 

    Police made no immediate arrests, but suspicion fell on the Hells
    Angels gang: Authorities said the injured men had ties to the rival
    Bandidos. 

    The 3-year-old gang war has left at least 10 people dead and more than
    60 injured in Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland. 

    In the past year, the attacks have become increasingly public, raising
    fears that bystanders would be caught in the middle of the fighting. 

    The feud's most recent fatal attack occurred in Aalborg, when shots
    were fired at a Hells Angel member as he drove in a car through the
    city. 

    The two gangs claim affiliation with two American groups of the same
    name: the Hells Angels, based in Oakland, Calif., and the Bandidos,
    based in Corpus Christi, Texas. 
                                    
7.1742IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:07107
    RTw  13-May-97 03:33    

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Blair's father-in-law, ever-present cringe maker 

    By Helen Smith 

    LONDON, May 13 (Reuter) - Tony Blair's enemies may have failed to find
    any skeletons in his closet, but Britain's new prime minister has one
    ever-present source of potential embarrassment -- his rumbustious
    father-in-law Tony Booth. 

    Booth is best known for his part in a popular television comedy series
    "Till Death Us Do Part" in the 1960s and 70s in which he played the
    idle, good-looking son-in-law. 

    By then, the blond-haired, dimple-cheeked actor had already earned a
    reputation as hard-drinker and a womaniser. He had abandoned his
    pregnant first wife Gale and his tiny daughter Cherie, now married to
    Blair, in the late 1950s. 

    Booth was also a fervent socialist and is credited with helping set
    Blair on the road to the prime ministership. 

    He introduced the ambitious young lawyer to leading figures in the
    Labour Party and arranged his first visit to the Westminster parliament
    -- the experience, it is said, that convinced Blair to abandon law for
    a career in politics. Since then Blair's views have shifted a long way
    from his father-in-law's angry socialism. 

    Booth, 65, remains an outspoken voice of the left and makes no secret
    of his loathing for the modernisers who have moved Labour to the
    centre-ground of politics. 

    But this is not what makes Blair's aides wince. 

    BOOTH'S HELLRAISING PAST 

    The biggest potential cringe-maker for clean-living Blair is Booth's
    evident pride in his lifetime of philandering and his shameless
    exploitation of his links with the new prime minister. In the middle of
    the campaign for the May 1 general election, Booth re-issued his
    none-too-successful autobiography, renaming it "Labour of Love -- the
    amazing life of Tony Blair's famous father-in-law." 

    The book is a tawdry account of Booth's boozing and womanising and an
    acting career that took him through soft-porn movies and local theatres
    before he landed his one big television role. 

    Booth's heyday was spent in the company of the acting world's most
    notorious hellraisers and he once arrived drunk at a party held by
    1970s prime minister Harold Wilson, where he mistook the prime minister
    of Luxembourg for the butler. 

    The carousing came to an abrupt halt in 1979, when the actor was nearly
    killed in a drunken accident when he tried to smoke his girlfriend out
    of their flat. She had locked him out. 

    The book was serialised in a tabloid newspaper and Booth gave several
    interviews, in one of which he offended readers of the right-wing Daily
    Telegraph by accusing them of having exploited the working class "for
    the last 1,000 years." 

    Now the election is over, Blair faces more discomfiture with the
    prospect of a television play about Booth's affair with Pat Phoenix, a
    soap star actress who died of cancer in 1986. 

    The story itself is a touching one. Booth and Phoenix first met when
    they were young actors working in the north of England, but drifted
    apart for 20 years when their careers took them to different parts of
    the country. 

    They were re-united after Booth's 1979 accident and married a week
    before Phoenix died. 

    But the irrepressible Booth couldn't help himself from relating details
    of their sex life in his autobiography and after Phoenix's death, he
    sold a collection of her personal belongings for 60,000 pounds
    ($98,000). 

    Not long after, Booth got married for a third time to a Canadian
    diplomat's daughter 23 years his junior. He is now divorced again. 

    He has seven daughters by his three ex-wives and two long-term
    partners. Cherie, the oldest child, was just 21 months old when Booth
    left her mother Gale, another struggling actress who abandoned her
    career to care for her two daughters. While Booth recounts his exploits
    in boastful detail, he says he is now remorseful. 

    "Of course I would want to change the past," he said recently. "All
    that hurt and pain I caused. How could I have been so vain, insensitive
    and stupid?" 

    It seems Cherie, at least, has forgiven him. She visited him weekly
    when he was in hospital recovering from his burns and she is happy to
    be photographed with her father, now white-haired and bearded and rigid
    with scar tissue. 

    BOOTH REMAINED IN BACKGROUND DURING ELECTION CAMPAIGN 

    One widely-used photograph shows Booth with Cherie and her mother and
    sister listening to Blair give a speech. Booth's face is creased with
    emotion and there is a proud tear in his eye.

    REUTER
          
7.1743IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0767
    RTw 12-May-97 21:13    

    Britain will not deport Nepalese boy

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    LONDON, May 12 (Reuter) - Britain's new Labour  government said on
    Monday it would not deport a young Nepalese brought to Britain by a
    millionaire who wanted to fulfil a "debt of honour" to the boy's
    father. 

    Home Secretary (interior minister) Jack Straw  decided to accept a
    recommendation by the Immigration Appeals Tribunal that 20-year-old Jay
    Khadka, who was adopted by Richard Morley, should be allowed to stay in
    Britain. 

    Straw's ruling overturns a deportation order issued last year by then
    Home Secretary Michael Howard, a member of the Conservative government
    ousted by Labour in the May 1 election. 

    A Home Office statement said Straw accepted that "there is not the
    slightest danger that Mr Khadka would ever become a burden on public
    funds" and that he "appears a young man of promise and it would be
    regrettable if that promise were to be fundamentally affected." 

    A High Court judge last December upheld the deportation ruling although
    it agreed the decision might appear harsh. 

    Khadka's case has attracted widespread attention because of the unusual
    circumstances surrounding his arrival in Britain as well as the
    communal living arrangements of his self-styled 'family'. 

    Morley brought the young Khadka to Britain to honour a pact made with
    the boy's father, a policeman in a remote area of Nepal who saved
    Morley's life when he collapsed with a punctured lung while on a
    mountaineering expedition in 1984. 

    The policeman walked for three days to summon help but refused
    financial reward, instead imploring Morley to take care of his son
    should anything happen to him. 

    Morley returned to Nepal in 1991 to find that the elder Khadka had died
    and so brought the boy home with him. 

    But because Jay Khadka's papers stated his age as 18, Morley was unable
    to adopt the boy legally. It was later determined that he was only 14
    at the time. 

    "The age of children in poor parts of Asia is often exaggerated without
    their knowledge so they can work at a much younger age," Morley said. 

    "He looked much younger than his age. When he came to England, we gave
    him a bath and the obvious was immediately realised. In Nepal when I
    took him over I didn't investigate such things. I took him at his word
    and he thought he was 18." 

    Khadka now lives on a commune with Morley and six other 'family'
    members -- ranging from ages 18 to 43 -- based in a castle in west
    England. 

    The group had vowed to leave Britain permanently if Khadka was
    deported. "The family intends to stay together," Morley said. "We are a
    new type of family structure which we think copes with the problems of
    tomorrow far more effectively than the current structure." 

    REUTER
          
7.1744IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0891
    RTw  12-May-97 20:44    

    France's Tapie from jail to dock for soccer trial

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Thierry Cayol 

    MARSEILLE, France, May 12 (Reuter) - Disgraced French tycoon Bernard
    Tapie went from jail to the dock on Monday to answer charges of
    embezzling 100 million francs ($17 million) from his former European
    champion club Marseille. 

    The 54-year-old rags-to-riches politician, now bankrupt prisoner 265
    449G serving an eight-month term for match-rigging and interfering with
    witnesses, faces a five-year sentence if convicted on charges of
    swindling, misusing corporate funds and falsifying documents in
    1987-1993. 

    Nineteen other soccer figures are standing trial along with Tapie. 

    The trial, expected to last three weeks, could shed light on alleged
    soccer corruption after defendant Jean-Pierre Bernes, Tapie's former
    right-hand man, promised the court "disclosures." 

    He has accused Tapie, a former cabinet minister in a Socialist-led
    government, of spending five to six million francs ($850,000 to $1
    million) a year on rigging French league and European cup games. 

    Tapie entered jail three months ago when the supreme court upheld his
    sentence for bribing players of league rival Valenciennes to give
    Marseille an easy game days before Marseille beat AC Milan 1-0 in the
    1993 European Cup final. 

    The investigating magistrate has accused Tapie of falsifying accounts
    to conceal bonuses and loans to players and illegally pay advertising
    companies based in tax havens to improve the image of soccer stars.
    Tapie says he can justify the sums spent. 

    His lawyer Jean-Yves Lienard told reporters the trial would "expose the
    workings of a certain high-level soccer." He said Tapie only followed
    widely used practices. 

    In court, Lienard accused magistrate Pierre Philipon of partiality for
    writing in court documents that Tapie acted like a "quasi-dictator." 

    Liebard also complained the documents spoke of corruption whereas no
    specific charges of that nature were levelled. 

    Others in the dock included ex-international Michel Hidalgo who was
    French national squad manager and Marseille's general manager, several
    other ex-Marseille executives and French soccer businessmen.

    Defendants also included Croatian national coach Miroslav Blazevic,
    charged with being an accomplice to a swindle over a friendly game
    which never took place and the transfer of Dragan Stojkovic to
    Marseille from Red Star Belgrade. 

    Former Croatian agent Ljubomir Barin, who was extradited from Germany,
    faced similar charges over transfer dealings. 

    Marseille's ailing ex-financial manager Alain Laroche stayed away from
    the court. 

    Three foreigners were being tried in absentia: British lawyer Melvyn
    Stein and accountant Lennard Lazarus, who dealt with the transfer of
    soccer star Chris Waddle to Marseille from Tottenham, as well as Greek
    agent Spiridon Karegeorgis. 

    Hundreds of reporters and fans waited outside the courtroom to catch a
    glimpse of a gloomy Tapie, who remains popular for giving the
    Mediterranean port its first European soccer title. 

    He demanded that police clear the court of reporters and camera crews
    before he entered and appeared to doze during the hearing. Lienard said
    he had spent the night in a cell with three other detainees and could
    not sleep. 

    The trial will be another step in the ex-cabinet minister's downfall
    after he was declared bankrupt and stripped of his seats in the French
    and European parliaments. 

    He is also appealing against a prison sentence for tax fraud in
    connection with his luxury yacht, the Phocea, symbol of his tycoon
    days, which was sold off last month to pay his debts. 

    Earlier this year Tapie was allowed to leave prison during the day to
    work as a commercial agent for a Marseille shipyard. 

    REUTER
          
7.1745IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0854
    RTw 12-May-97 20:16    

    Channel Tunnel fire report to rap operators-BBC

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    LONDON, May 12 (Reuter) - A report into last November's Channel Tunnel
    fire is expected to criticise the operating company's management when
    it is published on Tuesday, BBC television said. 

    But the report by the Anglo-French Channel Tunnel Safety Authority was
    expected to fall short of calling for a ban on the tunnel's
    much-critised open-sided latticed freight wagons, although design
    changes had not been ruled out in the future. 

    The authority's final report into the fire which swept through a main
    tunnel, creating tens of millions of pounds of damage, will be
    published in London at 0930 GMT on Tuesday, a spokesman for the British
    Department of Transport said. 

    The BBC said the report would accuse Eurotunnel Plc, the Channel Tunnel
    operator, of failing to make safety a priority. 

    The report would highlight "fundamental flaws" in the management of the
    company and would speak of "a disease of sloppiness in the way the
    tunnel is run," the BBC said. 

    Eurotunnel has said it is confident the CTSA report will endorse the
    design of its latticed freight wagons. 

    If the design of the wagons is cleared by the CTSA, Eurotunnel will be
    free to resume freight services in mid-June as planned. 

    Eurotunnel shut down its freight services after last November's blaze
    which resulted in lorry drivers being taken to hospital for treatment.
    Eurotunnel's own internal inquiry cleared its equipment of any fault
    but admitted to "avoidable delays" in tackling the fire. 

    But the Kent Fire Brigade, involved in the CTSA inquiry, has been loud
    in its criticism of the design of Eurotunnel's freight wagons, claiming
    their lattice-work design created a blow-torch effect once the fire was
    underway. 

    The outcome of the CTSA report will be crucial not just to getting
    services back on track but also to getting shareholders' and banking
    syndicate approval for Eurotunnel's debt restructuring which was
    recently approved by the lead lending banks. 

    The prospectus for the debt deal is due to go out to shareholders
    before the end of May, making a positive CTSA report integral to the
    company's survival. 

    REUTER
          
7.1746IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0938
    RTw 12-May-97 19:20    

    NASA counts down for shuttle mission to Mir

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., May 12 (Reuter) - The countdown was proceeding
    smoothly for Thursday's predawn blastoff of the space shuttle Atlantis
    on a mission to Russia's Mir space station, NASA officials said on
    Monday. 

    NASA test director Doug Lyons said launch controllers faced no
    technical problems during the early hours of the countdown. The
    shuttle's electricity-generating fuel cells had been doubled-checked,
    he said. The last shuttle mission was cut short by a fuel cell failure. 

    Blastoff on Thursday was scheduled for about 4:08 a.m. EDT (0808 GMT).
    Forecasters gave Atlantis an 80 percent chance of fair weather for
    launch. 

    Atlantis is to dock with the orbiting Russian outpost to pick up U.S.
    astronaut Jerry Linenger and drop off his replacement, Michael Foale,
    for a four-month tour of duty. 

    The shuttle will also haul nearly 4,000 pounds (1,814 kg) of equipment
    and supplies to Mir, including a new oxygen generator. The station has
    suffered a series of breakdowns in its life support systems since a
    serious fire in February. 

    The countdown clocks began ticking at the Kennedy Space Centre late on
    Sunday night shortly after the arrival of the shuttle's seven-member
    international crew from their training base in Houston.

    In addition to the British-born Foale, Atlantis' crew includes a
    Russian woman and a French astronaut from the European Space Agency. 

    REUTER
          
7.1747IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 11:0974
    RTw 12-May-97 15:40    

    Smaller UK companies face millennium bug sting

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    By Neil Winton, Science and Technology Correspondent 

    LONDON, May 12 (Reuter) - Most small and medium sized British companies
    are still unaware that the millennium computer bug threatens their
    survival, experts said Monday. 

    And although most bigger British companies are aware of the bug, more
    than 90 percent have yet to complete an internal audit of their
    information technology systems, the experts told a news conference. 

    The millennium bug is a potential glitch in the software which runs
    computers. This threatens to crash systems at midnight on December 31,
    1999, or cause them to spew out erroneous data. 

    The problem springs from short-cuts taken by computer programmers in
    the 1970s and 1980s. To save previous memory then in short-supply,
    programmers abbreviated years to a two-digit shorthand -- "87" or "98"
    for instance. 

    When the calendar clicks over to the year 2000, some computers will
    read the date as "00" and will either shut-down or churn out misleading
    information. 

    Programmers used this shorthand believing that because of the fast
    moving nature of technology, none of these programmes would still be in
    use by 2000. 

    This error of judgement could potentially cut a swathe of destruction
    across economies because of the ubiquity of computers in the modern
    world. 

    Companies may go bankrupt, health services could be crippled, pension
    and social security payments might go awry, power stations and
    telephone systems may stutter or fail. 

    "Our last survey at the end of last year showed that two thirds of
    managers of big corporations were aware of the problem, but only nine
    percent of organisations had completed an audit of their computer
    systems," said Margaret Joachim, assistant director of Taskforce 2000. 

    Taskforce 2000 was set up by the British government to raise awareness
    of the millennium bug problem. 

    "We think nothing much has changed since the end of the year. It still
    isn't good. Small and medium sized enterprises are still not aware that
    it (the millennium bug) affects them," Joachim said. 

    Tony Lewis, executive director of the Computer Software Services
    Association, said because many large companies use thousands of small
    companies as suppliers, they would face disruption to their businesses
    even if their own computer systems were bug-free. 

    Lewis cited food store chain J. Sainsbury Plc. "Look at Sainsbury. It's
    got about 7,000 suppliers. They all have to be compliant," Lewis said. 

    Other experts at the news conference said that although Britain's
    situation was worrying, industry had made more progress than other
    European countries such as Germany and France. 

    Scarce programming capacity in Germany and France was concentrating on
    preparing business for monetary union, scheduled to start on January 1,
    1999. 

    Only the United States had made more progress than Britain in stamping
    out potential damage from the millennium bug. 

    REUTER
          
7.1748IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:0285
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                                 
    Europe bows to Brown on VAT cut 
    
    By Toby Helm, EU Correspondent in Brussels, and George Jones 
                                                                       
    BRUSSELS backed away from an attempt yesterday to block the
    Government's plan to cut VAT on domestic fuel in next month's Budget.
                                                                       
    In a sign of goodwill, the EU Commission dropped a threat to take the
    Government to the European Court over reducing the tax from eight to
    five per cent. It was a symbolic, but important victory for the new
    Government, which has promised a fresh start in Europe.
                                                                       
    Gordon Brown, attending his first meeting of EU finance ministers as
    Chancellor, was able to return from Brussels demonstrating that the
    Labour Government would be able to deliver one of its main election
    pledges - to cut fuel bills by next winter.
                                                                       
    But Jack Cunningham, the Agriculture Minister, was less successful in
    efforts to secure an easing of the EU's world-wide ban on British beef
    despite promising to engage in a "constructive dialogue" over the BSE
    crisis.
                                                                       
    Dr Cunningham emerged from his first meeting with Franz Fischler, the
    Agriculture Commissioner who imposed the beef ban a year ago,
    acknowledging that there were no easy answers. An end to the ban was
    "not imminent", he said.
                                                                       
    In London, Robin Cook, the Foreign Secretary, set out the new
    Government's foreign policy objectives, promising that Britain would
    play a higher profile in Europe. Mr Cook said he wanted Britain to play
    an "equal part" in Europe to that of France and Germany.
                                                                       
    "We want a Europe that is a union of interdependent nations, working
    together where we have common problems to find common solutions,
    sometimes adopting common structures to achieve that," said Mr Cook.
                                                                       
    During the election campaign, EU officials challenged Labour's proposal
    to reduce VAT on fuel. They claimed that it ran contrary to the spirit
    of EU legislation which aims to harmonise VAT rates at 15 per cent.
                                                                       
    Officials working for Mario Monti, the single market commissioner, said
    that while it was permissible for Britain to have an interim rate of
    eight per cent, it could not reduce the level and stay within the
    spirit of the law.
                                                                       
    They had threatened to take the Government to the European Court. Mr
    Brown - on the basis of the Treasury's own legal advice - argued that a
    cut in the rate was "legally watertight".
                                                                       
    After discussing the issue with Mr Brown yesterday, Mr Monti signalled
    that the EU would give way rather than risk a confrontation. "While
    this measure may not be in the spirit of Community legislation, Gordon
    Brown feels the letter of the legislation gives the UK freedom to act
    in this way," he said.
                                                                       
    "Although the Commission's legal analysis can only be completed once
    the full details are known, I do not see any legal obstacle."
                                                                       
    Mr Brown is understood to have given a commitment not to undertake any
    other reductions in VAT. After the meeting, Mr Brown said he told Mr
    Monti of the "great political concern" about the impact of fuel bills,
    particularly on pensioners.
                                                                       
    Mr Brown signalled a "constructive" approach towards the European
    single currency. He kept open Britain's options as his EU counterparts
    made clear that UK membership in the first wave in 1999 was still a
    realistic - and desirable - objective.
                                                                       
    Mr Brown said any decision on EMU entry would be made "at the
    appropriate time" and "in the national economic interest". He refused
    to rule out joining in 1999, although he said it was "very unlikely".
    Mr Brown's approach encouraged fellow EU leaders to think in terms of
    early British participation in the "euro" zone.
                                                                       
    Gerrit Zalm, the Dutch finance minister who chairs Ecofin under the
    Dutch EU presidency, said he saw no real obstacles to Britain entering
    in 1999, providing it kept its economy on track to meet the Maastricht
    criteria. "The more the merrier," he said. "I don't see any obstacles,
    provided the figures are right."
                                                                       
    Mr Brown denied rumours that he was planning to take Britain back into
    the Exchange Rate Mechanism, which Britain quit on "Black Wednesday"
    nearly five years ago. He said: "We have no plans to join the ERM."
7.1749IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:0878
7.1750IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:1046
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                       
    Seven die in 70mph Everest blizzard
    
    By Paul Chapman in Wellington 
                                
    AT least seven climbers are believed to have been killed in a ferocious
    storm 650ft below the summit of Everest.
                                
    The dead were part of a 15-strong Kazakh team that was descending from
    the summit, a New Zealand-led expedition told its headquarters in
    Christchurch. The other eight were still unaccounted for.
                                
    They were believed to include three Kazakhs, a German, a Korean and a
    Sherpa. The other known dead was not identified.
                                
    There were up to 320 climbers on the mountain when the storm struck,
    with winds of more than 70 mph. It happened a year after nine climbers
    were killed in a similar storm on Everest, including Rob Hall, who
    spent his dying minutes making an emotional call to his wife in New
    Zealand by radio telephone.
                                
    Guy Cotter, who was with Hall's party last year, is leading one of two
    New Zealand parties now on the mountain. He ordered his group to return
    to Base Camp when the weather closed in, and criticised the Kazakh-led
    team, saying they should have taken notice of the weather warnings.
                                
    Speaking by radio from Base Camp last night, Mr Cotter said:
    "Unfortunately, it is no surprise that people are still dying on this
    mountain, especially when they have a cavalier approach to climbing
    near the summit during very windy weather.
                                
    "I think they just got a bit impatient, tried to go to the summit too
    early when conditions weren't good enough, and unfortunately they have
    paid the ultimate price.
                                
    "There are very strong winds over the top of Mount Everest at the
    moment. There is a jet stream which is stuck in place. We are just
    waiting for some weather to move it away."
                                
    A spokesman for the New Zealanders, Peter O'Connor, based at
    Queenstown, in South Island, said he thought the weather ruled out any
    plans to mount a rescue attempt. There was also concern last night for
    three Malaysians in a separate party at a camp 23,400ft up Everest's
    southern face. They were believed to be stranded by the blizzard and
    relying on oxygen cylinders.
7.1751IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:1665
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                      
    Jumbo jet's crew clung to faulty door at 21,000 ft
    
    By Michael Fleet 
                                                
    CABIN crew aboard a British Airways jumbo jet hung on to a door handle
    and lashed seatbelts around it when they feared it might fly open at
    21,000ft.
                                                
    The Boeing 747 had left Gatwick Airport for Nairobi with 306 passengers
    when staff became alarmed at the sight of the door handle spinning.
    This was followed by whistling noises from around the door frame,
    according to an Air Accidents Investigation Branch report published
    yesterday.
                                                
    Two members of the cabin crew managed to force the door latch back into
    the closed position but continued to be frightened at what might happen
    and used spare seatbelt extensions to tie the handle in place.
                                                
    The pilot jettisoned 46 tons of fuel and returned to Gatwick. The
    aircraft was taken out of service and the passengers transferred to
    another jet to make their flight.
                                                
    The report said that engineers had warned the flight crew that the door
    had been causing problems but said it would be safe. It had been
    incorrectly repaired a week before the incident last November by an
    engineer who decided not to wait to obtain the correct tool because of
    "commercial pressures".
                                                
    Problems began immediately after take-off when the door handle started
    to rotate towards the open position, the report said. The crew called
    Gatwick for advice about what to do with the door and engineers told
    them to "let go of the handle to see where it stops". The pilot refused
    to do this and turned the plane around and headed back to the London
    airport.
                                                
    Further investigations revealed that the door warning light had come on
    during flights on six days out of the seven leading up to the incident.
    Attempts to solve the problem by putting in a new latch failed because
    a bar in the door had been incorrectly drilled.
                                                
    The report revealed that engineers working on the bar did not have
    access to the best tool for the job because it was stored in a locked
    workshop. They considered calling out the workshop engineer or waiting
    until the following morning but decided to carry on without it "due to
    time constraints and the operational requirements of the aircraft".
                                                
    A spokesman for British Airways said that the door's design meant that,
    even with the faulty handle, the door could not have opened once the
    airliner was pressurised. Passengers sitting near the door were aware
    of what was going on but were reassured by the flight crew, he said.
                                                
    The spokesman added: "Safety will never be compromised. At no time were
    any of the passengers or crew in danger as a result of the problem with
    one of the doors. The design of the door prevents it from opening in
    flight when the aircraft is pressurised. Although the report does not
    identify a safety issue we have been working closely with the
    authorities to make sure a similar incident does not happen again.
                                                
    "Safety is paramount but you will find a degree of operational pressure
    within any organisation. We take great care at British Airways to make
    sure this does not impinge adversely on the engineers' work or on the
    overall safety of the operation. We have put measures in place to make
    sure a similar thing does not happen again."
7.1752IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:1934
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
    
    Stalker gets life for sex attacks
                                       
    A SERIAL sex attacker who for three years stalked women on footpaths
    was jailed for life yesterday after being caught by genetic
    fingerprinting.
                              
    The judge ordered that Dylan Rodwell, 24, must serve at least 15 years
    for what he described as "a campaign of sexual offending of the utmost
    gravity". Among Rodwell's victims were a 17-year-old student and a
    63-year-old pensioner. He attacked as they walked along footpaths in
    Berkshire and Buckinghamshire.
                              
    He left police baffled after five attacks on women who were all
    strangers. Reading Crown Court heard how Rodwell's "trademark" mirrored
    every woman's nightmare, being attacked from behind in early morning,
    on secluded footpaths.
                              
    Mr Justice Alliott told Rodwell: "I cannot give you credit for pleas of
    guilty, although I do give you credit for not requiring those victims
    to come to court."
                              
    Rodwell, 24, of Slough, Berks, was given life sentences on each charge
    of rape, attempted rape and two serious sexual assaults. The jury had
    heard how the first attack happened on Jan 21, 1993, when a 44-year-old
    mother-of-two was set upon as she jogged in Braywick Nature Reserve,
    near Maidenhead, Berks. She was threatened with a knife before Rodwell
    tried to rape her.
                              
    Another victim was a 47-year-old married woman who was attacked as she
    walked her dogs on a footpath at Boveney Lock in Eton Wick, Berks, on
    Aug 8, 1994. The court was told that the victims had suffered terrible
    traumas after the attacks.
7.1753IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:2669
7.1754IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:2929
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                          
    Feud sisters take offence over a fence
    
    By Paul Stokes 
                                                
    AN attempt by council workmen to put a physical barrier between two
    sisters who have been feuding for nearly 40 years ended in failure
    yesterday for the second time.
                                                
    Ellen Thorpe, 68, and Mary Martin, 66, who live with their husbands in
    neighbouring properties in Jarrow, Tyne and Wear, fell out as children,
    speak only to trade insults and have become involved in a dispute over
    garden borders and access to their driveways.
                                                
    Mr Thorpe built a drive and gates to his home, an idea copied by Mr
    Martin in the belief that he could use his neighbours' gates for
    access. But Mr Thorpe welded his gates shut to prevent Mr Martin
    driving in and out of his garden.
                                                
    South Tyneside council offered to build a fence to divide the two
    properties, but was frustrated when Mr Martin disagreed with the
    positioning and dumped his broken-down Vauxhall Cavalier along the
    proposed line of the fence. He eventually agreed to move the car but
    yesterday the Martins and their two sons stopped the returning workmen
    entering their garden.
                                                
    Bob Finch, Jarrow's housing manager, said: "All we can do is place the
    matter back in the hands of our solicitors."
7.1755IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:3431
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                   
    Developers back down over hedge
    
    By Michael Fleet 
                                                   
    VILLAGERS have won the first round of their fight to save a
    400-year-old hedge.
                                                   
    The people of Steeple Aston, Oxon, are battling to preserve 100 yards
    of hedgerow that developers want to cut down to improve visibility on a
    new housing estate.
                                                   
    A hearing at Oxford county court was adjourned yesterday after the
    developers, Tay Homes, gave an undertaking not to touch the hedge
    pending a full hearing.
                                                   
    Steeple Aston parish council says the hedge is protected under the
    Parliamentary Enclosure Act of 1766, the same statute used recently to
    preserve a hedgerow at Flamborough, East Yorks.
                                                   
    Work on cutting down the hedge at Steeple Aston was stopped two weeks
    ago when Margaret Hodge, a local councillor, threw herself in front of
    men wielding chainsaws.
                                                   
    Yesterday she said villagers would suspend their hedgerow vigil after
    the developer's undertaking. "We feel very confident and believe we are
    well on the way to winning this fight," she added.
                                                   
    A spokesman for Tay Homes said: "We are doing our best to reach an
    agreement which is acceptable to both parties."
7.1756IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:3743
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                             
    PCBs found in breast milk
                                          
    WORRYING levels of dangerous chemicals have been found in breast milk
    and food supplements containing fish oil, according to a report to be
    released by the Department of Health this week.
                                          
    The department is expected to release the findings of a review of data
    on environmental levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which have
    been linked to birth defects, liver damage and cancer amid claims from
    the Consumers' Association that it has kept the report under wraps for
    weeks.
                                          
    Sheila McKechnie, director of the association, said that, for political
    reasons, the department had deliberately delayed making a public
    announcement until after the general election."This problem would not
    arise with an independent food agency which could make things public
    when it liked," Ms McKechnie said. "We must have more open-ness."
                                          
    The claim that it had delayed publication of the report was dismissed
    by the Department of Health last night as "a load of rubbish", But the
    department said that experts had been reviewing the scientific evidence
    surrounding PCBs which were used widely in paints, inks and as
    insulating material in electrical transformers before an international
    manufacturing ban was imposed on them in the 1980s. American research
    linked PCBs with a range of life-threatening illnesses. 
                                          
    Huge quantities of PCBs, persistent chemicals which are extremely
    difficult to eradicate, still exist. They are known to be leaking
    gradually into soil and water where they can contaminate animals and
    fish. It is believed that most people in the US and Europe are
    contaminated with measurable amounts of PCBs which are said to lower
    resistance to disease. Thousands of electrical transformers still
    contain PCBs and scientists are afraid of spillages or fires which give
    off poisonous dioxins. 
                                          
    Miss McKechnie was speaking to journalists in London as she launched
    the association's own proposals for an independent food standards
    agency to restore consumer confidence in the wake of the beef crisis
    and the E coli food poisoning outbreak in Scotland. The association's
    "blueprint for food reform" is contained in a 32-page document entitled
    Policy Report: A National Food Agency.
7.1757IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:3831
7.1758IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4035
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                   
    Two out of three police shots miss their target
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 
                                              
    POLICE chiefs have reviewed training of firearms officers after a
    report showed that two thirds of shots fired in confrontations missed
    their target.
                                              
    In a survey of 23 incidents in England and Wales where marksmen used
    weapons, 66 per cent of rounds fired were wide of the target - the
    trunk of the body.
                                              
    In one incident an officer shot a colleague in the hand. In another a
    marksman shot himself in the leg and on a third occasion a civilian was
    hit in the leg by a stray bullet. The miss rate in the close-range
    encounters at 10 metres or less - the majority of incidents - was
    around 50 per cent. A number of the rounds hit hands or arms and many
    of the close-range misses hit the ground.
                                              
    The study was compiled by Supt Colin Burrows, of the Royal Ulster
    Constabulary on behalf of the Association of Chief Police Officers. The
    association is considering the findings, which may prompt changes.
    Officers are required to record a success rate of 70 per cent or above
    in shooting exercises to be accepted into specialist firearms squads.
                                              
    In close-range incidents officers are taught "instinctive, sense of
    direction shooting techniques" and use sights at longer ranges. The
    report said: "Officers often expressed disbelief that they had missed.
    There is clearly a divergence between training and operational
    performance."
                                              
    The association said the report showed a better miss rate than the rest
    of the world, which is around 80 per cent.
7.1759IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4123
7.1760IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4382
7.1761IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4431
7.1762IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4555
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                        
    Prosecution over woman pilot's affair 'is injustice'
    
    By David Sapsted in New York 
                     
    THE Pentagon is reviewing the rules governing personal relationships in
    America's armed forces amid a public outcry over a court martial for
    adultery of the air force's first woman B-52 pilot.
                     
    Lt Kelly Flinn, 26, is accused of having an affair with a married
    civilian and, if found guilty, faces a maximum nine years' imprisonment
    for offences including adultery, disobeying an order, making a false
    statement and conduct unbecoming an officer. She is also accused of
    fraternisation after allegedly having an affair with a serviceman of a
    lower rank - which is an offence in the air force but not in the army.
                     
    The outcry over the prosecution of Lt Flinn and the differing rules
    governing relationships in the various branches of the armed forces has
    forced the Pentagon to review the codes of conduct in all five branches
    of the armed forces: the army, air force, navy, marines and coastguard.
    A Pentagon spokesman said it had decided to act after a rash of
    high-profile cases - including one in which another woman air force
    officer faces a maximum 55 years in prison for having a baby out of
    wedlock - and partly because of a recognition of changing times.
                     
    The percentage of women in the armed forces has increased in the past
    25 years from less than two per cent to 13 per cent and could top 20
    per cent in the next few years. The current rules are not considered to
    reflect this. But the USAF appears determined to proceed with the
    prosecution of Lt Flinn. A spokesman at the bomber base in Minot, North
    Dakota, where the woman pilot is now restricted to a desk job, said:
    "This is a serious misconduct case. How can you lead people into war if
    you don't uphold those standards?"
                     
    The pilot is accused of carrying on her affair with the married soccer
    coach, who had promised her marriage, despite orders that she should
    not. "I just made a mistake," she said. "He told me that I was the love
    of his life, that I was something special, something that only comes
    along once in a lifetime."
                     
    Only two years ago, Lt Flinn featured in an air force promotional film
    when she became the first woman to pilot a B-52 nuclear bomber. She was
    praised as a possible future squadron commander and shuttle astronaut.
                     
    Senator Slade Gorton, a Washington Republican and a former USAF judge
    advocate general, has written to Sheila Widnall, Secretary of the Air
    Force, asking for the charges to be dismissed. "I'm very pro-military,"
    he said, "but a supportive command structure would have treated this
    quite differently. This is an injustice to her and a black eye for the
    air force."
                     
    The USAF has the strictest code covering personal relationships and
    enforces it vigorously. Last year, it prosecuted 67 servicemen on
    adultery charges.
7.1763IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4730
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                
    Error 'caused air collision'
                                                                    
    KAZAKH pilots have been blamed for the mid-air collision near New Delhi
    last year that killed 349 passengers.
                                                                    
    Indian air traffic controllers said "undisciplined pilots" allowed the
    Kazakhstan Ilyushin-76 aircraft to descend below the assigned altitude,
    causing the crash with a Saudi Boeing 747.
                                                                    
    The Airport Authority of India, replying to accusations that its
    personnel were responsible, said that the pilots had flouted
    instructions. Commodore A K Sarma told a court: "It is the reckless
    disregard of the assigned flight level by the pilot of the Kazakh
    aircraft that led to the collision."
                                                                    
    India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation will report its findings
    on the Nov 12 crash - the world's worst. Boeing, based in the United
    States, has been asked to file replies to help the judge complete his
    inquiry.
                                                                    
    The Saudis accused air traffic controllers of not following procedures,
    saying the 1,000ft separation ordered between the aircraft was their
    decision. Delhi uses a single air corridor, relying on different
    altitudes to prevent collisions.
                                                                    
    Saudi lawyers have said that in the last moments before the collision,
    there was "utter confusion" in the Kazakh cockpit. Aviation experts say
    evidence now with the judge points to a blunder by the Kazakhs. 
7.1764IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:4839
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                          
    Girl knifed on holiday
    
    By Sean O'Neill 
                    
    A 17-year-old student has become the third British tourist to be
    stabbed while on holiday in the South Cyprus resort of Paphos.
                    
    Kelly White, from Edinburgh, was walking along the seafront with her
    boyfriend, Derek Hooker, 21, when a man slashed at her short dress,
    cutting her buttocks.
                    
    "We were standing by a shop window when I felt a sharp sensation," she
    said. "I saw a man running away and, when I used my hand to check my
    dress, it was covered in blood. I screamed because I realised I had
    been stabbed. I was in agony and shock."
                    
    Miss White said the police did not take her complaint seriously and
    that her holiday company representative had told her to wear jeans
    rather than a short skirt when going out.
                    
    "All I wanted was to go home but Airtours said my wound was not serious
    enough for me to be flown home. I was too terrified to leave Derek's
    side for the rest of the holiday," she said.
                    
    Linda Lahiff, 33, from Glasgow, and Ellen Brooks, 45, from Bexleyheath,
    Kent, recently reported similar assaults while in Paphos. Mrs Lahiff
    said she thought she had been followed before the attack which happened
    in the harbour area of the resort.
                    
    A spokesman for the Cypriot High Commission in London said that a man
    in his 20s had been arrested.
                    
    A spokesman for Airtours said: "Tourists travelling to foreign
    countries should be aware of different cultures and religions and
    should respect those dress codes. But in a holiday resort like Paphos
    tourists should be able to wear light summery clothes without worrying
    about security."
7.1765IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:5058
7.1766IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:53113
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                               
    Has Deep Blue made the final move in chess?
    
    By Robert Uhlig and Malcolm Pein in New York 
                                                                   
    ALTHOUGH Garry Kasparov attributed human qualities to his mechanical
    nemesis, computer experts stressed yesterday that Deep Blue's victory
    did not indicate artificial intelligence had overtaken mankind.
                                                   
    Kasparov's crusade to stave off silicon hegemony in chess has ended but
    the question remains: how strong is Deep Blue? Speaking exclusively to
    The Telegraph, Grandmaster Joel Benjamin, Deep Blue's chess consultant,
    assessed its strength at 2700 ELO, which puts it comfortably in the
    world's top 10, but well behind the champion.
                                                   
    Grandmaster Ilya Gurevich said the computer's calculating abilities may
    eventually take the mystery out of chess, by being able to anticipate
    the exponentially branching consequences generated by each move. "Bobby
    Fischer once said chess is getting to be solvable," Gurevich said.
    "This computer event could eventually bring the whole thing to a
    solution. It may eventually mean the end of the game."
                                                   
    Artificial intelligence experts said that Deep Blue's win was a
    milestone, but added it did not indicate the computer had been imbued
    with human qualities. Compared with solving everyday dilemmas, or the
    skills of a doctor, chess is a very simple problem. It is ideal for
    computers because the game involves a specific number of physical
    objects governed by clearly defined rules.
                                                   
    "I'm not surprised Deep Blue won - it was bound to happen sometime,"
    said Dr Lyndon Clarke at the Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre, home
    of some of the most powerful computers in Europe. "It was inevitable
    that one day human beings would not have a chance. A computer can work
    out so many moves ahead compared to humans."
                                                   
    Grandmasters are said to be able to envisage around four moves ahead,
    beyond which they look for configurations of pieces. By analysing up to
    400 million potential moves every second, Deep Blue is capable of
    planning around 14 moves ahead, but this does not mean artificial
    intelligence is catching up with humans, Dr Clarke said.
                                                   
    "Deep Blue isn't smart in the way a human is smart. It is just able to
    look at a lot of positions and see what they are worth a lot faster
    than Kasparov can.
                                                   
    "It would be interesting to see if Deep Blue could come up with a new
    chess opening and have it named after it, in the way that Kasparov has.
    Deep Blue just plays chess - you cannot ask it to do anything else. It
    won't adapt to other problems. That's a sign of intelligence," he said.
                                                   
    Through brute calculating force, computers can sometimes identify
    patterns or correlations that would be attributed to intelligence or a
    leap of thinking in humans, but this does not amount to artificial
    intelligence. More importantly for a game such as chess, scientists
    have little understanding of how characteristics such as guile,
    sneakiness and intuition develop in humans, so there is no hope of
    transferring them to a machine.
                                                   
    C J Tan, the director of the IBM research team, said that in the 14
    months since the last match they had given Deep Blue extra power and
    more chess knowledge. But he stressed his creation could not be
    credited with intelligence: "Humans are creative, they are
    psychological beings. Machines are just a tool to extend our
    capabilities," he said.
                                                   
    Like any computer, Deep Blue is at best as clever as the people who
    programmed its software. When Kasparov met Deep Blue's predecessor in
    Philadelphia last year, he lost the first match, but adapted quickly
    and won the series 2-1 in style by using a tactic to slowly restrict
    the moves of the computer's chess pieces.
                                                   
    For the rematch in New York, IBM had enlisted a team of five chess and
    computer experts, including three grandmasters led by Joel Benjamin, to
    imbue the machine with what appeared to the outwitted Kasparov as human
    intuition.
                                                   
    The speed at which Deep Blue can calculate and the memory at its
    disposable were doubled, but experts said the deciding factor had been
    the human input. Grandmasters John Federowicz and Nick Firmian have
    spent the last six weeks in Yorktown Heights, New York, headquarters of
    IBM's research centre where Deep Blue was created.
                                                   
    The team played Deep Blue "a few times a day to test out different
    things", but could not explain why the machine occasionally took quirky
    turns in its play - a characteristic that the 34-year-old Russian world
    champion attributed to the computer taking on "human qualities".
                                                   
    After the third straight draw, Kasparov demanded that a printout of the
    computer's logic during the game be sealed, saying that its moves
    seemed "very human". He said: "I'm not afraid to admit that I'm afraid.
    It definitely goes beyond any chess computer in the world."
                                                   
    When Kasparov collapsed in the final game, under psychological stress,
    he said he was "ashamed" but contested that the match was unfair as he
    was not allowed access to records of the computer's pre-match games.
                                                   
    International Master David Levy, a leading authority on computer chess
    said: "The most notable thing about this match has been Deep Blue
    playing at a far higher level than expected."
                                                   
    Kasparov has vowed to take the computer on again, but he would demand
    more openness by Deep Blue and its team. "Eventually the machine will
    prevail," he conceded after losing the match. "But I wouldn't take
    today as the day of doom.
                                                   
    "This machine is vulnerable and I have no doubt that it will be beaten.
    I'm a human being, I proved vulnerable. I was not in the fighting
    mood."
                                                   
    The one advantage players say that Deep Blue has over any human is that
    it does not suffer from stress and faces each game fearlessly, with
    equal enthusiasm undaunted by previous results.
7.1767IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 16:5442
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                      
    Sorcerer 'killed 42 women to boost magical powers'
    
    By Richard Savill, South-East Asia Correspondent 
                                                              
    INDONESIAN police have discovered the remains of 19 women allegedly
    killed by a man claiming to be a sorcerer.
                                                              
    Nasib Kelewang, also known as Amat Saruji or Datuk Maringgi, is said to
    have confessed to killing 42 women since 1986 as part of a ritual to
    attain strong black magic powers. The remains of his victims, all of
    whom were strangled, were discovered in a sugar cane field near the
    sorcerer's home in the village of Sei Semayang in North Sumatra. A
    search was continuing last night for more bodies.
                                                              
    Kelewang has allegedly told police he had to kill the women and drink
    their saliva to boost his magical powers. He was arrested two weeks ago
    after a woman's body was found buried in the field. The woman was last
    seen by a friend at Kelewang's home. A police search near the house
    yielded two more bodies and a cache of 25 women's watches, bags and
    clothes.
                                                              
    Neighbours said that women often sought the sorcerer's help in the
    belief that they would make themselves richer, healthier and more
    sexually attractive. Police believe the victims may have been too
    embarrassed to tell their families and so their disappearances were not
    linked to Kelewang.
                                                              
    Two of Kelewang's three wives, all sisters, were also being questioned
    over the murders. The first, his eldest wife, is believed to have
    escorted several victims to the field at night. The second wife is
    believed to have helped seek potential clients for her husband.
                                                              
    The sorcerer was said to be widely respected in his village. Neighbours
    said he was often willing to help sick villagers at no cost, to
    contribute to charitable causes, and to help the village safeguard its
    livestock.
                                                              
    Sorcery is widespread in Indonesia. Even President Suharto is reported
    to consult a sorcerer regularly. But despite the murders, sorcerers in
    Jakarta's shopping malls said business was brisk as usual.
7.1768IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 17:0078
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                     
    Catholic pilgrims flock to Fatima
    
    By Robert Fox, and Kenneth Pottinger in Lisbon 
                                                                
    PILGRIMS have been gathering since the weekend at Fatima, in Portugal,
    where 80 years ago three shepherd children said they saw the Virgin
    Mary. 
                                                                
    The reported revelations of the Virgin at Fatima have made it one of
    the most celebrated places of pilgrimage for Roman Catholics. According
    to the children - Francisco Martos, his sister Jacinta and their cousin
    Lucia - the Virgin appeared on the 13th of each month until October
    1917. In that time, she is said to have made three prophecies, only two
    of which have been made public. The third, believed to be an
    apocalyptic vision of the fate of the Church and the end of the world,
    has been imparted only to popes.
                                                                
    "The pilgrims have been coming since last week, some crawling to the
    shrine on their hands and knees," said Sergio Peireira, 28, at the
    Hotel Fatima, one of the main pilgrim hostels. "The shrine itself can
    receive only 300,000 and there are now many more. We expect up to
    half-a-million in the candlit procession, which will go on all night. I
    think it is faith, just faith in Our Lady, that brings the pilgrims.
    Many, of course, hope to be cured of their diseases."
                                                                
    The roads to the shrine have been jammed with people arriving from all
    over Portugal. Some have complained of being accosted by beggars.
    Isabel Marques who set out by foot from the capital, Lisbon, said:
    "It's a national disgrace, the number of beggars who turn out to
    exploit the faith of the pilgrims. We came across people spaced out
    every 500 metres with their hands out."
                                                                
    The reported visions at Fatima came at a moment of crisis for Europe in
    the First World War. The armies in France had mutinied the month before
    and the Russian armies collapsed and sued for peace. The first
    revelation made to the three children concerned the coming Russian
    Revolution. The second, given later in the summer, was a prophecy of
    the Second World War and the return of the Russian people to the
    Christian faith.
                                                                
    One of the children, Lucia, is still alive. Now 90, she is a Carmelite
    nun at the Sardao Convent in Portugal. Her two cousins died from
    influenza within a year of the revelations, their early deaths
    apparently forecast in the prophecies.
                                                                
    Under intense pressure from the Bishop of Leiria, the young Lucia dos
    Santos was sent away from the village in 1921 and took holy vows to
    become a nun in 1926. Since then, she has been seen as the guardian of
    the revelations of Fatima. In 1957, she wrote down the third and most
    apocalyptic prophecy and handed it in a sealed envelope to Pope Pius
    XII. From that day, the prophecy has been made known only to popes.
                                                                
    For years, the third prophecy has been the subject of debate among
    serious theological scholars and astrological cranks alike. Most
    speculation suggests that the prophecy is a vision of upheaval in the
    Roman Catholic Church and a global crisis in the year 2000.
                                                                
    On October 13, 1917, the children gathered with a crowd of more than
    50,000 for what was to be the last time they believed that the Virgin
    spoke to them. "The rain stopped and the sun came out," one of those
    present said. "At first it seemed to start spinning and then it began
    to plunge crazily toward the earth. The crowd was terrified. After a
    moment, the sun returned to its position and twice repeated the same
    movement."
                                                                
    Despite the controversy that raged across Portugal in 1917, several
    people have claimed to the Portuguese press this weekend that they
    believed in the visions from the first. Antonio dos Santos Antunes, now
    100, told his local paper that he never had any doubts. "At first, no
    one believed; they thought it was something else," he said. "But I
    thought this is something from heaven. I didn't see Our Lady herself
    but I heard conversation between her and the shepherds." 
                                                                
    A Mass at noon today, the highlight of the celebrations, will be
    celebrated by the Bishop of Leiria and Cardinal Meissener, the
    Archbishop of Cologne and the Pope's special representative.
7.1769IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 13 1997 17:0240
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                      
    The sweet smell of success for dieting chocaholics
    
    By Robert Uhlig, Technology Correspondent 
                                
    SALVATION may be on the horizon for overweight chocaholics thanks to
    stick-on aroma patches, claimed to help people to resist sweet foods.
                                
    The Diet Scent Plasters are the brainchild of Liz Paul, a food
    specialist and chocaholic who found that certain smells put her off
    biscuits, cake and especially chocolate. The plasters, unlike nicotine
    patches, do not work by chemicals passing through the skin. They are
    said to use the new, and unproven, science of aromacology. The patches
    are impregnated with the smell of a tropical orchid, described as
    reminiscent of plasticine. This odour suppresses cravings for sweet
    foods, in particular chocolate.
                                
    Dr Alan Hirsch, a neurologist at the Smell and Taste Treatment and
    Research Foundation in Chicago, has found that overweight people were
    put off food if they smelt a variety of chemicals when they felt
    hungry. In a six-month trial on 3,193 people who were all at least
    100lb overweight, more than half lost about 5lb per month. "It appears
    possible that certain aromas can induce sustained weight loss over a
    six-month period," Dr Hirsch said. "When we are hungry, foods smell
    better and therefore taste better. Conversely, we have found that when
    people encounter certain smells, they do not want to eat as much. If
    you smell food for long enough, your body thinks it has eaten and you
    lose your appetite."
                                
    In a two-week test by Reading Scientific Services on 49 women who
    considered themselves at least a stone overweight, the Diet Scent
    slimming patches promoted an average weight loss equivalent to 1.6lb
    per person.
                                
    Dr Hirsch said he did not know quite why certain odours put people off
    food. "Maybe it is the mere act of being told to smell something that
    reminds people that they are watching their weight," he said. "You
    could get the same result by keeping a diary of what you eat to remind
    you that you are on a diet."
7.1770IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:22106
    AP 14-May-1997 1:02 EDT   REF5794

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, May 14, 1997
   
    DU PONT SENTENCING 

    MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -- Multimillionaire chemical heir John E. du Pont has
    apologized to the family of the man he was convicted of killing, saying
    "I've fully concluded on January 25, 1996, I was ill, and I wish to
    apologize to Nancy Schultz and her children. I'm very sorry for what
    happened." Du Pont was sentenced to 13 to 30 years in state custody on
    Tuesday for the murder of Olympic wrestler David Schultz. The state
    must now decide whether he will serve that at a mental hospital or in
    prison. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- White House and congressional bargainers have almost
    completed the budget-balancing deal announced 12 days ago, but say some
    differences remain. "We are very hopeful we can conclude an agreement
    very shortly," said White House budget chief Franklin Raines. Budget
    Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M. and House Budget Committee
    Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, said they believed their panels would
    begin voting Thursday on aspects of the plan. The deal is aimed at
    eliminating deficits by 2002, a first since 1969, while cutting taxes. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- The key to the Ryder truck used to bomb the Oklahoma
    City federal building was found in a alley near where Timothy McVeigh
    allegedly parked his getaway car, an FBI photographer testified. The
    key was introduced to bolster the testimony of star prosecution witness
    Michael Fortier, who said he was with McVeigh when the defendant cased
    the federal building and decided to park his car a block away in an
    alley behind a YMCA building. The key was found in that same alley. 
   
    OXYGEN CANISTERS 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Seven oxygen generators, banned as cargo on
    passenger planes since a ValuJet DC-9 crash, were found in the cargo of
    a recent Continental Airlines flight, the Federal Aviation
    Administration says. The generators, which were secured by safety caps,
    were in a cargo shipment of airline parts discovered by Continental
    workers 10 days after the passenger flight to Houston from Los Angeles.
    The canisters were not listed as part of the shipment, an FAA spokesman
    said. 
   
    AIDS VACCINE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Despite extensive understanding of AIDS, the
    co-discoverer of the virus that causes the condition says it is
    possible medical science will never find a protective vaccine. "We have
    to be realistic," said Dr. Robert Gallo. Drugs have been found that
    appear to suppress the HIV virus, but researchers still don't know how
    to make a vaccine that will keep people from getting infected after
    being exposed, he said. Some in the World Bank are investigating
    controlling AIDS with new drugs that suppress the virus to an
    undetectable level, he said. 
   
    JAPAN-U.S. MILITARY 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Opponents of U.S. military bases on Okinawa have begun
    three days of protests leading up to the 25th anniversary of the
    island's return to Japanese rule. Police said about 100 demonstrators
    left the state capital of Naha and a hundred more left the nearby city
    of Nago for separate marches through World War II battlegrounds and
    towns hosting U.S. bases. Protest organizers told police they expect
    thousands of Okinawans to join the marches before the protest
    culminates Thursday with a rally at the U.S. Marine Corp's Futenma Air
    Station in the city of Ginowan. 
   
    SERIAL RAPE-SUSPECT 

    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- A comedian from Los Angeles suspected in a series
    of rapes at college campuses across the Midwest has been arrested at
    Newark Airport, police say. Vinson H. Champ was arrested as he got off
    a flight from Bermuda. A warrant issued Tuesday charges Champ with
    first-degree sexual assault in a March 5 rape at the University of
    Nebraska at Omaha. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar slipped 0.74 yen to 118.50 in early trading.
    The Nikkei gained 14.10 points to 20,143.21. In New York the Dow bobbed
    above 7,300 for the first time but ended the day at 7,274.21, down
    18.54. 
   
    SUPERSONICS-ROCKETS 

    HOUSTON (AP) -- The Seattle SuperSonics beat the Houston Rockets 100-94
    Tuesday night as they seek to become the sixth team in NBA history to
    successfully come back from a 3-1 deficit. The Rockets shot just
    5-for-27 on 3-pointers and missed an opportunity to close out the
    series. Houston leads the series 3-2 and could wrap it up Thursday
    night at Seattle. 
   
    HAWKS-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- Dennis Rodman had 12 points and nine rebounds before
    being ejected Tuesday night as the defending NBA champion Chicago Bulls
    won 107-92 to eliminate the Atlanta Hawks in five games. The Bulls face
    either New York or Miami in the Eastern Conference finals. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1771IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2292
    RTw  14-May-97 04:08    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    KINSHASA - Zaire's President Mobutu Sese Seko and rebel leader Laurent
    Kabila meet on a ship off Congo on Wednesday with hosts South Africa
    optimistic they can avert a bloody battle for the capital Kinshasa. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov and NATO Secretary
    General Javier Solana are due on Wednesday to continue tense talks on
    future relations between Moscow and the Western alliance. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy will visit Washington
    at the end of the week for talks with U.S. officials, the State
    Department said on Tuesday. 

    - - - - 

    BRASILIA - Inmates seized 20 guards at two prisons in southern Brazil
    on Tuesday and threatened to kill hostages at one facility if police
    tried to raid it, authorities said. 

    - - - - 

    TEHRAN - International aid to survivors of a deadly earthquake which
    left 50,000 people homeless in eastern Iran trickled in as Tehran said
    rescue work had ended and announced plans to start rebuilding
    quake-stricken villages. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - The future of Prime Minister Alain Juppe has jumped to the
    forefront of France's election campaign amid mounting suggestions that
    he should go even if he leads the conservatives to victory. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Round two in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's
    bout with corruption allegations begins on Wednesday with opposition
    legislators asking judges to order his indictment. 

    - - - - 

    BRASILIA - Brazil was rocked by a fresh corruption scandal on Tuesday
    when a newspaper alleged five congressmen took bribes to vote in favour
    of a bill allowing President Fernando Henrique Cardoso to stand for
    re-election. 

    - - - - 

    LIMA - Peru's anti-terrorist police say Palestine Liberation
    Organisation (PLO) members have arrived in Peru to attack Jewish and
    U.S. targets this month, according to a document Reuters obtained on
    Tuesday. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - An apparent suicide blew himself up with a homemade bomb in a
    Beijing park just metres (yards) from the heart of China's government,
    and five people have died in a blast on a bus in south China, officials
    said on Wednesday. 

    - - - - 

    UNITED NATIONS - American U.N. envoy Bill Richardson said on Tuesday
    Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had been on a "joy ride" aimed at defying
    U.N. sanctions and the issue would be taken up by the Security
    Council's sanctions committee. 

    - - - - 

    MEDIA, Pa. - Chemicals heir John du Pont was sentenced on Tuesday to a
    term of 13 to 30 years in prison or in a mental health treatment
    facility for the January 1996 killing of Olympic champion wrestler
    David Schultz. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain's Queen Elizabeth will take her place amid the
    splendour of the House of Lords upper house of parliament on Wednesday
    to announce what the new Labour government plans to achieve over the
    next 17 months. 

    - - - - 

    REUTER
7.1772IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2253
    AP 14-May-1997 0:16 EDT   REF5448

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Death Sentence for Cop Shooting

    By MELANIE BURNEY

    Associated Press Writer

    CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) -- A transsexual was sentenced to death Tuesday for
    killing a police officer who had responded to the shooting of two other
    law enforcement officers in the defendant's house in 1995. 

    The jury said Leslie Ann Nelson deserved to die for fatally shooting
    Haddon Heights Patrolman John Norcross when he responded to the
    shootings in April 1995. 

    The sentence makes Nelson the only woman on New Jersey's death row. 

    The jury spared Nelson from a second death sentence in the killing of
    prosecutor's investigator John McLaughlin, who had gone to her home
    with a warrant to search for weapons. In that death, Nelson faces life
    in prison with parole eligibility after 30 years. 

    A third officer, Detective Richard Norcross, the slain patrolman's
    older brother, was wounded five times in the attack. 

    "We're so thankful ... we did get a death verdict," said McLaughlin's
    wife, Kim, their two daughters at her side. 

    Nelson, 39, was not in court when the verdict was announced but she
    pleaded for her life in court on Monday, saying she was prepared to
    spend her life in prison. 

    Defense lawyer James H. Klein said he would appeal. "Naturally we're
    very disappointed by the verdict," he said. 

    The defense contended Nelson was mentally and emotionally disturbed at
    the time of the shootings and suffered from a sexual identity crisis. 

    Klein said his client -- formerly Glenn Nelson -- was depressed and
    suicidal after undergoing a sex change in 1992, and was upset about her
    failed career as a go-go dancer. 

    The prosecution argued that she was aware of her actions and intended
    to kill the officers. 

    After the shootings, Nelson remained barricaded inside with a cache of
    weapons for 14 hours as police pumped tear gas into the house. She
    emerged wearing a bulletproof vest and gas mask. 

    There are currently 12 men under death sentence in New Jersey. 
7.1773IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2246
    AP 14-May-1997 0:04 EDT   REF5434

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Hostage Standoff on N.J. Bus Ends

    By MELANIE BURNEY

    Associated Press Writer

    CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) -- The last 16 passengers had just gotten off a New
    Jersey Transit bus Tuesday afternoon when a robbery suspect with a gun
    climbed on board and took the driver hostage. 

    Nearly four hours later, the two emerged, but authorities couldn't tell
    the gunman from the driver because they had switched shirts. 

    The two talked to an officer for about 15 minutes when the driver
    suddenly got hold of the gun, tossed it to another officer and the
    suspect was taken into custody. 

    "He kept his head. He handled it extremely well. He did an outstanding
    job," NJ Transit Police Chief Mary Rabadeau said of the driver, Samuel
    Harvey, 52, of Camden. 

    Dwayne Thomas had agreed to surrender about two hours earlier, but the
    doors would not open because officers had disabled the bus by tearing
    wires out of the engine. 

    Police couldn't find the emergency switch, so a transit mechanic had to
    crawl underneath wearing a bulletproof vest and helmet to open the
    doors, transit spokesman Steve Coleman said. 

    Thomas, 34, of Camden, was charged with aggravated assault on a police
    officer, attempted robbery and weapons offenses. 

    He got on the bus while being chased by police after an attempted
    robbery at a nearby variety store, and fired shots from a semiautomatic
    handgun before boarding the bus, authorities said. 

    Nearby buildings were evacuated, and police closed off several downtown
    blocks as they surrounded the bus. They disabled it so it wouldn't
    become "a moving hostage situation," Coleman said. 

    Thomas also is suspected in three armed robberies earlier this month in
    the area, authorities said. 
7.1774IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2235
    AP 13-May-1997 23:18 EDT   REF5402

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Governor's Fraud Trial Picks Jurors

    PHOENIX (AP) -- Prospective jurors in Gov. Fife Symington's fraud trial
    were asked Tuesday about their views on bankruptcy, labor unions and
    whether the justice system favors the wealthy and powerful. 

    Symington, a two-term Republican, took notes and paged through
    documents at the defense table as his trial got under way, six years
    after federal investigators began scrutinizing his finances as a
    developer. 

    U.S. District Judge Roger Strand, Symington's chief attorney, John
    Dowd, and lead prosecutor David Schindler questioned 18 members of the
    139-member jury pool during the first day of jury selection. 

    Two prospective jurors were dismissed, one a woman who said she thought
    Symington should have resigned or been recalled after he was indicted
    and the other a woman who appeared not to understand the jury
    questionnaire. 

    Everyone questioned said they had formed no opinion as to Symington's
    guilt or innocence on 22 counts of bank fraud, attempted extortion and
    perjury. 

    Questions about bankruptcy, unions and whether the wealthy and powerful
    get a better shake from the justice system were pertinent because
    Symington filed bankruptcy in 1995, listing $25 million in debts. 

    Symington still owes $12 million to a consortium of union pension funds
    that loaned him money to build the failed Mercado office and retail
    center in downtown Phoenix. 
7.1775IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2275
    AP 13-May-1997 23:16 EDT   REF5398

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Du Pont Gets 13-to-30-Year Sentence

    By MARIA PANARITIS

    Associated Press Writer

    MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -- Chemical heir John E. du Pont was sentenced to 13 to
    30 years in state custody on Tuesday for the murder of Olympic wrestler
    David Schultz at his estate. 

    The state must now decide whether the multimillionaire will serve that
    sentence at a mental hospital or in prison. 

    Delaware County Common Pleas Judge Patricia Jenkins cited the
    extraordinary impact that Schultz's death had on his family and others
    in the world of competitive wrestling. She also said she took du Pont's
    mental condition -- he's been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenia --
    into account. 

    "As long as he lives, his mental illness can never again be ignored,"
    Jenkins said. 

    At the end of the hearing, du Pont, 58, faced the judge and apologized
    to Schultz's family. It was his first statement in court. 

    "I've fully concluded on January 25, 1996, I was Ill, and I wish to
    apologize to Nancy Schultz and her children. I'm very sorry for what
    happened," he said, speaking clearly but dispassionately in the hushed
    courtroom. 

    "I wish to apologize to my friends, family and athletes for any
    disappointment I may have caused to them," du Pont said, and sat down. 

    Du Pont killed Schultz, 36, as the 1984 Olympic gold medalist was
    tinkering with his car in the driveway of his home on the edge of du
    Pont's estate and wrestling center. 

    Du Pont locked himself inside his mansion for two days after the
    shooting, negotiating with police on the telephone. He was captured
    when he walked outside to fix his heater. He was found guilty of
    third-degree murder but deemed mentally ill. 

    Du Pont has been in prison and in a state hospital for nearly 1 1/2
    years. Even deducting that time from his sentence, he still will not be
    freed until after he turns 70. 

    In closing arguments Tuesday, Assistant District Attorney Dennis
    McAndrews asked Jenkins to impose the maximum sentence of 40 years,
    calling du Pont "an extremely dangerous mix of wealth, perception of
    power, self-centeredness, desire and grasping." 

    Schultz's relatives also asked for the maximum punishment. His mother,
    Jeanne St. Germain, said she believes du Pont will always pose a
    threat. 

    "Because of who he is, John du Pont believes he can do whatever he
    wants," she said. 

    Du Pont's lawyer, Thomas A. Bergstrom, implored the judge to consider
    du Pont's contributions to society over the years, including
    sponsorship of world-class wrestling team, Team Foxcatcher. Schultz was
    training with the team for a comeback at the time of his death. 

    Five psychiatrists who testified at the daylong sentencing hearing all
    agreed that du Pont is in partial remission from the severe illness
    that made him believe that he was the Dalai Lama and that ghosts
    haunted his sprawling estate. 

    They testified that du Pont has shown signs of improvement after eight
    months of treatment, and that he no longer poses a threat to himself or
    others. 
7.1776IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2263
    AP 13-May-1997 23:14 EDT   REF5395

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Comedian Arrested in Campus Rapes

    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- A comedian suspected in a series of rapes at
    college campuses across the Midwest was arrested Tuesday at the airport
    here as he got off a flight from the Caribbean, where he had been
    booked on a cruise. 

    Hours earlier, police in Omaha, Neb., released an arrest warrant
    charging Vinson Horace Champ with first-degree sexual assault in the
    March 5 rape of a teacher at a computer lab at the University of
    Nebraska at Omaha. 

    Champ began a month-long engagement on the cruise ship on Sunday or
    Monday, but left the ship after a day or two, said police in Lincoln,
    Neb. 

    They alerted police at Newark International Airport that Champ would be
    arriving on a Continental Airlines flight from Bermuda in the
    afternoon, said Terry Benczik, a spokeswomen for the Port Authority,
    which operates the airport. 

    Champ was jailed after his arrest and is awaiting extradition back to
    Nebraska, Benczik said. 

    The victim in the Omaha attack, 30-year-old business teacher Heidi
    Hess, said it was "sickly ironic" that a comedian had been charged in
    the crime. 

    "A comedian is suppose to be funny and make people laugh and this
    wasn't funny," said Hess, who has spoken out about the case and wants
    to be identified by name. 

    Hours before the attack, Champ, 35, performed his routine at a small
    college four hours from Omaha. 

    Champ told the Lincoln Journal Star on Saturday that he was "101
    percent innocent." He has not returned messages left by The Associated
    Press on his answering machine this week. 

    Four rapes and two attempted rapes occurred in February and March on
    small college campuses in Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois and Wisconsin. 

    The similarities of the attacks prompted officials last month to
    suspect a serial rapist was responsible. In each of the rapes, the
    attacker spit on his victims, quizzed them about their sex lives and
    asked them to pray for him. 

    Champ came under scrutiny in the Midwest attacks after he was arrested
    last week and charged with the attempted rape of a student at Pasadena
    City College in California. Police said he attacked a woman playing a
    piano and fled after she screamed. 

    Champ was released after posting a $7,500 bond. He is scheduled to
    appear in court June 10. 

    The other attacks took place at Union College in Lincoln, Knox College
    in Galesburg, Ill., Carthage College in Kenosha, Wis., St. Ambrose
    University in Davenport, Iowa, and Augustana College in Rock Island,
    Ill. 
7.1777IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2294
    AP 13-May-1997 22:04 EDT   REF5305

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Danish Parents Get in Trouble in NY

    By BETH J. HARPAZ

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A Danish mother who left her child in a stroller
    outside a restaurant quickly learned how New York reacts to such a lack
    of street smarts: jail for her and the father, foster care for the
    youngster. 

    The case has become something of an international incident and shocked
    people on both sides of the Atlantic. 

    In Denmark, parents leave children unattended while they shop or dine.
    But that's unheard of in New York, where people chain up outdoor
    garbage cans and flower pots to prevent theft. 

    "I wouldn't leave a dog outside a restaurant in New York," said Leah
    Wells as she played with her 20-month-old son in a playground near the
    Dallas BBQ cafe, where the incident began Saturday. 

    Annette Sorensen, an actress visiting New York for a month, left her
    14-month-old daughter, Liv, in a stroller on the sidewalk next to the
    restaurant's plate-glass window, amid outdoor tables and chairs. 

    She went inside with the baby's father, Exavier Wardlaw, a movie
    production assistant who lives in New York, and sat three tables from
    the window, 6 feet away. 

    Waiters and customers suggested she bring the baby and stroller inside.
    "But she said the baby was fine," said waiter Peter Plano. 

    Then a customer called 911. Officers charged both parents with
    endangering the welfare of a child. The father was also charged with
    disorderly conduct. The couple spent three days in jail. 

    Late Tuesday, a family court judge ordered that the child, which had
    been placed in foster care, returned to her parents on Wednesday at 5
    p.m., said Maggie Lear, a spokeswoman for the Administration for
    Children's Services. 

    The case is due back in criminal court on Monday and in family court on
    Wednesday. 

    Mayor Rudolph Giuliani told reporters that police intervened because
    "patrons in the restaurant were complaining that the baby was left
    alone, that the baby was crying and the baby was being neglected. 

    "I think we did the right thing," the mayor said. "If they acted out of
    an excess of caution, so be it." 

    Sorensen refused interviews. 

    "We're trying to help her obtain legal counsel and find out what this
    case is really about," said Danish Consulate spokesman Kim
    Christiansen. He said a Dane would find it strange that "you could
    actually be charged here with leaving your child outside a place very
    near where you could see what was going on." 

    Indeed, parents in Denmark were astonished. 

    "Maybe it has something to do with the fact that Denmark is a safer
    place to live in than New York," said Tue Hoejbjerg, who left his son
    on a Copenhagen sidewalk for a few minutes as he ate in a fast-food
    restaurant. 

    Wardlaw's lawyer, David Kirsch, said the parents "had no idea that
    there was anything wrong with what they were doing. ... They were on
    one side of a glass partition, and on the other side was the child." 

    Kirsch alleged that officers beat Wardlaw at the police station and
    tried to stuff his head in a toilet. He said a brutality complaint will
    be filed once custody of the baby is resolved. 

    Police Deputy Inspector Michael Collins said officers reported that
    Wardlaw had been "belligerent, abusive and loud" to officers, calling
    them "pigs." 

    Police arrested the parents after witnesses said the baby was left
    outside for an hour. 

    Wardlaw did not return a call for comment. 

    Clare Walker, a London native who lives in Manhattan, said she wouldn't
    leave her 11-month-old unattended in England or New York. 

    "I'm too scared," she said while standing a few blocks from the Dallas
    BBQ cafe. But she also said police had gone too far: "They could just
    say, 'You shouldn't do that."' 
7.1778IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2257
    AP 13-May-1997 19:20 EDT   REF5028

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Airlines Fight Domestic Partner Law

    By RICHARD COLE

    Associated Press Writer

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The nation's major airlines sued Tuesday to block
    a city ordinance requiring them to offer health benefits to their
    employees' domestic partners. 

    The lawsuit filed by the Air Transport Association says the city has no
    right to regulate air carriers. It seeks an injunction barring
    enforcement of the ordinance, which goes into effect June 1. 

    "Airlines have always been governed by federal, not local, laws because
    it would be impossible to operate in hundreds of communities with
    different, and possibly contradictory, local ordinances," ATA President
    Carol Hallett said. 

    Federal law specifically prohibits local governments from mandating
    employee benefits to national companies, Hallett said. 

    "If another community passed an ordinance requiring that we could not
    provide benefits to domestic partners, we would file the same lawsuit,"
    she said. 

    The Washington-based ATA represents 22 domestic carriers that fly 95
    percent of the nation's cargo and passenger traffic. 

    "It's very sad that they feel so strongly about not providing equality
    that they can't work with the city, they just have to sue the city,"
    said San Francisco Supervisor Susan Leal. 

    The law, supported by the city's powerful gay community, requires
    companies doing business with San Francisco to offer the same benefits
    to legally registered domestic partners as they do to spouses. 

    The suit comes despite an agreement between the city and United
    Airlines, which has a $13.4 million, 25-year lease at San Francisco
    International Airport. United agreed to review the ordinance and
    develop a policy in the first two years of the lease. 

    After reviewing the ordinance, however, United changed its mind, said
    Mary Jo Holland, a spokeswoman for the airline. 

    "We are supporting the ATA lawsuit," she said. "The ordinance, we felt,
    was illegal." 

    Leal, who negotiated for the city with United, said she was angered by
    United's about-face, and warned that the airline still has future
    business with the city. 

    "I won't forget it," Leal said. 
7.1779IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2270
    AP 13-May-1997 17:46 EDT   REF5530

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Salinger Renews TWA-Missile Claim

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pierre Salinger called for a congressional
    investigation Tuesday into questions he has raised about the explosion
    of TWA Flight 800. 

    Salinger spoke at a news conference with author James Sanders,
    promoting Sanders' book. The book contends the disaster last July,
    which killed all 230 people aboard the Paris-bound flight, resulted
    from a missile strike. 

    Salinger and Sanders repeated their belief that a mystery blip on the
    official radar tape of the sky just before the plane exploded could be
    a missile. 

    FBI chief investigator James Kallstrom has ridiculed that claim, saying
    the radar blip was an unarmed Navy plane passing 7,000 feet above the
    jetliner. 

    Glen Schulze, an aviation investigator, asserted that Kallstrom had
    misinterpreted the symbols on the radar image. 

    "What they're (the FBI) saying is wrong, what we're saying is right,"
    Salinger said. 

    "The Senate Intelligence Committee should have hearings and bring in
    people who have been hidden away by the government," said Salinger,
    insisting that there has been a conspiracy to cover up involvement of a
    Navy missile in the disaster. 

    The group did not address how such a massive coverup could have
    continued for 10 months after a disaster that has been investigated by
    both the FBI and the National Transportation Safety Board and has drawn
    widespread media and public scrutiny. 

    Sanders' book, "The Downing of TWA Flight 800," contends that federal
    officials informed the White House a missile was involved and that
    missile residue was found on some seat covers. 

    The FBI has identified the residue as glue used to hold the fabric to
    the seats, but Sanders contended that an analysis he had conducted
    found chemicals not present in glue. 

    "We definitely need congressional hearings," Sanders said. 

    Investigators say three possible crash theories remain -- a bomb, a
    missile or mechanical failure -- but they insist the investigation has
    ruled out an errant missile strike by the U.S. military. 

    Just last week FBI Director Louis Freeh said investigators are leaning
    strongly toward mechanical failure as the likely cause of the crash. 

    "The evidence as we have developed it today, and particularly the
    evidence that we have not found, would lead the inquiry toward the
    conclusion that this was a catastrophic mechanical failure," Freeh
    said. 

    He said the FBI and the National Transportation Safety Board hope to
    release their final report on the crash by mid- or late summer. 

    Salinger served briefly as a senator from California and worked for ABC
    News after serving as President Kennedy's press secretary. 
7.1780IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2256
    AP 13-May-1997 17:41 EDT   REF5489

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Free Tolls on San Francisco Bridge

    By RON HARRIS

    Associated Press Writer

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Drivers crossed the San Francisco-Oakland Bay
    Bridge for free Tuesday, their $1 toll picked up by a radio station
    forced to make amends for a 1993 publicity stunt that caused a huge
    traffic jam. 

    "I already spent it on a Snapple," said Shannon Smith, holding up her
    bottle before zipping away. 

    The toll-free commute began at 2 a.m. Tuesday and will run until 2 a.m.
    Friday. It's being paid for with part of a $1.5 million settlement of a
    lawsuit that was filed on behalf of irate drivers after disc jockey
    Erich "Mancow" Muller blocked traffic on the bridge while a fellow DJ
    got a haircut. 

    Bridge traffic was heavier than usual Tuesday, but a count of motorists
    taking advantage of the freebie won't be available until Wednesday. 

    "People are saving a buck, but they're probably not saving much time,"
    said Colin Jones, a spokesman for the state Transportation Department. 

    "It's wonderful," said Jason Heard, who drives to the city from
    Vallejo, about 40 miles east. "They should be doing that all the time."

    Each driver's $1 toll will come from the settlement paid by United
    Broadcasting Corp., which owned KSOL-FM at the time Muller led a convoy
    of vans onto the bridge. Once on the bridge, one of the vans turned
    sideways, blocking several lanes during the haircut. The backup took
    hours to ease. 

    The stunt was meant to poke fun at President Clinton, who was accused
    of tying up traffic at Los Angeles International Airport while he got a
    haircut. Officials later said no flights were delayed. 

    After the bridge stunt, Muller was suspended by KSOL. He was fined
    $500, placed on probation and ordered to do 100 hours of community
    service. He has since left the station for a radio job in Chicago, and
    KSOL was sold. 

    "If I could do it again, would I want to pay $1.5 million?" Muller said
    Tuesday. "Would I want to go through 100 hours of community service?
    Would I want to be a felon? With all the hassles I've been through
    because of this damn thing, no." 

    The free tolls are expected to amount to about one-third of the
    settlement. The rest will go toward more road signs and training for
    toll-takers. 
7.1781IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:22111
    AP 13-May-1997 14:54 EDT   REF5299

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Key May Be Found in Okla. Case

    By STEVEN K. PAULSON

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- The key to the Ryder truck used in the Oklahoma City
    bombing was found in an alley near the federal building where Timothy
    McVeigh allegedly parked his getaway car, an FBI photographer testified
    today. 

    Prosecutors introduced the evidence to bolster the testimony of star
    witness Michael Fortier, who said he was with McVeigh when he cased the
    building and picked out the alley where he planned to park his getaway
    car. The key was found in the same alley. 

    "I photographed a key," FBI photographer Dawn Hester testified. "I
    wrote in the log I always keep what it was." 

    McVeigh attorney Rob Nigh challenged the key evidence, presenting Ms.
    Hester with a duplicate set of keys from the Ryder truck. But she said
    they appeared different from the ones she photographed. 

    U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch rejected the photo, saying the only
    way they could be identified was by comparing key cuts with the photo. 

    But he admitted the key into evidence after Hester testified she saw an
    agent pick it up in the alley and log it into evidence. 

    Earlier, in his redirect questioning, Fortier was asked if he was aware
    the key was found in the alley. 

    "I didn't know that," he said. "This is the first I've heard." 

    In his second day of cross-examination today, Fortier stuck by his
    plea-bargained testimony that McVeigh spent months planning the April
    19, 1995, federal building blast that killed 168 people and injured
    hundreds more. 

    But he acknowledged that his story has completely changed since the
    blast, and so have his looks and his speech. 

    "Of course I'm changing my language. I'm not going to sit here and
    curse in front of all these people," said Fortier, who took the stand
    wearing a suit, with his hair neatly cut, his beard shaved off and his
    earring gone. 

    McVeigh attorney Stephen Jones portrayed Fortier as a frequent drug
    user who cut the plea deal in part to escape drug charges. Fortier
    acknowledged he talked about drugs while he was recorded in FBI phone
    surveillance after the bombing. 

    Jones also suggested Fortier was lying to cover his own role, saying he
    actually rented a shed to store explosives, but claimed McVeigh did it. 

    "No sir, that's not true. Not at all," he said. 

    As prosecutors have done throughout the trial, they mixed testimony
    against with McVeigh with the stories of bomb survivors. Capt. Matthew
    Cooper, a U.S. Marine recruiter, testified today how the blast tore
    open the side of the building and blew a woman in his office across the
    room. "She was screaming, she was covered with blood," he said. "She
    was crying for help to get out of the building." 

    In nearly an entire day on the stand Monday, Fortier said McVeigh
    carefully cased the federal building months before the blast and even
    considered crashing his truck bomb through the glass front doors in a
    suicide attack. 

    Fortier said McVeigh, driven by rage over the 1993 government siege at
    Waco, Texas, wanted to bomb the building to "cause a general uprising
    in America." 

    Fortier said he refused to join the plot and learned of the bombing
    while watching television: "Right away I thought Tim did it." 

    Fearful he would go to prison and even be executed, Fortier said he
    initially lied to everybody, from the FBI and to the media, insisting
    McVeigh was innocent. He said he finally came clean and agreed to
    cooperate when he was faced with testifying before a grand jury. 

    Jones seized upon the changing stories when he began his
    cross-examination Monday, suggesting Fortier was slanting his testimony
    against McVeigh to secure a lenient sentence recommendation from
    prosecutors. 

    Fortier pleaded guilty to four federal charges, including failure to
    report the bombing plot and lying to the FBI. He faces up to 23 years
    in prison, but likely will get less because of his testimony. 

    Fortier confirmed that he told his brother John after McVeigh's arrest:
    "I've been thinking about trying to do those talk-show circuits for a
    long time, come up with some asinine story and get my friends to go in
    on it." 

    Jones asked Fortier if, during the same conversation with his brother,
    he said with a laugh, "I could tell stories all day." 

    "Yes, sir," Fortier replied. 

    Jones noted that Fortier told another friend he wanted to "wait till
    after the trial and do book and movie rights. I can just make up
    something juicy." 

    McVeigh, a 29-year-old Gulf War veteran, could get the death penalty if
    convicted in the bombing, the deadliest act of terrorism on U.S. soil.
    Co-defendant Terry Nichols is to be tried later. 
7.1782IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2334
    AP 13-May-1997 21:59 EDT   REF5295

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    104-Year-Old Gets Cambridge Degree

    LONDON (AP) -- Molly Maxwell celebrated her 104th birthday Tuesday with
    a special present, a degree from Cambridge University -- 80 years late. 

    Mrs. Maxwell was at the university during World War I and took her
    final exams in 1917. But the ancient university's rules then permitted
    only male graduates, so she awarded a "certificate." 

    "It is very important, but I don't know what I am going to do with it
    now," said Mrs. Maxwell, who lives in a retirement home in north
    London. 

    The university changed its rules in 1948 allowing women with
    certificates to apply to change them into degrees. 

    Staff at the Eastside Residential Home where Mrs. Maxwell has lived for
    three years applied on her behalf to translate her certificate in
    modern languages -- she studied English and German -- for a degree. 

    At her award ceremony at the home Mrs. Maxwell wore traditional black
    academic gown trimmed with white fur to indicate a bachelor's degree. 

    "Today we have completed the process properly. It is very good to see
    the translation of this hard-earned certificate," said Gillian
    Sutherland, a fellow, or faculty member, at Newnham College, Cambridge,
    who presented the degree. 

    "It has been very overwhelming for mother. But we are very pleased for
    her," said Mrs. Maxwell's daughter, Margaret Maxwell, 74. 
7.1783IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2334
    AP 13-May-1997 20:29 EDT   REF5218

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Kangaroo Bewilders Rural Sweden

    STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- When a rural Swedish woman set out some
    sunflower seeds, she attracted the wildlife she expected -- but not the
    kangaroo that showed up. 

    Vivi Berglund told the Swedish news agency TT that her unexpected guest
    showed up about 4 a.m. while she was sleeping. A howling house cat
    alerted her to the kangaroo's presence. 

    When Berglund sat up in bed and looked out the window, she couldn't
    believe what she saw. "I turned on the lamp so I could see better, but
    he sprang away," she said. 

    Eventually, the kangaroo came back. 

    Berglund and her husband, Bo, reported the incident to police in nearby
    Hagfors, about 165 miles northwest of Stockholm. They, too, found it
    hard to believe. 

    "People here have reported seeing wolves and lynx and so on," officer
    Kjell Birgersson told TT on Tuesday. "But never a kangaroo." 

    But then another woman in the area reported seeing the bouncy beast.
    And a forest ranger inspected some animal tracks and confirmed they
    were made by a kangaroo. 

    With that question answered, authorities now are trying to figure out
    where the marsupial came from. No zoos or circuses in the region have
    reported any missing. 
7.1784IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2340
    AP 13-May-1997 20:28 EDT   REF5216

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Okinawans Begin Protest of U.S.

    TOKYO (AP) -- Opponents of U.S. military bases on Okinawa began three
    days of protests Tuesday leading up to the 25th anniversary of the
    island's return to Japanese rule. 

    Police said about 100 demonstrators left the state capital of Naha and
    a hundred more left the nearby city of Nago for separate marches
    through World War II battlegrounds and towns hosting U.S. bases. 

    Protest organizers told police they expect thousands of Okinawans to
    join the marches before the protest culminates Thursday with a rally at
    the U.S. Marine Corp's Futenma Air Station in the city of Ginowan. 

    The rally will mark a quarter-century since the United States returned
    control of Okinawa to the Japanese after governing it as a colony since
    the end of World War II. Similar marches have been held since 1978. 

    Opposition to the U.S. bases is strong in Okinawa, where about a third
    of the civilian population died during some of World War II's fiercest
    battles. 

    More than half of the 45,000 U.S. troops in Japan are stationed on
    Okinawa, although it represents just 1 percent of Japan's land area. 

    Much of the land occupied by the bases is obtained from private owners
    who have been forced to lease it to the central government. In turn,
    Tokyo provides it to the United States to fulfill their mutual security
    treaty. 

    Also Tuesday, the remains of at least seven Japanese Imperial Army
    soldiers were discovered in two collapsed bomb shelters on Okinawa,
    authorities said. 

    The remains were found near the city of Itoman, about 1,000 miles
    southwest of Tokyo. The discovery of more bodies was expected. 
7.1785IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2373
    AP 13-May-1997 19:48 EDT   REF5105

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    IRA-Allied Party Sets Up in Commons

    By MAUREEN JOHNSON

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- The Irish Republican Army's political ally, Sinn Fein,
    plans to set up an office at the House of Commons for the first time,
    raising fears for the security of British lawmakers the IRA has vowed
    to kill. 

    Martin McGuinness, who along with Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams won
    Northern Ireland seats in the British Parliament this month, said
    Tuesday he has been told the party can have a House of Commons office. 

    However, Parliament sources speaking on condition of anonymity said
    Speaker Betty Boothroyd likely would block Sinn Fein's effort because
    the two refuse to take the oath of office -- which requires them to
    swear allegiance to Queen Elizabeth II. 

    Sinn Fein has never attempted to get an office in Commons; nor has any
    group whose members refused to take the oath. 

    The Commons rules, drawn up by a 19th-century constitutional expert,
    state that members who refuse to take the oath of office cannot be paid
    or vote but are entitled to all "other privileges." 

    These include 24-hour access to the Commons, the right to bring in
    guests without searches, free telephones, postage, and the right to
    apply to join the Commons gym and shooting-practice range. 

    McGuinness told reporters at the Foreign Press Association there were
    "no security implications" in Sinn Fein having a Commons office. 

    Asked about a risk of an IRA bomber getting into the Commons as a Sinn
    Fein guest, McGuinness said he would be "totally opposed," adding, "I
    would play no part whatsoever in it." 

    McGuinness, 47, is a Sinn Fein deputy leader who was convicted of
    membership in the outlawed IRA in 1973. He and Adams were elected to
    Parliament on May 1 but refuse to take their seats because it would
    mean swearing loyalty to the queen. 

    "I am an Irish Republican," McGuiness said. "I will not take an oath of
    allegiance to the English queen. ... No one should expect me to." 

    Bombers for the IRA, which is fighting to end British rule in Northern
    Ireland, have killed three British politicians since 1979. 

    Then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher escaped assassination in 1984
    when the IRA blew up the hotel where she was staying during a
    Conservative Party convention. Five people were killed. 

    Lady Thatcher is now a member of the unelected upper House of Lords,
    located with the Commons in the Palace of Westminster. 

    Andrew Hunter, a Conservative lawmaker who has a 24-hour police guard
    because of an IRA death threat, has been quoted as saying he "would be
    horrified to bump into IRA members in the bars and restaurants of the
    House." 

    He did not return a telephone call after the McGuinness news conference
    Tuesday. 

    Members of Sinn Fein, which is legal, all deny belonging to the IRA.

    Sinn Fein first ran candidates for Parliament in 1982. Adams was
    elected to the Parliament that served from 1983-92, but he was banned
    from traveling to Britain at the time. 
7.1786IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2385
    AP 13-May-1997 17:36 EDT   REF5479

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Climbers Report 5 Killed on Everest

    By BINAYA GURUACHARYA

    Associated Press Writer

    KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) -- Five climbers have died trying to conquer the
    world's highest mountain in the past week, according to expedition
    leaders waiting Tuesday for fierce winds to calm before attempting the
    Mount Everest summit themselves. 

    Victims included three members of a Kazak military expedition, a Sherpa
    guide and a German climber, Todd Burleson said in an Internet dispatch,
    citing a fellow expedition leader camped on the mountain's treacherous
    north side. 

    The five deaths would raise this season's count to seven. Last year, 12
    people died on the mountain, including members of an expedition that
    included American socialite Sandy Hill Pittman -- a toll that fueled
    debate on whether inexperienced climbers should be allowed to attempt
    the popular ascent. 

    "The mountain has claimed far too many lives," Burleson said Tuesday on
    The Mountain Zone Internet site from his base camp on Everest.
    "Hopefully people are going to start heeding this warning: Everest is a
    very dangerous mountain ... and needs to be treated with tremendous
    respect." 

    Burleson said the dead were: 

    -- Russian Aleksandr Toroshin, who was 1,000 feet short of the
    29,028-foot summit when he turned back Thursday due to exhaustion. A
    team of French climbers found his body. 

    -- Two other members of the Kazak team, Nikolai Shevchenko and Ivan
    Plotnikov, who reached the summit Thursday. 

    -- Sherpa guide Ang Nima and Peter Kuwalzik, a 29-year-old German. 

    A South Korean climber whose name was not immediately known was
    missing, and there were unconfirmed reports that at least one other
    climber was lost as well. 

    Eight teams, including one American group, were stuck at base camps
    Tuesday, according to Ukesh Singh, the Nepal Tourism Ministry official
    in charge of the expeditions. There were three teams from Britain and
    others from Canada, Malaysia, New Zealand and Nepal. 

    The Malaysian team reportedly was in trouble, camped on Everest's
    southern slopes at 23,620 feet. 

    A Sherpa guide with the Malaysian team fell to his death last week. 

    "There is concern for (these) climbers who have very little experience
    and make up an expedition which is a flag-waving exercise," New Zealand
    team leader Guy Cotter reported by radio to supporters in Christchurch,
    New Zealand. 

    "We are disturbed that people have been attempting to go to the summit
    in bad weather, when the winds are extremely high and the chances of
    surviving are quite low," he said. 

    Winds were raging at 125 mph Tuesday. Burleson said that forecasts
    indicated the winds may drop to 50 miles per hour by Saturday, and that
    the climbers might head out for the summit on Thursday. 

    "We want to move as quickly as possible. So do the other expeditions.
    So there is still the issue of overcrowding and how many people will be
    going to the summit," he said in his dispatch. 

    "I'm guessing there's 60 climbers here and close to 100 Sherpa that
    will want to attempt the summit. That would be far too many for one
    day, so we're trying to see how we could divide that up. But there has
    been no solution to that problem." 

    Ascents on Everest are possible only in May and October, between the
    winter snowstorms and summer monsoons, but severe storms can occur
    anytime and often move in very quickly. The Himalayan mountain
    straddles the border between Tibet and Nepal. 

    Malcolm Duff, a British climber, died in late April. 
7.1787IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2372
    AP 13-May-1997 21:05 EDT   REF5249

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Doc: AIDS Vaccine May Be Impossible

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Despite an extensive and detailed understanding of
    AIDS, an expert said Tuesday it is possible that medical science will
    never find a vaccine that protects against infection from the virus. 

    Drugs have been found that appear to suppress HIV, the virus that
    causes AIDS, but researchers still don't know how to make a vaccine
    that will keep people from getting infected after being exposed to HIV,
    said Dr. Robert Gallo, co-discoverer of the AIDS virus. 

    Vaccines now protect against polio, measles, small pox and many other
    diseases, but HIV presents unique problems, he said. 

    "We have to say it is a serious possibility that we will never succeed
    with a vaccine against HIV," Gallo said at a vaccine symposium
    sponsored by the Albert B. Sabin Vaccine Foundation. 

    "Nobody can say that we will (succeed) for sure," he said. "That needs
    to be said. We have to be realistic." 

    This problem, he said, has led some people in the World Bank to
    investigate the possibility of controlling AIDS by treating all of the
    world's HIV patients with new and expensive drugs that suppress HIV to
    the point that the virus is undetectable. 

    "I had discussions with people at the World Bank who are seriously
    contemplating the possibility of taking the drugs and treating
    everybody," said Gallo. But he said the discussion was only
    "exploratory" and that there are no firm plans for drug treatments on
    such a massive scale. 

    Gallo said that researchers have put out "an enormous effort" to
    understand HIV and how it reproduces in the body. 

    "It is safe to say that we know more about this virus and this disease
    than we know about any," he said. But Gallo said there are several
    major obstacles, with no known solutions, that may prevent a vaccine
    from ever being developed. 

    --There is no cheap, short-lived laboratory animal that can be infected
    with HIV for the testing of vaccines. Some monkeys can get a form of
    the disease, but they are expensive, rare and develop the disease very
    slowly. 

    --HIV constantly changes. Often there are a variety of strains within a
    single patient. To be effective, a vaccine would have to protect
    against each strain, or clade. 

    --The HIV virus integrates itself into the body, becoming part of the
    DNA in cells of the immune system. "As soon as you get infected, it
    starts impairing the immune system," said Gallo. "Once infection
    occurs, you've got it" and the immune system, which usually protects
    the body, is itself under attack. 

    --To be protective, a vaccine has to prime the immune system against a
    microbe. "We don't know if the immune system could be primed to do
    that" against HIV, said Gallo. 

    --Protection may require that every single virus in the body is killed,
    a trick that is not required of other vaccines. Gallo said, for
    instance, that polio vaccine merely represses the virus and "then it
    goes away," preventing an infection. It may take more than this to
    prevent an HIV infection, he said. 
7.1788IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2339
    RTw  14-May-97 05:27    

    Balding British nuclear sub raises eyebrows in HK

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    HONG KONG, May 14 (Reuter) - A British nuclear submarine that arrived
    in Hong Kong this week made people wonder if it had just emerged from
    battle when surfaced with large areas of its outside cladding missing. 

    Photos of the HMS Trenchant showed many of the acoustic cladding tiles,
    designed to help it avoid sonar detection, had been lost, leaving bald
    patches across the hull. 

    The English-language South China Morning Post newspaper said seafarers
    could be forgiven for mistaking the ship for a "battle-scarred survivor
    of some colossal conflict." 

    But a military spokesman said nothing was wrong. "It's just wear and
    tear. It will be repaired quite shortly. It is just one of those things
    that happen when a submarine has been in the water for quite a long
    time," Captain Cathy Little told Reuters. 

    "The upper casing of the submarine is to deflect sonar... Things like
    tiles coming off happens all time. All submarines, regardless (of) what
    nations they belong to." 

    She said repairs would be made at the Trenchant's next stop in
    Australia. 

    The Trenchant, one of seven Trafalgar class nuclear-powered submarines
    in the navy, called into Hong Kong on Tuesday to top up food supplies
    and allow its 120 sailors some recreation. 

    The vessel is participating in a 12-vessel Royal Navy task force
    deployment to the Asia-Pacific region during the months leading up to
    the transfer of British-ruled Hong Kong to China on July 1. 

    REUTER
7.1789IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:23101
    RTw  14-May-97 03:23    

    New Labour enacts cultural revolution in Britain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    By Paul Mylrea 

    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - British politics is undergoing its own
    cultural revolution. 

    Since Tony Blair stormed into power on May 2, hardly a day has passed
    without Labour enacting a radical change to the engine of government. 

    It was not just 18 years of Conservative rule that were swept aside
    when Labour won Britain's election in a landslide. Surnames and titles
    went too. 

    Along with reforms to policy -- such as making the Bank of England all
    but independent -- Blair has taken his new broom to the customs and
    traditions of politics. 

    First to go was the formal tone of cabinet meetings. Ministers round
    the most powerful table in Britain would no longer address each other
    by their title, Blair announced. First names were the rule. 

    With that out of the way, Tony -- not Prime Minister, now -- and his
    cabinet agreed to give up their scheduled pay rise for this year. 

    Labour's political reformation perhaps should not have come as a
    surprise. 

    Last week, Blair became Britain's first leader in living memory to move
    into Downing Street -- where the prime minister has his office and
    residence -- with school-age children. 

    After years catering for sober-suited politicians and elegant cocktail
    parties, the doormen and housekeepers had to come to terms with
    children and their skateboards and baseball caps. 

    The Blairs immediately broke with convention by swapping the flat above
    the prime minister's office for the larger one next door at number 11
    -- traditionally the home of Britain's finance minister. 

    Cartoonists seized on pictures of Blair's electric guitar -- left over
    from his days in a university rock band -- being carried into the prime
    minister's new home as the symbol of the wind of change blowing through
    British politics. 

    BROWN, COOK, BREAK WITH TRADITION TOO 

    Chancellor of the Exchequer (Finance Minister) Gordon Brown has also
    blown away a few cobwebs. He starts work at 7 a.m. and provoked outrage
    and praise in equal measure by refusing to wear formal dress -- white
    tie and a tailcoat -- to give the annual speech to the elite of
    London's financial district in June. 

    Robin Cook -- a renowned horse racing tipster as well as one of the
    sharpest intellects in the government -- has done the same for the
    grandly titled Foreign and Commonwealth Office. 

    In a presentation Cook -- who has added the Racing Post to the
    department's newspaper subscriptions -- this week unveiled a mission
    statement for the department, publicly putting ethics and human rights
    at the heart of foreign policy. 

    To ram the message home, Oscar-winning film director David Puttnam has
    been hired to do a film illustrating this for Britain's far-flung
    embassies. 

    The generational shift in Downing Street has been mirrored in
    parliament where the Labour landslide brought in 262 new members. 

    The youngest was just 24, and 120 of them were women -- 57 more than
    before the election. This posed an immediate problem for the
    authorities of the 659-seat House of Commons (lower house) where
    facilities, from the barbers to the toilets, are overwhelmingly for
    men. 

    The 101 Labour women have already earned a new nickname -- Blair's
    Babes. But they come determined to change an institution which bears
    more resemblance to one of London's venerable clubs for ageing
    gentlemen than to a modern democratic parliament. 

    Some have already suggested changing the Commons' rifle range into a
    nursery. But it is the traditions of debate and the tone of ritual
    jousting that is likely to go first. 

    CHANGES PLANNED FOR QUESTION TIME 

    Blair has already announced changes to Prime Minister's Question Time,
    reducing it from twice to once a week and cutting out some of the
    archaic rigmarole that surrounded it. Blair will now face 30 minutes of
    questioning on a Wednesday. 

    Further changes are in the pipeline to replace the theatrical battles
    that enthral and appal television viewers around the world with
    constructive debate, and to reform parliamentary hours to make them
    easier for parents of young children. 

    REUTER
7.1790IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2368
    RTw  14-May-97 01:37    

    UK government to set out plans for next 17 months

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    By David Ljunggren 

    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - Britain's Queen Elizabeth will take her place
    amid the splendour of the House of Lords upper house of parliament on
    Wednesday to announce what the new Labour government plans to achieve
    over the next 17 months. 

    The Queen's Speech is the climax of a lengthy and colourful ritual
    which is one of the highlights of the parliamentary year but the
    pageantry is slightly misleading since the monarch is merely reading
    out what ministers have written for her. 

    Aides to Prime Minister Tony Blair made it clear that Labour, which
    vowed to hit the ground running after its landslide May 1 election win
    over the Conservatives, does not intend to waste any time. 

    The party wants to push no less than 26 bills through parliament
    between now and September next year, a punishing schedule even for a
    government with a huge majority. 

    In the Queen's Speech, Blair will stress his desire to unify the
    country after what he regards as 18 years of increasing divisions which
    developed under the Conservatives. 

    "We are the people's government," an aide quoted Blair as saying.
    "People feel they have a government back, a government determined to
    serve them." 

    The programme will focus on Labour's five key manifesto pledges -- to
    cut primary school class sizes, shorten hospital waiting lists, crack
    down on young offenders, get 250,000 young people off welfare into work
    and create the conditions for lasting prosperity. 

    Wednesday's issue of the Sun tabloid newspaper said the government
    would announce a 1.1 billion pound ($1.7 billion) programme to build
    two new hospitals and revamp 73 others. It said private cash would pay
    for the two new complexes. 

    Another bill would scrap some of the Conservatives' controversial
    market-oriented health reforms. 

    During the election campaign Labour spent a great deal of effort
    attacking the Conservatives over health and education and the party
    plans bills intended to drastically improve the basic language and
    mathematical skills. 

    Blair also has his eyes on radical constitutional reforms designed to
    give the regions more say over their own affairs. 

    He intends to grant a limited amount of sovereignty to Scotland and
    Wales by giving them the right to form local parliaments which would
    have the right to set some taxes. 

    "You can see and feel the commitment to change which marks this
    government -- just look what we have achieved in only the first 10
    days," said Blair's deputy John Prescott. 

    The new government is also set to ban all handguns, carrying out a
    pledge it made in opposition after a crazed gunman massacred 16 small
    children and their teacher in a small Scottish school last year. 

    REUTER
7.1791IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2351
    RTw  13-May-97 23:39    

    Tax doesn't stop poor from smoking, study finds

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - The poor smoke more than the rich and even
    high taxes on cigarettes do little to deter them, experts reported on
    Wednesday. 

    Surveys of 240,000 U.S. adults, made over 11 years, show those living
    below the poverty line are up to 40 percent more likely to smoke than
    their wealthier compatriots. 

    Although smoking was on the decline in the United States in general,
    this did not hold true for the least well-off, Alan Flint and Thomas
    Novotny of the University of California at San Francisco found. 

    "Our findings suggest that individuals below the poverty threshold may
    need strengthened efforts (beyond those focused on blacks and women) to
    prevent recruitment of new smokers and to help those who already smoke
    to quit," Flint wrote in a report in the journal Tobacco Control. 

    Alan Marsh, a social psychologist at London's Policy Studies Institute,
    said he had found raising tax on cigarettes did little to deter the
    poor from smoking. 

    "These data almost certainly speak for other countries, too," he wrote
    in a commentary on Flint's report. 

    He said he found Britain's poorest returned 16 percent of welfare
    benefits to the government in the form of tobacco duties -- 600 million
    pounds ($975 million) a year. 

    "If you go on hiking up the price of cigarettes...they continue
    spending their welfare money on cigarettes," he said in a telephone
    interview. 

    Psychology played an important role, he added. "The state of mind that
    leads you to give up smoking is not one of despair -- it's one of
    optimism," he said. "And the poor have very little to feel optimistic
    about." 

    But Marsh said black Americans and Britons both tended to smoke less
    than their white counterparts, whatever their income level. Asian women
    in Britain also smoked very little even if they were poor. 

    Marsh said experts should investigate why that was. "How come their
    culture protects them from smoking?" he asked. 

    REUTER
7.1792IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2331
    RTw  13-May-97 23:06    

    Don't lick those golf balls, expert warns

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - Licking your golf ball clean may be more than
    just an unappealing habit -- it can lead to liver disease, an Irish
    expert warned on Wednesday. 

    One golfer who preferred using his tongue to a wet cloth developed
    hepatitis when he licked strong weedkillers off his ball, Dr Connor
    Burke of James Connolly Memorial Hospital in Dublin reported. 

    Writing in the British Medical Association's journal Gut, Burke
    described the case of a 65-year-old golfer who developed the liver
    disease even though he was a non-drinker and had no other risk factors
    for hepatitis. 

    The patient finally admitted he habitually licked his golf ball clean
    before teeing off -- evidently a common practice to make it go faster.
    It turned out that his golf course used the exfoliant agent orange to
    control weeds. 

    Once he stopped licking the ball, his symptoms cleared up but came back
    when, sceptical of the diagnosis, he resumed the licking habit, Burke
    wrote. 

    The golfer now carries a damp cloth for ball-cleaning. 

    REUTER
7.1793IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:2349
    RTw  13-May-97 22:19    

    Thousands in Gibraltar protest against Spain

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    GIBRALTAR, May 13 (Reuter) - Nearly one-third of Gibraltar's 30,000
    residents marched down Main Street of the British colony on Tuesday to
    call for Spanish recognition of their European Union rights. 

    Led by Chief Minister Peter Caruana, the protesters urged Britain to
    stand firm against political efforts by Spain to prevent the rock
    pennisula at its southernmost tip from enjoying rights gained when
    Gibraltar joined the EU with Britain as a dependent territory. 

    Spain, which has claimed sovereignty over Gibraltar for 300 years, does
    not recognise locally issued passports and bans sea and air travel to
    the territory. 

    In recent months several Gibraltarians were detained by Spanish
    authorities who refused to recognise their passports. 

    Caruana backed the demonstrators, some 8,000 according to local police
    and 10,000 according to organisers, in saying that the protest was not
    against the Spanish but against Madrid's policy. 

    "I'm still keeping my hopes for dialogue alive," he said. "But we
    cannot afford to be the only place in Europe where our EU rights are
    not respected." 

    Caruana, in power for a year, said he was disappointed that Spain had
    hardened its attitude instead of accepting his proposal that Gibraltar
    be recognised as a third, but not sovereign, party at talks affecting
    the territory's future. 

    Spanish officials, who could not be reached for comment on Tuesday,
    have hinted recently that Gibraltar's status should be finally
    resolved, pointing to Britain's transfer of Hong Kong to China. 

    "It's difficult to explain how it occurs in Hong Kong and doesn't in
    Gibraltar," Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar said in a recent
    interview, adding that Spain maintained its claim of sovereignty. 

    Gibraltarians at the protest said they would not give in to pressure
    from Spain to become Spanish and they urged Tony Blair's new labour
    government to take a firmer stance against Spain than the previous
    British administration. 

    REUTER
7.1794IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 11:24102
    RTw  13-May-97 18:01    

    Safety group slams Eurotunnel in fire report

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Edna Fernandes 

    LONDON, May 13 (Reuter) - The Channel Tunnel Safety Authority on
    Tuesday slammed Eurotunnel Plc in its report into last November's fire
    in the tunnel, concluding the incident exposed fundamental weaknesses
    in safety management. 

    But the Anglo-French safey group stopped short of ordering the
    debt-laden Eurotunnel to change the controversial design of its
    open-sided freight wagons -- a costly move which would have dealt a
    devastating blow to the group's survival plan to restructure its nine
    billion pounds ($14.5 billion) of debt. 

    Instead the report into the November 18 blaze gave 36 recommendations
    to improve Eurotunnel's safety procedures by simplifying procedures and
    training up staff. 

    The blaze caused 200 million pounds of damage and put eight lorry
    drivers into hospital. 

    Fire fighters published their own report into the fire, with the Fire
    Brigades Union describing the blaze as "a disaster waiting to happen,"
    blaming the wagon design in particular. 

    The FBU has called for a permanent ban on the open-sided wagons and
    said it would be lobbying the government to intervene in the name of
    public safety. 

    British Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott said in a statement the
    Safety Authority's report was "an indictment of poor operating
    procedures and practices by Eurotunnel." 

    Prescott called on the tunnel operator to implement the recommendations
    promptly and in full, and added that he shared concerns regarding the
    design of the freight wagons and Eurotunnel's operation procedures for
    them. 

    Eurotunnel responded to the Safety Authority's report by saying that
    most of the recommendations were already in place or at hand. A
    spokeswoman added that the fire report was "a good indication" that it
    would get the go-ahead to resume freight shuttles. 

    "The next step really is to wait for the go-ahead from the IGC
    (Intergovernmental Commission). And assuming that we receive that, we
    would then restart a trial with a view to bringing the service back
    into full service by mid-June," said the Eurotunnel spokeswoman. 

    The final judgment on when Eurotunnel can resume freight services lies
    with the Anglo-French IGC which is due to meet Wednesday or Thursday to
    consider the report findings. 

    In the meantime, the Safety Authority told a press conference that
    Eurotunnel would not be allowed to run any freight traffic through the
    tunnel -- even ruling out its publicised plans for trial runs ahead of
    the IGC verdict. 

    Analysts welcomed the news, saying it was broadly in line with
    expectations. "It's another step forward in the debt restructuring
    process. The clearance of the wagon design is key," said one analyst. 

    But controversy over that decision looks set to continue to rage as
    fire chiefs reiterate fears about the open-sided design. 

    The safety group chairman Roderick Allison defended the decision not to
    order a redesign despite grave concerns from fire fighters. He denied
    the decision was based in Eurotunnel's financial predicament. 

    "It is not for us to dictate what systems or designs Eurotunnel operate
    but to decide on whether the systems are safe...we were not influenced
    by economic factors." said Allison 

    He added that if Eurotunnel came up with alternative designs they would
    be "welcomed with open arms." 

    But Jeremy Beech, a member of the safety group and head of the Kent
    Fire Brigade in southeast England which battled against the blaze last
    year, strongly disagreed and continued to repeat his conviction that
    the open-sided wagons were not safe 

    "As a fire officer I know the extent to which fire can spread with no
    containment (of wagons). If we had started with a clean sheet I would
    have liked to have seen a closed wagon design," Beech told the news
    conference in London. 

    Just after the blaze, Beech had described the "blow-torch effect"
    created by the open-wagons once the fire was underway. 

    With the threat of a full redesign out of the way for Eurotunnel and
    its financiers, Eurotunnel now must brace itself for the final hurdle
    -- clearance from the IGC. 

    It must then go on to fight the bigger battle of persuading its
    shareholders and lender banks to approve the restructuring of its debt
    mountain. 

    REUTER
7.1795IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 16:5186
7.1796IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 16:5236
7.1797IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 16:5671
    City News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719

     City News

    THE Bank of England took swift advantage yesterday of its new
    decision-making powers to signal its desire to see interest rates rise
    in the months ahead and to argue against those who believe that the
    strong pound has removed the need for policy action. 

    Describing last week's 0.25-point rise in interest rates as "an
    appropriate step", the Bank made it clear that it believes that more
    needs to be done to "slow the pace of expansion". It said the new
    system for setting interest rates announced by chancellor Gordon Brown
    last week had already brought benefits in the form of lower long-term
    interest rates, which suggested that the credibility of policy had been
    strengthened. But it would not be safe to base policy on this.

    The Bank's tougher-than-expected stance boosted sentiment on the
    exchanges. The pound, which had been falling earlier in the day,
    reversed direction to close a net half a pfennig up at Dm2.7697 and 0.3
    points higher at 98.8 in index terms.

    Mervyn King, economics director, was adamant yesterday that the Bank's
    tough line on interest rates did not mean that it was intent on
    achieving low inflation at the expense of other economic goals. He
    claimed that there was no trade-off between growth and inflation and
    argued that, by delivering price stability, the Bank could set the
    scene for a better all-round economic performance. "We want growth to
    be as high as possible, consistent with the inflation target," he said. 

    Mr King also hoped that decisions on interest rates by the new
    nine-person monetary policy committee would be made by consensus,
    rather than by relying on a vote at the end of each meeting.

    The first committee meeting is due next month but no date has yet been
    agreed and Mr King hinted that an interest rate rise is unlikely until
    after the Budget. He refused to offer the new chancellor any advice but
    said the committee would speak out if it thought the government's
    fiscal stance threatened the inflation target.

    In its first report on inflation since winning greater independence,
    the Bank said that the strong pound has helped cut the cost of imported
    goods and materials, setting the scene for a "favourable" inflation
    performance in the short run. The chart shows the Bank is forecasting a
    fall in inflation from 2.7pc at present to below the government's
    target rate of 2.5pc by the summer and then down to 2-2.25pc by the end
    of the year. However, it is also forecasting a pick-up in inflation
    during next year and expects the inflation target to be comfortably
    breached by the end of the year.

    The present "happy combination" of low inflation and strong growth on
    which the Conservatives based their appeal for a new mandate is
    described by the Bank as "unsustainable".

    It warns that action to dampen down demand will be needed "at some
    point" to prevent above trend output growth leading to higher
    inflation. Central to this argument is the view that the benefits of a
    strong pound will be "temporary" and that long-term inflation will be
    determined by the behaviour of the broad money supply and by the
    strength of domestic demand.

    Although the Bank is careful not to tread on Mr Brown's toes, it draws
    attention to the "policy dilemma" created by the strength of sterling
    and suggests that something needs to be done to correct the "increasing
    imbalance between the growth rate of manufacturing, which accounts for
    less than a quarter of total output, and of services, which account for
    just under two-thirds". 

    Geoffrey Dicks, economist at NatWest Markets, believes that that
    amounts to a coded call for a moderately "tight" Budget. He said: "This
    puts the ball very much in the chancellor's court."
7.1798IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 16:5885
7.1799IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 16:5933
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719
                                   
    Kirsty's body is found in river
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 
    
    THE mutilated body of a teenager, believed to be the missing
    14-year-old Kirsty Tidman, was found in the Thames yesterday.
    
    Kirsty's parents, Keith and Lynda, were told by detectives that it was
    almost certainly that of their daughter, who had been missing since May
    4. A murder inquiry has been launched. The head and legs had been
    severed, but a ring bearing her initials and markings on the body are
    understood to match details of Kirsty, who disappeared from her home in
    Charlton, south-east London.
    
    A Scotland Yard spokeswoman said yesterday: "The body has not been
    positively identified, but we strongly believe it to be that of Kirsty
    Tidman." The cause of death has not yet been established.
    
    Detectives are trying to establish the movements of Kirsty's cousin
    Paul Pearson, 30, who was regarded as the principle suspect. He died by
    apparently cutting his own throat last week after being questioned by
    detectives for 36 hours. Police pulled the girl's body from the water
    near Woods Pier, at Wapping, east London, at about 6.40am yesterday
    after being alerted by the crew of a boat. Det Supt Michael Banks, who
    is heading the inquiry, said: "We are distressed by this sickening and
    brutal crime." 
    
    Trisha Jaffe, headmistress of Kidbrooke School, where Kirsty was a
    pupil, broke the news of the discovery to classmates at a special
    assembly yesterday afternoon.
    
7.1800IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:0132
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719
                        
    Mother on school run is given B-test ban
    
    A MOTHER was yesterday banned from driving for three years after being
    breathalysed while collecting her young child from school.
    
    Police stopped Jacqueline Stockbridge, 39, after receiving a tip-off
    that she was driving with excess alcohol. Stockbridge had her daughter
    Sophie, aged four, strapped in the rear of her Volkswagen Passat at the
    time she was arrested and was on her way to another school to pick up
    Jocelyn, aged eight.
    
    Stockbridge, of Pilgrims Way West, Otford, Kent, wept as the court was
    told that she was more than four and a half times over the legal limit
    when police stopped her. Pc Andrew Larkins, who stopped Stockbridge,
    said in his police statement: "The area was filled with parents
    obviously picking up children from school. She smelt of alcohol and her
    eyes were glazed."
    
    The officer reported that Stockbridge had been "excitable and erratic"
    and had several times refused to take a breath test, although she
    denied that she had been drinking. After he had calmed her down,
    Stockbridge said she had drunk two glasses of wine the night before the
    incident on March 25.
    
    She gave a positive breath test and was found to have 155 microgrammes
    of alcohol. The legal limit is 35. She pleaded guilty at an earlier
    hearing before magistrates at Sevenoaks, Kent, to driving with excess
    alcohol and the case had been adjourned for pre-sentence reports.
    Stockbridge was also put on probation for three years.
    
7.1801IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:0258
7.1802IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:0456
7.1803IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:0658
7.1804IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:0736
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719
                                      
    Bomber strikes at heart of Beijing
    
    By Graham Hutchings, China Correspondent 
                                                       
    AN explosion yesterday in a park near Beijing's Forbidden City, where
    China's Communist leaders live and work, was said by police to be the
    work of a man who tried to commit suicide.
                                                       
    The blast took place at about 5pm in Zhongshan Park, which is popular
    with locals and tourists. Some residents said it was caused by a bomb
    placed under a park bench but others denied any knowledge of what had
    taken place - apparently because they had been told to do so by police.
                                                       
    Police gave no further details about the explosion, and made no mention
    of any deaths or injuries. Police closed a road leading to the park,
    and prevented people from entering by its main gate.
                                                       
    Officers in plain clothes and wearing plastic gloves could be seen
    searching the area and collecting material in plastic bags. The park
    normally closes to the public about 6pm and, late last night, there
    were no signs of unusual activity in the vicinity.
                                                       
    Terrorism and bomb explosions were almost unheard of in Beijing until
    March this year, when a blast on a bus injured at least eight people.
    That incident - which occurred two weeks after the death of Deng
    Xiaoping, the senior leader, and during the annual session of
    parliament when security is traditionally very tight - sent a wave of
    panic throughout Beijing.
                                                       
    No arrests have been made, and the government has not blamed the
    explosion on any one group. However, it is thought by many to be the
    work of Muslim separatists in Xinjiang, the remote north-western
    province, where explosions and assassinations have become common as
    activists step up their resistance to Chinese rule.
7.1805IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:0854
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719
                                    
    Chirac pledge on child sex abuse
    
    By Susannah Herbert in Paris 
                                                           
    CHILD abuse, long regarded in France as a problem that afflicts other
    countries, threatens this week to eclipse the lacklustre election
    campaign and become the new national issue.
                                                           
    High-profile paedophile cases in France and the suicide of a man who
    accused his former gym instructor of rape have prompted President
    Chirac to pledge new measures protecting children from "depravity". M
    Chirac, who met members of the National Union of Family Associations on
    Monday, said he was "shocked by the sexual abuse . . . and by the
    silence that conceals for too long".
                                                           
    His intervention follows press coverage of six incidents involving
    teachers suspected of molesting pupils. More significantly, it marks a
    new willingness to investigate cases that have until now been swept
    under the carpet. In this spirit, Paris judicial authorities last week
    ordered the re-opening of the case of "the seven missing girls of
    Auxerre".
                                                           
    The girls - all mentally disabled students at a state institution in
    Yonne - disappeared between 1977 and 1979. Despite pressure from their
    families, who said all seven were acquainted with a bus driver with a
    record of sexual abuse - no charges were brought and the case was
    closed in 1982. The families of two of the victims tried to have it
    re-opened last August but their efforts were thwarted by a judge in
    Auxerre in February.
                                                           
    Yesterday, a front-page article in the newspaper Le Monde claimed:
    "Slowly, a veil is being lifted. For decades, a crushing silence,
    composed of guilt and fear and social propriety, has muzzled the
    suffering of children and the scandal of sexual violence . . . today,
    our society opens its eyes wide before the intolerable."
                                                           
    The statistics bear out this claim: over 10 years, the number of
    recorded cases of incest and child rape have multiplied sixfold, while
    sentences for indecent assault of minors rose by 65 per cent between
    1984 and 1993.
                                                           
    Nicole Tricart, head of the police division responsible for child
    protection, says that as people were gradually overcoming their
    reluctance to talk about child abuse, more cases were being reported.
    In 1992, her division dealt with 349 cases but by 1995 this had risen
    to 488.
                                                           
     Children are fighting a losing battle against sexual abuse in eastern
    Europe, an Interpol expert told a conference in Stavanger, Norway,
    yesterday. Ann-Kristin Olsen, who chairs an Interpol group on offences
    against minors, urged police officers at the European Policing
    Executive Conference to infiltrate paedophile networks.
7.1806IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:1040
7.1807IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:1141
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719
                                            
    Sailor casts doubt on twins' shark story
    
    By Paul Chapman in Wellington 
                       
    THE bizarre tale of New Zealander twins who claim to have survived
    shark-infested waters and the Australian bush took a new twist
    yesterday when the Malaysian seaman found with them said they spent
    almost three weeks marooned on an uninhabited island.
                       
    Joanne and Sarah Ingham, 18, say they jumped from the Malaysian
    container ship Bunga Terasek, on which they had stowed away, together
    with a crewman. The twins claim that the three of them swam for 18
    hours in lifebelts through waters inhabited by tiger sharks and
    crocodiles.
                       
    They were reported to have told police in Coen, Cape York Peninsula,
    where they were discovered, that they had survived for three weeks on
    crabs and oysters. Because they were in good health when found, their
    story was greeted with scepticism, although no one has offered a better
    explanation of how they had arrived at such a remote spot.
                       
    The crew member, Ja'afar bin Mohamed Zan, 29, was deported to Malaysia
    by Australian authorities. Reports from Kuala Lumpur quoted him as
    saying that he and the twins jumped from the ship as it passed a
    mangrove island in Princess Charlotte Bay, off northern Australia.
                       
    He said they stayed on the island "because of love". He claimed that
    they were eventually spotted by Aborigines, who took them to the
    mainland. The seaman said he had got to know Sarah, the elder twin,
    while she was on the ship and she had moved into his cabin. Joanne had
    shared a room with a colleague. "I soon fell in love with her and would
    follow whatever she said, including running away from the ship,"
    Ja'afar told a reporter in his village in the southern state of Johore.
                       
    The twins are adding nothing to their account, amid reports that
    several magazines were bidding for their exclusive story. They were
    remanded in custody by a district court judge in Nelson, where they
    appeared on Monday on charges including assault and breaching bail and
    supervision orders.
7.1808IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:1354
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 14 May 1997 Issue 719
                                    
    Bonn dreads 'Berlin catastrophe'
            
    BONN lives in the shadow of an approaching catastrophe: owing to a
    blunder committed in the early Nineties, power will vanish from the old
    West German capital within the next two years.
            
    This has nothing to do with the signing of the Maastricht Treaty or the
    launch of the euro - which Bonn, unlike the rest of Germany, warmly
    welcomes. It involves a far more terrible change, decided in 1991 and
    scheduled to take place in May 1999: the transfer of the German
    government to Berlin.
            
    It would be hard to exaggerate the fear and loathing that a great part
    of the official class in Bonn feels for Berlin, a city on the far side
    of the country inhabited by an anarchic mixture of West German
    dissidents, East German communists and criminals drawn from every
    corner of eastern Europe.
            
    Most Bonners would rather take a foreign posting than go to Berlin. The
    result is that many are staying behind in administrative jobs or taking
    retirement. Those who do go will be given large sums of money and
    regular flights home to the Rhineland.
            
    Bonn has also delayed the move until Berlin is "ready", and still
    argues that May 1999 is too soon, because although the Reichstag,
    renovated by the British architect Norman Foster, should be ready for
    debates, MPs' offices will not be finished. The expense of hiring
    temporary office space is held to be a decisive argument for staying a
    bit longer on the Rhine.
            
    In Bonn's eyes, Berlin can never be ready: never as orderly and remote
    from the people as the quiet suburb on the Rhine, not actually in Bonn
    but between it and Bad Godesberg, from which West Germany was run.
            
    Berlin is too big, too full of history, to be neutered in that
    small-town way. It is cluttered with monuments to half a dozen regimes
    that have held sway within living memory: the last Kaiser, the Weimar
    Republic, Hitler, Stalin and the western allies, East and West Germany.
    All these regimes had trouble keeping the Berliners, who are a rude and
    witty, in check, and the political class in Bonn is right to fear it
    will have trouble, too.
            
    The new buildings going up south of the Reichstag at Potsdamer Platz,
    once the Piccadilly Circus of Berlin but, after the war, a stretch of
    barren ground where the Berlin Wall ran, look like an attempt to crush
    the unruly spirit of Berlin beneath development of inhuman size. The
    attempt will fail. Berlin is too self-possessed to be awed into
    silence.
            
    But by taking the courageous decision to go back to Berlin, Germany is
    confronting its past: an inescapable stage in growing into a normal
    country.
7.1809IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:1545
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                   
    Buckyballs build a thinner wire
    
    Robert Uhlig on a development using the recently discovered form of
    carbon
         
    The world's smallest electric wire measures barely 10 atoms across, and
    may become one of the key electronic components of the 21st century.
         
    Known as a nanotube because it is a billionth of a metre in diameter,
    it could open the way to molecular electronics - devices that are
    thousands of times smaller than anything possible today.
         
    Today's components are made using lithographic methods to etch
    electronic elements on to silicon. But even the ultra-short wavelengths
    of X-rays are not fine enough to create the ultimate electronic
    components.
         
    The solution, scientists believe, is to persuade nature to help by
    exploiting the atoms' natural ability to form into chains.
         
    Early research revealed a weakness in this method: at best, the tiny
    chains were only partial conductors of electricity.
         
    However, a joint Dutch-American team has now succeeded in producing the
    world's smallest conducting wire. The 1.5 nanometre wire is made from
    buckminster fullerene, a new form of carbon nicknamed buckyballs.
         
    "Even the most advanced lithographic techniques cannot make such small
    wires, but with the nanotube the size is intrinsic - it's made by
    nature," said Dr Sander Tans, who has tested the wire at at Delft
    University of Technology in Holland.
         
    Although nanotubes have been made before, they have not been suitable
    for electronics because of their unreliablity.
         
    To solve the problem, Richard Smalley, who shared the 1996 Nobel prize
    for chemistry for his work on fullerenes, developed a method of firing
    a laser into an oven at a mixture graphite, cobalt and nickel. This
    vapourises and forms single-walled tubes when it condenses.
         
    The tubes are put into a liquid suspension, and deposited on to
    platinum electrodes. The electronic properties are being studied by
    Tans.
7.1810IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:1740
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997
                                           
    Hole in your plane? Try tape says Robert Uhlig
                                                                  
    The first airliner repaired using a stick-on patch has passed
    airworthiness tests. A team led by Sandia National Laboratories
    engineers applied the patch - called a "bonded composite doubler" - in
    late February to reinforce a corner of a door on the plane's starboard
    side.
                                                                  
    The 250-passenger Delta Airlines L-1011 jetliner has been flying a
    transatlantic route with stops in New York, France, England, and
    Holland almost daily. 
                                                                  
    The new technique uses a thin tape of flexible, fibre-reinforced
    composite material. Layers of the tape, which has strong, parallel
    boron fibres enmeshed in epoxy, are cut to fit and applied with an
    adhesive, forming a laminate. Heat and pressure are applied for
    adhesion. 
                                                                  
    Each layer is just .14 of a millimetre thick but, once laminated, can
    be three times stronger than a traditional riveted aluminium patch.
                                                                  
    The advantage of the composite doubler is its flexibility, said Dennis
    Roach of Sandia. With riveted plates, stress load transfer takes place
    exclusively at the doubler's edges. With a composite doubler, the
    stress is spread across the covered area because the tape shears.
                                                                  
    Engineers can also exploit the tape's boron fibres. Each layer of tape
    is strongest in the direction parallel to the fibres. By lining
    successive plies across or parallel to a crack's orientation, the patch
    can be applied with optimium directional strength.
                                                                  
    Composite doublers are corrosion resistant and lightweight and can be
    easily shaped to cover irregular components such as doors and wing
    joints.
                                                                  
    Pete Versage, project manager at the FAA's Technical Centre, said the
    patch system will now be used "for many common aircraft repairs,
    including fuselage joints, landing gear bays, and cargo door".
7.1811IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:1953
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
    
    A hand-held sensor may be used to detect deadly viruses, says Robert
    Uhlig
                                                                
    Mr Spock's tricorder may soon no longer be the stuff of science
    fiction. The American Department of Defense is working on a hand-held
    sensor that can scan the atmosphere for harmful germs and viruses.
                                                                
    The idea might sound like the fanciful musings of Star Trek fans, but
    scientists from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's
    biological warfare programme recently unveiled the neuron-based
    biosensor research at a microbiology meeting in Miami Beach.
                                                                
    According to Lawrence DuBois, director of DARPA's Defense Science
    Office, the "canary on a chip" device can detect many toxic chemicals
    or biological toxins that affect the central nervous system.
                                                                
    Unlike current devices for detecting poisonous gases and biological
    warfare agents, the biosensor works in real time, can be used in
    enclosed spaces or on the battlefield, and it can detect substances
    that are poisonous, yet currently unknown.
                                                                
    "The biosensor contains an immortalised nerve cell, living and growing
    on an electrically conducting silicon chip," said Mildred Donlon, who
    heads the sensor device project.
                                                                
    The nerve cell continuously fires nerve impulses. "When a toxic
    substance is present, the interruption of that electrical signal then
    triggers an alarm." In the past 18 months, the detector has been
    miniaturised and tested worldwide.
                                                                
    "The living cells have functioned well for four months so far," Donlon
    said. She added that it had been tested against 18 toxic substances,
    and successfully detected all but Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B, a
    food-poisoning agent. 
                                                                
    If the toxins are not detected in time, a second research project is
    developing an injectable bloodscrubber to destroy micro-organisms in
    the bloodstream.
                                                                
    The University of Virginia has developed special heteropolymers which
    attach to Velcro-like hooks on red blood cells on one end and bind to
    the targeted viruses with the other. The virus is rendered harmless and
    removed from the bloodstream after passing through the liver and
    spleen.
                                                                
    According to Dr Shaun Jones, the polymers do not affect the normal
    functioning of the blood cells.
                                                                
    Although the bloodscrubber is not ready for widespread use, Jones said
    the day could come when soldiers are injected with the heteropolymer so
    they can operate without having to put on a protective suit.
7.1812IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:2137
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
                                                                       
    Robert Uhlig on the new wave of gaming
                                                                       
    Computer games will soon become more physical, with joysticks that
    transmit the vibrations of a racetrack and dive forward when you are
    shot in the back in Quake.
                                                                       
    "We can simulate liquid. We can simulate friction. We can simulate
    gravity. We can simulate springs," said Louis Rosenberg who has
    invented the "force feedback" joysticks.
                                                                       
    Following the digital sound card, the CD-Rom, the 3D graphics generator
    and Internet gaming, the development is only natural in the growth of
    PCs as serious games machines. Until now the sensory joystick
    technology was limited to costly military and commercial flight
    simulators and arcade games.
                                                                       
    Rosenberg realised the mass-market potential for the technology while
    working on his doctorate in engineering at Stanford University.
                                                                       
    "It was clear if you could take a $250,000 device and make it a $100
    device - and make it work on PCs - you'd really have something," he
    said.
                                                                       
    To make the technology work, a computer must read sensors and control
    motors thousands of times each second.
                                                                       
    For a small PC, this kind of work slows the game, so Rosenberg got
    around the problem by giving force-feedback devices their own
    microprocessors and developing a language to let the computer and
    joystick or steering wheel work together.
                                                                       
    Several games have already incorporated the I-Force software necessary
    to interact with force-feed joysticks and Apple has signed a letter of
    intent to incorporate I-Force into the next major release of Apple Game
    Sprockets, the gaming platform for the Macintosh operating system. 
7.1813IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 14 1997 17:2455
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 13 May 1997 Issue 718
       
    3D computer model traces killer shot and dismisses commission findings,
    reports Robert Uhlig
            
    New "evidence" in the J.F. Kennedy assassination saga has been
    delivered by an Anglo-German team who used a computer to recreate the
    scene and trace the path of "the magic bullet".
            
    The Warren Commission, set up to investigate Kennedy's assassination,
    concluded that the president was shot by a single marksman positioned
    on the sixth floor of the Dallas book depository, and that one bullet
    caused seven wounds, including injuries to Governor Connally, sitting
    in front of Kennedy in the presidential Lincoln car.
            
    Detractors argue this would have required the bullet to twist and turn
    in mid-air, leading to several dozen conspiracy theories involving
    variously the CIA, Mafia, Cuban exiles and Union Teamsters - most of
    which are detailed in depth on the Internet.
            
    Joachim Marks, a German computer scientist, and Matthew Smith,
    Sheffield-based author of JFK - The Second Plot, have combined
    photogrammetry and virtual reality techniques to build a 3D computer
    model of the Dallas scene on November 22, 1963.
            
    Photogrammetry is usually used to make architectural plans from
    photographs, or 3D models from aerial images, but Marks and Smith used
    it to combine maps, photographs and stills from the world's most famous
    home cine film: Dallas clothing manufacturer Abraham Zapruder's 30
    grainy seconds of the bullets hitting the president. 
            
    The resulting 3D animated model includes the Lincoln, the grassy knoll,
    book depository, all the bodyguards and police motorcyclists, and many
    of the bystanders.
            
    On next Sunday's Correspondent on BBC2, Marks and Smith demonstrate the
    software that lets them position themselves anywhere in the
    assassination arena, and even follow the trajectory of the bullets,
    from a "bullet's eye view".
            
    "When the bullet leaves Kennedy's throat, there is no reason it should
    change direction," said Marks.
            
    The Marks-Smith theory suggests the fatal bullet could only have come
    from in front of the car, probably from a marksman standing beside a
    nearby picket fence - a location suspected in previous re-enactments.
            
    Gerald Ford, the former US president who served on the Warren
    Commission, said: "Those diagrams in theory I can understand," but
    added that he still believes the findings of the commission.
            
    So why should the Marks-Smith theory be considered?
            
    "It's better than one answer," Smith answered, "the Warren Commission
    answer."
7.1814IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:13119
    AP 15-May-1997 1:22 EDT   REF5894

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, May 15, 1997
   
    SPACE SHUTTLE 

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Space shuttle Atlantis is scheduled to
    take off early Thursday for a critical resupply mission to the Russian
    space station Mir. Atlantis will ferry a new oxygen generator, carbon
    monoxide detectors and several other parts to the aging and ailing
    space station. Atlantis also will take NASA astronaut Michael Foale to
    Mir, where he will spend 4 1/2 months. 
   
    MILITARY HARASSMENT 

    HURLBURT FIELD, Fla. (AP) -- An Air Force colonel was convicted
    Wednesday of kissing a female officer, but was cleared of a more
    serious charge of allegedly lifting her shirt and fondling her breast.
    Col. David C. Rauhecker, convicted of having an unprofessional
    relationship, faces up to six years in prison. He is among the
    highest-ranking officers court-martialled on sexual harassment charges.
   
    GAMMA RAY BURST 

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Astronomers at Caltech have solved part of the
    mystery of gamma ray bursts by determining that one occurred billions
    of light-years outside the Milky Way and burned brighter than any
    object in the universe. It is the first time anyone has been able to
    pinpoint the distance and brightness of gamma rays, which are invisible
    to the naked eye and have higher energies than all other forms of
    radiation. 
   
    EARHART FLIGHT 

    DARWIN, Australia (AP) -- The Texas millionaire tracing the
    round-the-world flight of Amelia Earhart lifted off from Australia
    Wednesday, flying her vintage plane toward the Pacific island region
    where the aviator vanished 60 years ago. Linda Finch, 46, left Darwin,
    with 3,240 miles to go to reach Howland Island, a tiny uninhabited site
    north of Fiji. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The budget deal between President Clinton and
    Congress is nearly complete. Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete
    Domenici has prepared a budget-balancing plan that envisions $212
    billion in savings on the way to eliminating deficits in 2002.
    Domenici's budget also assumes $135 billion in tax cuts over the next
    five years, partly offset by $50 billion in revenue increases.
    Domenici, R-N.M., tentatively planned to present the package to his
    committee for votes as early as Thursday. 
   
    ZAIRE 

    KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) -- Talks to avert a battle with rebels moving in
    on Zaire's capital have broken off after President Mobutu Sese Seko was
    stood up by rebel leader Laurent Kabila. A Western diplomat and Zairian
    military officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Kabila's
    rebels had reached the Black River, about 60 miles outside Kinshasa and
    the last major defensive position before the capital. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Jurors saw photos taken from a surveillance camera of a
    Ryder truck creeping toward the Oklahoma City federal building minutes
    before a bomb blew the building apart. Prosecutors showed pictures
    taken just two minutes before the 1995 blast. Timothy McVeigh, 29,
    could get death if convicted of murder and conspiracy in the explosion,
    which killed 168 people. 
   
    MLK-RIFLE 

    SOUTH KINGSTOWN, R.I. (AP) -- James Earl Ray's rifle, locked away for
    nearly 20 years, was fired Wednesday in the first of the court-ordered
    tests he hopes will clear him in the assassination of Martin Luther
    King Jr. Ray, 69, imprisoned in Tennessee and gravely ill, pleaded
    guilty in 1969 to killing the civil rights leader but almost
    immediately recanted. 
   
    LATE-TERM ABORTION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton has agreed to accept a limited ban
    on late-term abortions. He told Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle he
    "would be supportive" of a compromise as long as it permits abortions
    for mothers experiencing grievous health problems. The American Medical
    Association board said the so-called partial-birth abortions should be
    used rarely, if at all. 
   
    FLAG BURNING 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress would have authority to outlaw desecration
    of the U.S. flag under a proposed constitutional amendment approved by
    the House Judiciary Committee. Two Democrats -- Rep. Robert Wexler of
    Florida and Rep. Steven Rothman of New Jersey -- joined 18 Republicans
    in voting for the amendment. Nine Democrats voted against it. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was changing hands at 115.90 yen, down 3.03
    yen. The Nikkei fell 252.82 points to 19,956.90. In New York, the Dow
    gained 11.95 to close at 7,286.16. The Nasdaq rose 1.96 to 1,335.55. 
   
    OBIT-BLACKSTONE 

    LOMA LINDA, Calif. (AP) -- Magician Harry Blackstone, 62, who thrilled
    generations before TV, died Wednesday. He died at Loma Linda University
    Medical Center, apparently from complications of pancreatic cancer, a
    coroner said. 
   
    KNICKS-HEAT 

    MIAMI (AP) -- Four players were ejected as the Miami Heat brawled their
    way past the New York Knicks, winning 96-81 to stay alive in the NBA
    Eastern Conference semifinals. The Knicks lead the best-of-7 series
    3-2. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by AMY FINKELSTEIN 
7.1815IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1374
    RTw  15-May-97 04:16    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    POINTE NOIRE, Congo - South African President Nelson Mandela has failed
    to bring Zaire's President Mobutu Sese Seko and rebel leader Laurent
    Kabila together for crunch peace talks, raising the likelihood of a
    battle for the capital Kinshasa. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Leaders of the NATO western alliance and Russia must put the
    smiles of relief that greeted their long-awaited accord behind them and
    face up to the challenge of selling the deal back home. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albania stepped back from fresh turmoil as President Sali
    Berisha postponed a decree on new elections, which most political
    parties had said they would boycott. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - White House counsel Charles Ruff agreed to testify to a
    House of Representatives committee investigating campaign fund-raising
    misdeeds in a potentially explosive hearing rescheduled for next week. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain's new Prime Minister Tony Blair unveiled an "ambitious
    but practical" legislative programme, including plans for major
    constitutional reforms, and promised clear leadership after his
    landslide election victory. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - A senior PLO negotiator said after a U.S.-sponsored meeting
    with Israel's defence minister that Middle East peace efforts were
    still in deep crisis. 

    -------- 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton said a new agreement between former
    Cold War foes NATO and Russia was "an historic step closer to a
    peaceful, undivided, democratic Europe." 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate unanimously ratified changes in a European
    military forces treaty that were negotiated to adapt to the breakup of
    the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact. 

    - - - - 

    TEHRAN - International aid sent to Iran for survivors of last weekend's
    deadly earthquake which left 50,000 homeless has reached the 200 tonne
    mark, Tehran radio said. 

    - - - - 

    SEOUL - South Korean state prosecutors are preparing to arrest one of
    President Kim Young-sam's sons over a sleaze scandal revealed by the
    collapse of failed Hanbo Steel Co, prosecution sources said. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - French President Jaques Chirac arrived in Beijing for a
    four-day visit expected to see the signing of hundreds of millions of
    dollars worth of business deals and to set the seal on strong political
    ties. 

    REUTER 
7.1816IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1395
    RTw  15-May-97 06:39    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    Danish mother reunited with her baby in New York 

    NEW YORK - A Danish actress was reunited with her baby, whom
    authorities had put in foster care for four days after the mother left
    her parked in a stroller outside a New York restaurant. 

    Attorneys for the mother said such a practice was common in Copenhagen,
    but officials questioned the wisdom of being so trusting in New York. 

    Authorities took 14-month-old Liv Sorensen from her Danish mother,
    Annette Sorensen, and American father, Exavier Wardlaw, on Saturday.
    The couple had left her outside an East Village restaurant while they
    were inside having a drink and watching her through the window, police
    said. 

    Passers-by said the baby was cold and crying and called police, they
    said. 

    The parents face charges of endangering the welfare of a child and
    disorderly conduct. 

    - - - - 

    Britain's Oasis may sue over Internet copyright 

    LONDON - The management of leading British pop group Oasis is
    threatening legal action for breach of copyright against hundreds of
    unofficial Internet sites dedicated to the band, the Financial Times
    reported. 

    The newspaper said the Oasis initiative was a first for the music
    industry but formed part of a general clampdown against intellectual
    copyright infringements on the Internet. 

    "In its warning to unauthorised Oasis web sites, Ignition Management
    says it is unlawful to use copyrighted photographs, video clips, song
    lyrics and sound samples without permission, and has given them 30 days
    to erase illegal material," the Financial Times said. 

    - - - - 

    Renoir bather sold in New York for $12.4 million 

    NEW YORK - An oil painting of a red-haired girl bathing by Pierre
    Auguste Renoir sold for $12.4 million in a sale of impressionist and
    modern painting and sculpture at Christie's auction house. 

    An anonymous buyer decided the 1888 work was worth more than its
    estimate of $8 million to $10 million. 

    Eyes averted, the girl in "Young Woman Bathing" demurely shields her
    body with her hands in a pose that alludes to several classical
    paintings and sculptures. 

    The work was the most expensive item in the $119.8 million evening
    sale. The total fell within its estimated range of $102 million to $137
    million, although several important works failed to meet the minimum
    price required for a sale. 

    - - - - 

    Eddie Murphy sues over transsexual hooker stories 

    LOS ANGELES - Comedian Eddie Murphy sued two supermarket tabloids,
    alleging they printed lies about his sexual habits after he was stopped
    by undercover police with a transsexual prostitute in his vehicle. 

    Murphy's suits, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, each seek $5
    million in general damages and unspecified punitive damages from the
    National Enquirer and the Globe for slander, libel and invasion of
    privacy. 

    A third suit seeks at least $1 million for the same reasons, from Ioane
    Seiuli, a relative of the prostitute who was in his car the morning of
    May 2. 

    Atisone Seiuli was arrested by sheriff's deputies on an outstanding
    prostitution warrant in the incident on Santa Monica Boulevard in West
    Hollywood. Murphy, 36, was not charged with any offence. 

    After the 4:45 a.m. incident, Murphy said in interviews and through his
    publicist that he had been giving Seiuli a ride home and that he was a
    "good samaritan" who often helped the homeless and prostitutes. 

    The tabloids printed interviews with transvestite prostitutes
    suggesting Murphy had a "secret sex life" and a "sick obsession." 
7.1817IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1351
    AP 14-May-1997 23:53 EDT   REF5760

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Tobacco Executive Seeks Immunity

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Former Philip Morris research chief Thomas Osdene is
    seeking federal immunity in the Justice Department probe of the tobacco
    industry, according to broadcast reports Wednesday. 

    Osdene, former vice president of science and technology at Philip
    Morris, would be the first tobacco executive to use his right against
    self-incrimination, the CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News
    broadcasts reported. 

    Osdene oversaw Philip Morris' research on smoking and health, NBC said,
    and was told to "bury" a nicotine study from 1977 if it was found to be
    unfavorable, according to the network. 

    NBC said he was to testify in connection with a lawsuit Texas has
    brought against the tobacco industry. The lawsuit, which seeks $4
    billion to cover the cost of tobacco-related illnesses, accuses the
    tobacco industry of violating federal fraud, racketeering and
    conspiracy laws. 

    The chief spokesman for Texas Attorney General Dan Morales declined to
    discuss the reports. 

    "We're not going to comment on that situation," said spokesman Ron
    Dusek. "There is a court order that prohibits us from discussing any of
    those details. 

    Chuck McDonald, a spokesman for the tobacco industry in the Texas case,
    did not return a telephone call seeking comment. 

    In an earlier interview, Osdene told NBC he had done nothing wrong. 

    "I feel perfectly satisfied with what I did," he said. "I did an honest
    job and worked for an honest company." 

    Meanwhile, CBS News reported that a federal grand jury in Washington is
    probing, among other issues: 

    -- Whether tobacco companies deceived federal agencies, specifically
    about additives of nicotine. 

    -- Whether they perjured themselves or committed mail fraud when
    dealing with federal agencies. 

    -- Whether they conspired to destroy documents and hide their own
    research on nicotine levels and their manipulation. 
7.1818IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1358
    AP 14-May-1997 22:43 EDT   REF5722

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Report Finds Fla. Bikers in Danger

    By FREIDA RATLIFF FRISARO

    Associated Press Writer

    MIAMI (AP) -- Four of the five most dangerous large metropolitan areas
    in the country to ride a bicycle are in Florida, with the Tampa Bay
    area being the deadliest, according to a report released Wednesday.

    The study by the Surface Transportation Policy Project said the
    Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater area leads the nation in the number of
    traffic-related bike fatalities with 9.2 deaths for every million
    residents, or about 19 per year. 

    The rest of the top five, in order, were Miami, Phoenix, Ariz., Fort
    Lauderdale, and Orlando. 

    Miami, where an estimated 15 cyclists are killed by vehicles each year,
    is working to make bike riding safer: 32 miles of a 215-mile bicycle
    beltway have opened since September. Most of the paths are separated
    from the highway. 

    It isn't any safer traveling by foot, though. Last month, Surface
    Transportation, a nonprofit advocacy group for more efficient
    transportation systems based in Washington, D.C., ranked Florida as the
    nation's most dangerous place for pedestrians. 

    "Florida communities are dangerous for bicyclists for the same reason
    that they are dangerous for pedestrians -- they are designed for cars,
    not people," said Steve Murchie, of the Florida Consumer Action
    Network. 

    Between 1986 and 1995 in Florida: 1,135 bicyclists were struck and
    killed by vehicles; 9,997 cyclists were injured by vehicles; 29.8
    percent of bicycle fatalities involved children under 18; and 3,389
    children were injured each year riding their bikes. 

    Nationally, about 840 bicyclists are killed by vehicles each year, and
    more than 75,000 are injured, according to the study. 

    The safest city in the survey was Providence, R.I., with only 0.7
    bicyclist deaths for every million residents. Pittsburgh followed with
    1.2 fatalities per million residents, then Boston with 1.4 deaths per
    million. 

    The five most dangerous states after Florida (8.8 deaths per million)
    were Arizona (7 deaths), Louisiana (5.9), South Carolina (5.4) and
    North Carolina (4.5). 

    The safest state was Rhode Island with 1.1 deaths per million. West
    Virgina (1.2 deaths), New Hampshire (1.4), Oklahoma (1.6) and and North
    Dakota (1.7) followed, according to the Federal Highway
    Administration.
7.1819IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1329
    AP 14-May-1997 22:05 EDT   REF5698

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Mass. Rules in Favor of Beggars

    BOSTON (AP) -- Massachusetts' highest court, saying that begging is
    constitutionally protected free speech, struck down a 111-year-old
    state law Wednesday that permitted the imprisonment of panhandlers. 

    In addition to impinging on free speech, the statute also "suppresses
    an even broader right -- the right to engage fellow human beings with
    the hope of receiving aid and compassion," wrote Justice John M.
    Greaney in the Supreme Judicial Court's unanimous opinion. 

    The law, which dates to 1866, states that anyone caught begging for
    charity in a public place may be deemed a vagrant and imprisoned for up
    to six months. 

    Craig Benefit, 36, a homeless man who was arrested three times in 1992
    and 1993 for panhandling in Harvard Square, challenged the law, even
    though the charges were dismissed in 1994. 

    Greaney dismissed prosecutors' argument that the law is necessary to
    preserve safety. 

    "If we ever end up a society where you can't ask for help, we're in
    deep trouble," said Benefit's lawyer, Sarah Wunsch of the American
    Civil Liberties Union. 
7.1820IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1374
    AP 14-May-1997 20:54 EDT   REF5602

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Group Urges Egg Poison Warnings

    By JOHN D. McCLAIN

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Egg cartons should carry labels warning consumers
    that eating raw or undercooked eggs can poison them, a health advocacy
    group urges. 

    "Eggs have become the No. 1 contributor to food poisoning outbreaks,
    with hundreds of thousands of Americans getting sick or dying every
    year," Caroline Smith DeWaal, food safety director for the Center for
    Science in the Public Interest, said Wednesday. 

    The government says 128,000 to 640,000 cases of food poisoning are
    caused annually by a strain of salmonella called enteritidis associated
    with eggs. However, the government's Centers for Disease Control says
    only 10 of those cases resulted in deaths in 1995 and 1996. 

    DeWaal told reporters Public Interest is formally petitioning the Food
    and Drug Administration to require the warning: "Caution: Eggs may
    contain illness-causing bacteria. Do not eat raw. Cook eggs until the
    yolk is firm." 

    If followed, the warning would relegate to the past the practice of
    children licking the bowl of cake or cookie dough prepared with raw
    eggs, or their parents eating sunny-side-up eggs with runny yolks. 

    DeWaal said 45 billion eggs are produced annually in the United States
    and only a small fraction are contaminated. 

    But, she added, consumers don't know which ones will make them sick.

    The center's message is similar to the message the egg industry's Egg
    Nutrition Center has stressed in consumer education materials for a
    dozen years. That is, said executive director Donald McNamara: "'Keep
    eggs refrigerated and cook them thoroughly before eating.' It's the
    standard things recommended for any perishable item." 

    McNamara said, however, that the industry opposes the label wording the
    Center for Science in the Public Interest is proposing. It gives the
    wrong impression that all 12 eggs in any carton are contaminated, when
    only a minute fraction of eggs pose a danger, mostly from undercooking
    and temperature abuse, he said. 

    Public Interest officials praised the Clinton administration's $43.2
    million program announced this week to protect the nation's food
    supplies, including measures designed to ensure that fresh eggs are
    safe. 

    Both the administration and the center's egg-safety programs recommend
    additional research, testing, early warning systems, government
    coordination and consumer education. 

    But until those measures are put in place, food poisoning will remain a
    threat to thousands. 

    Salmonella causes diarrhea and systemic infections in victims and can
    be fatal, especially among the very young and elderly. 

    The Center for Science in the Public Interest said that until the
    1980s, eggs generally were safe. Then salmonella enteritidis entered
    the production chain, and contaminated eggs now are found coast to
    coast. 

    Although the Agriculture Department checks eggs for quality, the FDA is
    responsible for controlling harmful bacteria in them. The center said
    the cash-strapped agency is able to inspect egg plants only an average
    of once every 10 years. 
7.1821IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1364
    AP 14-May-1997 20:39 EDT   REF5551

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Defends Army Chemical Tests

    By MARY R. SANDOK

    Associated Press Writer

    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Secret biological warfare tests conducted by the
    Army in the 1950s and 1960s didn't expose U.S. and Canadian residents
    to toxic chemical levels, a new study said Wednesday. 

    A National Research Council committee, at the request of Congress,
    studied the effects of the experimental spraying of the chemical
    compound zinc cadmium sulfide in 33 urban and rural areas on both sides
    of the border. 

    The areas included Corpus Christi, Texas; Fort Wayne, Ind.;
    Minneapolis; St. Louis; and Winnipeg, Manitoba. 

    The fine fluorescent powder was used to test the way biological weapons
    might disperse under varying conditions. The compound is not a
    biological weapon, nor was it believed to be toxic. 

    "We have found no evidence that exposure to zinc cadmium sulfide at
    these levels could cause people to become sick," said committee chair
    Rogene Henderson, senior scientist at Lovelace Respiratory Research
    Institute in Albuquerque, N.M. 

    The committee estimated that an average-sized man could inhale as much
    as 500 micrograms of cadmium sulfide over a few days without harmful
    effects. 

    But the highest estimated doses of cadmium -- the most toxic part of
    the compound -- in all areas was 24.4 micrograms in St. Louis; 14.5 in
    Winnipeg; 6.8 in Minneapolis; 1.1 in Fort Wayne; and 0.1 in Corpus
    Christi. 

    The report said the dose may have been as high as 390 micrograms in
    Biltmore Beach, Fla., just east of Panama City Beach in the Florida
    Panhandle, but that the area was remote and unpopulated at the time of
    the tests and very few people, if any, were believed to have been
    exposed. 

    The committee reviewed data from published scientific literature,
    information supplied by the Army and its contractors and testimony from
    citizens at public meetings in Minneapolis, Fort Wayne and Corpus
    Christi. 

    The zinc compound was sprayed over several parts of Minneapolis --
    including an elementary school -- in 1953. Several women who went to
    school there at the time have reported health problems including
    cancer, disabled children and miscarriages. 

    Rep. Martin Sabo, D-Minn., who pushed for the $1 million study, said
    that despite the findings, he was disturbed by "the idea that the U.S.
    Army would use American citizens as guinea pigs -- even in the name of
    national security." 

    The National Research Council, based in Washington, D.C., is a private,
    nonprofit organization that gives independent advice on science and
    technology. 
7.1822IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1339
    AP 14-May-1997 20:38 EDT   REF5546

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wed. McVeigh Trial Developments

    By The Associated Press

    TRUCK VIDEO: Jurors saw surveillance camera pictures that show a Ryder
    rental truck a block from the Oklahoma City federal building minutes
    before the blast. The truck sits in front of the Regency Towers
    apartment complex for 21 seconds and then moves forward a couple of
    feet, pausing three more seconds. It pulls away at what is timed by the
    camera at 8:57:18 a.m. The bomb exploded at 9:02 a.m. 

    BOOMERANG: The force of the blast propelled the Ryder truck axle 575
    feet, where it landed on the hood of a small, red Ford Festiva. The
    car's owner, Regency apartment's maintenance worker Richard Nichols,
    recalled he and his wife were strapping their 10-year-old boy into the
    back seat when the axle hit. "I saw this humongous object coming
    straight at us, spinning like a boomerang." Neither Nichols, his wife
    nor his nephew was injured. 

    MURDER COUNTS: Prosecutors began calling witnesses to identify eight
    victims named specifically in the indictment because they died while on
    the job as federal agents. Proving those deaths is required under
    federal laws in order to seek the death penalty. 

    TONS OF DEBRIS: Investigators sifted through 1,035 tons of debris from
    the bombing, looking for everything from body parts to bomb components.
    Seven tons of evidence were recovered, including mangled truck pieces
    that were wheeled into court in carts. 

    WHAT'S NEXT: An expert is expected to testify that the truck parts
    collected could have come from a Ryder truck. More witnesses are
    expected to establish victims who died on the job as federal agents. A
    hearing is set in the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on a news
    media appeal of U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch's decision to keep
    secret the identify of evidence he ruled inadmissible. 
7.1823IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1377
    AP 14-May-1997 17:41 EDT   REF5806

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Rejects Medicinal Marijuana

    By SCOTT BEKKER

    Associated Press Writer

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Smoking marijuana has less medical benefit than
    taking the drug's active ingredient in its pure form, and neither is of
    much use when side effects are considered, a new study says. 

    The active ingredient in marijuana, THC, has been shown to be
    medicinally useful for such things as fighting nausea after
    chemotherapy and restoring appetite in AIDS patients, according to the
    study published Wednesday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. 

    But THC is more effective when taken in its pure form, the prescription
    drug dronabinol, than when smoked, according to Dr. Eric A. Voth and
    Dr. Richard H. Schwartz, whose conclusions came from analyzing earlier
    studies. 

    And since it's the ingredient that makes pot smokers high, its medical
    value is negated by its intoxicating effects, which increase patients'
    risk of having an accident, such as falling down stairs, Schwartz said. 

    "I don't see any advantage of smoking pot any more than I would suggest
    there's an advantage of smoking tobacco for weight control or anxiety,"
    Voth said. 

    The researchers are members of the International Drug Strategy
    Institute, an anti-drug think tank based in Topeka, Kan. Their findings
    were based on a review of studies published between 1975 and 1996 and
    did not consider anecdotal accounts of the medical effectiveness of
    smoking marijuana. 

    One medical marijuana proponent called the study's authors
    "missionaries" bent on convincing the public that marijuana is
    dangerous, and questioned the quality of a journal that would publish
    their work. 

    Dr. Lester Grinspoon, author of "Marijuana, the Forbidden Medicine,"
    said the omission of anecdotal evidence taints the research because so
    few other studies have been done. 

    "That's just a way of trying to dismiss what is so obvious to these
    suffering people who have discovered that it's much more useful than
    the conventional medicine," said Grinspoon, a professor of psychiatry
    at Harvard University. 

    Schwartz, a pediatrician in Vienna, Va., said concerns that he is
    biased were reasonable, but added: "I think we did a very, very
    vigorous search for all the valid studies." 

    Voth criticized the media for supporting the notion that "there's some
    great magic to smoke marijuana," and said the study is a much-needed
    dispassionate review of the medical literature. 

    The issue gained momentum in November when voters in Arizona and
    California passed ballot initiatives legalizing prescription of
    marijuana for medical uses. 

    The study found that younger patients who had smoked marijuana in the
    past appeared to experience the greatest medicinal benefits while older
    patients ran into problems with faster heart rates and low blood
    pressure. 

    The researchers also warned that patients with weakened immune systems
    could risk exposure to carcinogens and bacterial infections as a result
    of smoking pot. 

    Grinspoon said marijuana offers important benefits to people whose
    post-chemotherapy nausea would make it difficult to swallow THC or
    other pain-killing pills. If it were legal, he added, marijuana would
    also be less expensive than intravenous anti-nausea medication. 
7.1824IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1448
    AP 14-May-1997 23:14 EDT   REF5742

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    UN Health Assembly Concludes

    By DALIA BALIGH

    Associated Press Writer

    GENEVA (AP) -- Human cloning is ethically unacceptable but nonhuman
    cloning has enough potential benefits to justify continued research,
    the 191-nation World Health Assembly said Wednesday. 

    The governing body of the U.N. health agency also criticized Israel for
    expanding Jewish settlements in areas claimed by the Palestinians, and
    expressed concern for the health of Palestinians because of Israel's
    closure of the West Bank and Gaza strip. 

    The resolutions on cloning and Palestinian health were the last two
    passed by the assembly before it ended its 10-day annual meeting. 

    Both were approved by committees Tuesday -- the cloning resolution by
    consensus and the one on Israel by a roll-call vote. Assembly approval
    was only a formality. 

    "The use of cloning for the replication of human individuals is
    ethically unacceptable and contrary to human integrity and morality,"
    the resolution said. 

    But it recognized "the need to respect the freedom of ethically
    acceptable scientific activity and to ensure access to the benefits of
    its applications." 

    A Scottish institute's cloning of a sheep named Dolly with cells from
    another sheep's udder in February raised widespread concerns about the
    possibility of human cloning. 

    The WHO lacks enforcement powers, but the resolution sets global
    standards expected to be widely respected by scientists. 

    In the other resolution, the assembly worried about the "adverse
    consequences" of the continuous closure of the West Bank and Gaza strip
    on their socioeconomic development, including health. 

    Israeli authorities routinely seal areas claimed by the Palestinians,
    saying it is the only way to prevent possible Palestinian terrorist
    attacks. 
7.1825IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1440
    AP 14-May-1997 22:27 EDT   REF5714

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Asia Leaders Vow End to Child Labor

    By RANJAN ROY

    Associated Press Writer

    MALE, The Maldives (AP) -- Leaders of seven South Asian nations vowed
    Wednesday to eliminate child labor by 2010 in a region where children
    often are the breadwinners in their families. 

    Governments will establish a study group to identify the factors that
    lead to child labor and then take steps to remove them, according to a
    declaration made at the end of the three-day conference of the South
    Asian Association for Regional Cooperation. 

    The leaders "recognized that the problems of these children are
    inextricably linked to the prevailing socioeconomic conditions," the
    14-page declaration said. 

    India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, the larger of the
    region's countries, had refused to see child labor as a problem until
    they were spurred by human rights activists and threatened with
    boycotts of products made by children. 

    There is no reliable count of child laborers in the region, but
    children are widely employed as domestic help, waiters, motor mechanics
    and shop assistants. 

    The Indian government, for example, says there are about 18 million
    child laborers in the country. Independent estimates range from 44
    million to 100 million. 

    Pressured by volunteer organizations, the leaders meeting in Male also
    promised to enact stronger laws to stop child prostitution, especially
    the huge illegal trade of young girls from the poorer areas of Nepal
    and Bangladesh to big-city brothels in India and Pakistan. 
7.1826IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1442
    AP 14-May-1997 22:22 EDT   REF5711

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saudi Bomb Suspect To Be Deported

    OTTAWA (AP) -- Canadian officials on Wednesday ordered the deportation
    of a Saudi man suspected of involvement in the June 1996 bombing that
    killed 19 U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia, but said there had been no
    decision where to send him. 

    Both Saudi and U.S. authorities have expressed interest in questioning
    Hani Al-Sayegh, who allegedly drove the car that signaled a bomb-laden
    truck to enter the grounds near the targeted U.S. barracks in Dhahran. 

    Al-Sayegh, 27, came to Canada in August on a tourist visa, passing
    through several countries, including Kuwait and the United States. He
    was arrested in March after security authorities linked him to the
    bombing. He has been in custody ever since. 

    His lawyer, Doug Baum, said Al-Sayegh doesn't want to be sent back to
    Saudi Arabia. 

    "He is likely to be tortured or ... summarily executed," Baum said. 

    David Olson, an Immigration Department spokesman, said a decision on
    where to deport Al-Sayegh was expected soon. 

    "Negotiations are going on at a very high level," he said. "The
    Americans have a very good interest in this client." 

    Wednesday's deportation hearing took only 11 minutes. The decision was
    pre-ordained by a special government certificate issued earlier this
    month alleging that Al-Sayegh was a member of a terrorist group and a
    threat to Canadian security. 

    Baum said his client would be unable to get a fair trial in Saudi
    Arabia. 

    "Before you send a man off before what is certainly a summary
    execution, surely you owe him the decency of ensuring he gets some due
    process," Baum said. 
7.1827IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1448
    AP 14-May-1997 22:20 EDT   REF5708

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Money Trucks Heisted in Puerto Rico

    By LUIS VARELA

    Associated Press Writer

    PONCE, Puerto Rico (AP) -- Gunmen dressed as guards slipped into an
    office of an armored truck company, waited for cash-filled trucks to
    arrive and stole at least $7 million. 

    FBI agents and Puerto Rican police searched a wide area of southern
    Puerto Rico on Wednesday and seized two vans believed used in the
    robbery of the Wells Fargo trucks. There were no immediate arrests. 

    Tuesday night's robbery, in the south coastal city of Ponce, was
    believed to be one of the largest armed robberies ever in Puerto Rico. 

    Police said between $7 million and $10 million was stolen. 

    "It was a perfect hit," said state police Agent Esteban Altaban de
    Jesus. 

    At least three uniformed gunmen used a key to enter an unoccupied Wells
    Fargo depot shortly after 7 p.m. Tuesday while two others stood
    outside. Over the next 90 minutes, they disarmed the drivers of five
    arriving Wells Fargo trucks and removed sacks of cash, police said. 

    "Don't move, or we'll blow you away," one of the gunmen yelled at a
    Wells Fargo employee, according to a police report. 

    In all, the gunmen handcuffed nine drivers and locked them in a
    bathroom. The workers eventually broke open a door and hailed a passing
    police officer. 

    Police Lt. Col. Hector Luis Rodriguez said officials were investigating
    whether current or former company employees took part in the robbery. 

    "Definitely, whoever did this knew that large quantities of money
    arrived here," Rodriguez said. "More than that, they knew the hours,
    the routes, the days and everything else." 

    Last week, gunmen took $2.9 million from a Brinks Puerto Rico Inc.
    armored truck near the western city of Mayaguez. FBI agents recovered
    the money and arrested five people, including two Brinks employees. 
7.1828IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1459
    AP 14-May-1997 21:35 EDT   REF5684

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Brazil 'Soap' Murder Rivets Public

    By MICHAEL ASTOR

    Associated Press Writer

    RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) -- An actor's ex-wife pleaded innocent
    Wednesday to fatally stabbing a sultry soap star after her husband
    claimed his on-screen tryst had become a real-life affair. 

    Paula de Almeida Thomaz is accused of helping her husband stab Daniella
    Perez 18 times with scissors on Dec. 28, 1992 -- a murder that upstaged
    even the impeachment of Brazil's president, who resigned the next day. 

    Guilherme de Padua was convicted in January of murdering his TV co-star
    and is serving a 19-year prison term. He testified at his trial that
    Thomaz stabbed Perez in a fit of rage. 

    Padua and Perez, 22, played lovers in the popular prime-time soap opera
    "Body and Soul," written by her mother, Gloria Perez. Padua testified
    that the TV affair continued off-screen and Thomaz went berserk when
    she found out. Perez's mutilated body was found in an abandoned lot on
    Rio's west side. 

    Prosecutors say Padua and Thomaz, who was pregnant at the time,
    murdered Perez together to seal a pact of fidelity. 

    A crowd gathered in front of the downtown courthouse Wednesday. Inside,
    Thomaz, with waist-long dark hair and wearing white slacks and a brown
    sleeveless shirt, told Judge Jose Geraldo Antonio she was in a mall all
    day shopping for baby clothes on the day of the murder. 

    After testifying for a little more than an hour, Thomaz broke into
    tears as the judge began reading the evidence against her. 

    Her sobbing soon grew uncontrollable and Thomaz was removed from the
    court at the request of her lawyers, who later said she had suffered a
    nervous breakdown. 

    "She's a victim of the hysteria that existed at the time," said defense
    attorney Carlos Eduardo Machado. 

    Thomaz's baby was born in prison and is being cared for by her parents. 

    Prosecutors are relying on a witness, lawyer Hugo da Silveira, who says
    he saw the couple's car at the murder site, wrote down the license
    plate and told police he saw Thomaz there. 

    "I expect she'll be convicted," said assistant defense attorney Arthur
    Lavigne. "There's a wide array of evidence against her." 

    The trial was expected to end Friday. Even if convicted and sentenced
    to the maximum 30 years in prison, Thomaz would be eligible for work
    release next year because -- including time served awaiting trial --
    she would have fulfilled one-sixth of the sentence. 
7.1829IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1479
    AP 14-May-1997 17:36 EDT   REF5792

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Blair Offers Legislative Agenda

    By MAUREEN JOHNSON

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- Prime Minister Tony Blair on Wednesday announced the
    first legislative program by a Labor government in 18 years, a centrist
    package he called "a necessary mixture of idealism and realism." 

    With a record 418 Labor lawmakers -- too many to fit into the House of
    Commons benches allotted to the governing party -- legislators sat
    crammed behind Blair, jammed knee to knee, their shoulders hunched. 

    The new Labor program includes bills to set up separate assemblies for
    Scotland and Wales, a ban on tobacco advertising, an elected mayor of
    London, and an $8.2 billion windfall tax on utility companies. 

    While the program contains radical constitutional proposals, it also
    sticks largely to Conservative spending restraints and pledges not to
    raise personal taxes. 

    "We have reached the limits of the public's willingness simply to fund
    an unreformed welfare state through ever higher taxes," Blair said. 

    Blair led the former socialist party back to power in part by shedding
    Labor of its high-tax image. Millions of middle-class voters deserted
    the Tories, split over closer ties with Europe and appearing jaded
    after four successive terms in office. 

    Labor faces the depleted ranks of the Conservatives, who lost half
    their lawmakers in Labor's landslide election victory May 1, and are
    down to 164 members in the 659-member House of Commons. 

    Earlier, Queen Elizabeth II opened the new session of Parliament amid
    traditional pageantry and read out Labor's program. 

    The 71-year-old monarch -- dressed in a long white gown and a crown --
    arrived for the ceremony with her husband, Prince Philip, in a
    horse-drawn carriage flanked by an honor guard. 

    Blair and his Conservative predecessor John Major stood side by side
    with other commoners while the queen read the 15-minute speech. 

    It included a bill to outlaw handguns -- a radical measure that follows
    the massacre last year of 16 kindergarten children and their teacher in
    Dunblane, Scotland. 

    Labor also plans to abolish a Conservative program which provided
    places at expensive private schools to 40,000 bright children from
    poorer homes. 

    Blair says he will use that money to reduce class sizes at state
    schools. 

    Critics say, however, that taxes are likely to rise, given Labor's
    promises to improve education and health services. 

    "There's a lot wrong with this," Kenneth Clarke, the Conservatives'
    former treasury minister said. "But it will take some months before the
    gloss wears off and they realize government is not as easy as
    opposition." 

    There was a reprieve for the hereditary members of the House of Lords.
    Because of pressures on the legislative timetable, Blair omitted his
    plan to strip the scions of aristocratic families of the right to vote
    in the unelected House of Lords. 

    Peter Mandelson, Labor's campaign manager and now a government
    minister, said the party was committed to reforming Lords later in its
    five-year term. 

    He warned that if the Conservative-dominated Lords, who can delay bills
    for six months, frustrate Labor's program, "there will be a head of
    steam growing very quickly for changes." 
7.1830IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1470
    AP 14-May-1997 23:11 EDT   REF5740

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Gamma Ray Burst Was the Brightest

    By JANE E. ALLEN

    AP Science Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Astronomers have solved part of the mystery of
    gamma ray bursts by determining that one occurred billions of
    light-years outside the Milky Way and burned brighter than any object
    in the universe. 

    The California Institute of Technology group is the first to pinpoint
    distance and brightness for one of astronomy's most enigmatic
    phenomena. 

    "This is certainly the discovery of the year in astronomy," said Bohdan
    Paczynski, a Princeton University astrophysics professor who termed the
    extragalactic finding "spectacular." 

    The gamma ray burst observed on May 8 blazed "a billion-billion times
    brighter" than the sun, said Caltech astronomy professor Shri Kulkarni.
    For 10 seconds, it was "the reigning king or queen of the sky." 

    The burst occurred about halfway across the universe, researcher Chuck
    Steidel said. Assuming the universe is about 15 billion light-years
    across, the burst was "greater than 7 billion light-years away," he
    said. 

    "This is a puzzle that's been around for 25 years. We finally have
    evidence that at least some of these bursts are at great distances and
    are the most intense sources of radiation in the universe," said Mark
    Metzger, one of the lead researchers. 

    The Caltech astronomers alerted colleagues through an International
    Astronomical Union circular. They'll submit the findings shortly to a
    peer-reviewed journal. 

    Gamma rays are invisible to the naked eye but can be detected by
    scientific instruments. They have higher energies than all other forms
    of radiation, including X-rays. 

    Gamma ray bursts were discovered more than 25 years ago by U.S. spy
    satellites trying to monitor Soviet compliance with a nuclear test ban
    treaty. They occur several times a day throughout the sky and can last
    anywhere from a few seconds to hundreds of seconds. 

    Scientists have only speculated about their sources, and this discovery
    still doesn't shed light on their origin. 

    The burst earlier this month was first detected by the Italian-Dutch
    BeppoSAX, a satellite with X-ray and gamma ray detectors launched last
    year. 

    Within hours, the Caltech researchers began observations of visible
    light features resulting from the burst, using telescopes at the
    Palomar Observatory in San Diego County. They found a bright, star-like
    object that "appeared from nowhere" and was gradually fading away. 

    When they used one of the ultra-powerful telescopes Sunday at the Keck
    Observatory in Hawaii, they found small intergalactic gas clouds had
    absorbed light from the fading object, which turned out to be "the
    glowing remains of the gamma ray burst," Kulkani said. 

    Then, based on how fast the gas cloud was moving away from Earth, they
    calculated the distance from the Earth of the burst. Those calculations
    helped them arrive at the object's true brightness. 
7.1831IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1469
    AP 14-May-1997 19:41 EDT   REF5891

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Refutes Condom-Sex Link

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A national campaign in Switzerland to promote the
    use of condoms has not encouraged people to have more sex, according to
    a study. 

    The study published Wednesday in the American Journal of Public Health
    found that a safe sex program and education about the risks of
    contracting the AIDS virus led to dramatic increases in the use of
    condoms, but no increase in the number of sex partners or the rate of
    casual sex. 

    The conclusions are based on telephone interviews of more than 2,000
    randomly selected Swiss residents between the ages of 17 and 45. The
    interviews started in 1987 and were repeated periodically through
    October 1994. 

    Lead author in the study was Dr. Francoise Dubois-Arber of the
    University Institute of Social and Preventative Medicine in Lausanne,
    Switzerland. 

    Included in the findings: 

    --Among people aged 17 to 30, those who said they always used condoms
    in casual sex increased from 8 percent in 1987 to 56 percent in 1994.
    Among ages 31 to 45, a group first polled in 1989, those who said they
    always used condoms in casual sex increased from 22 percent to 42
    percent. 

    --Within the younger group, those with steady partners increased condom
    use from 40 percent in 1988 to 64 percent in 1994. Those in the older
    group with steady partners reported condom use increased from 57
    percent to 72 percent. 

    --Sex with one or more casual partners decreased among those aged 17 to
    30, but remained about the same for the 31 to 45 age group. For the
    younger group, 18 percent reported having one or more casual partners
    within a year in 1987, while in 1994, the rate had dropped to 13
    percent. The rate among the older group remained between 8 percent and
    10 percent through five years of polling. 

    "While the proportion of people who had casual partners remained
    stable, consistent condom use as a means of protection against the risk
    of infection with HIV during casual sex increased considerably," the
    study reported. 

    The authors of the study said there was evidence that the proportion of
    sexually active 17-year-olds was going down, probably as the result of
    the national AIDS campaign and general sex education in schools. The
    researchers said their findings confirmed conclusions from other
    studies that showed "neither sex education nor condom promotion leads
    to earlier or increased sexual activity among adolescents." 

    In an editorial in the journal, Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus of the
    University of California, Los Angeles, said the Swiss sex education and
    AIDS awareness programs stress "responsible sexuality," while the
    dominant theme in U.S. programs among youth has been "abstinence." 

    Rotheram-Borus said that European condom promotion programs have led to
    fewer teen-age pregnancies, births and sexually transmitted diseases. 

    In the United States, however, she said, condom ads are not accepted by
    television networks and only 37 percent of sex education programs in
    public schools include instructions on the health effects of condom
    use. 
7.1832IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:15102
    AP 14-May-1997 18:15 EDT   REF5844

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Anti-Obesity Drug Wins Approval

    LAURAN NEERGAARD

    Associated Press Writer

    BETHESDA, Md. (AP) -- The first anti-obesity drug that does more than
    merely suppress appetite moved a step closer to the market Wednesday.
    Government advisers recommended approval of a pill that blocks the
    absorption of almost a third of the fat people eat. 

    But scientists cautioned that Xenical, a prescription drug, comes with
    embarrassing side effects that worsen with the more fat that dieters
    eat. 

    Taking the pill doesn't mean people can frequent McDonald's and still
    lose weight, manufacturer Hoffman-La Roche and outside scientists
    agreed. 

    Xenical may work by causing "a kind of intestinal aversion," said Dr.
    Jules Hirsch of Rockefeller University, before joining scientific
    advisers to the Food and Drug Administration in recommending approval
    of the drug. "Patients learn there are consequences to eating more." 

    Among side effects, Xenical can cause soft stools and oily leakages as
    the pill sends undigested fat out of the body so it doesn't wind up
    instead on dieters' thighs. 

    Xenical also can decrease absorption of vitamin D and certain other
    important nutrients, the panel warned. They unanimously recommended
    that Xenical users take carefully controlled doses of vitamin
    supplements. 

    The FDA isn't bound by advisory panel decisions but typically follows
    them. Metabolic drug chief Dr. James Bilstad said the agency would make
    a decision within a month. 

    Some 58 million Americans are overweight and spend $30 billion a year
    fighting the excess pounds, often futilely. Dieters have a variety of
    appetite suppressants that offer modest help. 

    The first new alternative in 20 years, Wyeth-Ayerst's hot-selling
    Redux, alters brain chemicals to trick the body into feeling full. A
    similar competitor, Knoll Pharmaceuticals' sibutramine, is expected to
    be approved within the year. 

    Xenical, known chemically as orlistat, would become the first drug to
    fight obesity through the intestine instead of the brain. The drug,
    taken with each meal, binds to certain pancreatic enzymes to block
    digestion of 30 percent of the fat people eat. 

    If Xenical is sold, no one should combine it with Redux or other
    appetite suppressants because there is no research to date showing that
    would be safe, warned Roche scientist Dr. Russell Ellison. 

    The FDA is evaluating how strongly to warn consumers and doctors about
    that issue, Bilstad said. 

    Two studies of about 1,400 patients found Xenical on top of a mild diet
    -- cutting about 600 calories a day -- helped obese people lose more
    weight in a year than people who took a dummy pill. 

    The weight loss was modest, scientists cautioned. On average, Xenical
    patients lost about eight more pounds than the dieters on placebo, or 5
    percent to 10 percent of their initial body weight. 

    But when the patients went off their diets in the second year, those
    who kept taking Xenical regained only 26 percent of the weight they had
    lost while placebo dieters regained half of their weight, Roche said. 

    More intriguing, the FDA panel said, was that Xenical users also saw
    slight drops in their cholesterol, blood pressure and blood-sugar
    levels -- suggestions that the drug might lower the risk of heart
    disease that strikes so many obese Americans. 

    But eliminating undigested fat meant 26 percent of patients had "oily
    stools" and other gastrointestinal effects. About 20 percent of Xenical
    users had enough problems absorbing vitamins D, E and beta carotene
    that they were prescribed vitamin supplements. Vitamin D absorption is
    particularly worrisome, the FDA panel said, because it can lead to bone
    loss and osteoporosis, although Roche said studies so far don't show
    signs of that. 

    And the panel was perplexed by a handful of breast cancer cases. Ten
    women who took Xenical were diagnosed with breast cancer, while only
    one breast cancer case arose among female dieters taking a dummy pill. 

    Animal studies showed no evidence that Xenical caused cancer and half
    of the breast cancer was diagnosed so soon after the study began that
    FDA doctors and independent scientists said there didn't appear to be a
    link. Still, the advisers urged further study just to be safe and said
    Xenical should be labeled to warn about the puzzling finding. 

    "It's a little disconcerting that we're creating an illness of
    malabsorption in return for modest weight loss," said acting panel
    chairman Dr. Robert Sherwin of Yale University. But "we felt compelled
    to approve it" because of the effects on cholesterol and blood
    pressure. 
7.1833IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:15105
    RTw  15-May-97 04:15    

    FEATURE-Recession, gambling stoke Macau gang warfare

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Harald Bruning 

    MACAU, May 15 (Reuter) - Back in the early 1990s, the Macau government
    official responsible for law and order described the sleepy,
    Portuguese-run territory as an "oasis of security." 

    Today, violence has reached such a level that Macau, a popular weekend
    getaway for stressed out Hong Kong workers and gamblers chancing their
    luck, is being dubbed the "Chicago of the Orient." 

    Heavily armed police fanned out across Macau last week in search of
    drive-by hitmen who gunned down three men in the latest wave of
    gangland warfare. 

    A senior police officer said the victims were "pretty well known
    triads" -- or members of mafia-like Chinese criminal societies. 

    Police spokesman Brigadier Manuel Monge said earlier this year he
    believed Macau police, who number about 4,500, were now outnumbered by
    triad members. 

    Macau police say the killing of Hong Kong's "Tiger of Wanchai," alleged
    gangster Anderly Chan, during the 1993 motor racing Grand Prix,
    signalled the prelude to gang warfare in the territory. 

    "Chan's killing was a clear indication that triads from Hong Kong were
    using Macau as the battleground for their turf wars," a senior Macau
    Judicial Police detective said. 

    Macau, due to revert to China in 1999 after more than 400 years as a
    Portuguese outpost, lies just 40 km (25 miles) from the British colony
    of Hong Kong. 

    More than a dozen deaths and scores of beatings and injuries have been
    attributed to gang violence so far this year. Twenty-one murders were
    reported in the enclave of just 445,000 people in 1996.

    HEAD-TO-HEAD BATTLE 

    Police and community leaders believe the battle is being fuelled by a
    head-to-head battle between Macau's two main triad societies for a
    greater share of takings from casino loansharking, smuggling,
    protection rackets and prostitution. 

    Violence simmered as an economic downturn began to bite deeper into the
    community in 1994 and 1995 and has worsened in the past six months. 

    "Macau's economic downturn in the mid-90s has not only affected bona
    fide businessmen but also the triads," said a senior community leader. 

    Police sources estimate the 14K triad society, boasting some 5,000
    members, is on the wane despite outnumbering its rivals. 

    Its arch-enemy, the Soi Fong or "water room" triad, sometimes known as
    the Won On Lok, has about 3,000 members and its influence appears to be
    growing. 

    The Hong Kong-based Sun Yee On triad also has a sizeable presence in
    Macau, but its tentacles are believed to be restricted to specific
    gambling-related businesses. 

    The Dai Huen, or "Big Circle," gang is said by police to be a "loose
    grouping" of criminals from China's southern Guangdong province which
    borders Macau. 

    Police sources say they believe some of the recent killings and
    attempted assassinations in Macau could have been carried out by Big
    Circle hitmen, often former Red Guards and People's Liberation Army
    soldiers hired by traditional triads. 

    Chinese contract killers are rumoured to murder for US$6,250 a head,
    Macau newspapers say. 

    Triad criminals from Hong Kong, Taiwan and China are beginning to
    muscle in for a slice of a shrinking pie. 

    Macau police say most violent crimes take place on the fringes of the
    territory's nine casinos and other "adult entertainment" businesses --
    nightclubs, saunas and massage parlours. 

    SCARING OFF INVESTMENT 

    Hong Kong businessman Stanley Ho, whose company Sociedade de Turismo e
    Diversoes de Macau (STDM) holds the casino monopoly, has complained
    about the local judiciary being too lenient with gangsters and called
    for the reimposition of the death penalty. 

    Ho, 75, said Macau's crime wave was scaring off potential investors. 

    The impact on tourism, however, has been mixed. 

    Over two million tourists visited the enclave in the first quarter of
    the year, up 2.7 percent from the same period in 1996, the Macau
    statistics department said recently. 

    A decline in the number of tourists from Hong Kong and Thailand was
    more than offset by more visitors arriving from 

    REUTER
7.1834IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1538
    RTw  15-May-97 02:30    

    Humans bring poultry virus to penguins

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - Visitors to the Antarctic may have carried a
    potentially deadly chicken virus to the penguins that thrive there,
    Australian scientists said on Wednesday. 

    They said tests showed that colonies of both emperor and Adelie
    penguins showed they had antibodies to infectious bursal disease virus
    (IBDV), which can weaken and kill domestic chickens. 

    "This raises concern for the conservation of avian wildlife in
    Antarctica," Heather Gardner and colleagues at Tasmania's environment
    department wrote in a letter to the science journal Nature. 

    The disease affects chicks, weakening their immune systems and leaving
    them open to infection. Strains vary but a new, virulent strain can
    kill off many of the chicks in a flock. 

    Gardner's group said tests had shown 65 percent of the chicks in one
    flock of emperor penguins had antibodies to the virus. A flock of
    Adelies had about a two percent prevalence -- while another flock, in a
    more remote location, had none. 

    "A potent source of environmental contamination in Antarctica could be
    from careless or inappropriate disposal of poultry products," they
    wrote. 

    Those visiting the continent could be the biggest threat yet to the
    species there, they added. 

    They said there was no evidence yet that any of the penguins had died
    or become ill from the virus. 

    REUTER
7.1835IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1586
    RTos 15-May-97 00:06    

    European Regulators OK BT-MCI Merger

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BRUSSELS, Belgium (Reuter) - European regulators Wednesday cleared the
    $20 billion merger of British Telecommunications Plc and MCI
    Communications Corp., but only after requiring the companies to sell
    certain assets and make other concessions. 

    The concessions would prevent the partners from dominating telephone
    services between Britain and the United States as well as the British
    audioconference business, the European Commission, the European Union's
    executive body, said in a statement. 

    One thing the commission required was that MCI, the No. 2 long-distance
    carrier in the United States, sell Dacom, its telephone conferencing
    business in Britain. 

    "The commission has considered that the undertakings proposed by the
    parties during the proceedings are sufficient to address the
    competition concerns," the statement said. 

    A British Telecom spokesman welcomed the decision. "We're very pleased.
    They placed a couple of conditions on clearance and we were only too
    happy to agree to them," he said. 

    An MCI spokesman said his company was pleased by the approval, and that
    it keeps the two companies plans for closing the merger on track. "We
    are optimistic we will close the deal by early fall," MCI spokesman
    Frank Walter said. 

    The merger, announced in November, will give British Telecom control of
    MCI, of which it already owns 20 percent. The deal will create the
    world's second largest phone company based on stock market worth after
    Japan's NTT Corp., neck-and-neck with AT&T Corp., the largest
    long-distance company in the United States. 

    EU regulatory approval had never been a problem as the British
    telecommunications market is one of the most liberalized in the
    15-nation European Union and both partners agreed to cooperate with the
    commission. 

    The deal still faces its main test in the United States where approval
    hinges on whether Britain is deemed to be as open to fair competition
    as the American market. 

    The Federal Communications Commission and Justice Department in
    Washington are expected to issue their rulings on the deal later this
    year. British Telecom has said it expects to win U.S. approval for the
    deal, one of the biggest takeovers ever. 

    The companies made the following concessions in Europe: 

    -- To make available capacity from the companies' trans-Atlantic cable
    to British carriers, without delay and at prices corresponding to
    British Telecom's "true cost of purchasing."

    The commission said this was justified by a capacity shortage on
    international transmission lines and because satellite does not yet
    provide a "satisfactory substitute" for submarine cable to transmit
    trans-Atlantic phone calls. 

    -- To sell a percentage of the trans-Atlantic cable capacity British
    Telecom now leases to other operators on the Britain-U.S. route if the
    operators requested it and on fair terms. An MCI spokesman said this
    would involve the sale of about 10 percent of BT's existing
    trans-Atlantic capacity. 

    -- To sell to other operators, at their request and without delay,
    circuits owned by British Telecom in Britain, enabling them to provide
    voice telephone services on the Britain-U.S. route "on an end-to-end
    basis." 

    -- To arrange for the sale of MCI's Dacom teleconferencing business in
    Britain. 

    The commission said that together the two companies would have
    controlled 80 percent of the British market, making it difficult for
    new companies to enter the business. 

    Dacom holds about 30 percent of the British teleconferencing market,
    the MCI spokesman said. British Telecom would be allowed to keep its
    teleconference operations, which account for about 50 percent of the
    British market, the spokesman said. 
7.1836IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1542
    RTw  14-May-97 23:46    

    Scientists synthesise potential new cancer drug

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - U.S. researchers announced on Wednesday they
    had managed to synthesise a new kind of cell-killing chemical that
    promises great hope for cancer victims. 

    The chemicals are known as epothilones. Naturally produced by a
    bacterium, they work in the same way as Taxol, the yew tree extract
    whose synthetic version is now registered to Bristol-Myers Squibb. 

    Many scientists think the epothilones could work better than Taxol
    because they seem to kill off tumour cells that have become resistant
    to it. 

    Writing in the science journal Nature, K C Nicolaou of the Scripps
    Research Institute in La Jolla, California and colleagues at the
    National Cancer Institute described how they had synthesised epothilone
    A and B. 

    This is important, as it is hard to get naturally occurring compounds
    in big enough amounts to work with, let alone use in treatment. 

    Taxol was considered a potential breakthrough drug but its discovery
    threatened the rare Pacific yew until it was synthesised. 

    It has shown great promise for the treatment of some cancers, including
    malignant melanoma, breast and some cases of ovarian cancer. 

    Cameron Cowden and Ian Paterson of Cambridge University's University
    Chemical Laboratory said scientists could now start finding out just
    which bits of the epothilones work best against cancer. 

    "Unlike the early stages in the development of taxol, which was
    originally extracted from the bark of a Pacific yew, work should not be
    hindered by the availability of these compounds," Cowden and Paterson
    wrote in a commentary on the study. 

    REUTER
7.1837IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1584
    RTw  14-May-97 19:28    

    Airlines christen Star Alliance, seek growth

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Clifford Coonan 

    FRANKFURT, May 14 (Reuter) - A group of major airlines, including
    Deutsche Lufthansa AG and United Airlines, on Wednesday formally
    branded an existing partnership under the name "Star Alliance" but said
    they would not merge. 

    The alliance, which also includes Air Canada, Scandinavian Airlines
    Systems and Thai Airways International Ltd, aims to create a global
    image for the alliance but for carriers to keep their identities. 

    The new alliance rivals that announced last year by British Airways and
    American Airlines, but airline executives said they did not expect the
    partnership to violate anti-competition laws. 

    "The Star Alliance poses no threat to competition and provides distinct
    customer benefits," the airlines said in a statement issued at a news
    conference at Frankfurt airport. 

    The launch of Star Alliance prompted American Airlines to call again on
    the British and U.S. governments to approve its alliance with British
    Airways, which has been dogged by regulators since being announced last
    June. 

    Other airlines are expected to join Star Alliance. There was
    confirmation on Wednesday that Brazil's Varig Airlines will join the
    group in October. 

    The partners said other potential partners include South African
    Airways and regional European carrier British Midland , which both now
    cooperate with Lufthansa. 

    Talks were also being held with unnamed Asian airlines to strengthen
    the alliance's presence in the expanding region but alliance airline
    executives declined further comment. 

    "Asia is the fastest growing region in terms of air traffic growth.
    Looking to the future of the alliance, we are hopeful there will be
    other airlines in that region who join," Lufthansa chief executive
    Juergen Weber told reporters. 

    Alliance chiefs would not comment on the possibility of Hong
    Kong-basaed Cathay Pacific joining the alliance, an airline seen as
    strategically important in the Asian market. 

    Industry analysts have said Asia was a critical market and there was no
    doubt partnerships will be formed in Asia. 

    The airlines, which have worked closely for a few years, said they
    would not take equity stakes in one another and each airline would keep
    their individual identities. 

    "It is not our intention to merge our airlines nor to develop identical
    product offerings. Our research tells us categorically that our
    customers enjoy and appreciate our varied cultures," the airlines said. 

    The branding deal, a bid to cut costs and offer integrated "same
    airline" travel for passengers and cargo, creates one of the largest
    industry alliances. 

    The five airlines have a combined staff of more than 210,000 employees
    and flights to 578 cities in 106 countries. 

    The alliance airlines showed off the power of their size, saying their
    combined revenues in 1996 totalled $42.3 billion and they carried about
    174 million passengers on flights around the world. 

    The partners projected annual global passenger growth of five to six
    percent in the coming years and Lufthansa said cargo shipment growth
    would average six to seven percent. 

    The partnership calls for common branding in marketing and advertising
    and to intensify, when possible, coordination of routes and the
    offering of code-share flights. 

    Passengers will also be able to accumulate and redeem mileage points on
    any of the partner airlines and for further integration of some airport
    operations, purchasing and ticketing operations.
7.1838IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 15 1997 11:1584
    RTw  14-May-97 17:55    

    Old Boeing 747 faces passenger safety sacrifice

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Neil Winton, Science and Technology Correspondent 

    LONDON, May 14 (Reuter) - An old Air France Jumbo jet is about to make
    the ultimate sacrifice -- it will be blown to bits on Saturday in the
    name of passenger safety. 

    Britain's Civil Aviation Authority and the U.S. Federal Aviation
    Administration are sponsoring an experiment to find new ways of
    designing aircraft structures to provide the best protection against
    terrorist bombs. 

    Four bombs will be exploded inside the cargo hold of a Boeing 747 while
    it is parked at a former U.S. Air Force Strategic Air Command base at
    Bruntingthorpe, Leicester, about 100 miles (160 km) north of London. 

    The CAA and FAA have been seeking tougher designs to protect civil
    airliners against terrorist threats. 

    In 1988, 270 people were killed when a Pan Am 747 was destroyed by a
    terrorist bomb over Lockerbie, Scotland. In 1989, another 171 perished
    when a bomb brought down a French UTA DC-10 airliner over Niger. 

    Saturday's experiment will be carried out by Britain's Defence
    Evaluation Research Agency for the CAA. It is part of a five-year, $5
    million research programme seeking to improve aircraft structures
    generally. 

    Two explosions on Saturday will test two new types of baggage
    containers and a third will test a body-armour type of protective
    material in the cargo hold. 

    "A fourth will demonstrate the impact of bombs against unprotected
    structures, and will make a big hole," CAA spokesman Richard Wright
    said. 

    Frank Taylor, director of Cranfield University's Aviation Safety
    Centre, said these experiments seek to localise the damage from bombs
    to curb the devasting spread of the impact which caused the Lockerbie
    disaster. 

    "They look at the gap between the outer skin and inner lining of the
    plane. A bomb will blow a hole in the side of the plane anyway, that's
    inevitable. At Lockerbie, the shock waves channelled between the outer
    and inner skin around the fuselage and met around the other side and
    reinforced themselves and the whole thing was immediately totally
    destroyed," Taylor said. 

    "These experiments are trying to change the design to stop the shock
    waves travelling around," Taylor said. 

    Professor Glyn Davies, head of aero structures at Imperial College,
    said it is also possible to toughen the structures of containers used
    on airliners to carry luggage and freight. But maximum protection is
    made difficult by the weight penalty. 

    "Perhaps you cannot contain all the explosive force in a protected
    container because of the weight, but a combination of this and improved
    body strength would help minimise the impact of the bomb's energy,"
    Davies said. 

    Davies said that airline structures were designed to be much stronger
    than normal requirements would demand. He pointed to a Hawaiian-based
    Boeing 737 which landed safely after about one third of the roof had
    been ripped off, and a Philippines BAC-111 which survived two separate
    bomb attempts. 

    "Airliners are designed for extreme cases. Most of the time they are
    much stronger than they should be. If you lose the odd bit it is quite
    likely to survive," Davies said. 

    The doomed Air France 747-100 was built in 1972 and was sold to an
    aerospace museum at Bruntingthorpe in England 1994. Its engines and
    major components were removed, and it has been used as an exhibit and a
    conference centre. 

    The CAA purchased the 747 for an undisclosed sum in 1995.

    REUTER
7.1839IJSAPL::VISSERSDutch ComfortFri May 16 1997 12:45142
7.1840IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:15107
    P 21-May-1997 2:00 EDT   REF5241

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, May 21, 1997
   
    ABORTION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate has approved legislation to ban certain
    late-term abortions. But the vote was three shy of a number needed to
    override President Clinton's threatened veto. The Republican-crafted
    bill passed 64-36. The vote to ban so called "partial birth" abortions
    sent the measure to the House. The GOP measure bans the operation
    except in cases where a mother's life would be jeopardized by
    continuing the pregnancy. Clinton vetoed a similar bill last year,
    saying it did not provide for exemptions in the cases of harm to a
    woman's health. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The house debate on an outline of the
    budget-balancing deal between President Clinton and legislative leaders
    is stretching passed midnight. House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt
    opposes the deal, arguing it favors the rich. Top lawmakers were
    nervous about the first serious attempt to alter the package: a
    high-pressure effort to add $12 billion to the $125 billion already
    planned for road-building through 2002. The plan promises to eliminate
    deficits by 2002 while cutting taxes for many families, investors and
    college students. 
   
    JUROR MISCONDUCT 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Judges must root out jurors who use personal beliefs
    about race, ethnicity or anything else to disregard the law in deciding
    a case, a federal appeals court has ruled. In a decision that could set
    an important legal precedent, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
    ruled in an Albany drug case that courts have a duty to stop jurors
    from ignoring the law by issuing firm instructions or even dismissing
    jurors. The practice of disregarding the law to achieve a verdict for
    other reasons is known as "nullification." 
   
    AIR FORCE PILOT 

    MINOT AIR FORCE BASE, N.D. (AP) -- The Air Force has ordered a delay in
    the court-martial of the nation's first female B-52 bomber pilot on
    adultery charges so it can consider her request to be honorably
    discharged instead. The case against 1st Lt. Kelly Flinn had been due
    to open Tuesday morning. Officials would not speculate on how long it
    would take for Air Force Secretary Sheila Widnall to reach a decision
    on Flinn's discharge request. Flinn is accused of having an affair with
    a married man, lying about the relationship to investigators and
    disobeying an order to end it. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Attempts by Timothy McVeigh's attorneys to launch an
    attack on the FBI crime lab have been cut short by the judge who barred
    questions about the fallout from a scathing federal report. Although
    the judge restricted cross-examination about the beleaguered crime lab,
    he allowed FBI chemist Steven Burmeister to answer specific questions
    about some of the possible shortcomings of the physical evidence.
    Burmeister testified that explosives residue, while found on McVeigh's
    clothing and ear plugs, wasn't detected in McVeigh's alleged getaway
    car. 
   
    TEXAS CASTRATION 

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- Gov. George W. Bush has signed a bill allowing
    repeat child molesters in prison to undergo voluntary surgical
    castration, saying it's for people "too sick to cure their illness."
    The law, which takes effect immediately, makes Texas the first state to
    offer the surgery as the primary method of castration for prisoners.
    Offenders would have to admit guilt, be screened by a psychiatrist and
    psychologist, and give written consent. Castration could not be used as
    a condition of parole or an exchange for good time credits. 
   
    FED-INTEREST RATES 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Reserve has left a benchmark short-term
    interest rate unchanged. The committee opted to wait and watch for
    signs of inflation before raising borrowing costs for millions of
    Americans. The federal funds rate on overnight loans between banks
    remains at 5.5 percent. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading at 113.18 yen early Wednesday, up
    0.76. The Nikkei fell 117.21 points to 20,215.62. On Wall Street, the
    Dow industrials closed up 74.58 to 7,303.46. 
   
    HEAT-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- The Chicago Bulls overcame 36 percent shooting and
    technical fouls on Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen and Dennis Rodman to
    defeat the Miami Heat 84-77 in the Eastern Conference finals opener.
    Miami led by 16 points in the first half and was still ahead 72-67
    midway through the fourth quarter, but the Heat didn't make a field
    goal for almost 6 1/2 minutes and fell to 0-7 against the Bulls in the
    playoffs. 
   
    FLYERS-RANGERS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Eric Lindros scored three goals as his beefy Flyers
    rolled over the disorganized, undermanned New York Rangers to give
    Philadelphia a 6-3 victory in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1841IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:15110
    RTw  21-May-97 04:18    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - Zaire's new head of state Laurent Kabila has arrived in
    Kinshasa to take charge after his guerrillas toppled veteran dictator
    Mobutu Sese Seko. He is expected to unveil his new transitional
    government for Africa's third largest country. Western powers want this
    to be broad based and focused on steering the nation to elections. 

    LOME - The soldier son of Zaire's ousted president Mobutu Sese Seko
    denied any link with last week's murder in Kinshasa of army chief of
    staff and defence minister General Mahele Lieko Bokungo. 

    NAIROBI - The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said it emptied the last major
    Rwandan Hutu refugee camp south of Kisangani and more than 34,000 had
    been flown home to Rwanda. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton, citing "severe repression" in
    Burma, imposed economic sanctions on Rangoon, including a ban on U.S.
    investment in its oil and natural gas development. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albanian Prime Minister Bashkim Fino launched late-night
    efforts to solve a deepening political crisis after European envoy
    Franz Vranitzky warned the country's fate hinged on a solution by the
    end of the day. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russia said it would reconsider its new partnership with NATO
    if the Western alliance moved towards offering membership to the Baltic
    states. 

    - - - - 

    DHAKA - The confirmed death toll in Bangladesh's devastating cyclone
    reached 112 night with some 1,500 still missing and hundreds of
    thousands made homeless. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russia's new reformist government faces a first big clash with
    the communist-dominated parliament when it presents its accounts for
    the first quarter and a bill demanding drastic spending cuts. 

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - Sinn Fein, the political wing of the Irish Republican Army
    (IRA), will meet British officials for the first time since republican
    guerrillas ended a truce in February 1996, political sources said. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - President Jacques Chirac weighed into France's tight
    parliamentary election race five days before the first round of voting
    with a veiled warning to voters against left-right "cohabitation"
    power-sharing. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Madeleine Albright, in a bid to give new momentum to
    flagging Bosnian peace efforts, will make her first trip as secretary
    of state to Sarajevo later this month, the State Department said. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - Italy's centre-left government called a parliamentary confidence
    vote for the 23rd time in its year of office, to opposition anger. 

    - - - - 

    DUESSELDORF, Germany - Lawyers defending East Berlin's legendary
    spymaster Markus Wolf on trial for masterminding three kidnappings
    during the Cold War called for his acquittal. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, encouraged by
    improved ties between India and Pakistan, said she was considering a
    trip to the region that would be the first such visit in 14 years. 

    - - - - 

    BEIJING - China hailed U.S. President Bill Clinton's decision to renew
    its most favoured trading status but urged Washington to grant the
    trade concessions on a permanent basis. 

    - - - - 

    ISLAMABAD - The purist Islamic Taleban militia said its forces had
    captured the Shibar Pass and had advanced to within five km (3 miles)
    of the Shi'ite Moslem stronghold of Bamiyan in central Afghanistan. 

    - - - - 

    TOKYO - A scandal centred on Japan's giant Nomura Securities took a
    twist with possible political repercussions when the chief government
    spokesman said three cabinet ministers held accounts at the brokerage. 

    - - - - 

    MAE HONG SON, Thailand - A senior member of an ethnic rebel

    REUTER
7.1842IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1580
    AP 21-May-1997 1:43 EDT   REF5226

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Union Criticizes Math Curriculum

    By ROBERT GREENE

    AP Education Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Teen-agers in France, Germany and Japan take far
    tougher math courses than Americans, with earlier exposure to algebra
    and geometry, according to a teachers' union study released today. 

    Looking at tests that help determine the academic futures of 15- and
    16-year-olds in those countries, the American Federation of Teachers
    said the other countries push students to higher levels of achievement.

    "They have a common curriculum, tests based on the curriculum, and
    incentives for students to work hard in school," said AFT president
    Sandra Feldman. "There is no parallel in the United States, so it's no
    surprise that our students don't perform as well." 

    Feldman also pointed to the shortage of math teachers with training in
    the subject. 

    Researchers also looked at college entrance examinations. But the
    examination of tests at the lower grade levels shows that the rigorous
    standards aren't just reserved for the college-bound, the report said. 

    The report comes as the Education Department struggles to develop a
    voluntary national test of math achievement in the eighth grade. States
    also are developing standards and tests. 

    Feldman said the foreign exams should serve as a model. 

    The report is the fourth in a series by the 940,000-member union and
    the National Center for Improving Science Education, a research
    organization, comparing American, Asian and European education. The
    late AFT president Albert Shanker had campaigned to boost standards. 

    The report found that the French, German and Japanese examinations
    stress geometry, measurement and algebra. 

    The study looked at a ninth-grade "brevet" from France, a 10th-grade
    "Realschule" exam from Germany and a high-school entrance exam for
    Japanese ninth-graders. 

    The tests help determine the courses that students later take. No
    comparable tests with comparable stakes are used widely in this
    country. 

    Two-thirds of the French students earn the brevet, 43 percent of
    10-graders meet the Realschule standards and nearly all the Japanese
    students take the high-school test, which determines which school they
    attend. 

    The researchers said the French brevet "reflects curriculum that is at
    least one year ahead of the typical U.S. ninth-grade curriculum," with
    a stress on algebra and geometry -- subjects that some U.S. students
    are never required to learn. 

    The report also looked at some tests that have been given to U.S.
    eighth-graders to measure national progress or make international
    comparisons. Accounting for the age differences, the researchers said
    those tests nonetheless find Americans lagging in algebra, measurement
    and geometry. 

    The typical eighth-grade curriculum in the United States is dominated
    by arithmetic, the report says. 

    "This hardly challenges them for the more advanced work students in
    other countries get in high school," said Senta Raizen, director of the
    National Center for Improving Science Education. 

    The report also found that the math sections of the college-entrance
    examinations -- the French "baccalaureat," German "Abitur," and the
    Tokyo University entrance examination -- were far more rigorous than
    the U.S. Scholastic Assessment Test, the ACT and Advanced Placement
    tests. 
7.1843IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:15106
    AP 21-May-1997 1:31 EDT   REF5209

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Docs Differ on Abortion Procedure

    By NANCY BENAC

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Dangerous and indefensible. Safe and essential. 

    Opinions are firmly held and passions run high among doctors on both
    sides of the wrenching battle over a late-term abortion procedure that
    critics call "partial-birth abortion." 

    "It is a procedure that I think puts women in danger," says Dr. Steve
    Calvin, an obstetrician-gynecologist at the University of Minnesota who
    supports efforts to ban it. 

    "There are situations, albeit rare ones, where it represents the safest
    and best choice for a patient," says Dr. Richard Hausknecht, a New York
    ostetrician-gynecologist at Mount Sinai School of Medicine who
    estimates he has done it maybe 10 times over 25 years. 

    Yet even among doctors with such differing views, there is general
    agreement that banning the procedure would have little practical impact
    on women who obtain abortions at advanced stages of pregnancy. Doctors
    can get around the restrictions by only slightly modifying their
    techniques, they say. 

    But some worry that a ban would have a chilling effect if doctors worry
    about running afoul of the law and shy away from other kinds of
    abortion as well. 

    "I think it has the potential to make abortion providers even fewer
    than they are," said Dr. Fredric Frigoletto, chief of obstetrics at
    Massachusetts General Hospital. "There will be enough confusion over
    this so that it might still have a detrimental effect." 

    Furthermore, critics oppose the intrusion of government into medical
    decision-making and the effort to turn doctors into criminals if they
    perform what some believe to be a defensible medical procedure. 

    At issue is legislation passed by the Senate on Tuesday that would ban
    "partial-birth abortions" except when a woman is at risk of death and
    no other medical procedure can be used to end the pregnancy. President
    Clinton is expected to the veto the bill. 

    The abortion procedure, known among doctors as intact dilation and
    extraction, involves partially extracting a fetus, legs first, through
    the birth canal, cutting an incision in the barely visible skull base
    and then draining the contents of the skull. 

    It is the "surgery of choice" for Dr. Martin Ruddock when women get
    abortions after the 20-week point in their pregnancies, said Pam
    O'Leary, administrator of the Center for Choice in Toledo, Ohio. But
    she said even Ruddock's practice would not be affected by the proposed
    ban because he cuts the fetus' umbilical cord to ensure that it is not
    alive when it enters the birth canal, and the legislation applies to
    the extraction of "a living fetus." 

    Likewise, Dr. Lee Carhart of Bellevue, Neb., said last year that he had
    done about 5,000 intact D&Es but that he induces death first by
    injecting drugs into the fetal sac, the American Medical News reported.

    Ruddock, Carhart and other proponents of the procedure say it is
    preferable to an alternative late-term abortion known as dismemberment
    D&E. In this procedure, the woman's cervix is dilated and the fetus is
    scraped out with serrated forceps and is dismembered and killed in the
    process. 

    "There's less instrumentation introduced into the uterus when you're
    removing the pregnancy intact," said O'Leary. 

    But some critics of the procedure believe that abortion doctors prefer
    intact D&E because the surgery is quicker and can be done outside of
    hospitals where they would be subject to peer review. 

    "If they can keep these things out of the hospital, they don't have
    anybody looking over their shoulders," said Dr. William Stalter, an
    obstetrician-gynecologist in Dayton, Ohio, who supports the Senate
    legislation. 

    Stalter said there are some indications that women who have undergone
    the procedure are more prone to lose subsequent pregnancies, although
    the procedure has not been properly studied. 

    The difficulty of the debate is reflected in the division among medical
    professional groups. 

    The American Medical Association agreed to support the legislation
    after the procedure being banned was more clearly defined and other
    changes were made. The AMA estimates the procedure represents one-tenth
    of 1 percent of the 1.5 million abortions performed each year. 

    Dr. Nancy W. Dickey, chair of the AMA's board of trustees, said the
    legislation would ban "a procedure which is never the only appropriate
    procedure and has no history in peer reviewed medical literature or in
    accepted medical practice development." 

    The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists opposes the
    legislation as "an inappropriate, ill-advised and dangerous
    intervention into medical decision making." It said the bill was so
    vague it could restrict other techniques in obstetrics and gynecology.

7.1844IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1543
    AP 21-May-1997 0:43 EDT   REF5116

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-UPI Executive Gets Prison Time

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Earl Brian, a former executive of Financial News
    Network and United Press International, was sentenced to 57 months in
    prison Tuesday for bank fraud and conspiracy. 

    U.S. District Judge Ronald S.W. Lew also ordered Brian to pay a $25,000
    fine. He was ordered to surrender on Aug. 15. 

    Brian was convicted in October of lying to auditors in an effort to
    prop up the companies by hiding losses in order to obtain more than $70
    million in loans. 

    The jury acquitted co-defendant John Berentson of conspiracy and
    deadlocked on 12 other counts. 

    Brian, 55, of Easton, Md., was chairman and chief executive of United
    Press International and FNN. 

    Berentson, 56, of New York, was executive vice president of FNN and
    UPI's chief operating officer and vice chairman of the board. 

    Prosecutors alleged the two drafted hundreds of false invoices and
    other documents to conceal FNN's losses and help the network and its
    parent, Infotechnology Inc., obtain $70 million in bank loans in the
    late 1980s and early 1990s. 

    Infotechnology held controlling interests in both FNN and UPI. 

    The scheme allegedly inflated FNN's profits by almost $50 million
    between 1988 and 1991, when the company went bankrupt. UPI also
    declared bankruptcy that year. 

    FNN, which sustained losses totaling $72.4 million in 1990, later sold
    its core media operations to CNBC. UPI was sold in 1992 to Middle East
    Broadcasting Centre, a Saudi corporation. 

    Brian was secretary of California's Health and Welfare Agency when
    Ronald Reagan was governor. 
7.1845IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1531
    AP 21-May-1997 0:37 EDT   REF5103

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Norwegian Satellite Launched

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- An unmanned Delta rocket hurled a
    Norwegian communications satellite into orbit Tuesday night. 

    It was the first launch of a McDonnell Douglas Delta rocket from Cape
    Canaveral Air Station since the explosion of another Delta in January. 

    That explosion, which occurred just 13 seconds into flight, was
    attributed to damage to one of the nine solid-fuel booster rockets. 

    Tuesday's flight -- valued at $150 million -- was delayed one week so
    McDonnell Douglas could analyze unusual fuel data from a Delta launch
    earlier this month from California. Bad weather caused an additional
    two-day delay. 

    Knud Reed, managing director of Norwegian Telenor Satellite Services,
    said the Air Force's secretive investigation of the rocket explosion
    was "a painful experience." 

    He said next time his company might take its business "farther south,"
    referring to the European Ariane launch site in French Guiana. 

    During the next several weeks, the Norwegian satellite, called Thor,
    will be checked and moved to its final 22,300-mile-high orbit off the
    west coast of Africa. It is expected to begin providing service to
    primarily Scandinavia beginning in early July. 
7.1846IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1561
    AP 21-May-1997 0:17 EDT   REF5079

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cancer Doctor's 2nd Trial Begins

    By TERRI LANGFORD

    Associated Press Writer

    HOUSTON (AP) -- A federal prosecutor painted a cancer doctor on Tuesday
    as a conniving businessman who thumbed his nose at court orders
    forbidding him from shipping an unproven treatment to out-of-state
    patients. 

    Dr. Stanislaw Burzynski sat without emotion as Assistant U.S. Attorney
    Mike Clark made his opening statement at Burzynski's second trial on
    the charge. The first ended in March with a hung jury. 

    Burzynski faces a single count of contempt for violating 1983 and 1984
    court orders barring him from shipping his experimental antineoplastons
    treatment out of state. 

    "This case is not about whether this is not a good drug or a bad drug,"
    Clark said. "It's clearly whether or not a federal judge entered an
    order and that order was violated." 

    Clark insisted Burzynski knew he was violating the law, contending the
    doctor made out-of-state patients who came to his Houston office to
    pick up the treatment sign waivers absolving him of liability. 

    But defense attorney Rick Jaffe countered that nothing in the 1983 and
    1984 orders blocked patients from coming to Texas to pick up the
    medication. 

    "It's not in the order that Dr. Burzynski has to stop treating any of
    his patients," Jaffe said. 

    The prosecution's first witness, U.S. Postal Service inspector Barbara
    Richey, testified, however, that she bumped into one of Burzynski's
    employees two years ago as the employee was shipping the drug outside
    Texas, in violation of the court order. 

    Defense attorneys contend the employee was acting on his own and made a
    mistake. 

    Burzynski, 54, and his Burzynski Research Institute were originally
    indicted in 1995 on 75 counts of mail fraud, contempt and violating
    Food and Drug Administration rules by introducing his unproven
    antineoplastons treatment into interstate commerce. 

    After his first trial ended with a hung jury, U.S. District Judge Sim
    Lake dismissed 34 mail fraud counts. Then, on Monday, prosecutors asked
    the judge to dismiss 41 more charges and try the doctor on the single
    contempt count. 

    Clark, under a court-ordered gag order, declined to say why he wanted
    the other charges dismissed. 

    A conviction on a contempt charge has no set penalty. A sentence would
    be up to the judge. 
7.1847IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1534
    AP 21-May-1997 0:00 EDT   REF5008

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    4 Teens Charged in Classmate's Rape

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Three teen-agers took turns raping a 14-year-old girl
    in a classroom last month as a fourth classmate held her down,
    prosecutors said Tuesday in announcing rape charges against the four
    teens. 

    The April 16 attack took place in a classroom at August Martin High
    School that was being renovated, said Queens District Attorney Richard
    A. Brown. 

    Two of the suspects went to a guidance counselor's office for condoms
    before the attack, The New York Times reported Wednesday. 

    Charged with rape, sexual abuse and unlawful imprisonment are: Vincent
    Dowdy, 17, of Brooklyn, Charles Baskerville, 18, Deshawn James, 17, and
    Valjean Lee, 18, all of Queens, the prosecutor said. 

    The girl went to a counselor a day after the attack but was initially
    reluctant to provide full details, school Principal Richard Ross told
    the Times. 

    Police were finally called after the girl, who was being taunted by
    other students, gave a more complete account to an assistant principal,
    the newspaper said. 

    The four suspects have made videotaped statements to police that the
    girl had consented to sex, but one said she was crying and tried to
    escape and was pushed back down on a table two or three times, the
    Times said. 
7.1848IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1535
    AP 20-May-1997 23:42 EDT   REF5875

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Grown Mouseketeers Seek Disney Pay

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Those once adorable, now 50-something Mouseketeers
    want Walt Disney Pictures & Television to pay them residuals and
    royalties for reusing the original "The Mickey Mouse Club" shows. 

    The Screen Actors Guild contends Disney hasn't paid residuals,
    clip-reuse fees or merchandising royalties even though the shows are
    used in TV specials, movies, videos, records and theme park
    attractions. The show ran from 1955 to 1959. 

    "It's been a real privilege to be a Mouseketeer, but fair is fair. I
    would never want to do anything to damage my relationship with Disney,
    but if they benefited from us they should be willing to compensate us,"
    Karen Pendleton said. 

    The union made the allegations and request for conciliation with Disney
    six months ago, and recently referred its case to a lawyer. 

    The claim doesn't seek a specific dollar amount, but unidentified
    sources told the Hollywood Reporter it could easily top $100 million. 

    Use of film clips and audio tracks from the original show in dozens of
    anniversary specials made them "immediately subject to residual
    payments," according to the SAG claim. 

    The union claims Disney owes the Mouseketeers more than $4 million for
    a 1985 repackaging of 30 original episodes. 

    Disney had no comment on the grievance. Spokesman Ken Green would only
    say, "We've always had very good relationships with our Mousketeers." 
7.1849IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1555
    AP 20-May-1997 23:30 EDT   REF5868

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Judge Delays Release of Ramsey Info

    By AARON J. LOPEZ

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- A judge Tuesday delayed the release of details from
    JonBenet Ramsey's autopsy, including the full extent and location of
    her injuries, for another 15 days. They were supposed to be released
    Wednesday. 

    District Court Judge Carol Glowinsky said the delay is to give the
    appeals court time to consider investigators' requests to overturn her
    order to release the details. 

    Prosecutor Madeline Mason said releasing more details of the autopsy
    would cause "real, immediate and irreparable" damage to the 5-month-old
    investigation because the report contains information only the killer
    would know. 

    "All of this is information that can be used to evaluate confessions
    and statements of possible witnesses," Mason said. "It is information
    that is currently not publicly known which could be received by way of
    tips or leads." 

    The 6-year-old beauty queen was found strangled in her family's
    basement Dec. 26. She suffered severe head injuries as well as
    abrasions to the neck and face. 

    In February, Glowinsky ordered the release of limited details of the
    autopsy. Large portions of the report -- including the time of death --
    were omitted because they were deemed essential to the investigation. 

    Last week, Glowinsky ordered more details be made public Wednesday.
    That information includes the position of JonBenet's body after her
    death and the full extent and location of her injuries. 

    Facts already made public include information that JonBenet had
    internal bleeding and vaginal abrasions, which suggested she may have
    been sexually assaulted before her death. 

    Her parents, John and Patsy Ramsey, have proclaimed their innocence,
    but neither has been ruled out as a suspect. 

    Mrs. Ramsey on Tuesday gave investigators a fifth handwriting sample to
    compare with a ransom note she found about eight hours before
    JonBenet's body was discovered. 

    Past samples have been inconclusive, and prosecutors need a
    satisfactory sample before investigators can take fingerprints from the
    ransom note. That process could destroy the note for future use. 
7.1850IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1663
    AP 20-May-1997 23:21 EDT   REF5857

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Court Throws Out Charge in Sex Case

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Three high school athletes who had sex with a
    retarded 17-year-old girl wrongly took advantage of her, but that does
    not constitute forcible sex, a state appeals court ruled Tuesday. 

    "Testimony and conduct clearly reflect that her engaging in the sexual
    activity in question was consensual," the appeals court ruled, throwing
    out part of the convictions in the highly publicized case. 

    The court overturned three men's convictions on the charge of sexual
    assault by force or coercion, while leaving in place other charges
    involving sex with a "mentally defective person." 

    Christopher Archer and twins Kevin and Kyle Scherzer, leading athletes
    at Glen Ridge High School at the time of the encounter in 1989, were
    tried as adults and convicted in March 1993. 

    The six-month trial focused national attention on a lurid encounter in
    a suburban basement in which a girl identified in court papers only as
    M.G. was penetrated with a baseball bat, broom handle and stick by a
    group of boys. 

    The appeals court said that because she was retarded, Archer and Kevin
    Scherzer were rightly convicted on charges of aggravated sexual assault
    on a mentally defective person. The court upheld the conviction of Kyle
    Scherzer of attempted aggravated sexual assault. 

    The court said the three must have known "that M.G. did not understand
    that she could say no to a request." They noted that the defendants had
    taken advantage of her "acquiescent nature" in the past.

    The president of the state chapter of the National Organization for
    Women, Bear Atwood, said the court did not fully weigh the girl's
    limited mental abilities. 

    "If this had been a first-grader, no one would have doubted there was
    coercion," she said. 

    The ruling does not allow the prosecutor to try the three again on the
    charge involving force or coercion, said Neal M. Frank, attorney for
    Archer. But either side could appeal today's ruling to the state
    Supreme Court. 

    Kevin Scherzer's lawyer, John Saykanic, said he would appeal.
    Prosecutors said they had not yet decided. 

    The Scherzers and Archer were sentenced to indeterminate terms of up to
    15 years at a youth facility. But over the prosecutor's objections,
    they were granted bail while their appeal inched forward. The appeals
    court said they should be resentenced, but their lawyers did not agree
    Tuesday on whether the dismissal of one count would make much
    difference. 

    A fourth defendant in the case, Bryant Grober, was convicted only on
    the lesser charge of conspiracy, and sentenced to probation. 

    All are now in their mid-20s, have completed college, and are working,
    their lawyers said. 
7.1851IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1628
    AP 20-May-1997 22:42 EDT   REF5833

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Texas OKs Voluntary Castration

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- Gov. George W. Bush signed a bill Tuesday that
    allows repeat child molesters in prison to undergo voluntary surgical
    castration, saying it's for people "too sick to cure their illness." 

    The law, which took effect immediately, makes Texas the first state to
    offer the surgery as the primary method of castration for prisoners.

    "The bill provides a voluntary means -- there is no coercion -- for
    people who are obviously too sick to cure their illness," Bush said.
    "If this legislation saves just one child from the horror of a sexual
    assault, it will have accomplished its purpose." 

    Offenders would have to admit guilt, be screened by a psychiatrist and
    psychologist, and give written consent. Castration could not be used as
    a condition of parole or an exchange for good time credits. 

    Lawmakers cited the case of convicted child molester Larry Don McQuay,
    who asked for the procedure last year to keep him from preying on more
    youngsters. The state refused. 

    Earlier this year, California enacted a chemical castration law that
    allows molesters to choose surgical castration as an alternative. 
7.1852IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1665
    AP 20-May-1997 21:59 EDT   REF5719

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Court: Saudi Teen Can't Be Deported

    By ROBERT IMRIE

    Associated Press Writer

    WAUSAU, Wis. (AP) -- A state judge lacks the authority to deport a
    Saudi Arabian teen-ager convicted of taking part in the torture and
    beating death of his cousin, a state appeals court ruled Tuesday. 

    The case of 16-year-old Bandar A., as he's identified in court
    documents, must be returned to a lower court for federal authorities to
    handle, the 3rd District Court said. State juvenile courts have no
    authority to order deportations, the panel found. 

    The teen-ager testified in his trial last year that he was scared of
    returning to Saudi Arabia because the punishment for homicide is
    "execution by having your head taken off," court records said. 

    Last year, Circuit Judge Eric Wahl found the boy delinquent of being
    party to first-degree reckless homicide and child abuse for his part in
    the Nov. 5, 1995, death of his cousin, Abdullah Al-Qahtani. 

    The 16-year-old victim's body was found covered with wounds and burns. 

    Bandar was accused of whipping Abdullah with a coat hanger for up to
    two hours and burning him even though a companion told him that "there
    was no where left on his body to burn," court records said. 

    Witnesses testified the boy was being punished for failing to correctly
    answer questions about the Koran, the holy book of Islam. Others said
    he was punished for stealing and lying. 

    Assistant District Attorney Andrew Maki said he will continue to seek
    Bandar's deportation. 

    "He has never been a citizen of the United States, and we think he
    should be judged by his own culture," Maki said. Saudi Arabian
    authorities are interested in the case, he said. 

    Maki said he would ask the judge to release the teen-ager from a
    juvenile prison so the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service
    could attempt to have him deported. 

    Bandar will continue to fight deportation, said his lawyer, Robin
    Shellow. 

    Bandar's 27-year-old brother pleaded no contest to first-degree
    reckless homicide in Abdullah's death in a Wisconsin court last year
    and was voluntarily deported. 

    The brother, Ahmed Al-Qahtani, was then convicted in Saudi Arabia for
    his part in the slaying, Maki said. "My understanding was he had not
    been put to death," the prosecutor said. 

    Three other Saudi Arabian men who were traveling companions of the
    brothers had charges against them dismissed through plea agreements
    once the 27-year-old brother was returned to Saudi Arabia. 

    All five defendants were relatives or friends of the victim. The group
    came to the United States in 1995 to go to school. 
7.1853IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1662
    AP 20-May-1997 21:27 EDT   REF5531

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Atlanta FBI Censured on Bomb Probe

    By LORI WIECHMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    ATLANTA (AP) -- The head of the FBI's Atlanta office said Tuesday he
    was censured for tricking Richard Jewell into answering questions about
    last summer's Olympic Park bombing without a lawyer present. 

    Agent Woody Johnson said he was given a letter of censure. David Tubbs,
    in charge of the bureau's Kansas City's office, was also censured, and
    agent Don Johnson was suspended for five days without pay, WSB-TV
    reported Tuesday. 

    Jewell's lawyer said the punishments were not enough. 

    "If this is all they're going to do ... then this is a whitewash," said
    Wayne Grant. "These agents should be terminated." 

    The FBI's discipline of the agents was expected. The Justice
    Department, in an unreleased internal report, concluded that they made
    "a major error in judgment" in asking Jewell to waive his right to a
    lawyer during questioning about the bombing. 

    Jewell was interviewed in Atlanta after the July 27, 1996, blast. To
    keep him from getting suspicious and asking for a lawyer, the FBI
    agents pretended they wanted his help in making a training film. 

    Jewell, a security guard in Olympic Park, had discovered the bomb in a
    knapsack and helped move people away just before its explosion killed
    one person and injured 111. 

    Jewell went from hero to prime suspect in a matter of days. After three
    months of intense scrutiny and publicity, the FBI cleared him. Jewell
    has since settled lawsuits with several news organizations. 

    Johnson said Tuesday he took responsibility for the investigation, but
    defended the agents' actions in the face of the "extraordinary
    circumstances" following the explosion. 

    "I believe we operated within the framework of the Constitution. We
    have all along," he said. 

    Two unnamed agents were exonerated of wrongdoing by the FBI, reported
    WSB. 

    The FBI refused to comment Tuesday, saying that the Justice
    Department's report was not released and that its disciplinary actions
    can be appealed. 

    The Olympic Park bombing was one of three bombings in Atlanta in the
    past year. A gay and lesbian nightclub was bombed in February and a
    suburban abortion clinic was struck in January. 

    FBI spokesman Jay Spadafore refused to comment on a report Tuesday by
    CBS that the agency was investigating letters sent to Georgia's
    congressional delegation that may be linked to the clinic bombing. 
7.1854IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1640
    AP 21-May-1997 2:19 EDT   REF5252

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ex-Tycoon Hospitalized in France

    AIX-EN-PROVENCE, France (AP) -- Former tycoon and ex-government
    minister Bernard Tapie is in the hospital today, suffering from
    suspected heart problems. 

    Tapie, the jailed former owner of the European championship soccer team
    Olympique Marseille, is in stable condition, according to officials at
    the Aix-en-Provence hospital in the south of France. 

    Hospital director Jean Yves Le Quellec said the 53-year-old Tapie was
    transferred early today to the intensive care unit from the Luynes
    Prison, where he is being held while on trial for fraudulent financial
    dealings involving Olympique Marseille. 

    Tapie is already serving an eight-month sentence that ends in October
    for bribing soccer players on an opposing team to throw a 1993 match
    against Olympique Marseille. 

    The former urban affairs minister was admitted to the hospital shortly
    after midnight suffering from chest pains, officials said. 

    Only hours before, Tapie was standing in a Marseille courtroom
    answering prosecution questions on allegations of fraud, abuse of
    company assets and abuse of confidence. 

    The bankrupt tycoon is one of 20 people being tried on charges of fraud
    in relation to Olympique Marseille. The defendants have to explain the
    disappearance of more than $18 million in club money from 1987 to 1993. 

    The defendants face maximum five-year prison sentences and fines of up
    to $440,000. 

    Tapie held a minister's post under former Socialist President Francois
    Mitterrand. He is also the former owner of Adidas, the sporting goods
    concern. 
7.1855IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1629
    AP 21-May-1997 1:32 EDT   REF5215

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Children's Paper Closed in Iran

    TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Authorities have closed a children's newspaper for
    writing a satirical piece critical of television coverage of this
    week's presidential election. 

    The state-run television network reported Tuesday that Aftabgardoon, or
    sunflower, was closed after it ran an article satirizing Tehran
    television's claim of impartiality in Friday's election. 

    The television reported the paper had "violated the law banning
    state-funded newspapers from campaigning on behalf of any of the
    presidential candidates." 

    The television network is ostensibly impartial in the election, but its
    coverage has favored Ali Akbar Nateq-Nouri, a leading presidential
    candidate backed by the hard-line faction that controls the radio and
    television. 

    Tehran's mayor, Gholamhossein Karbaschi, holds the license for
    Aftabgardoon, which is owned by the municipality. He supports
    Nateq-Nouri's main rival, Mohammad Khatami. 

    Four candidates are running in the election, the most keenly fought
    contest since the 1979 Islamic revolution. 
7.1856IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1671
    AP 21-May-1997 0:41 EDT   REF5113

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Albania Warned Troops May Pull Out

    By MERITA DHIMGJOKA

    Associated Press Writer

    TIRANA, Albania (AP) -- Two of Albania's neighbors warned Tuesday that
    a multinational force helping restore order in the country may pull out
    unless bitter political rivals resolve their differences over next
    month's elections. 

    The Socialists and other opposition parties are embittered over a
    decision by President Sali Berisha to have parliament, which is
    controlled by his Democratic Party, adopt an election law rejected by
    the opposition. 

    Caretaker Prime Minister Bashkim Fino, a Socialist, threatened to
    resign after all-party talks dragged on past midnight Monday
    inconclusively. 

    But he held off after pleas by international envoy Franz Vranitzky,
    Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi and a senior U.S. diplomat,
    Assistant Secretary of State John Kornblum, said Vladimir Prela, Fino's
    spokesman. 

    "They promised Fino they would intervene around Berisha to help unlock
    the situation," Prela said. 

    International support is crucial to organizing any elections, which are
    believed to be the only way to end the anarchy that erupted in January
    when many Albanians lost money in failed pyramid schemes. More than 600
    people have been killed in ensuing violence. 

    In March and April, Europe dispatched a multinational force of about
    6,000 men, led by Italy, to secure aid deliveries and end lawlessness
    and violence. 

    Prodi told reporters in Budapest, Hungary, on Tuesday that if elections
    were postponed, the mission would be reviewed. And in Athens, Greek
    Defense Minister Akis Tsochadzopoulos sent the same message. 

    "If the Albanian parties fail to reach a common position under which
    the elections will be held, then we will have a problem with the
    continued presence of the multinational force," Tsochadzopoulos told
    reporters. 

    He blamed Berisha, saying his version of the elections law has
    "endangered the path to elections." 

    Prela, the government spokesman, said Fino wanted representatives of
    all parties included on all commissions dealing with the elections
    instead of having Berisha appoint the members at will. 

    He also wants polling stations closed by 6 p.m., three hours earlier
    than stated in the law passed by Berisha. And he opposed having an
    official from the Interior Ministry, which is controlled by Berisha's
    Democrats, appointed chairman of the central electoral commission. 

    Last week, Berisha's Democratic Party used its overwhelming majority in
    the 140-seat parliament to ram through a version of the election law,
    ignoring a draft prepared by Fino's government with help from European
    envoys. 

    Vranitzky, representing the Vienna-based Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, tried and failed to resolve the dispute in a
    48-hour visit to Tirana. Berisha, meanwhile, has fixed the election
    date for June 29, and started campaigning. 
7.1857IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1655
    AP 20-May-1997 22:22 EDT   REF5781

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Sweden Releases Sex Life Survey

    By JIM HEINTZ

    Associated Press Writer

    STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- Sweden, long on the front lines of the sexual
    revolution, is busily working to retain its title, according to a new
    nationwide survey of sexual behaviors. 

    The government study, released Tuesday, finds that compared with 1967,
    when the last such survey was conducted, there's more of almost
    everything in Swedes' sex lives: more partners, more liaisons -- even
    more watching of pornographic movies. 

    The study found, for instance, that the median number of sexual
    partners for Swedes in a lifetime is about five for women and seven for
    men -- up from 1.4 and 4.7, respectively, in 1967. 

    A similar study in the United States in 1994 found that the typical
    American man reported six sexual partners and the typical woman, two. 

    The Swedish study also reported an increase of about 25 percent in the
    frequency of sexual activity, with the average number of sexual
    encounters per month for those ages 18 to 60 rising from 5.4 to 6.8. 

    The study was conducted by the public health agency
    Folkhaelsoinstitutet. It surveyed 5,250 people ages 18 to 74. No margin
    of error was provided. 

    It was a blue movie, "I Am Curious (Yellow)," that for many was
    emblematic of Sweden's position at the vanguard of sexual liberation in
    the 1960s. At the time, Sweden, where sexual education in schools has
    been mandatory since the 1930s, seemed shockingly advanced to much of
    the West. 

    But in the last decade, the country has taken a turn away from public
    libertinism, banning live sex shows and restricting the profusion of
    pornography. 

    That, however, is not to say that Swedes have becomes prudish. Quite
    the contrary. 

    In Sweden, aging is no impediment to sex. In 1967, 63 percent of those
    ages 51 to 55 reported having had sex in the previous month; the number
    rose to 80 percent in the current study. 

    One of the sharpest increases showed up in questions about pornography.
    Half the men and 20 percent of the women reported having watched a
    pornographic film within the past year, compared with about 21 percent
    and 13 percent, respectively, in 1967. 
7.1858IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1651
    AP 20-May-1997 22:15 EDT   REF5748

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Brazil Cops Kill Squatters

    SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) -- Mounted police with swords and riot troopers
    armed with shotguns charged a crowd of squatters during an attempted
    eviction Tuesday, killing at least three. 

    The police had been sent to evict hundreds of squatters who on May 3
    had taken over a housing project still under construction in Sao
    Mateus, on the eastern outskirts of Sao Paulo. 

    After the 140 state police officers on Tuesday tore down a fence built
    by the squatters, they were pelted by rocks and sticks. The police
    responded with gunfire. 

    One of the homeless, Eduardo Aparecido Goncalves, told Radio CBN that
    he saw police shoot his friend, Cipriano Jose da Silva, in the back. 

    "I was with my friend Cipriano when the police showed up. I walked away
    with my son, but Cipriano went up to talk to them. A few seconds later
    he started walking away when a policeman killed him with three shots in
    the back and one in the neck," Goncalves said. 

    But police rejected that account. 

    "We opened fire in self-defense," said police Lt. Col. Joao Boscati,
    who commanded the police operation. "We were attacked with sticks and
    stones and gunfire." 

    Goncalves said the homeless had no firearms, "only sticks and stones." 

    Various TV reports showed three bodies at the site. 

    After authorities received radio and TV reports about the
    raid-gone-awry, a judge intervened and suspended the eviction. Police
    officers remained at the housing project into the night, but they had
    backed off from the front line, as had the squatters. 

    Evictions are an everyday occurrence in Brazil, where rents are high
    and poverty is pervasive. But usually they are conducted nonviolently. 

    Human rights organizations here and abroad have labeled the Brazilian
    police as some of the world's most violent. 

    In early April, an amateur videographer captured a group of Rio de
    Janeiro police officers extorting money in a poor slum. The cops
    slapped and beat some of those who were unable to pay the bribes -- and
    even some who did pay. One person was killed. 
7.1859IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1654
    AP 20-May-1997 21:39 EDT   REF5536

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Geologists Insist Gold Find Is Real

    By CLARO CORTES

    Associated Press Writer

    MANILA, Philippines (AP) -- Two Filipino geologists of Bre-X Minerals
    said Tuesday they still believe there is gold in an Indonesian mine,
    despite an independent investigation that found the company's claim was
    a hoax. 

    "Of course, there is gold in Busang," geologist Roberto Ramirez said
    shortly after arriving from Jakarta, Indonesia, with mining engineer
    Manny Puspos. 

    Bre-X, of Edmonton, Alberta, filed for bankruptcy court protection in
    Canada earlier this month after an independent consultant found the
    company's highly publicized claims of a major gold find at the Borneo
    site were bogus. 

    Ramirez said Tuesday, however, that he does not believe core samples
    taken from the site were doctored. Puspos refused to speak, but nodded
    in agreement with Ramirez's statements. 

    Bre-X had claimed the Busang field contained 200 million ounces of
    gold, making it the richest find of the century. But an outside
    laboratory report said its ore samples were falsified. The company says
    it was the victim of fraud. 

    Ramirez and Puspos are the first Filipinos working for Bre-X to appear
    in public since the Busang gold scandal broke early this month. Eight
    Filipinos worked at Bre-X, including Michael de Guzman, the company's
    chief geologist, who fell to his death on March 19 from a helicopter en
    route to Busang. 

    In a case with echoes of the Bre-X scandal, another Canadian mining
    company also is claiming to be the victim of gold tampering at a Nevada
    project and is asking police to investigate. 

    While samples taken by Delgratia Mining Corp. and other explorers had
    suggested a large amount of gold in the Josh deposit south of Las
    Vegas, the company said Monday that independent consultants recently
    found "insignificant gold." 

    The firm said the consultants have identified the likely source of the
    tampering, and that the source is not from the company or its
    associate, Cactus Mining. A full report is due Friday. 

    Delgratia has a 40 percent share in the project, with 60 percent held
    by Philgold Investments Inc. of the British Virgin Islands. 
7.1860IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1677
    AP 20-May-1997 21:26 EDT   REF5530

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.N. Leery of Zaire Name Switch

    By CRAIG NELSON

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- For triumphant rebel leader Laurent Kabila and his
    followers, renaming Zaire was a simple matter. Getting the rest of the
    world to go along isn't so easy. 

    As of Saturday, the country formerly known as Zaire became the
    Democratic Republic of the Congo -- at least in the eyes of its new
    leaders and supporters. 

    The U.S. State Department was quick to recognize the new name. But it
    was a different story at the United Nations, where protocol and the
    bureaucracy of consensus outweigh snap decisions. By Tuesday, it had
    yet to adopt Zaire's new name, although officials said that had nothing
    to do with doubts about the new government. 

    "We have yet to receive a notification of the new name," said Myriam
    Dessables, a spokeswoman for the secretary-general's office. "With no
    government, foreign ministry or U.N. mission, it's still legally
    Zaire." 

    Even officials at the Central African nation's embassy in Washington
    seemed to be having an identity crisis. 

    A man answered the telephone with a hesitant "Hello?" Asked if the
    "Zaire" nameplate at the embassy entrance had been replaced, Elie
    Charles said, "I think so." But later, a passerby noted the same
    tarnished brass plate and an empty flagpole. 

    Overseas telephone operators were still placing calls to "Zaire." And a
    spokesman for the U.S. Postal Service said it would not adopt the name
    "Congo" until it had State Department notification. 

    At the State Department, though, at least one official wasn't clear
    exactly how to let other agencies know about the name change. 

    "I don't know what the procedure is for notifying other U.S. government
    agencies," said Yvonne O'Brien, a spokeswoman for the State
    Department's Africa bureau. 

    Along with its new name, Zaire has a new flag -- a blue standard
    emblazoned with seven yellow stars. But when the flag will fly at the
    United Nations is in the same limbo as the name-change. 

    A U.N. security official, who refused to be identified, said he was
    waiting for a representative of the new government to hand him the flag
    so it could be copied, and the copy could be hoisted up one of the 185
    flagpoles outside the New York headquarters. 

    Even that's a hassle. The flags are flown in alphabetical order, which
    means all the flags have to be shifted so the old Zaire standard can
    occupy a C spot. 

    The official was indignant when asked if the red-yellow-and-green
    Zairian flag would be destroyed. "We'll store it," he said. "Maybe
    someday they'll go back to the old one. You never know." 

    Meanwhile, in the sub-basement of U.N. headquarters, Mike Korsanos was
    waiting for word to begin making new nameplates for the former Zaire to
    adorn office doors and the country's seat in the General Assembly. 

    Korsanos, from Riverdale, N.Y., worked his way up from the mail room as
    a teen-ager to the international agency's signmaking shop. After 22
    years at the world body, he knows he's privy to history in the making. 

    "It's very prestigious what I do here," he said. "My work is seen all
    over the world." 

    And when will that happen for the new Congo? For now, no one is sure. 
7.1861IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1740
    AP 20-May-1997 20:50 EDT   REF5516

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    EU Ministers Back Beef Hormone Ban

    BRUSSELS (AP) -- European Union farm ministers defended an EU ban on
    hormones in beef amid concerns that the World Trade Organization will
    rule the ban illegal, officials said. 

    At a closed meeting Tuesday, ministers urged the EU's head office, the
    Commission, to file an appeal if WTO rules that the ban is illegal,
    according to EU officials who spoke on condition of anonymity. 

    A preliminary WTO report leaked two weeks ago concluded that the
    eight-year EU ban on hormone-treated beef is not scientifically
    justifiable. 

    Both side have 30 days to file comments and then the WTO panel will
    issue its final ruling, which can then be appealed by the losing side
    to a WTO appeals panel. 

    Some farm ministers pressed the Commission to react publicly to the
    report and to commit itself to fighting any ruling that the ban is
    illegal, one official said. 

    But EU Farm Commissioner Franz Fischler said he would wait for the
    final WTO report before publicly voicing his objections, the official
    said. 

    The EU ban, which covers growth hormones used in meat production, was
    imposed in 1989 because of concerns that they could endanger human
    health. 

    If the WTO rules the ban illegal, the Commission would be obligated to
    lift the ban or to pay compensation to the U.S. cattle industry, which
    claims it loses $250 million a year because of the ban. 

    France has said it would rather pay compensation than import
    hormone-treated beef. 
7.1862IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1780
    AP 20-May-1997 11:04 EDT   REF5302

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Smoke Raises Heart Risk

    By MELISSA WILLIAMS

    Associated Press Writer

    DALLAS (AP) -- Regular exposure to secondhand smoke appears to almost
    double the risk of heart disease, Harvard researchers found in a
    10-year study of more than 32,000 nurses. 

    The findings, indicating more harm than previous studies, could help
    advocates of a nationwide ban on smoking in workplaces and sites such
    as bars and restaurants that are often exempted from no-smoking rules.
    It also could be useful to those suing the tobacco industry. 

    For women like college student Carrie Carter, a nonsmoker who spends 25
    hours a week waiting tables in a Dallas restaurant smoky enough to make
    her throat swell, the findings were not surprising. 

    "My doctor's, like, 'You don't smoke, right? You work in a sports bar,
    that's almost as bad,"' Ms. Carter said. 

    Past studies have linked secondhand smoke to an increased risk of heart
    disease, asthma and bronchitis. 

    In a study published last August, nonsmoking spouses of smokers had
    about a 20 percent higher rate of heart disease deaths than nonsmokers
    whose spouses did not smoke. 

    This latest study -- published today in the American Heart Association
    journal Circulation -- found that nurses who said they had regular
    exposure to smoke at work or home had a 91 percent greater chance of
    heart disease. 

    Nurses who reported occasional exposure had a 58 percent greater risk
    of heart disease. 

    The study included only women because the researchers took advantage of
    an ongoing study of breast cancer and oral contraceptives. In light of
    what's known about smoking and heart disease in men, "There's no reason
    to believe that the new findings would not apply to men," said Ichiro
    Kawachi, the study's lead author. 

    "They're startling in terms of the strength of the association," said
    Kawachi, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. 

    However, researchers did not differentiate between smoke exposure at
    work and home, and left it up to participants to decide what
    constitutes "regular" or "occasional" exposure. 

    Kawachi said that is one possible weakness of the study, along with the
    fact that the women were asked about exposure only once, at the
    beginning of the 10-year study period, then tracked for heart problems.

    Michael Eriksen, director of the Office on Smoking and Health at the
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the study is one of
    the strongest to date on the dangers of secondhand smoke. 

    The researchers at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's
    Hospital studied 32,046 female participants in the Nurses' Health Study
    ages 36 to 61 who had never smoked and free of diagnosed heart disease,
    stroke and cancer in 1982. 

    During 10 years of follow-up, they recorded 152 cases of heart disease,
    including 127 nonfatal heart attacks. 

    Kawachi said his study took into account other factors that might
    explain an association between secondhand smoke and heart attack,
    including diet, exercise, obesity, high cholesterol and use of the
    pill. 

    The strengths and weaknesses of the study are likely to be debated in
    court if it is cited in lawsuits filed by those who claim their health
    was harmed by secondhand smoke. A nationwide class-action suit
    scheduled for trial June 2 in Miami will seek billions of dollars in
    damages for flight attendants who worked on smoking flights. 
7.1863IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1796
    RTw  21-May-97 07:02    

    Oklahoma City prosecutors ready to rest case

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Adrian Croft 

    DENVER, May 21 (Reuter) - Prosecutors in the Oklahoma City bombing
    trial were expected to rest their case on Wednesday after weaving a web
    of evidence to tie defendant Timothy McVeigh to the attack. 

    The prosecution has presented more than 130 witnesses in a little more
    than three weeks, portraying McVeigh as a right- wing extremist who
    hoped to spark a second American revolution by bombing the Oklahoma
    City federal building. 

    McVeigh, 29, has pleaded not guilty to murder and conspiracy charges
    stemming from the April 19, 1995, bombing -- the worst attack on
    civilians in U.S. history -- that killed 168 people, including 19
    children. He could face the death penalty if convicted.

    Federal Judge Richard Matsch said at the end of Tuesday's court session
    that the government was expected to rest its case some time on
    Wednesday. 

    The prosecution was expected to finish with more dramatic eyewitness
    testimony from survivors of the blast on Wednesday, then the defence
    was expected to begin presenting its witnesses. Legal analysts
    estimated the defence case could take five to 10 days. 

    Legal experts said the prosecution case skilfully blended technical
    details and the human drama of the bombing to keep the jury interested. 

    "I give them very high marks," Denver attorney David Japha said,
    praising prosecutors for condensing a vast amount of information and
    presenting "a workable theory" in a way that jurors would remember.
    "Now we will see if the defence can compete in terms of advocacy," he
    said. 

    Prosecution witnesses have testified that McVeigh talked about planning
    the bombing and shopped for materials to make a bomb while another
    witness identified him as the man who rented the Ryder truck allegedly
    used in the bombing. 

    The government has also said he had a motive -- fury over the federal
    raid on the Branch Davidian cult compound at Waco, Texas, which led to
    the deaths of 80 Branch Davidians exactly two years before the Oklahoma
    City blast. 

    But there were some holes in the prosecution case. They have so far
    presented no witness placing McVeigh in Oklahoma City on the day of the
    blast and the Gulf War veteran's fingerprints were not found at several
    key locations. 

    This week, prosecutors presented what some analysts saw as the most
    vulnerable part of their case, analysis of crime scene evidence
    performed at the FBI's laboratory in Washington D.C. 

    A Department of Justice report last month criticised several FBI lab
    scientists for their work on the Oklahoma City bombing case, saying
    they slanted their findings toward the prosecution or used unscientific
    methods. 

    Steven Burmeister, acting chief of the FBI lab's Chemistry and
    Toxicology Unit, testified on Monday that explosive residues were found
    on clothes worn by McVeigh when he was arrested for a traffic violation
    90 minutes after the blast. 

    He also said he found ammonium nitrate crystals on a piece of the Ryder
    truck recovered after the blast. The prosecution says ammonium nitrate
    was the main component of the bomb. 

    But Burmeister said on Tuesday no explosives traces were found in the
    car McVeigh was driving when he was arrested or in a Kansas storage
    unit where he and alleged co-conspirator Terry Nichols allegedly kept
    explosives. Nichols will be tried separately later. 

    Defence attorney Cristopher Tritico pounded Burmeister on Tuesday,
    suggesting that crucial evidence could have been contaminated by FBI
    mishandling or lack of precautions at the lab. 

    He tried several times to refer to events related to the critical
    Department of Justice report but his efforts were blocked by Matsch who
    sustained prosecution objections. 

    British explosives expert Linda Jones backed up many of Burmeister's
    findings when she testified for the prosecution Tuesday. She said she
    was confident in the procedures he had used and described him as "an
    excellent chemist." 

    Jones, an investigator from a Ministry of Defence forensic explosives
    laboratory in Britain, estimated the bomb contained between 3,000 and
    6,000 pounds of explosives. 

    REUTER
7.1864IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:17102
    RTw  21-May-97 03:28    

    FEATURE - Tobacco debate raises questions for ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE - Tobacco debate raises questions for Formula One 

    By Helen Jones 

    LONDON, May 21 (Reuter) - Formula One, the world's most glamorous and
    expensive motor racing event, is looking for new sponsors as a growing
    number of countries introduce restrictions on tobacco sponsorship. 

    Tobacco companies represent the biggest group and the most important
    chunk of revenue among all sponsors that spend money on big motor
    racing events.    Formula One -- where teams compete in 16 Grand Prix
    races in 16 countries every year -- receives an estimated 100 million
    pounds ($163.8 million) in sponsorship money from tobacco companies,
    experts say. 

    But as countries such as Britain, France, Germany and Canada introduce
    total or partial bans on tobacco advertising and the use of tobacco
    company logos in TV broadcasts, motor racing teams are looking for
    alternative sponsors. 

    These might include soft-drink and high-tech companies. 

    On Monday Britain's new Labour government announced it was banning
    sponsorship of sporting events by tobacco companies. 

    That dealt a blow not only to Formula One but other sports that
    flourish from tobacco sponsorship -- cricket, golf, darts, rugby league
    and horse show-jumping. 

    Experts told Reuters that in Britain tobacco companies began pouring
    money into sponsoring car racing and other sports after tobacco
    advertising on television was banned in the 1960s. "Tobacco sponsorship
    is very important to Formula One. As tobacco companies cannot advertise
    on TV they have put their advertising budgets into sponsorship," said
    John Fitzpatrick, secretary general of the British Racing Driver's
    Club. 

    SPONSORSHIP ESSENTIAL FOR FORMULA ONE 

    Without sponsorship of some kind, Formula One would not exist. 

    The sport was once the preserve of wealthy amateurs but industry
    observers estimate it now costs between 30 million and 50 million
    pounds for a team to make a serious bid to win the Formula One world
    championship. 

    Although most teams have a number of sponsors, tobacco companies are
    among the most visible and their logos appear on the racing cars,
    drivers' clothing and advertising hoardings around the track. 

    The Renault-Williams team which was victorious last season with Damon
    Hill behind the wheel is sponsored by Rothmans, the Benetton team is
    sponsored by Japanese cigarette brand Mild Seven and the Jordan team
    has the support of Benson & Hedges. 

    Experts say Formula One has a few options in the face of growing
    restrictions on tobacco sponsorship -- secure other sponsors, move the
    event to countries that don't restrict tobacco promotion and find ways
    to live with existing curbs. Steve Herrick, managing director of CSS
    Internetional, a sports marketing agency, cites the search for new,
    non-tobacco sponsorship money. 

    "They (Formula One organisers) are not daft and I'm sure they are
    looking at other potential sponsors as restrictions are introduced," he
    says. 

    To comply with existing regulations on tobacco promotion, Formula One
    teams have to be careful not to display tobacco logos when racing in
    certain countries. 

    At the British and German Grand Prix, tobacco logos must be adapted for
    television coverage to meet local tobacco advertising guidelines. Brand
    names must be dropped although corporate colours are allowed. 

    So Rothman's, for example, replaces its name with the word "racing" in
    the same colours and logotype. 

    But at other venues such as the Argentine Grand Prix, no such
    restrictions exist. So television viewers in Britain or Germany
    watching the Argentine race see the cigarette brand names that cannot
    be displayed at home events. 

    Some experts say Formula One could simply move to countries with no
    bans on tobacco promotion if things get too tough in main event
    locations. Herrick says that if strict legislation is introduced in
    Europe then Formula One organisers may move the event to Asia and South
    America where there are fewer restrictions on tobacco sponsorship. 

    "Twenty years ago it was a European event. Now there is a Japanese
    Grand Prix, and (South) Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines may
    follow," he said. 

    But Darren Marshall, general manager for ISL US, a part of
    Switzerland-based ISL, a sports marketing group, says that is an

    REUTER
7.1865IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 12:1735
    RTw  20-May-97 22:53    

    EU agrees standards for ``pig hotels''

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BRUSSELS, May 20 (Reuter) - European Union farm ministers on Tuesday
    agreed rules for "pig hotels" -- rest centres for farm animals on
    marathon journeys across the continent, diplomats said. 

    "It was agreed by consensus," a German diplomat said, adding the
    European Commission was asked to examine possible special measures
    demanded by Britain, Denmark and Ireland for high-value breeding pigs
    and to report back as soon as possible. 

    Britain abstained from the political agreement which can only be
    finalised after the European Parliament has given its opinion. Along
    with the Danes and Irish, it had argued that the pigs did not need to
    be unloaded at rest centres and that this put them at risk of disease. 

    The centres were part of a deal struck in June 1995, after five years
    of argument, to ease the pain of millions of animals crammed annually
    into lorries for trips of up to 50 hours from northern producer states
    to southern slaughter houses. 

    Swedes and other northerners have denounced transport conditions as
    cruel but southerners, such as Italy, protest that the new rules will
    raise costs, making imports of live animals uneconomic and throwing
    tens of thousands of people out of work. 

    They set a basic eight hours journey limit for cattle, pigs, sheep and
    other farm animals, after which they must be unloaded from their
    vehicles and rest for 24 hours before continuing their journeys. 

    REUTER 
7.1866IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:01121
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
    
    Runway moles dig in after raid by bailiffs
    
    By Nigel Bunyan 
                          
    A DAWN raid by black-clad security men yesterday launched the operation
    to evict environmental protesters from the site of Manchester Airport's
    planned second runway.
    
    Teams of men deployed by the under-sheriff of Cheshire began moving
    into woodland fringing the Bollin Valley shortly before 4am. They
    quickly overpowered the more visible of the 'eco-warriors' living in
    two out of six treetop camps established during the past 16 weeks. But,
    to the sound of whistles, cat-calls and the frequent roar of aircraft
    taking off from the existing runway, they spent much of the rest of the
    day consolidating their position.
    
    The under-sheriff, Randal Hibbert, is anxious not to order full
    assaults on the protesters' network of tunnels until more of the
    adjacent trees have been vacated and felled. In the meantime,
    compressed air is being pumped into tunnels thought to be occupied by
    up to 20 protesters. The tunnels, which are said to have provisions for
    up to two months, are also being monitored for the presence of methane
    gas.
    
    The entire eviction of around 100 protesters, many of them veterans of
    similar protests at Honiton, Newbury and the M65 near Blackburn, Lancs,
    is expected to stretch at least into next week. By the time Operation
    Fulcrum was launched security men had surrounded the protesters' camps
    - Zion Tree, Sir Cliff Richard OBE Vegan Revolution, Flywood, River
    Rats, Jimi Hendrix and Wild Garlic - with miles of steel-mesh fencing.
    Journalists were given only restricted access, and protesters claimed
    that "legal observers" were not allowed on to the site at all.
    
    In the initial raid the under-sheriff's men targeted the Zion Tree and
    Jimi Hendrix camps. They removed 20 protesters, most of whom had been
    sitting or lying around a camp fire. A green and red flag had fluttered
    above the crown of Zion Tree. But shortly after 9am a phalanx of
    climbers, wearing white boiler suits and helmets, tore it down.
    
    Less than seven hours after Operation Fulcrum began Mr Hibbert, who had
    been unable to use earth-movers because of the risk of tunnels
    collapsing, claimed that it was going "basically according to plan".
    
    He rejected claims by protesters that his 60-strong team of sheriff's
    bailiffs, tree climbers and tunnellers had been armed with truncheons
    and staves. Nor, he said, had they been heavy-handed. One woman
    protester had sprained her ankle when she slipped, another suffered
    injuries to her wrists when she struggled to free herself from
    handcuffs, and a television journalist had complained of being struck
    about the head. The latter complaint was being investigated by police.
    
    There was "nothing sinister" in the fact that some of his team had been
    wearing black balaclavas under their helmets, he said. This was simply
    to ensure that their identities did not become known to protesters.
    
    Mr Hibbert confirmed that 11 people had been arrested for obstructing
    an under-sheriff in his duty. He went on: "Safety and security have
    been at the top of the list of our priorities in planning this
    eviction. I am told that the tunnels are in some respects dangerous -
    dangerous to the protesters and dangerous to the tunnellers who have
    got to get them out.
    
    "Timing depends very much on the progress on this particular site. The
    tunnellers cannot start until the trees have been taken down. Until we
    get into the tunnels we do not know how long it will take to get the
    people out. We are talking at the moment about days rather than hours."
    
    The Bollin Valley protesters have predicted that the authorities will
    find it far more difficult to evict them than their counterparts at
    other sites. As well as constructing a series of tunnels, some of them
    said to be up to 50ft deep and 100ft in length, a number have attached
    themselves to "lock-ons" - metal spikes set into concrete.
    
    Some protesters complained that they had been beaten with truncheons as
    the eviction gained momentum. One, who gave his name as Rob, said: "We
    got kicked and they weren't gentle about it. They had massive
    truncheons and they were using them to get rid of us."
    
    Another, Phil, said he had been down a tunnel when the bailiffs moved
    in. "I had been sleeping about 5ft down the tunnel and I was woken up
    by the voices," he said. "They were hammering on the door to the tunnel
    with a sledgehammer and I 'locked on' to a pipe in the tunnel so they
    couldn't pull me out. They were shouting and swearing and said I would
    get really injured if I didn't come out.
    
    "They said they had CS gas and they sprayed a sort of liquid down the
    tunnel. But it didn't sting so I didn't think it was CS gas. They broke
    the door open and I was hit on the head and arms with a truncheon. I
    unlocked myself from the pipe and they pulled me out and handed me over
    to the police."
    
    Jeff Gazzard, a long-term anti-runway campaigner from the Manchester
    Airport Environmental Network, accused the under-sheriff's men of "a
    violent assault on peaceful protesters". He claimed that both police
    and bailiffs had reneged on an agreement that he should act as a
    mediator. After being ejected from the site, he said: "This is
    completely one-sided. They have broken their agreement to let us
    on-site. 
    
    "It was allegedly because of comments I made to the media, but how the
    under-sheriff could possibly have heard those when he is on the site
    this morning I don't know. We are going to see the police to see if we
    can come to a fresh agreement."
    
    Mr Gazzard complained that video cameras, which protesters had intended
    to use to record the bailiffs at work, had been banned from the site.
    He said: "We thought we had an agreement that we could monitor the
    safety of our colleagues and friends. This facility has been withdrawn
    on a whim. This must raise questions over what the under-sheriff has to
    hide by denying access to independent observers."
    
    Mr Hibbert's teams halted the eviction at 6pm. They were due to resume
    their work at 8am today.
    
     At Lyminge Forest, near Folkestone in Kent, tree-dwellers and
    tunnellers are also preparing their defences against possible eviction.
    The protesters are fighting plans by Rank to develop hundreds of acres
    of ancient woodland - designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty
    and home to some rare and protected species - into a "holiday village". 
7.1867IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:0329
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                                                                
    Scot whips off his kilt to save a man's life
    
    A SCOTSMAN saved the life of a stranded hillwalker on a remote
    mountainside by taking off his kilt and wrapping it round the shivering
    man.
    
    Bare-bottomed Andy Young, 43, braved the elements as he stripped down
    and used his kilt and thick cotton shirt to keep the hypothermic man
    warm.
    
    Mr Young cuddled close to Tom Mitchell, 41, and sang him traditional
    Scottish songs while they waited two hours on chilly Sron Ghorm, near
    the Aultguish Inn, Wester Ross, for a helicopter.
    
    Mr Mitchell, of Collynie, Methlick, near Aberdeen, went for a lone hill
    walk on Monday but did not return to the inn. Friends were particularly
    concerned because he is an epileptic.
    
    Mr Young said: "It was all I could think of because he was shivering so
    much. I cuddled in close beside him and I think our body heat kept us
    alive. I sang songs to him to keep his spirits up. I sang MacPherson's
    Rant, the Skye Boat Song and Pittenweem Joe over and over again.
    
    "When the helicopter arrived, I took my kilt and shirt back and looked
    on as he was winched into the helicopter. I did not want to have to
    walk into the inn naked."
    
7.1868IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:0671
7.1869IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:0992
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
    
    Cook prepared to wreck EU treaty over border controls
    
    By Toby Helm, EU Correspondent in Brussels 
    
    ROBIN Cook, the Foreign Secretary, put the Government on collision
    course with Europe last night by demanding that Britain must retain its
    own control over policy on border controls, asylum and immigration.
    
    Speaking after his first meeting of EU foreign ministers in The Hague,
    Mr Cook indicated Britain would refuse to sign a new EU Treaty in
    Amsterdam with its 14 EU partners unless he got his way.
    
    "The bottom line for Britain is an outcome in which we obtain legal
    authority for our frontier controls and our own control over
    immigration and asylum," he said.
    
    His comments came as the Dutch presidency of the EU, with support from
    most other member states including France and Germany, tabled a new
    Treaty text calling for the abolition of national vetoes over asylum
    and immigration policy three years after the new agreement comes into
    force. Mr Cook said he would refuse to consider accepting such a plan
    under any circumstances.
    
    He also demanded that Britain be given a permanent opt-out from plans
    to end frontier checks between EU states, something which had not been
    offered to date. "We want a permanent legal authority for our frontier
    controls."
    
    Mr Cook, who has gone out of his way since Labour's election victory to
    strike a more conciliatory note with Europe than the previous
    government, said he was still hopeful of a deal at the Amsterdam EU
    summit on June 16 and 17. "I do not come here to try to wreck a deal. I
    come to try to get a deal," he said.
    
    But his determination to resist pooling sovereignty over the key issue
    of who can enter Britain puts him at odds with partners who are placing
    the highest priority on new joint policies to help combat illegal
    immigration and combat international crime.
    
    Mr Cook said that he had "grave doubts" about Franco-German led plans
    to give the EU a new defence identity by incorporating the Western
    European Union into the EU. Defence of Europe was a matter for Nato, he
    said.
    
    He also made clear that Britain would not accept cutting the number of
    UK commissioners from two to one unless it won other powers to
    compensate for the loss. "We see no case for getting rid of one of
    those commissioners," he said.
    
    The tone of Mr Cook's comments will alarm Britain's EU partners who
    hoped that a new government would end conflict over the direction of
    European policy. It also suggests a tough month ahead in the run up to
    the Amsterdam summit.
    
    Germany last night turned up pressure on the Blair government and
    warned that a "night of the long knives" would be necessary to break
    the deadlock at the summit.
    
    With the backing of the Dutch presidency of the EU, it left Mr Cook in
    no doubt of its ambition to switch a raft of powers from national to
    European institutions.
    
    The Dutch tabled the most detailed plans to date for giving the EU an
    operational defence role with "the progressive framing of a common
    defence" which "shall be supported as appropriate by co-operation
    between member states in the field of armaments."
    
    This would be achieved, said the Dutch Treaty text, through the
    "gradual integration of the WEU (Western European Union) into the
    European Union."
    
    Britain with the support of Sweden, Finland, Austria and Ireland are
    strongly resisting Franco-German moves to give the EU a new defence
    identity.
    
    But as the negotiating trade-offs take place and the small countries
    come under pressure to give ground it may he hard to avoid some
    reference in the Treaty to a clearer defence role. While welcoming the
    more positive rhetoric of the British government and its agreement to
    sign the Social Chapter and include an employment chapter in the
    Treaty, Germany made clear that more concessions were needed.
    
    Klaus Kinkel, the German foreign minister, said: "The British have
    moved but there are obviously still points where it would be nice if
    they moved even further."
    
    Yesterday's talks were set up to pave the way for a special mini-summit
    on Friday when Tony Blair will make his first appearance on the
    European stage.
    
7.1870IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:1137
7.1871IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:1247
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                                               
    Agent who foiled IRA says police blew cover
    
    By Paul Stokes 
                                                                
    A DOUBLE agent who gave false details to escape a driving ban while
    living under an assumed identity was cleared yesterday of perverting
    the course of justice.
                                                                
    Martin McGartland, 27, has been credited with saving at least 50 lives
    by thwarting planned IRA bombings and shootings. Special Branch
    "relocated" him from Northern Ireland to north-east England because of
    fears for his life. He had his face rebuilt and took on the name Martin
    Ashe, Newcastle Crown Court heard.
                                                                
    Regardless of his past, uniformed officers booked him for repeated
    speeding offences in his distinctive BMW car with the registration
    plate K33 ASH. He was said to have obtained four driving licences to
    avoid disqualification after collecting 12 points in 1993.
                                                                
    The court was told that he had driven at speed to avoid cars which he
    felt may be following him or acting suspiciously with hit men inside.
    The jury unanimously acquitted him after 10 minutes, following a
    four-day trial from which publicity had been banned until its
    conclusion for security reasons.
                                                                
    McGartland, whose book 50 Dead Men Walking is a top 10 bestseller, was
    kidnapped by gunmen when it was realised he had been a police informer.
    He had been passing information to the Royal Ulster Constabulary for
    four years and was known as Agent Carol when the IRA tried to murder
    him in Aug 1991.
                                                                
    He jumped through a third storey window while tied up and escaped, but
    suffered serious head injuries with partial brain damaged. He is
    believed to have infiltrated the highest echelons of the IRA. A senior
    police officer who worked in counter-terrorism in Ulster described him
    in his diaries as the most successful double agent he had known.
                                                                
    McGartland took action against Northumbria Police after discovering his
    real name and new name were both held on file and a computer programmer
    was dismissed as a result. Alderson Dodds, McGartland's solicitors,
    claimed in a statement that the prosecution had exposed their client to
    further danger. He would now have to move home and change his name
    again.
                                                                
    A Northumbria Police spokesman denied conducting a vendetta.
7.1872IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:1426
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                                                 
    Driver killed in crash was using mobile phone
                                                                
    THE use of mobile phones by drivers was criticised by a coroner after a
    journalist was killed in a road crash.
                                                      
    Kate Alderson, 28, a Times journalist, was on her way to cover the
    helicopter crash that killed Matthew Harding, Chelsea football club
    vice-chairman, and four others when she pulled out of a junction into
    the path of an oncoming car, an inquest in Crewe was told.
                                                      
    Witnesses said Miss Alderson, of Didsbury, Greater Manchester, had her
    mobile phone to her right ear as she turned right on to a main road and
    was hit by a woman driving a Peugeot at 65mph.
                                                      
    Recording a verdict of accidental death, John Hibbert, the coroner,
    said: "It is dangerous to use a phone or to have a phone close by one's
    ear and attempt to steer by one hand."
                                                      
    Peter Beal, a Press Association journalist, said Miss Alderson had
    twice called him on her mobile for directions to the scene of the
    helicopter crash and had appeared to be lost. Sgt John Hayes, an
    accident investigator with Cheshire police, told the inquest that she
    was on the phone to Mr Beal at the time of the crash on the main road
    from Middlewich to Northwich, Cheshire, on Oct 23.
7.1873IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:1643
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                                                        
    St John Ambulance arrests in paedophile ring inquiry
    
    By Michael Fleet 
                               
    SIX men were arrested yesterday by police investigating allegations of
    a paedophile ring operated within the St John Ambulance.
                               
    The men, all former members of the service and including brigade
    leaders, were arrested in dawn raids on their homes in Aldershot and
    Farnborough, Hants. Police have interviewed hundreds of former members
    of the brigade over the past four months after launching an inquiry
    into alleged abuse during the 1960s, 70s and 80s. Some 50 men have
    complained about assaults while they were children and detectives
    believe that more allegations could be made.
                               
    The offences are alleged to have been committed against boys aged from
    six to 16. All were members of the brigade, which currently has 56,000
    children under 18 among its membership of 82,000. The police operation
    has centred on Farnborough and Aldershot but alleged victims have been
    contacted in Australia, Canada, Thailand, Norway and America.
                               
    A spokesman for Hampshire Police said: "We are looking at sustained
    abuse of boys over a 30-year period by men who were St John Ambulance
    brigade members in positions of responsibility."
                               
    Det Insp Peter Swan, the man in charge of the investigation, said: "We
    have identified a large number of alleged victims. We are still anxious
    to speak to any former members of St John from the Farnborough and
    Aldershot areas who have not yet been seen and who may have information
    that could help the inquiry."
                               
    Harry Dymond, commander of the St John force in Hampshire, said the
    brigade was devastated by the allegations. "I knew the police were
    looking at a possible paedophile ring and I think it is horrendous if
    anyone has used the St John Ambulance for that purpose," he said. "As
    an organisation we have a lot of contact with youngsters and are an
    important youth organisation."
                               
    Mr Dymond said procedures had been tightened over the years because of
    greater awareness of child protection issues. The brigade was
    conducting its own inquiry.
7.1874IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:1780
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                                                             
    Nurses pledge to save relatives from traumatic procedures
    
    By Celia Hall 
                
    BRITAIN'S nurses decided yesterday that family members should not have
    the right to be in hospital resuscitation rooms when casualty teams are
    struggling to save the lives of their relatives.
                
    They spoke of the traumatic effects on family members who witness the
    "brutal" life-saving procedures. One nurse, during a debate at the
    Royal College of Nursing annual congress, in Harrogate, spoke of the
    constant, harrowing memory of watching hospital attempts to revive her
    baby grandson who died from drowning.
                
    Betty Woodland, an accident and emergency nurse of 30 years' experience
    from Portsmouth, said that her 18-month-old grandson had fallen into a
    lake. "He did not survive. The loss of a precious child devastated the
    whole of our family. But the efforts of the police, ambulancemen,
    paramedics and the accident and emergency staff left us traumatised,"
    she said. 
                
    "Nothing could have prepared me for it. He went into the accident
    department without a mark on him but attempts to revive him left him
    battered and bruised.
                
    "We watched and prayed and screamed silently for them to carry on, even
    though we knew it was a losing battle. Even now I wonder, did the team
    carry on longer just because we were there. There is no doubt in my
    mind that, as a family, we were damaged by watching this event," said
    Mrs Woodland.
                
    The vote by congress goes against the recommendation of a specialist
    Royal College and British Association of Accident and Emergency
    Medicine working party which decided that loved ones should be able to
    witness resuscitation if they wished to do so.
                
    A survey by the working party in 1995 found that 90 per cent of
    relatives who had been present did not regret it. They also found that
    only 25 per cent of accident and emergency departments had a policy
    which allowed unrestricted access to resuscitation rooms for relatives.
                
    Brian Dolan, a casualty nurse at Kingston Hospital, south-west London,
    and an accident and emergency researcher, seconded the motion which
    called on the congress to support relatives' access to the hospital
    resuscitation room.
                
    He said: "Too often relatives are excluded because we do not have
    enough confidence in ourselves as carers to admit that we might not be
    able to save a patient's life."
                
    Mr Dolan, who was himself excluded from unsuccessful attempts to revive
    his mother, said it was routine for parents to be allowed to stay with
    children in these circumstances.
                
    "They don't interfere. They just want to be there. Why should it be
    different for adults? It's a kind of casual ageism that has no place in
    compassionate care," he said.
                
    Andrew Dyke, an accident and emergency nurse from Wandsworth, south
    London, disagreed. "It's not pretty, it's not ER and it's not Casualty.
    It's very brutal," he said.
                
    Mr Dyke said a patient was stripped naked, sometimes clothes were cut
    off with scissors, tubes were inserted and patients given injections
    and electric shocks.
                
    "It's very busy in accident and emergency. Who's got the time to look
    after the patient's relatives? It is not up to the trusts to introduce
    policies on this point. It is not up to the Royal College of Nursing
    and it's not up to the British Medical Association or to the
    Government. It is up to the doctors and nurses who look after the
    patients," said Mr Dyke.
                
    Even though congress was told that, by being present, relatives could
    see that everything had been done and that litigation was less likely,
    or that it was a last chance to say "I love you, I'm sorry, or
    goodbye", the nurses defeated the motion by 259 votes to 149 with 67
    abstentions.
7.1875IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:1952
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                                                 
    Frank Muir's book 'too literary' for Radio 4 
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 
                                                              
    FRANK Muir, the celebrated wit and broadcaster, has suffered rejection
    at the hands of the BBC after half a century of distinguished work for
    the corporation.
                                                              
    His autobiography, A Kentish Lad, had been submitted for serialisation
    on Radio 4 and Muir, 77, was destined to read extracts to be broadcast
    in the 8.45am slot during the August parliamentary recess.
                                                              
    But although the producer, Paul Kent, was initially enthusiastic, Muir
    has been told by Radio 4's controller, James Boyle, that his book was
    "too lugubrious" and "too literary" for the station.
                                                              
    Personal History, an autobiography by Katharine Graham, the feminist
    chairman of the Washington Post Company, will be serialised instead.
    Muir's literary agent, Gill Coleridge, said yesterday that she was
    dismayed and disappointed by Radio 4's rejection of him.
                                                              
    "Frank is such a well-known voice on Radio 4 that they scarcely bother
    to introduce him," she said. "I would have thought that this book was
    completely up their street. It covers his childhood and also his early
    years at the BBC, doing sketches like The Glums and also his
    involvement in the very early days of television. We thought it was
    perfect for Radio 4. If Frank Muir is not suitable for Radio 4 then I
    cannot think who is."
                                                              
    Muir, famed for his gentlemanly wit and bow ties, started writing
    sketches for classic radio comedy shows like Take It From Here and
    Breakfast With Braden, which were sometimes cannibalised to provide
    jokes for Carry On films.His television credits include Whack-O, My
    Word, My Music and Call My Bluff.
                                                              
    Mr Boyle, who was appointed controller of Radio 4 last year, has said
    all programmes were potentially under review but has promised that the
    station would continue to serve its listeners.
                                                              
    However, some sections appear to be changing in style, with Fever
    Pitch, by the "thirty-something" writer Nick Hornby, being serialised
    as the Late Book.
                                                              
    A Radio 4 spokesman said yesterday that there were only a limited
    number of slots during the recess and they were being divided into
    travel, biography and diary. "It was a straightforward commissioning
    decision," she said.
                                                              
    A Radio 4 source said: "There is a great difference between a book
    which is a good read and a book which makes a good listen.
7.1876IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:2137
7.1877IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 21 1997 17:2229
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 21 May 1997 Issue 726
                              
    Texas executions milestone
    
    By Hugh Davies in Washington 
                
    THE sleepy Texas town of Huntsville, which possesses America's busiest
    execution chamber, is adding to its grim reputation this week with a
    legal milestone: four executions in as many days.
                
    The quickening pace reflects a state court ruling to streamline the
    appeals process that has allowed some convicts to prolong their lives
    for 20 years. It also echoes public sentiment. A recent poll showed
    that eight out of 10 Texans favoured capital punishment.
                
    Texas has carried out 119 executions - a third of the country's total -
    since the United States Supreme Court ruled them constitutional in 1976
    after a four-year hiatus. With time running out for many of the 466 men
    and seven women on "death row" at Huntsville, more records are about to
    be set. By the end of next month, Texas will exceed its all-time annual
    high of 19 executions. Richard Drinkard, 39, who killed three people in
    a hammer attack, became of the first of the four to be strapped to a
    special table in the "Walls Unit" of the prison on Monday. He died from
    a lethal injection.
                
    The lack of public interest in the latest executions worries opponents
    of the death penalty. Mike Charlton, a Houston lawyer, said people
    pushed executions from their minds now that they had become
    "sanitised".
7.1878IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:30108
    AP 22-May-1997 1:06 EDT   REF5050

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Thursday, May 22, 1997
      
    VOLUNTEER-PROTECTION 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress has approved a bill to shield volunteers
    from some liability suits arising out of their charity work, despite
    critics' claims that it steps on states' prerogatives. The bill would
    protect a volunteer from liability for harm caused while properly
    engaged in volunteer work unless the harm was caused by willful or
    criminal misconduct. A volunteer under the influence of drugs or
    alcohol also would not be immune from liability. The House passed the
    bill Wednesday 390-35 and the Senate approved the measure by unanimous
    voice vote, sending it to President Clinton. 
   
    AIR FORCE-PILOT 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Under pressure from lawmakers who say the adultery
    case against pilot Kelly Flinn is unfair, the Air Force's top general
    said the issue is "an officer entrusted to fly nuclear weapons who
    disobeyed, who lied." At the Pentagon, Air Force Secretary Sheila
    Widnall canceled an out-of-town trip to consider 1st Lt. Flinn's
    request for an honorable discharge instead of a court martial. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's attorneys say their case could be even
    shorter than the prosecution's. Sources tell The Associated Press that
    McVeigh's lawyers plan to call 30 to 40 witnesses to challenge "every
    facet" of the government's circumstantial case. Lead attorney Stephen
    Jones said that his presentation "may take less than two weeks."
    Prosecutors rested their case after calling 137 witnesses in 18 days. 
   
    ASTHMA-GENE 

    SAN DIEGO (AP) -- A genetic mutation that makes people susceptible to
    asthma has been discovered on one of the world's most isolated islands,
    researchers said. Sequana Therapeutics analyzed DNA from about 300
    people on Tristan da Cunha, a South Atlantic island where about 30
    percent of the residents have asthma. The mutated gene is said to
    affect people with high asthma rates in the United States, Canada and
    Australia. An estimated 15 million Americans have asthma. 
   
    BRITAIN-LAND MINES 

    LONDON (AP) -- Britain says it will ban the manufacture of
    anti-personnel land mines, impose an immediate moratorium on their use
    and destroy the country's stockpile by 2005. Reversing the policy of
    its conservative predecessor, the new Labor government also will back a
    Canadian bid for a swift global ban. Britain, like the United States,
    had previously said it was better to negotiate a ban through the U.N.
    Conference on Disarmament than to back the Canadian initiative. 
   
    RUSSIA-POLITICS 

    MOSCOW (AP) -- An odd alliance of liberals and hard-liners called for a
    no-confidence vote against President Boris Yeltsin's Cabinet. But
    Russia's parliament, the Duma, refused to set a date for the debate.
    Grigory Yavlinsky, leader of the Reformist Yabloko faction, said he
    would take up the issue again Friday, seeking a vote on June 4. But
    there is little chance of getting the vote approved because it lacks
    the support of the Communists, the largest party in the Duma. 
   
    ALBERT INDICTED 

    ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) -- The woman who claims sportscaster Marv Albert
    forced her to perform oral sex faces a charge of threatening to kill
    her former boyfriend, WRC-TV in Washington reports. According to court
    records, the woman threatened to kill her ex-boyfriend, "his dog and
    any girl he may be with," on March 13 -- a month after the alleged
    incident involving Albert. She faces a July 30 trial on a charge of
    making threats to do bodily harm, WRC said. If convicted, she could get
    a maximum sentence of six months. Albert denies her allegations of
    forcible sodomy and assault. 
   
    DAYTIME EMMYS 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Talk show divas Oprah and Rosie fought to a draw in
    the 24th annual Daytime Emmy Awards ceremony. Each took home one award,
    but Susan Lucci lost the best actress award for the 17th time. Pat
    Sajak was named the best game show host for his role spinning the
    "Wheel of Fortune." Veteran Bob Barker's show, "The Price is Right,"
    won for best game show. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading at 114.55 yen early Thursday, up
    0.59. The Nikkei lost 78.70 points, falling to 19,763.28. On Wall
    Street, the Dow fell 12.77 points to close at 7,290.69. 
   
    ROCKETS-JAZZ 

    SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- The Utah Jazz pick-and-rolled, outrebounded and
    utterly frustrated the Houston Rockets, beating them 104-92. John
    Stockton had 26 points, 12 assists and eight rebounds and Karl Malone
    had 24 points and 15 rebounds. The Jazz have won two in the best-of-7
    series. 
   
    CLEMENS' 200TH 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- The Rocket arrived at another career milestone. Roger
    Clemens (8-0) earned his 200th victory and his eighth straight of 1997,
    leading the Toronto Blue Jays to a 4-1 win over the New York Yankees. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by JESSE STONE 
7.1879IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:30105
    RTw  22-May-97 04:09    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - Self-proclaimed president Laurent Kabila worked to form a
    government for his new Democratic Republic of Congo, making contact
    through a top aide with a veteran opponent of ousted Zaire president
    Mobutu Sese Seko. 

    PARIS - France indicated that it may be prepared to freeze the assets
    of ousted Zaire president Mobutu Sese Seko but may admit him for
    medical treatment. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin chairs a key meeting of the Kremlin
    Defence Council to consider the fate of Russia's armed forces, reeling
    from a barrage of corruption charges against the top brass. 

    - - - - 

    DHAKA - Nearly 2.5 million people were affected by a cyclone in
    Bangladesh that is feared to have killed more than 100 and the
    government said medical squads were trying to prevent outbreaks of
    disease in devastated areas. 

    - - - - 

    BANGKOK - The number of senior members of Aung San Suu Kyi's party who
    have been arrested by Burma's military government has risen to about 60
    and more arrests are expected, a senior NLD official said. 

    WASHINGTON - The United States said Burma's arrest of some 50 senior
    opposition figures demonstrated the "perfidious and inhumane nature" of
    the Asian country's military government. 

    - - - - 

    JERUSALEM - Israel said it would complain to the U.N. commission on
    human rights over the Palestinian Authority's decision to impose the
    death penalty on people who sell land to Jews. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - France's ruling right and its leftist challengers stepped up
    their row over the European single currency as the campaign for the
    first round of a parliamentary election entered its penultimate day. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Albanian Prime Minister Bashkim Fino, seeking to end a
    long-running crisis over elections, asked the international community
    for "intensive" monitoring of the vote. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - The Russia-NATO pact that President Bill Clinton and
    Russian President Boris Yeltsin will sign in Paris next week in no way
    limits the security alliance's freedom of action, U.S. officials said. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Belarus President
    Alexander Lukashenko were due to meet to iron out differences over a
    controversial union deal one day before its planned signing. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - French Socialist Party leader Lionel Jospin reached out to
    female voters with a pledge to give important cabinet portfolios to
    women if the left won France's May 25-June 1 parliamentary election. 

    - - - - 

    ROME - The Italian government won its 23rd lower house confidence vote
    when it gained approval for a decree aimed at speeding up the process
    for starting or resuming state construction projects. 

    - - - - 

    SOFIA - Bulgaria's new reformist cabinet appointed by parliament faces
    a challenge to live up to high public expectations and complete market
    reforms delayed since the end of communist rule, officials say. 

    - - - - 

    BONN - Markus Wolf, the legendary East German spymaster, was accused by
    leading German politicians of greed and slander for his forthcoming
    book that lifts the lid on a number of embarrassing Cold War secrets. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - The new Labour government promised to destroy all Britain's
    anti-personnel landmines by 2005, pursuing its pledge to put human
    rights at the centre of foreign policy. 

    - - - - 

    SALAHUDDIN, Iraq - Turkey's Iraqi Kurdish allies have vowed to keep the
    Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas out of northern Iraq once
    Ankara's week-old campaign against the rebels is over. 

    REUTER
7.1880IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3156
    AP 22-May-1997 1:10 EDT   REF5062

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Marine Kills Teen Near Texas Border

    REDFORD, Texas (AP) -- Military activities aimed at stemming drug
    traffic on the Texas-Mexico border were suspended Wednesday following
    the shooting death of a local high school student by a Marine. 

    Ezequiel Hernandez Jr., 18, was shot Tuesday after opening fire on four
    Marines who were watching a suspected drug-trafficking route, the U.S.
    Border Patrol said. 

    Hernandez, a 10th-grader at Presidio High School, fired twice and was
    getting ready to fire a third time when he was shot in the chest,
    Border Patrol spokesman Mario Ortiz said. 

    Relatives said Hernandez had taken his .22-caliber rifle to tend the
    family's 30 goats after dinner when they heard a single shot. The
    shooting took place about a half-mile away. 

    "Even if he did shoot at them twice like they said, I think they had no
    right to kill him," said Belen Hernandez, Hernandez' 26-year-old
    sister. "They could've shot him in the leg or arm, but not to kill
    him." 

    The Texas Rangers were investigating and military border activities in
    the area about 200 miles southeast of El Paso were suspended. 

    "One, you have the death of a U.S. citizen. Secondly, it did involve
    the military. And thirdly, it was obviously a very unfortunate
    incident," Ortiz told The Dallas Morning News. 

    The shooting drew sharp criticism from immigrant rights advocates, who
    argue that using troops along the border incites violence. 

    "They're not local, they're not trained as Border Patrol agents, and
    they probably don't know the field very well. You're asking for more
    and more bloodshed,' said Suzan Kern, coordinator of the El Paso-based
    Border Rights Coalition. 

    The shooting was the second on the border involving the military. An
    Army Green Beret conducting surveillance along the Rio Grande near
    Brownsville wounded a Mexican man who opened fire on him on Jan. 24. 

    The man, Cesario Vasquez Acuna, 30, later pleaded guilty to assault and
    other charges. He faces up to 15 years in prison and a $500,000 fine at
    his sentencing next month. 

    The January shooting was the first in 2,000 missions authorized since
    1989 by Joint Task Force Six, a federal agency that helps local
    authorities fight drug smuggling, said spokeswoman Maureen Bossch. 

    Soldiers involved in such operations are forbidden by federal law from
    confronting suspects, but they are allowed to shoot in self-defense. 
7.1881IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3124
    AP 22-May-1997 0:06 EDT   REF6112

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Education Board Member Apologizes

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- A state Board of Education member apologized and
    asked for forgiveness Wednesday for saying "Screw the Buddhists and
    kill the Muslims" at a meeting. 

    "I'm here today to issue an apology, first of all, to the Muslim and
    Buddhist communities," Dr. Henry Jordan said. "Second, I would like to
    apologize to the Christian community." 

    Jordan's remarks came during a May 13 board committee meeting after he
    suggested posting the Ten Commandments in public schools. He made the
    comment when told people of other religions might be offended. 

    Several religious groups have called for Jordan's resignation. 

    Jordan, a surgeon who failed in a bid to get the Republican nomination
    for lieutenant governor in 1994, said he would wait until the
    controversy dies down before bringing his suggestion on the
    commandments before the full board. 
7.1882IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3131
    AP 21-May-1997 23:25 EDT   REF6089

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Eight-Year-Old News Carrier is Hero

    PEORIA, Ill. (AP) -- Eight-year-old Jessica Glass was substituting her
    older brother's delivery route when she noticed a bundle of unopened
    newspapers behind a front door. 

    Jessica, wondering why a car was in the driveway, mentioned the pile of
    issues of the Journal Star to her mother. 

    "I didn't really know if something was wrong," Jessica said. 

    Something was very wrong indeed. On the floor just inside the door,
    Anna Mae Purcell, 83, was drifting in and out of consciousness. 

    Last Tuesday or Wednesday -- Ms. Purcell isn't certain -- she climbed
    on a chair to reach a hat. But she lost her balance and fell, banging
    her head on a table leg. 

    Weakened and dehydrated, Ms. Purcell said she prayed a lot, yelled for
    her neighbors and banged her fists on the door when she heard noises
    outdoors. But sharp pains in her chest and side kept her pinned down. 

    Ms. Purcell remained in the same spot until Saturday morning, when
    Jessica encouraged her mother to call police, who found the woman. 

    She remained hospitalized Wednesday in stable condition with serious
    bruises and rug burns. 
7.1883IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3152
    AP 21-May-1997 21:11 EDT   REF6039

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Michigan Crash Prompts Ice Warning

    By CATHERINE STRONG

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Blaming icing as the likely cause of a crash last
    January in Michigan that killed all 29 aboard a commuter plane, the
    National Transportation Board issued recommendations Wednesday to avoid
    a recurrence. 

    The recommendations include installing automatic ice detection systems
    on all Embraer EMB-120 planes -- something the Federal Aviation
    Administration has already proposed -- and more crew training to detect
    and prevent icing. 

    Comair Flight 3272 was trying to land in light snow when it nosedived
    into a field about 18 miles short of the Detroit Metropolitan Airport.
    The Embraer EMB-120 was slowing when it stalled at about 150 knots and
    rolled right several times before plunging to the ground. 

    The safety board said in a six-page letter that accumulation of "ice on
    the wing was the only reasonable explanation" for loss of control of
    the aircraft at higher than expected speeds. Information from the
    accident suggests the flight crew may not have seen the ice or
    recognized it was thick enough to be a hazard, the board said. 

    There is no indication the flight crew activated the wing de-icing
    equipment, the NTSB said. Other pilots reported trace to severe icing
    in the area that day. 

    The FAA, the agency that sets rules for airlines, has already proposed
    installing ice-detection systems on the commuter planes before next
    winter. And Cincinnati-based Comair has said it will do so. Flight
    crews now use visual cues to detect ice buildup. 

    The NTSB also wants flight crew training to emphasize recognizing icing
    conditions and the need to turn on de-icing equipment at the first sign
    of ice formation. The board said the training was needed to break
    flight crews of old habits. 

    The FAA has proposed that Embraer flight manuals state a minimum air
    speed of 160 knots when the commuter planes are flying in "known or
    forecast" icing conditions. The FAA also wants pilots to increase their
    normal landing approach speeds in potentially icy weather. 

    The government proposals would affect 220 domestic planes operated by
    ComAir, Atlantic Southeast, Continental Express and United Express. 
7.1884IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3188
    AP 21-May-1997 22:46 EDT   REF6073

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Blair Wants Kinder Question Time

    By SUE LEEMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    LONDON (AP) -- For more than 30 years, it has been a parliamentary
    spectator sport, a ritual of shouting, booing and taunts. 

    On Wednesday, though, Tony Blair's first Question Time as prime
    minister was limited to, well, questions. There was no yelling and just
    the odd round of booing as Blair answered questions for 30 minutes in
    the House of Commons. 

    Blair's new, more sober version replaces the twice-weekly rowdy
    shouting matches that have packed the House and, since 1990, drawn a
    television audience of about 800,000 people for the 15-minute sessions.

    Some lamented the new civility. 

    "All the emotion and theater ... have disappeared," moaned Chris
    Moncrieff, who has covered Parliament for the British news agency Press
    Association since 1961, the year that Conservative Harold MacMillan
    introduced the tradition. 

    Blair says longer sessions once a week will allow lawmakers to quiz the
    prime minister in greater depth -- and perhaps engender a more
    dignified atmosphere. 

    Question Time is the latest establishment ritual that Labor has tweaked
    since its May 1 landslide election victory. Blair has told fellow
    ministers to call him Tony at Cabinet meetings, and his treasury chief
    wore a suit instead of formal evening dress to deliver a major speech
    at a London banquet this week. 

    In Parliament, lawmakers still refer to each other as "the Honorable
    Member." But the custom of preceding every question with an inquiry
    about the prime minister's schedule has disappeared. 

    Paddy Ashdown, leader of the third-ranking Liberal Democratic Party,
    applauded the new format as "a little less confrontational and a little
    more rational." 

    Some Conservatives grumbled that Blair should have consulted Parliament
    first. 

    But for the most part, the Conservatives, with half their legislators
    lost in the Labor landslide, just sat there, not looking in much shape
    to argue anyway. 

    Of the 10 questioners called, only a couple were Conservatives. One,
    ex-Prime Minister John Major, tried a bit of gentle pressure with a
    question about which utility companies privatized by the Conservatives
    will pay a windfall tax. 

    Blair replied politely that that was a decision for Treasury chief
    Gordon Brown. 

    Major, who in the old rowdy sessions liked accusing Blair of talking in
    sound bites, declared that the windfall tax would mean higher bills
    "that hits most those that have least." 

    Replied Blair: "I will resist the temptation to say that was the sound
    bite ... because I have a feeling I used to use a few of those myself
    at one time." 

    He and Major laughed. 

    It's too early to gauge the public's reaction to the new Question Time.
    In addition to its domestic broadcast, it is aired live on dozens of
    foreign TV stations, including C-Span in the United States. 

    But for some of the reporters crowded into the press gallery, the fare
    was too pallid. A few yawned, others slouched in their seats. 

    Only once did Speaker Betty Boothroyd have to call noisy lawmakers to
    "order, order." 

    But Matthew Parris, a former Tory lawmaker who now writes wry
    parliamentary sketches for The Times of London, said nothing has really
    changed. 

    "It is just as ill-natured as ever, but the Tories are more muted and
    depressed," while Labor is behaving better, he said. 
7.1885IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3153
    AP 21-May-1997 22:18 EDT   REF6065

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Britain To Abolish Land Mines

    LONDON (AP) -- Britain will ban the manufacture of anti-personnel land
    mines, impose an immediate moratorium on their use, and destroy the
    country's stockpile by 2005, the Labor government said Wednesday. 

    The government also will back a Canadian bid for a swift global ban.

    "We now have decided that British forces will not and should not use
    land mines," Foreign Secretary Robin Cook said. "Every hour, another
    three people lose their life or lose a limb from stepping on a land
    mine." 

    The move, which Cook called "leading by example," was also a boost for
    Princess Diana, who has joined a campaign by the International
    Committee of the Red Cross to get a global ban. 

    There was no immediate comment from Diana's office Wednesday. 

    Britain's previous Conservative government, which lost power May 1, was
    officially neutral about Diana's campaign. But in December, The Times
    of London quoted an unidentified Conservative minister as calling her a
    "loose cannon" after she made a high-profile visit to Angola. 

    In a diplomatic turnaround from Conservative policy, Cook said Britain
    will support a meeting of international leaders in Canada in December
    that is aimed at securing a global land-mine ban. 

    Previously Britain, like the United States, said it was better to
    negotiate a ban through the U.N. Conference on Disarmament than to back
    the Canadian initiative. 

    Russia and China also have not agreed on a ban. 

    British troops last used land mines in 1991 during the Gulf War, the
    Foreign Office said. The size of the British stockpile was not
    disclosed, but Cook said it would be destroyed before 2005 if there is
    a global ban. 

    As long as the stockpile lasts, British commanders could ask to use
    mines in an emergency if their troops' lives were threatened, Cook
    said. If the government temporarily lifted the ban, Parliament would be
    told, he said. 

    The United Nations estimates that at least 111 million unexploded land
    mines planted in wartime remain buried in 75 countries, killing or
    maiming more than 2,000 people each month. 

    The weapons cause particular misery in Angola and Cambodia. 
7.1886IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3134
    AP 21-May-1997 21:10 EDT   REF6037

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Vatican Attacks Cardinal's Accusers

    VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican on Wednesday came to the defense of a
    cardinal accused of complicity in human rights violations during his
    term as papal envoy in Argentina. 

    A strongly worded commentary by the Vatican's daily newspaper
    criticized an Argentine human rights group for "casting shameful
    shadows on the church" and Cardinal Pio Laghi. 

    L'Osservatore Romano expressed "full solidarity" with Laghi and said it
    firmly rejected the accusations. 

    Laghi was accused by the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, a group that for
    20 years has campaigned on behalf of victims of Argentina's military
    dictatorship. 

    The group formally asked the Italian justice ministry Monday to
    prosecute the cardinal on charges of torture, murder and kidnapping,
    allegedly committed while he was papal ambassador to Argentina from
    1974 to 1980. 

    Laghi, who later was papal envoy to the United States, denied the
    charges Tuesday and accused the group of acting with malice. 

    The newspaper said it understood and shared the mothers' grief. 

    Argentina's government has acknowledged that at least 9,000 people
    disappeared during the "dirty war" against political dissidents. The
    Mothers of Plaza de Mayo put the number at 30,000. 
7.1887IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3153
    AP 21-May-1997 20:44 EDT   REF6030

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    One of FBI's Most Wanted Arrested

    TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -- Mexican authorities Wednesday retained custody
    of a man on the FBI's most wanted list for allegedly killing four
    people -- two of them little girls -- in a rampage in the Los Angeles
    suburb of Baldwin Park. 

    David Alex "Spooky" Alvarez was sent to a federal prison in Mexico City
    on Wednesday morning, said Diana Ortiz Villacorta, a spokeswoman for
    the Attorney General's office in Tijuana. 

    In a telephone interview with The Associated Press, Ortiz said it was
    unclear how long the extradition process would take. 

    Alvarez was arrested Tuesday afternoon without incident at a Chinese
    restaurant in downtown Tijuana, the FBI said. 

    Following his arrest, Alvarez said he wasn't responsible for the
    killings. 

    "I'm being falsely accused of the crime they say I committed," Alvarez
    told reporters. 

    Alvarez said he fled to Mexico, driven by false accusations from his
    estranged wife. 

    "I was a three strikes candidate already," he told reporters. 

    Alvarez added that he told his estranged wife, "You know that the cops
    come looking for me because you called them. You know, I'm not going to
    stick around so they could catch me. I'm going to leave." 

    Mexican authorities said Alvarez altered his appearance, using contact
    lenses to change his eye color to blue and that he underwent
    reconstructive surgery on his nose. 

    Tips sent to the FBI's World Wide Web site and calls to the TV show
    "America's Most Wanted," along with assistance from Mexican
    authorities, contributed to Alvarez's capture, said Tim McNally, the
    FBI's assistant director in Los Angeles. 

    Alvarez was sought on a warrant charging him with unlawful flight and
    murder. An alleged accomplice, Trinia Irene Aguirre, 21, of Los
    Angeles, was arrested Nov. 21. 

    Authorities contend that Alvarez and Aguirre barged into a quiet,
    suburban home where Alvarez's ex-wife lived on Sept. 29, 1996. They
    allegedly bound and then shot or stabbed to death two little girls --
    Evelyn Torres, 9 and her sister, Massiel, 12. 
7.1888IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3134
    AP 21-May-1997 19:55 EDT   REF6008

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Air France Flights Foiled by Strike

    PARIS (AP) -- A pilots strike at Air France forced the troubled
    state-owned airline to cancel up to half of its domestic and European
    flights Wednesday, though most overseas flights went as planned, an
    airline spokesman said. 

    Those figures were disputed by unions, however, who said only half of
    the airline's overseas flights, and one-in-three of the shorter flights
    were operational. 

    Some pilots had returned to work, allowing the airline to keep many
    flights going Wednesday, spokesman Marie Clotilde Debieuvre said. 

    The airline said its flight program would be scheduled as normal for
    Thursday, though there was some risk of disruptions. 

    Unions disagreed, predicting even more canceled flights. 

    "From Thursday, the conflict will spread to include all of the
    long-haul flights," five pilots' unions said in a news release. 

    Pilot unions called a four-day strike to run through Friday to protest
    Air France's planned double-tier salary system for new pilots. 

    One of six unions pulled out of the strike Tuesday, after reaching
    agreement on the hiring of new pilots. 

    Air France Chairman Christian Blanc has said the strike could cost the
    company up to $17.8 million a day. 
7.1889IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3136
    AP 21-May-1997 17:00 EDT   REF5905

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Backs Cellular Phones

    BOSTON (AP) -- Cellular phones carry little risk to people with
    pacemakers as long as they don't carry them in their shirt pockets or
    hold them next to their chests, a study suggests. 

    The research was first reported by The Associated Press when it was
    presented a year ago at a meeting of the North American Society of
    Pacing and Electrophysiology in Seattle. 

    Dr. David L. Hayes of the Mayo Clinic led the study, which tested
    whether cell phones interfere with pacemakers, as some earlier research
    suggested. 

    The study found that signals from the phones can indeed cause
    pacemakers to stop sending signals to the heart or make the heart beat
    too fast. However, there was virtually no risk while people held the
    phones to their ears. The problems occurred mainly when the phones were
    placed directly over the implanted pacemakers. 

    The study, published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine,
    found that in 5,533 tests on 980 patients, the phones caused enough
    interference to trigger symptoms 7 percent of the time. Most of these
    symptoms were palpitations. More serious episodes, such as feeling
    faint, were rare, occurring less than 2 percent of the time. 

    Furthermore, the more serious episodes happened only when the phones
    were placed over the pacemakers. 

    The study was financed by Wireless Technology Research, an industry
    group in Washington. The industry has agreed to put pacemaker warnings
    on cellular phones. 
7.1890IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3182
    AP 21-May-1997 14:02 EDT   REF5569

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study: Chimps Are Cheatin'

    By MATT CRENSON

    AP Science Editor

    NEW YORK (AP) -- There may be more monkey business going on among
    chimpanzees than scientists once thought. 

    A study suggests that half of all chimpanzees may be conceived on the
    sly when females sneak off for risky trysts with males outside their
    social group. 

    Female chimpanzees' secret sex lives come as something of a surprise to
    researchers, who previously thought that they almost always mated
    within their own group of 20 to 100 animals. 

    "When they can get away with it, they sneak off and they try to expand
    the pool of possible fathers," said Pascal Gagneaux, a professor at the
    University of California at San Diego. 

    Working with UCSD biologist David Woodruff and Christophe Boesch of the
    Basel Zoological Institute in Switzerland, Gagneaux painstakingly
    worked out the genetic family tree of a chimpanzee group living in the
    Tai Forest of West Africa's Ivory Coast. 

    Between 1991 and 1995, he and his colleagues collected DNA samples from
    all 52 members of the Tai Forest group. The DNA came from hair --
    collected from chimpanzee sleeping nests by researchers who climbed
    trees more than 100 feet tall -- and from chewed fruit, which yielded
    cells from inside the mouth. 

    Paternity tests on the DNA yielded a shocking result: Of 13 infants,
    only seven were fathered by members of the Tai Forest group. 

    Richard Wrangham, a Harvard professor who studies chimpanzees in
    Uganda, said that because of the animals' ferocious territorial
    behavior, extra-group couplings might actually have a practical
    benefit: A female that has such a tryst creates the possibility that
    her offspring may be related to a neighboring male. That might lead the
    neighboring male to show mercy in a future encounter with her or her
    offspring. 

    In his own research, Wrangham has seen females lurking about a
    neighboring group's territory. So he was not surprised to learn that
    some infants among the Tai chimps have fathers from other groups. 

    "But even so, 50 percent seems extraordinarily high," he said. "There's
    still a lot that's mysterious about this." 

    Gagneaux's findings, published in Thursday's issue of the journal
    Nature, give female chimpanzees a much more important role in the
    reproductive process. Evolutionary biologists often treat females as a
    prize to be won by the most deserving male. But Gagneaux said that's
    the wrong way to look at things. 

    "Females are not some sort of resource that just wait there like fruit
    to be picked," Gagneaux said. "Females have their own agenda." 

    Apparently, that agenda includes sneaking off to mate with their
    hunkiest neighbors. It's common in chimpanzee society for a female to
    disappear for a day or two, so nobody really notices the absence of a
    trysting female. But if she were to be caught, Gagneaux said, dire
    consequences would result. 

    Male chimps physically dominate females to get what they want, and
    sometimes kill infants that they believe aren't theirs. 

    Chimp societies are complicated affairs, with strictly obeyed but
    constantly shifting hierarchies that determine which animals get the
    best fruit, mates and sleeping nests. Neighboring groups almost never
    interact, except to fight over territory. 

    Since those fights are females' only opportunity to check out the
    neighbors, Gagneaux hypothesizes that all the histrionics that males
    engage in during the conflicts -- the hooting, the stomping, the
    thumping of trees -- may be the chimpanzee equivalent of mowing the
    lawn shirtless. 
7.1891IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3172
    RTw  22-May-97 07:25    

    Lust drives males to early grave, research shows

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Robert Woodward 

    LONDON, May 22 (Reuter) - Lust drives males to an early grave and, if
    worms are anything to go by, men wanting to enjoy a long life should
    stay at home and resist their sexual urges, a British researcher
    reported on Thursday. 

    Dr David Gems said studies of a tiny worm, caenorhabdiris elegans,
    showed the males exhausted themselves pursuing the females. When they
    gave up the chase, males lived up to twice as long as females. 

    In nature, males in the majority of species, including man, do not live
    as long as females. Longevity is governed by constitutional factors,
    covering the basic physiology of species, and sexual behaviour. 

    Sexual behaviour includes the effects of reproduction, and conflict
    between males including searching for mates, and holding and protecting
    mates and territory. 

    The worm is normally hermaphrodite in the wild but there are a few
    males. For the purpose of his research, Gems classed the hermaphrodites
    as female, an article in the New Scientist magazine said. 

    "Essentially the males are like super-charged females. They move a
    great deal more than the females searching for mates and their
    lifestyle is shortened because of this," Gems told Reuters. 

    When healthy males were "crippled" by genetic mutation, they lived a
    great deal longer. "It basically reversed the pattern of
    gender-specific longevity. Males lived up to twice as long as females,"
    Gems said. 

    When males were put together with females they lived for just over 10
    days. But when individuals were isolated they lived for 20 days, longer
    than the female average of 16 days. Isolating female worms had no
    effect on their life span. 

    The genetically mutated males lived for 30 days but mutation had no
    effect on the life span of females. 

    "If you look at nature, males do not live as long. Is this because they
    age faster? Or is the higher mortality associated with sex? I would
    suggest it was because of sex," Gems said. 

    "This (worm) is a basic organism but it gives ideas of what we can look
    at in higher organisms." 

    The New Scientist quoted geneticist Armand Leroi of London's Imperial
    College as saying Gems's work was the first time the difference in
    longevities between males and females in one species had been dissected
    in great detail. 

    Gems said there was already evidence that males in other species live
    longer when sex is taken out of the equation. Male marsupial mice die
    in just a few sex-crazed weeks, copulating five to 11 hours a day. But
    if they are castrated they can live for years, he said. 

    Human eunuchs also live considerably longer than whole males. Gems said
    men might be built to live longer than women if it were not for sex. 

    "This research lays open the fact that gender differences, as far as
    constitutional factors are concerned, are unknown," Gems said. "Man
    might be an instance where male constitutional factors are stronger
    than females." 

    REUTER
7.1892IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3126
    RTw  22-May-97 03:42    

    T-Ray could be sharper, safer than X-Ray

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    LONDON, May 22 (Reuter) - The T-Ray could replace the X-Ray with images
    that are sharper and safer, researchers said on Thursday. 

    New York researchers say the terahertz rays -- electromagnetic waves
    with frequencies that are measured in trillions of seconds -- could be
    used in everything from medicine to drug enforcement. 

    Physicist Xi Cheng Zhang and colleagues at the Rensselaer Polytechnic
    Institute in Troy, New York say the imaging system can produce pictures
    with resolutions down to 150 micrometres. 

    The team, whose findings were reported in the weekly New Scientist
    magazine, is initially concentrating on its medical applications in the
    development stage. "We are working on bone density images," Zhang said. 

    The T-Rays could also be used to check silicon chip circuits, hunt for
    hidden drugs being loaded onto planes, look for defects in plastics and
    monitor food for freshness. 

    REUTER
7.1893IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3196
    RTw  22-May-97 01:08    

    UK unions launch gas and electricity supply company

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 20 (Reuter) - British trade unions became the latest
    entrant into the U.K. domestic energy market on Thursday with the
    launch of Union Energy Ltd, offering low cost gas and electricity to up
    to seven million of their members. 

    Sponsored by the Trade Unions Congress (TUC), Union Energy is
    negotiating with 17 licensed suppliers of gas and electricity, to
    obtain tenders by the end of June for supplies to its members. 

    "This is a major innovation for the trades union movement," said John
    Monks, TUC general secretary. "It highlights the real value that union
    membership can bring our members and their families. By entering the
    energy market in this way we want to exercise a positive influence in
    the power supply industry." 

    The TUC said their main priority would be to pass on cost savings to
    members, and they plan to invest profits in "socially responsible
    activities," such as energy conservation and energy efficiency. 

    Union Energy expects three companies to be chosen, based on criteria of
    cost, service, lack of red tape and flexible payments. 

    Britain's domestic gas and electricity markets are opening up to
    competition in a process expected to be complete by April 1998. 

    Domestic electricity customers will be able to buy from any of the UK's
    suppliers by then, if the current timetable is adhered to. 

    Union Energy intends to offer better value to householders by teaming
    up with suppliers, effectively arranging bulk deals with them on behalf
    of its seven million potential users. 

    A spokeswoman for Union explained that gas and electricity will be
    delivered by a supplier, but the bill will carry the Union Energy
    identity. "It's really a marketing partnership," she said. 

    The attraction for suppliers is access to Union Energy's membership
    database. 

    The winners are likely to gain far more customers than they would do by
    marketing in competition with other licensed suppliers. 

    And they will not necessarily be expected to provide their services at
    bargain prices. 

    "For us, the TUC brand is synonymous with reliability and service,"
    said a spokeswoman. "We will not necessarily offer a bargain basement
    price, we want excellent customer service, an excellent range of
    payment options and a good price." 

    Union Energy expects to sell its first supplies in October. 

    The main launch to members will take place at the TUC's Brighton
    Congress from September 8-11. A call centre will then open in October
    to give more information about the company. 

    Sue Slipman, Director of the Gas Consumer's Council (GCC) was positive
    about the new company. 

    "We're very keen to see the introduction of this kind of development,"
    she said. "We've welcomed the scheme as it could prove remarkably
    useful to consumers and suppliers alike." 

    She added that local authorities and housing associations could get
    involved in similar schemes, bringing pressure to bear on behalf of
    consumer groups who would not otherwise be represented. 

    Union said reaction from suppliers had been very positive, not least
    because of the access to markets that the scheme could give to the
    chosen suppliers. 

    But Neil Lambert, joint general manager of Calor Gas (CG.L)/Texaco
    (TX.N) joint venture Calortex, which is a gas supplier only and has not
    been asked to tender, was less certain. 

    "Whether people will go this route or will prefer to do deals in the
    comfort of their own homes I just don't know," he said. 

    He added that although there could be clear advantages from the
    shipper's point of view in accessing the TUC's database, "that depends
    on what is the cost of tapping into such a database," assuming that the
    TUC will be looking to make a profit. 

    He was not certain that the flexible range of payments promised by
    Union Energy will be an important selling point. 

    "The truth is that every supplier, as a condition of its licence, has
    to offer a multiplicity of payment options," he said. 

    REUTER
7.1894IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 11:3261
    RTos 21-May-97 23:19    

    Study Casts Doubt on 'Life' in Martian Fossil

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON (Reuter) - Scientists Wednesday cast more doubt on whether an
    ancient meteorite found in Antarctica contains fossils of life on Mars. 

    Edward Scott and colleagues at the University of Hawaii said their
    analysis indicated that carbonates in the rock -- taken as key evidence
    of life -- were formed as part of a high-impact shock and not long-term
    processes friendly to life. 

    Last year NASA researchers stirred the science community when they said
    tiny holes in the 16 million-year-old piece of meteorite might be the
    remains of ancient Martian bacteria. 

    Since then ALH84001, as the rock is formally known, has been examined
    by teams of researchers around the world. 

    Those who say it could harbor fossils cite evidence that the carbonates
    inside the rock formed at moderate temperatures over long periods of
    time. 

    The idea is that mineral-rich water percolated through tiny cracks in
    the rock, making a nice environment for bacteria. 

    But others say it looks like the carbonate molecules formed in a hot
    flash -- like that caused by a meteorite impact -- which would make it
    less likely that living bacteria were once in there. Scott's group
    backed the hot flash camp. 

    "We find that carbonate, plagioclase and silica were melted and partly
    redistributed by the same shock event responsible for the intense local
    crushing of pyroxene in the meteorite," they wrote in a report in the
    science journal Nature. 

    They said it looked like the structures were cooled and re-sealed
    within seconds. 

    "Our results therefore suggest that the carbonates in ALH84001 could
    not have formed at low temperatures, but instead crystallized from
    shock-melted material," they wrote. 

    "This conclusion weakens significantly the arguments that these
    carbonates could host the fossilized remnants of biogenic activity."

    But there is other evidence of life in the rock. There are polycyclic
    aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which can be formed by burning living
    matter -- for instance, frying bacteria as a meteorite heats up on
    entry into Earth's atmosphere. 

    Scientists think ALH84001 was knocked off the surface of Mars by a
    meteor or asteroid impact millions of years ago. It finally crashed to
    Earth 13,000 years ago. 

    NASA is planning missions to Mars to scoop up and analyze rock and soil
    to see if any similar traces can be found.

    REUTER
7.1895IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:0372
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
    
    Blair to press for flexible job laws
    
    By George Jones, Political Editor 
         
    TONY Blair will deliver a blunt message to Europe tomorrow that it must
    move towards more flexible labour markets.
         
    He will tell his first European summit that Britain, while signing up
    to the social chapter, will veto attempts to impose high social costs.
    The Prime Minister has been invited to a mini-summit in the Dutch
    coastal town of Noordwijk to meet his 14 fellow EU leaders. 
         
    While keen to show that he will bring a more co-operative approach to
    relations with the EU, Mr Blair is determined that Britain should not
    lose its growing competitive edge over leading European rivals.
         
    A report published yesterday claimed that Britain had been catapulted
    from 15th to seventh place in a league table of the world's most
    competitive countries and had opened up a substantial lead over Germany
    and France.
         
    During the election campaign the Conservatives claimed that, if Labour
    gained power, the rest of the EU would use the social chapter to force
    Britain to adopt Continential-style working practices and additional
    social costs, with the loss of 500,000 jobs.
         
    However, Mr Blair has told Cabinet colleagues that if Europe is to meet
    the global challenge - particularly from the "tiger" economies of
    south-east Asia - it must have flexible labour markets. He believes he
    can use the goodwill of the new Government to press the case for the
    rest of Europe to adopt the more flexible labour laws pioneered by
    Britain, which have resulted in a large number of overseas firms
    choosing it as a location for inward investment.
         
    Britain, he will argue, can use its experience to bring about change
    and greater flexibility in Europe through the social chapter. Mr Blair
    will tell his EU colleagues that there is a "third way" - between
    Tory-style laissez-faire policies and the kind of over-regulation that
    has imposed extra costs on employers in Germany and France.
         
    He believes more flexible labour markets must be underpinned by
    measures such as a minimum wage and education and training measures to
    improve the skills of workers - but that does not mean overburdening
    employers with regulations.
         
    He will make clear that Labour will not allow the social chapter to be
    used to introduce legislation that could damage British
    competitiveness. Mr Blair intends to serve notice that his Government
    will block any move to introduce qualified majority voting - which
    removes the national veto - on social security legislation and worker
    involvement on company boards.
         
    An authoritative Government source said last night: "We don't want to
    lose control of our social security costs. We would veto such extra
    costs being imposed here."
         
    Mr Blair's strong support for flexible labour laws will be seen as a
    further sign of New Labour's willingness to adopt the policies of the
    former Tory government. He is keen to demonstrate that he will lead a
    pro-business government. But his support for flexible labour markets
    will be seen as a further sign that he is keeping at arms length from
    the trade unions, who had seen Europe as a way of regaining many of the
    rights and privileges taken away during the past 18 years.
         
    Mr Blair told MPs yesterday that the Government would be able to get a
    "far better deal" than the Tories over lifting the beef ban. But he
    forsaw no early breakthrough. "We have inherited a quite appalling
    situation in relation to BSE - and not just the expense. The way these
    negotiations were handled was a disgrace. It will take time to sort
    out."
7.1896IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:0726
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                               
    Benefits win for deaf nurse
    
    By Terence Shaw, Legal Correspondent 
                                                              
    A DEAF nursery school nurse won a landmark victory yesterday when five
    law lords ruled that she was entitled to a disability living allowance
    for a sign language interpreter to help her lead as normal a social
    life as possible.
                                                              
    Their ruling in favour of Rebecca Halliday, 22, of Newark, Notts, will
    enable thousands of deaf, blind and other disabled people to claim the
    allowance. The law lords' generous interpretation of the benefit laws
    will cost the Government millions of pounds each year.
                                                              
    Miss Halliday said that she was delighted by the ruling. "I can't
    believe it has happened. I never thought I would win because the legal
    battle has been going on like this for 10 years now."
                                                              
    She has been deaf from birth and said that the House of Lords judgment
    meant she could now afford a sign language expert to help her with job
    interviews as well as in her social life. "I used to have a job at a
    nursery but I got made redundant because of cutbacks. I should love to
    get a job again in the nursing field because I have passed all the
    college courses, but it is a difficult field to get into."
7.1897IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:0983
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                                                     
    Father loses legal battle to stop wife's abortion
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 
            
    A 28-YEAR-old man lost a court battle yesterday to prevent his
    estranged wife from aborting their unborn child. A senior judge said
    that the courts could not take the place of doctors in determining the
    grounds for an abortion.
            
    Last week, James Kelly won the first stage of his case when, in an
    unprecedented move, a judge issued a temporary injunction preventing
    his wife from going ahead with a planned abortion. The court order was
    served on Lynn Kelly, 21, a nightclub singer, and on Edinburgh Royal
    Infirmary, where doctors had agreed to terminate the pregnancy.
    However, the same judge, Lord Eassie, lifted the interim interdict at
    the Court of Session in Edinburgh yesterday.
            
    Cardinal Thomas Winning, leader of the 750,000-strong Roman Catholic
    Church in Scotland, said in a statement: "It is a sad day indeed. There
    is surely an extraordinary anomaly in the law when a father can be
    pursued by the Child Support Agency for maintenance of a child, but has
    no say in protecting the child's life in the womb."
            
    Mr Kelly, a roofer from Inverkeithing, Fife, immediately instructed his
    lawyers to lodge an appeal, which will be heard by three judges today.
    His solicitor, Wendy Sheehan, said the judgment had denied her client
    "any rights either as a father of his child or as the guardian of his
    unborn child". It is understood that Mrs Kelly has arranged for the
    termination to be carried out tomorrow.
            
    Her husband had hoped to persuade the court to award him custody of the
    baby and of the couple's 18-month-old daughter in the first case of its
    kind in Scotland.
            
    Jane Roe, of the Abortion Law Reform Association, said the decision was
    expected, but criticised the judge for granting a temporary court order
    which had added to Mrs Kelly's stress "at an incredibly difficult
    time". She added: "For a man to be able to force a woman to go ahead
    with a pregnancy, and have a baby she does not want to have, would have
    been an intolerable situation."
            
    The Birth Control Trust, which favours a woman's right to choose,
    welcomed the ruling, and said it was not aware of any case in Britain
    or the United States in which a husband had won a court order to stop
    an abortion going ahead.
            
    John Smeaton, of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children,
    said: "Above all, the right which the law should uphold is the unborn
    baby's right to life. A situation such as this exposes an absolute
    travesty of justice in that the unborn child is totally helpless and
    has absolutely no rights at all."
            
    In his judgment, Lord Eassie said the 1967 Abortion Act laid the onus
    on doctors to decide whether there were sufficient grounds to allow a
    woman to have an abortion. The judge was told that the couple had
    separated earlier this month, when Mrs Kelly was about eight weeks'
    pregnant.
            
    Mr Kelly claimed in court that his wife had "falsely represented" to
    doctors at the Edinburgh hospital that she had been the victim of
    violence at his hands. But Lord Eassie said there was nothing to
    suggest that the doctors had acted in anything other than good faith.
            
    He said that he agreed with an English court decision from 1979 which
    held that the Abortion Act did not give any right or title to a husband
    to prevent a termination. And he rejected an attempt by Mr Kelly's
    counsel to have the decision deferred for 24 hours for his client to
    re-consider the position.
            
    The couple, who married in 1995, were said by neighbours to have a
    stormy relationship. Mr Kelly said before the court verdict that his
    wife was "putting her singing before the kid and me". He added: "I'm
    not a religious person, not in the slightest, but who is anybody to say
    who lives and dies? I wouldn't have her back."
            
    Mrs Kelly, who performs in local pubs and clubs, said nobody could
    force her to have a child, and she threatened to travel to England to
    have an abortion if the court ruling went against her.
            
    Lord Eassie issued his judgment yesterday after a private hearing on
    Tuesday.
7.1898IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:1186
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7.1902IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:1838
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                                        
    Watchdog attacks Railtrack cash plan
                                                               
    RAILTRACK, the privatised monopoly that owns the network of track,
    signalling and stations, was attacked by John Swift, the rail watchdog,
    yesterday as he announced plans to tighten up regulation.
            
    The company's delivery of its investment plans to date had been
    "disappointing". "There remains a substantial backlog of expenditure on
    network assets, stations and depots that Railtrack must eradicate as a
    priority," he said.
            
    The group's investment programme must be directed to ensure the
    maintenance of the network, its renewal and replacement in the
    "appropriate modern equivalent form" and its improvement, enhancement
    and development, he said.
            
    As Railtrack had no competitors, the regulation system should mirror
    the pressures that would exist in a competitive market place. "But at
    present Railtrack's obligations on delivery of its investment programme
    are extremely light," he said.
            
    Railtrack did not have to say how it linked its programme with the
    results and there was no way of checking that it spent the money
    wisely. "Assurances that the capital and maintenance programme will be
    carried out - especially when most of the expenditure is State funded -
    require something more bankable than the expression of intentions or
    the short-term pressures to meet contractual obligations."
            
    Mr Swift had opened talks with Railtrack to agree a modification to its
    licence to introduce new conditions. He would consult with interested
    parties to ensure that their interests were safeguarded.
            
    Later it emerged that Mr Swift's action had been prompted by a tough
    stance from John Prescott, the Deputy Prime Minister. Mr Prescott said:
    "The regulator's announcement exposes the weaknesses in the present
    system."
7.1903IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:2042
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7.1906IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:2732
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                                        
    Children who are lemons over oranges
    
    By David Brown, Agriculture Editor 
                                  
    ONE third of children think that oranges sold in shops and supermarkets
    are grown in Britain, while 90 per cent believe that tomatoes are
    exotic fruits which are only produced abroad, according to a survey
    published today.
                                  
    A quarter of eight- to 11-year-olds questioned by Mori for the National
    Farmers' Union did not know that wheat is the main ingredient in bread
    - and many believe that it is made from rice or potatoes.
                                  
    One fifth of children are unaware that cheese is made from cow's milk.
    But nearly half mistakenly believe that margarine, manufactured from
    vegetable oils, is made from milk, the survey says. And one in 10 does
    not know know that ham comes from pigs - some think that it is made
    from horses.
                                  
    The NFU is launching a campaign today to teach the public more about
    food and the farming industry. More than 120 farms are opening to the
    public under The Friendly Farm Fundays initiative.
                                  
    Children will be invited to join a free "Friendly Farm Club" and be
    given "goodie bags" containing puzzles and information sheets. Tony
    Pexton, deputy president of the NFU, said: "We really must try to
    unravel the confusion in children's minds and that is why we are
    inviting families down on the farm this summer. While most children
    appear to be aware of general farming facts their depth of knowledge is
    very patchy to say the least."
7.1907IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:2823
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                                                 
    Turning on radio gives snorers a silent night
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
                        
    A WAND-like instrument that emits radio waves can selectively shrink
    excess soft tissue, offering a way to cure snoring and sleep apnoea, in
    which excess tissue blocks the throat.
                        
    The method safely and successfully shrank the tongues of research
    animals, Dr Nelson Powell and his colleagues at Stanford University
    claim in the May issue of the journal Chest. He has been treating 23
    snorers and all have experienced at least a 70 per cent improvement.
    The next step is to try shrinking people's tongues to reduce sleep
    apnoea, a disorder in which people temporarily stop breathing. The only
    cure at present involves the removal of tissue by scalpel, burning or
    laser beam.
                        
    Dr Powell's technique relies on a needle electrode which is pushed into
    soft tissue. The electrode relays radio-frequency energy, destroying
    nearby cells. As the lesion heals, it is replaced by scar tissue, which
    takes up less space.
7.1908IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:3080
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                                                
    Election farce as Iran chooses its president
    
    By Christopher Lockwood in Teheran 
                                        
    IRANIANS go to the polls tomorrow to elect their new president, an
    exercise in democracy which, according to any meaningful sense of that
    word, will be a farce.
                                        
    Of the 238 candidates who applied to run for a job which is the second
    most important in the country, 234 were rejected out of hand by Iran's
    Council of Guardians, a group hand-picked by the unelected and
    constitutionally almost all-powerful religious leader, Ayatollah Ali
    Khamenei, and loyal to him.
                                        
    Among the excluded were all nine women candidates, probably on the
    grounds that women are not fit for the post. Excluded, too, were Iran's
    handful of cautious dissidents. One of these, Eezat Sahabi, a magazine
    editor, last year was approved by the Council as fit to run for
    parliament, an inconsistency that the regime declines to explain. Mr
    Sahabi's sin is that he does not believe that mullahs, or clergymen,
    should be running the government.
                                        
    Of the four accepted, two are no-hopers: a detested hardline cleric who
    once headed Iran's intelligence services, and a near-unknown. Neither
    has made much of an impact on the election, judging by the number of
    posters their supporters have deployed in Teheran.
                                        
    That leaves two main candidates, and both of these are Islamic
    clergymen, both long-term servants of the Islamic regime that has held
    power since the revolution of 1979. Both hold the rank of hojatoleslam,
    one step below ayatollah in the Shia Islam hierarchy. Both were
    associates of Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of the revolution, and
    after his death in 1989, of Ayatollah Khamenei.
                                        
    The favourite is Ali Akbar Nateq-Nouri, the parliamentary speaker, who
    has the support of most of Iran's dominant conservatives and especially
    its hardline clergy, including Ayatollah Khamenei. Under a Nateq-Nouri
    presidency, Iran's experiment in recent years of cautious social
    liberalisation would be halted, and even reversed. Islamic dress for
    women would be rigidly enforced. So would a ban on television satellite
    dishes.
                                        
    The dark horse is Mohammed Khatami, for 11 years the Minister of
    Culture, who has emerged as the candidate of an informal coalition
    opposed to Iran's "establishment".
                                        
    Uncomfortably for him, that coalition includes both the technocratic
    reformers, who dared not field their own candidates, and a group of
    Left-wing clerics, "the followers of Imam Khomeini's Line", who are
    opposed to unchecked economic reform. Mr Khatami's meetings are
    preceded by earnest prayers. He is very much a creature of the Iranian
    regime, although his instincts are more liberal than those of his
    rival.
                                        
    His failure as a minister to censor books and films rigidly led to his
    falling out with Ayatollah Khamenei in 1992, and his dismissal from
    government. But never in his campaign has he sought to challenge Iran's
    theocratic system. There is enough difference between the candidates
    for the election to have become unprecedentedly lively. Squads of
    activists from the radical Ansar-e-Hezbollah group have been sent to
    disrupt the "subversive" Mr Khatami's rallies. His supporters denounce
    the Nateq-Nouri faction as the "Taliban", the fundamentalists who have
    flung Afghanistan back into the dark ages.
                                        
    Iran has only the most rudimentary of opinion polls, and these suggest
    a close result, with the "modernising" Mr Khatami expected to do well
    in the big cities, but Mr Nateq-Nouri's support still strong in the
    villages.
                                        
    "Mr Khatami is a mullah, true, but he is a special mullah," said
    Ibrahim Adiroun, a shop owner. "He is educated, he has studied abroad.
    He speaks four languages. He will solve the problems Iran has with the
    world."
                                        
    But if Mr Khatami wins, policy shifts are unlikely. Arrayed against him
    will be a parliament dominated by Mr Nateq-Nouri's conservative
    faction. And the president's powers are always subject to be
    over-ridden by the religious leader.
7.1909IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:4134
7.1910IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:4228
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 22 May 1997 Issue 727
                                         
    Race body turns down whinge about Pom
    
    By Philip Johnston 
                                      
    BEING called a Pom is not a cause for complaint, according to racial
    discrimination officers in Australia.
                                      
    They ruled yesterday that the term was not offensive, rejecting
    complaints from British ex-pats who objected to being being called Poms
    or Pommies - usually accompanied by a sceptical remark concerning their
    parenthood. A complaint of racial discrimination was lodged with the
    Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission against a Brisbane
    newspaper The Courier-Mail.
                                      
    However, Sir Ronald Wilson, the commission president, said the term was
    unlikely to offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate - the criteria
    which would merit a ban. He said he could imagine that the words could
    be unlawful in the context of an article which was plainly malicious or
    scurrilous. But the law allowed a fair degree of journalistic licence.
                                      
    The complainant, Richard Bryant, said "Pom" had been used in a number
    of places in the Courier-Mail's Sunday edition.
                                      
    Last year, Australia's Anti-Discrimination Board said that 22 per cent
    of all complaints came from Britons, who objected mostly to being
    called "whingeing Pommy bastards".
7.1911IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:47135
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 20 May 1997 Issue 725
                           
    P-p-p picture a penguin
    
    Making an animated advertisement featuring a family of middle class
    penguins called for a blend of computer programming and puppeteer
    skills. Nicola Godwin describes how it all came together without any
    flap
                                                               
    Most people thinmk of the Muppets when you mention animatronics, though
    a more formal definition would run along the lines of: "The use of
    animation and electronics to animate characters and creatures
    mechanically".
                                                               
    It was used recently, in conjunction with traditional animation and
    other computer-based technologies, to produce an advertisement for
    Penguin biscuits, that depicts a harassed penguin mother settling her
    unruly brood with a packet of Persons. The ad's catchline is
    "P-P-P-Pick up a Person!".
                                                               
    The idea was dreamt up by advertising agency Publicis, which hired film
    director Steve Barron from the Limelight production company. In the
    past, Barron had worked on feature films such as Teenage Mutant Ninja
    Turtles and Pinocchio with Jim Henson's Creature Shop, the London
    animatronics and Muppet studio, which he enlisted to create walking,
    talking, biscuit-eating penguins.
                                                               
    Jamie Courtier, project supervisor at Henson's, says: "The Penguin
    commercial was a natural for us because it combines computer graphics
    with puppet penguins." Henson's used both rod and hand puppets for the
    purposes of the commercial.
                                                               
    Courtier explains: "The mother penguin and her neighbour - Maureen and
    Pauline - were both rod puppets, which means they were operated by
    puppeteers wearing blue suits or gloves, that can be removed from shot
    later by chroma-keying." That's the same process used to show the
    television weatherman in front of his charts.
                                                               
    Only one full-length penguin was required for the commercial, operated
    by five puppeteers: one for each flipper, one for the head, one for the
    body, and one for the radio-controlled facial expressions and the
    movement of the beak as the puppet speaks.
                                                               
    This puppet (Maureen; voice courtesy of chatshow hostess Mrs Merton),
    is seen at the beginning of the ad waddling into Pauline's kitchen. "We
    wanted a full-length shot to establish that they weren't just hand
    puppets - to add realism," says Courtier. 
                                                               
    In the next scene, the chatting penguins were shot from the waist up,
    which permitted the use of hand puppets. "They were fully-animatronic,"
    says Courtier, "with radio-controlled eyes, brows and flippers." These
    puppets required three operators: one to work the head, another the
    flippers, and the third to look after the radio control.
                                                               
    "We managed to develop some lovely neck mechanisms," continues
    Courtier. "The penguins were able to flex and stretch their necks just
    like real penguins do."
                                                               
    To make the puppets look as real as possible, their creators studied a
    stuffed penguin donated by Tring Museum, as well as specially
    commissioned paintings. But Courtier admits: "We tweaked reality
    because it was a little bit bland. We did things like increase the size
    of their irises to make them appear warmer."
                                                               
    The penguin's eyes were created by false-eye manufacturer Nissels,
    while the fur was purchased from an American company called National
    Fiber Technology, which specialises in supplying synthetic hair to the
    entertainment industry. This was then applied to the foam and foam
    latex models that were based on an original clay sculpt. The entire
    building process took Henson's approximately two months.
                                                               
    Steve Barron, approached The Mill, a London post-production facility,
    to add the computer graphics element of the Penguin commercial.
                                                               
    Dave Throssell,The Mill's head of 3D, says: "The animatronic puppets
    were 3ft high, which means there's plenty of room inside for all the
    actuators and rods or for the puppeteer's hands to make the penguin
    move. Baby penguins, however, are only about 6in high, which means you
    can't get all the gubbings inside for full-body movement."
                                                               
    As a result, Pauline's three naughty penguin children are
    computer-generated images which were blended with the footage of the
    larger, animatronic puppets, shot in the studio set of Pauline's
    kitchen.
                                                               
    In addition, the larger penguins' beaks were computer-generated. "The
    puppet beaks weren't big enough to provide the sort of movement
    required when the penguins talked."
                                                               
    The first task in post-production, however, was to "paint" clean
    footage of the kitchen set over the puppeteers and the rods that appear
    in shot, making them invisible. Once that had been achieved the ground
    had been laid for the computer animation work.
                                                               
    Says Throssell: "We decided the best way to begin was to get Jim
    Henson's Creature Shop to make us a life-size baby penguin sculpture so
    that we would know what the computer model should look like."
                                                               
    The model was taken to a facility in west London called Cyber Site,
    which has a laser scanning device. It was placed on a rotating
    turntable while the laser scanner translated all the geometric
    information from the model, into computer data.
                                                               
    Back at The Mill, this basic data was loaded into a computer animation
    system made by a company called Softimage, which runs on a Silicon
    Graphics supercomputer.
                                                               
    The data was used as the basis of a complex 3D model. "Basically there
    are two ways of creating geometry inside a computer," explains
    Throssell. "You can either make it up of thousands and thousands of
    flat triangles, called polygonals, or you can make it up of smooth
    surfaces called patches. We used the polygonal information that Cyber
    Site had given us, to create a more sophisticated patch model."
                                                               
    Two tasks remained: animating the model, and making it look real. In
    order to save time and money, Neville Astley, a traditional cell
    animator, was called in to create rough paper animations of the baby
    penguins, which served as the basis for the computer models. The
    animating process took approximately six weeks.
                                                               
    As for realism, Throssell says: "We looked at real penguins, but they
    were actually quite manky, compared with the Henson's models, which
    were stylised, rock-star penguins. We had to match our baby penguins to
    the latter."
                                                               
    The computer was used to generate textures of, for example, the
    penguin's feathers, which were wrapped around computer-generated
    wireframe models.
                                                               
    Finally, a special piece of software was written within Softimage, to
    simulate the way light falls on a penguin's back.
                                                               
    "Detail is crucial," says Throssell. "When you look at the commercial,
    you may not notice all these things, but without them, the penguins
    would look a little less real and a little less desirable."
7.1912IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Thu May 22 1997 14:53109
7.1913IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:16108
    AP 23-May-1997 1:10 EDT   REF5508

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Friday, May 23, 1997
   
    CONGO 

    KINSHASA, Congo (AP) -- Etienne Tshisekedi, who had been Zaire's most
    prominent opposition activist, will not be Congo's new prime minister.
    Tshidekedi had said he would settle for no other post, but President
    Laurent Kabila eliminated the position Thursday, announcing instead the
    partial formation of a government that places most power in his own
    hands. Thirteen cabinet ministers were named, with seven coming from
    his rebel alliance and other political groups, including two from
    Tshisekedi's party. No ministers came from parties allied with the
    regime of ousted leader Mobutu Sese Seko. 
   
    AFGAHANISTAN 

    MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AP) -- Warlord Rashid Dostum has mounted
    an aggressive defense against officers from his own army who on Monday
    sided with the Taliban. If Dostum loses his eight northern provinces,
    the Taliban will rule all of Afghanistan -- a troubling prospect for
    neighboring Central Asian nations who fear the Taliban will try to
    export its harsh brand of Islamic rule. Dostum, a former communist
    general, espouses a more liberal view of Islam. 
   
    GAY-SCOUT-LEADER 

    SAN DIEGO (AP) -- The Boy Scouts do not have to return a gay ex-police
    officer to his leadership post. The 4th District Court of Appeals in
    San Diego reversed a 1994 Superior Court ruling that ordered the Boy
    Scouts of America to rehire Chuck Merino, who was forced out after he
    disclosed his sexuality in 1992. The justices ruled that the youth
    group is not a business under the Unruh Civil Rights Act, a state law
    that bars businesses from discrimination on the basis of sexuality and
    other factors. 
   
    DISASTER RELIEF 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Multibillion-dollar federal disaster aid legislation
    was sidetracked in the House Thursday night as Republican leaders sent
    lawmakers home for a Memorial Day recess without permitting a vote.
    Despite a House vote against adjournment, GOP leaders used their
    parliamentary prerogatives to prevent a meeting in anything other than
    pro forma session for the next 10 days. But the federal disaster relief
    fund still has about $2.1 billion in it, enough to last until late
    September, agency officials said. 
   
    BUDGET 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate planned passage Friday of its blueprint
    of the budget pact between President Clinton and congressional leaders.
    The agreement envisions the first wide-ranging tax cuts since 1981 and
    a balanced budget in 2002 -- the first since President Johnson's
    income-tax surcharge produced a $3 billion surplus in 1969. 
   
    AIR FORCE-PILOT 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bomber pilot Kelly Flinn ended her Air Force career
    Thursday, accepting the mild punishment of a general discharge and
    avoiding a court-martial on charges of adultery, lying and disobeying
    an order. Air Force Secretary Sheila Widnall said the pilot's "lack of
    integrity" and her "disobedience to orders" were more important to the
    Air Force than the adultery charges brought against her as a result of
    an affair with a married man. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's defense opened Thursday with testimony
    about a Ryder truck, a detached leg and a mystery man -- all designed
    to suggest someone else was involved in the Oklahoma City bombing. Nine
    witnesses were packed in, from a Chinese food delivery man to a noted
    forensic pathologist, to cast doubt on the prosecution theory that
    McVeigh masterminded the April 19, 1995, blast that killed 168 people. 
   
    HACKER CREDIT 

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A hacker slipped into a major Internet provider
    and gathered 100,000 credit card numbers along with enough information
    to use them, the FBI said Thursday. Carlos Felipe Salgado Jr., 36,
    allegedly inserted a program that gathered the credit information from
    a dozen companies selling products over the Internet, the FBI said.
    Salgado allegedly tried to sell the credit information to an undercover
    agent for $260,000. He was arrested and faces a maximum of 15 years in
    prison and $500,000 in fines if convicted. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar traded at 115.78 yen early Friday, down 0.10.
    The Nikkei rose 54.30 points to 19,931.69. On Wall Street, the Dow
    dropped 32.56 to close at 7,258.13. 
   
    HEAT-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- The Chicago Bulls won the lowest-scoring playoff game
    in NBA history by beating the Miami Heat 75-68 Thursday night. Scottie
    Pippen scored 23 points as the Bulls took a 2-0 lead in the Eastern
    Conference finals. 
   
    AVALANCHE-RED WINGS 

    DETROIT (AP) -- Igor Larionov and Kirk Maltby each scored two goals as
    the Detroit Red Wings stunned the Colorado Avalanche 6-0 Thursday night
    to take a 3-1 lead in the Western Conference finals. 
   
    AP Newsbrief by JESSE STONE 
7.1914IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:16110
    RTw  23-May-97 04:19    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    KINSHASA - Laurent Kabila, self-proclaimed president of the former
    Zaire, has named an incomplete government and will not appoint a prime
    minister, one of his chief lieutenants told reporters early on Friday. 

    - - - - 

    TEHRAN - Iran votes for a new president after a fierce campaign in
    which the Islamic republic's top two officials tried to calm fears of
    vote-rigging. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Belarus leader Alexander
    Lukashenko are due to sign a charter to govern a controversial union
    between their two Slav states amid uncertainty about its practical
    scope. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Prime Minister Alain Juppe warned on the last campaigning day
    that a left-wing win in parliamentary elections would cripple France
    because of unavoidable "cohabitation" or power-sharing. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - An earthquake estimated at 5.7 on the Richter scale was
    recorded north of the Philippines and minor tremors were felt in Hong
    Kong, the Hong Kong Royal Observatory said. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Madeleine Albright unveiled a U.S.
    initiative to spur progress toward peace in Bosnia that would include
    having NATO-led troops there take on new roles. 

    The State Department meanwhile said there were no plans to keep
    American troops in Bosnia beyond June 1998 despite earlier statements
    by a senior official. 

    BONN - Germany rejected U.S. criticism of its drive to deport wartime
    refugees to Bosnia and urged the Bosnian authorities to do everything
    they could to help exiles return quickly and peacefully to their
    homeland. 

    - - - - 

    TIRANA - Elections aimed at preventing Albania reverting to chaos were
    back on course as the country's second-largest party agreed to take
    part in the vote. 

    - - - - 

    BRATISLAVA - Slovaks vote in two referendums which could determine
    their place in Europe but which have been cast in doubt by a row tied
    to a bitter feud between their president and prime minister. 

    - - - - 

    MOSCOW - Russia's parliament is due to make up its mind on what to do
    about a government plan to slash spending, but with the cuts already
    under way, its decision is unlikely to make much difference.

    - - - - 

    BELFAST - Protestant Unionists seemed set to lose political control of
    Belfast, the heart of British rule in Northern Ireland, as results of
    municipal elections showed gains by Sinn Fein, the political arm of the
    IRA. 

    - - - - 

    PORT-AU-PRINCE - Election officials in Haiti announced that
    second-round balloting in senatorial elections would be postponed until
    June 15, a move diplomatic sources attributed to international
    pressure. 

    Haitian election officials have come under fire for the way ballots
    were counted in the first round of elections on April 6. 

    - - - - 

    PRAGUE - Leaders of the three parties in the Czech ruling coalition
    failed to complete an agreement on changes to the cabinet, but
    scheduled a breakfast meeting for Friday to continue the talks, party
    officials said. 

    - - - - 

    CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh - Nearly 750 fishermen were reported missing in
    the Bay of Bengal, three days after a cyclone battered the Bangladesh
    coast killing around 100 people. 

    - - - - 

    HONG KONG - The future of democracy in Hong Kong was put on the line as
    Beijing's hand-picked advisers met to set an electoral framework. 

    - - - - 

    DENVER - Lawyers for accused bomber Timothy McVeigh started their
    defence , suggesting that a never-identified leg found in the Oklahoma
    City federal building explosion belonged to the actual bomber. 

    REUTER 
7.1915IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1683
    RTw  23-May-97 07:18    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately: 

    - - - - 

    Virgin Mary said sighted in Western Samoan skies 

    APIA, Western Samoa - Reported sightings of the Virgin Mary in the sky
    caused a stir in the South Pacific islands of Western Samoa this week. 

    Witnesses said they saw the image on the horizon in the early morning
    surrounded by bright colours, according to Father Paulino Kolio, head
    of the Sataua parish on Savaii island. 

    The witnesses, who numbered about 100, also said they saw images of the
    eucharist and the holy grail. 

    "The Virgin Mary remained there for about five minutes before merging
    into the clouds," said witness Tili Alailua. 

    "Some people began crying, and jumping for joy thinking it was the end
    of the world, or fell on their knees praying for forgiveness," she
    said. 

    A church official said discussions would be held to confirm whether the
    image was authentic. 

    - - - - 

    Mother Teresa asks Nashville cafe to end bun promo 

    NASHVILLE, Tenn., - The owner of a Nashville coffee shop who has
    displayed a cinnamon bun shaped in the image of Mother Teresa said he
    had received a letter from her asking him "to stop selling merchandise
    bearing my likeness." 

    Bob Bernstein, the owner of the "Bongo Java" coffeehouse, had displayed
    the "nun bun" in a glass case adorned with Christmas lights since
    December, when a customer perceived Mother Teresa's likeness in a
    cinnamon bun he was served. 

    A subsequent merchandising industry bloomed at the cafe and on the
    Internet. "If she saw the fun this has generated and the good
    intentions we've had, I think she'd appreciate it," Bernstein said. 

    When word of the "miracle" reached Mother Teresa in India, she had a
    lawyer ask Bernstein to stop the promotion. Bernstein immediately
    dropped the Mother Teresa name and offered 15 per cent of the proceeds
    to her Sisters of Mercy charities. 

    - - - - 

    Taiwan dog-killing plan condemned by world group 

    TAIPEI - Animal rights campaigners in London and Taiwan condemned a
    Taiwanese plan to kill some 1.3 million stray dogs in a year using
    methods they described as cruel. 

    The London-based World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA)
    demanded that Taiwan's government abandon the plan to start the stray
    dog cull from July. 

    "The knee-jerk reaction to the problem of stray dogs is the ultimate
    act of an irresponsible government that is flouting international
    opinion and the guidelines of the World Health Organisation," WSPA
    said. 

    "It amounts to a deliberate and unnecessary slaughter of dogs in a
    country where they are viewed as rubbish to be cleared away," the world
    group said. 

    It said Taiwan already uses some of the world's cruelest and most
    inhumane methods in handling stray dogs, including gassing,
    electrocuting and poisoning the dogs or leaving them in shallow pits to
    starve to death. 

    REUTER
7.1916IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1660
    AP 22-May-1997 23:19 EDT   REF5478

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Sting Ends 'Badfellas' Prison Case

    By LARRY NEUMEISTER

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Mobsters had the run of a federal prison, ordering in
    for meatballs and Italian pastries and holding secret meetings until
    "Operation Badfellas" nabbed 11 correction officers and nine others
    Thursday. 

    Federal prosecutors called it one of the worst corruption cases in U.S.
    prison history and the largest at a single federal detention center. 

    In one instance, members of the Luchese organized crime family were
    allowed to view confidential Bureau of Prison computer files that
    identified cooperating witnesses in government cases against the mob,
    U.S. Attorney Zachary W. Carter said. 

    The witnesses were never endangered because the investigation that
    began 18 months ago at the Metropolitan Detention Center in the borough
    of Brooklyn was in full throttle by then and the records had been
    protected, officials said. 

    But Justice Department Inspector General Michael R. Bromwich said at a
    news conference that it was "hard to imagine a more gross violation ...
    than a violation of that duty to protect such vital information." 

    Lewis Schiliro, special agent in charge of the FBI's New York bureau,
    said the case "tarnishes the badge we all carry." 

    He said organized crime figures were allowed to meet secretly among
    themselves in the prison, conducting themselves "like many of the
    social clubs in Brooklyn." 

    Those arrested included Raymond Cotton, president of the prison's union
    for correction officers; a civilian employee of the New York Police
    Department; and two reputed associates of the Luchese crime family. 

    If convicted on bribery charges, all face a maximum of 15 years in
    prison and a $250,000 fine. 

    Correction officers were caught on videotape and audiotape taking
    bribes ranging from $100 to $1,000 to smuggle vodka, wine, clothing,
    radios and other electronic equipment into the prison, Carter said. 

    The name of the investigation, "Operation Badfellas" is an apparent
    take off on the Martin Scorsese movie "Goodfellas," in which organized
    crime figures are seen preparing gourmet meals while incarcerated. 

    Carter said the corrupt officers also made it possible for inmates to
    plot to buy freedom, as two did in planning to try to free a convicted
    narcotics trafficker in exchange for a bribe of $500,000 to $2 million. 

    The detention center houses 1,000 inmates, 140 correction officers and
    300 support staff. 
7.1917IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1627
    AP 22-May-1997 23:07 EDT   REF5475

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tests Finished on MLK Rifle

    CRANBERRY, Pa. (AP) -- Investigators who finished tests on James Earl
    Ray's rifle on Thursday won't reveal until next month whether the
    weapon was used to kill the Rev. Martin Luther King. 

    The findings will be kept confidential until a hearing in early June
    before a Memphis judge who is considering Ray's motion for a trial. 

    Ray, who is dying of cirrhosis of the liver, may not live to know the
    judge's decision. 

    "I am very confident in what we've done," said George Reich, an
    investigator with the Suffolk County Crime Laboratory on Long Island,
    N.Y. 

    The investigators used a scanner electron microscope to compare the
    surviving fragments of the fatal bullet with bullets fired from Ray's
    rifle last week at the University of Rhode Island. 

    Ray, who is serving a 99-year sentence for King's assassination,
    pleaded guilty to murder but recanted days later. King's family has
    endorsed his efforts to win a trial. 
7.1918IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1663
    AP 22-May-1997 21:35 EDT   REF5438

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Unlicensed Doctor Misdiagnoses Girl

    By MIKE SCHNEIDER

    Associated Press Writer

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- An unlicensed doctor was sentenced Thursday to
    five years' probation and community service after an 11-year-old
    English tourist he misdiagnosed as having a sore throat died of
    juvenile diabetes. 

    Amrishkumar H. Patel must perform 1,500 hours of community service at a
    juvenile diabetes foundation and pay a $1,000 fine, said Circuit Court
    Judge Jay Paul Cohen. Patel must also pay almost $9,000 for court and
    other costs of his trial. 

    Patel's attorney, J. Cheney Mason, said he expects Patel's probation
    sentence to be lifted early. 

    "I think it's fair. I think it's unfortunate that anything had to
    happen but I don't have a quarrel with it," Mason said of the sentence.

    Patel was convicted April 10 of culpable negligence and practicing
    medicine without a license. He faced up to five years in prison. 

    Prosecutors had asked that Patel be imprisoned for more than a year.

    "We felt that rendering medical services is one of the highest
    responsibilities since it's the power of life and death, as in this
    case," said prosecutor Dorothy Sedgwick. "That's a violation that
    society shouldn't take lightly." 

    Prosecutors said Patel ran a scam that provided incompetent services to
    tourists. William and Marlein Villafanas faced similar charges at a
    June 23 trial. 

    Rebecca Richards of South Yorkshire, England, came to Orlando to visit
    Walt Disney World with her grandmother, sister and a family friend. On
    the flight over, she became sick and vomited. 

    After finding a referral card in their hotel room, the family called
    On-Call Medical Services, a firm that promised to make house calls to
    tourists for $25. 

    Patel, who wasn't licensed to practice medicine in Florida but had
    received medical training in India and had passed a federal licensing
    exam for foreign doctors, diagnosed her with a sore throat and
    recommended a prescription of penicillin. 

    The next afternoon, Rebecca stopped breathing and was rushed to a local
    hospital where she died of complications from juvenile diabetes. 

    Prosecutors said Patel should have advised Rebecca's family to get her
    a blood test. But Mason said Patel had no way of knowing Rebecca had
    the condition. 

    Since the death, Patel has been performing medical research in New
    Jersey. He has been accepted into a residency program in Oklahoma and
    intends to pursue his medical career, Mason said. 
7.1919IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1628
    AP 22-May-1997 20:56 EDT   REF5407

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    'Megan's Law' Prosecution Rests

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- The twice-convicted sex offender accused of
    raping and strangling Megan Kanka told police he had been "getting
    those feelings for little girls" weeks before the killing, an officer
    testified Thursday. 

    The prosecution then rested its case against Jesse Timmendequas, 36,
    charged with kidnapping, raping and murdering the 7-year-old girl on
    July 29, 1994. He could face the death penalty if convicted of capital
    murder. 

    Megan's parents channeled their grief into a national campaign to
    notify communities when sex offenders move in. "Megan's Law" statutes
    have been enacted in New Jersey and other states and President Clinton
    has signed a federal version. 

    The final witness was Detective Sgt. Charles Stanley Jr., who read from
    a confession Timmendequas gave two days after the girl disappeared. It
    was the fifth confession introduced as evidence in the murder trial. 

    The prosecution called 18 witnesses over 14 days. Closing arguments
    were scheduled to begin Tuesday. The defense said it planned to rest
    its case without calling a witness. 
7.1920IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1651
    AP 22-May-1997 20:52 EDT   REF5388

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Transplant Boy's Family Has Dilemma

    PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Saul Pineda took two jobs to start paying the nearly
    $400,000 cost of his son's liver transplant. His wife, Angelica, found
    work as well, and friends and strangers donated money. 

    But last month, the Immigration and Naturalization Service told them
    they must leave the country by July 29. 

    Although 9-year-old Soel Pineda no longer needs medical care in the
    United States, his parents say it will be extremely difficult to repay
    their debt from their homeland, Venezuela, where the national currency
    has lost much of its value. 

    "I don't know what we are going to do," Mrs. Pineda said. "I am a
    little sad. A little nervous. I hope we can work it out." 

    Soel, one of the Pinedas' three children, received a liver transplant
    in August 1995 at Children's Hospital. Because he arrived as an
    emergency case, his family had not made prior arrangements to pay. 

    The Pinedas took jobs at Miller Process Coating, which makes screen
    printing equipment in Monroeville, a suburb of Pittsburgh. Pineda works
    in the machine shop in addition to his job as a telemarketer. His wife
    works in the office and interprets for Spanish-speaking customers. 

    In the past 19 months, the Pinedas have repaid $13,000. 

    "They are trying to pay back a debt," said their boss, Daphne Miller.
    "They didn't have to do that. They could have said, 'Thank you very
    much, United States, for your services. We are out of here."' 

    The Pinedas say that in Venezuela, his earnings as manager of a car
    dealership and hers as a nurse could not have paid the $400 a month
    needed for Soel's anti-rejection medicine. 

    George R. Hess, an officer of the immigration service in Pittsburgh,
    said the Pinedas can appeal their case to an immigration judge. If they
    can prove compelling circumstances, the judge may extend their stay. 

    DeAnn Marshall, a spokeswoman for Children's Hospital, said Soel does
    not have to stay in Pittsburgh, although he must take his medicine and
    make frequent visits to his doctor in Venezuela. 

    "He's basically at a point where he's medically stable and has been for
    a long time and can return home," Ms. Marshall said. "We do have an
    outstanding bill, but we're not holding them here in Pittsburgh." 
7.1921IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1759
    AP 22-May-1997 20:30 EDT   REF5298

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Man Accused of Lottery Ticket Theft

    By ANNE GEARAN

    Associated Press Writer

    ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) -- A man who said he found a $6.8 million lottery
    ticket on the floor of his restaurant was charged Thursday with
    stealing the ticket from a patron. 

    Jaspaul Narang duped the man who bought the ticket by telling him his
    winning combination had only entitled him to a free ticket, police
    said. 

    Narang, 45, of Annandale, was arrested Wednesday night and released on
    his own recognizance Thursday after he turned the ticket over to state
    police. 

    He faces a June 9 preliminary hearing on the charge of grand larceny. 

    A man identified by police as "R. Bernard" told police he purchased the
    winning Lotto ticket at Narang's Royal Lee Deli & Restaurant on May 8,
    and returned the ticket and two others to the deli on May 13. 

    Narang processed the tickets through the Virginia Lottery computer at
    the deli and told Bernard he had won only a free ticket, police said. 

    Four days later Bernard returned to buy more tickets and noticed a sign
    at the deli proclaiming that the sole winner in the May 10 jackpot
    drawing was purchased there, police said. No one had yet come forward
    to claim the $6.8 million prize. 

    The winning six numbers listed on the ticket are the same six numbers
    that Bernard says he regularly plays, police said. 

    Bernard went to lottery officials Monday to report his ticket was
    stolen. 

    "It was no longer in his possession and he said he felt someone at the
    Royal Deli was in possession of the ticket," said Penelope Kyle,
    director of the Virginia Lottery. 

    Narang's lawyer, James Lowe, said Narang found the winning ticket on
    the restaurant floor. Narang sued the lottery and Bernard Thursday for
    $6.8 million. 

    "The real issue here is going to be who owns the money," Lowe said. 

    Lottery officials said it is unlikely any winnings will be paid until
    the case against Narang is settled. 

    Ms. Kyle said she has temporarily suspended the Royal Lee Deli's
    lottery license. She warned ticket buyers to sign their tickets as
    protection. Without a signature, a lottery ticket can be cashed by
    anyone, she said. 
7.1922IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:17122
    AP 22-May-1997 20:28 EDT   REF5275

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh's Lawyers Begin Defense

    By MICHAEL FLEEMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's defense opened Thursday with testimony
    about a Ryder truck, a detached leg and a mystery man -- all designed
    to suggest someone else was involved in the Oklahoma City bombing. 

    Nine witnesses were packed in, from a Chinese food delivery man to a
    noted forensic pathologist, to cast doubt on the prosecution theory
    that McVeigh masterminded the April 19, 1995, blast that killed 168
    people. 

    Vicki Beemer, an employee of a Ryder agency in Junction City, Kan.,
    testified that the man who came in two days before the blast to rent
    the truck used in the attack was accompanied by a second man. But she
    couldn't remember either well enough to say if one was McVeigh. 

    She said the man who filled out the paperwork was 5-foot-10 or
    5-foot-11, slender, with short hair in a military-style cut. All she
    could recall of the other was he "was just another man." 

    In other testimony, the Chinese food delivery man said someone other
    than McVeigh greeted him at the door of Room 25 at the Dreamland Motel
    in Junction City, where McVeigh checked in under his own name. 

    "I do not believe it was him," said Jeff Davis, adding that he saw only
    one man in the room when he delivered the order of moo goo gai pan four
    days before the bombing. 

    Subjected to a grueling cross-examination, Davis stuck to his
    testimony. Prosecutor Larry Mackey suggested Davis not only was
    mistaken, but told a bartender during a Denver happy hour that there
    were two people in Room 25. 

    "You deny that?" Mackey asked. 

    "Yes, sir, I do," Davis said. 

    Prosecution witnesses have said McVeigh checked into the room the night
    of the delivery and phoned in the order using the last name "Kling,"
    which prosecutors say is the same alias McVeigh used to rent the truck. 

    Earlier, the defense elicited grisly testimony about a left leg found
    in the Oklahoma City rubble, suggesting the real bomber died in the
    blast. 

    Jurors looked grim as Oklahoma state medical examiner Fred Jordan
    described the task of matching 98 body parts to the 168 bodies from the
    bombing. 

    "We have one left leg which we don't know where it belongs," Jordan
    said, under questioning by McVeigh attorney Stephen Jones. 

    Jordan said identifying body parts was difficult because they often
    were badly mangled and unrecognizable. 

    He also noted one victim, a woman, was buried with only her left leg,
    meaning the stray left leg couldn't be hers. 

    Jones answered that testimony with a quip: "As a physician, you know
    there are no people who are born with two left feet, except in
    dancing." 

    There was no laughter in the courtroom. 

    Although Jones never openly stated in court the leg could have come
    from the bomber, that suggestion clearly was his intent. He spent most
    of his direct examination of Jordan focusing on the extra leg. 

    Jordan testified that a severed left leg was found more than a month
    after the blast when the gutted building was demolished. 

    That leg, in a military-style boot, was later matched to the body of
    Air Force Airman Lakesha Levy, which had been mistakenly buried with
    someone else's leg. But Jordan said the stray left leg taken from her
    casket has never been identified. 

    A defense expert, Thomas Marshall, former chief pathologist for
    violence-torn Northern Ireland, said the stray missing leg likely
    belongs to the "169th victim" who was near the bomb when it detonated.
    He said it was telling that nobody filed a missing person's report
    about somebody near or in the bombed building. 

    "If nobody misses them, then it reinforces the suggestion that the
    deceased is involved in the bombing," he said. 

    The testimony came on the first day of what looks to be a lean defense
    case designed to attack the reliability of the prosecution's
    circumstantial evidence. 

    The defense opened with witnesses called to cast doubt on a key
    government claim -- that McVeigh rented the bomb-carrying Ryder truck
    in two days before the bombing. 

    Herta King and Renda Truong said they saw a large Ryder truck in the
    parking lot of the Dreamland motel on Easter Sunday, April 16, 1995 --
    three days before the bombing. 

    Ms. King said she's certain she saw the truck on Easter Sunday because
    she brought her son an Easter basket filled with chocolate eggs. He was
    staying at the motel. 

    Ms. Truong said she saw the truck that Sunday as she was going out to
    lunch with the family. 

    Both women testified that they did not see anyone in or around the
    Ryder truck. 

    Eric McGown, the co-manager of the motel, testified during the
    prosecution's case that he saw McVeigh in a Ryder truck but was unsure
    whether it was the Sunday or Monday before the bombing. 

    McVeigh, a 29-year-old Gulf War veteran, could get the death penalty if
    convicted on murder and conspiracy charges in the blast, the deadliest
    act of terrorism on U.S. soil. 
7.1923IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1737
    AP 23-May-1997 0:37 EDT   REF5497

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Colombia Senate OKs Extradition

    BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- The Senate approved a bill Thursday to
    re-establish extradition of Colombian drug traffickers -- with several
    key restrictions -- sending the legislation toward final enactment. 

    The Senate voted 53-14 in favor of the bill in the second of eight
    congressional votes that the legislation must pass this year if
    extradition is to be revived. 

    The legislation offers exceptions for people who turn themselves in or
    have already been sentenced in Colombia, meaning the jailed leaders of
    the Cali drug cartel, would not be eligible for extradition. 

    Extradition of Colombian citizens was banned under the nation's 1991
    constitution, which was enacted amid a decade-long wave of drug
    violence in which thousands were killed. 

    The United States has long pressured Colombia to revive extradition,
    which it considers a key tool in fighting international drug
    trafficking, without exceptions. 

    The U.S. embassy had no immediate comment, but the terms of the Senate
    legislation do not appear to meet Washington's criteria for a strong
    bill. Several Cali cartel leaders have been indicted in the United
    States and face life sentences. 

    The Senate vote came on the same day that Venezuela approved the
    extradition to the United States of alleged Colombian drug kingpin
    Justo Pastor Perafan, who was captured in that country in April. 

    Unlike Colombia, Venezuela has an extradition treaty with the United
    States. 
7.1924IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1746
    AP 22-May-1997 20:44 EDT   REF5335

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Party Held for Rabin's Assassin

    By DANNA HARMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    JERUSALEM (AP) -- Yitzhak Rabin's killer turned 27 on Thursday, and a
    half-dozen supporters gathered at the gate of his prison to celebrate
    with champagne and a birthday cake. 

    But Yigal Amir did not join in the festivities -- he spent the day in
    his cell at Beersheva Prison, where he is serving a life sentence for
    gunning down Rabin at a November 1995 peace rally in Tel Aviv. 

    "Is it his birthday? I didn't even know," prison services spokeswoman
    Orit Messer Harel said, adding sarcastically: "We are all really happy
    for him." 

    One of Amir's supporters, Joseph Ben-Tsvi, said he had come to present
    Amir with a silver medallion reading, "All honor to the 'tzadik'
    (righteous) Yigal Amir, from all proud Jews." 

    But wardens barred the group, which was outnumbered by reporters, from
    entering the prison grounds. 

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was shocked and horrified
    that some Israelis still support Amir. 

    Parliament member Ran Cohen filed a complaint with Israeli police,
    calling for the arrest of anyone who gathered to celebrate Amir's
    birthday on the grounds they were inciting violence. 

    "More and more public figures are walking around with bulletproof vests
    in this country, and soon it will only be murderers who can go around
    freely," he said. 

    Police said they could not stop a birthday celebration, even if it was
    in honor of a murderer. 

    So, how did Amir spend his birthday? His mother, Geula Amir, said her
    son, who is being held in an isolation wing, spends most of his time
    studying the Torah. 
7.1925IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1770
    AP 22-May-1997 19:30 EDT   REF5201

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    N. Korea: War Is Not What We Want

    By SANG-HUN CHOE

    Associated Press Writer

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- North Korea acknowledged Thursday that it
    has a serious food shortage, but accused "bellicose elements" of
    spreading false rumors that it planned to launch a war to divert
    attention from the crisis. 

    North Korea denied what it called an "ill-boding campaign" by foreign
    countries who warn that the communist state might start a war with
    South Korea. 

    "It is true that our temporary food shortage has reached a serious
    stage," an unidentified spokesman for North Korea's Foreign Ministry
    said in a statement, carried by the country's official Korean Central
    News Agency. "But war is not what we want." 

    The statement accused "bellicose elements" of spreading rumors to
    justify plans to launch "pre-emptive" attacks on North Korea. 

    North Korea suffered devastating floods in 1995 and 1996, and the
    United Nations predicts famine unless outside aid arrives quickly. 

    Worries that North Korea was preparing for war grew after comments by
    North Korean defectors, including Jang Yop, a member of the country's
    decision-making Workers Party's Central Committee, who arrived here in
    April. 

    One North Korean defector said Thursday that rumors were widespread in
    the North that leader Kim Jong Il might start a war between July and
    October. 

    "Everyday, TV screens are showing Kim Jong Il visiting military units
    and exhorting the nation to strengthen its military," said the
    defector, Kim Won Hyung. 

    Kim Won Hyung and seven relatives, along with six members of a friend's
    family, arrived in South Korea last week by boat. 

    Washington and Seoul are refusing large-scale government aid until
    North Korea agrees to peace talks aimed at officially ending the
    1950-53 Korean War. South Korea believes that providing food aid before
    peace is made will only encourage North Korea to maintain a
    militaristic policy. 

    Red Cross officials from the North and South were to meet Friday in
    Beijing to discuss food aid. Last time they met, talks broke down after
    two days. The South Korean Red Cross demanded a more efficient aid
    distribution system. The North Korean Red Cross called the demand
    premature until South Korea could specify how much aid it would deliver
    and when. 

    The South Korean Red Cross delegation is expected to offer 50,000 tons
    of grain worth $10 million donated by private aid groups. 

    It wants those donations marked with the donors' names and delivered by
    land -- two conditions North Korea has found difficult to accept in the
    past because of their humiliating implications. 

    Deliveries in marked boxes through Panmunjom -- the only land route
    across the demilitarized zone that separates the North and South --
    would give North Koreans more evidence their government cannot provide
    for them. 
7.1926IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1736
    AP 22-May-1997 18:56 EDT   REF6140

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Ukrainian Village Quarantined

    KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -- An Ukrainian village was under quarantine
    Thursday after a suspected outbreak of anthrax killed two people and
    led to the hospitalization of 19 others. 

    Hundreds of police, emergency and health workers were sent to the
    Donetsk region village of Privolnoye, Emergencies Ministry spokesman
    Oleg Bykov said. The village is 350 miles southeast of Kiev, the
    capital. 

    Eight of those hospitalized with symptoms of cutaneous anthrax, which
    causes swollen boils on the skin, work at a slaughterhouse on the
    Transportnoye state farm in Privolnoye. The workers may have been
    infected by meat they received in lieu of pay. 

    Anthrax can infect humans through skin contact, ingestion and even
    inhaling contaminated spores. It can be treated with penicillin. 

    A husband and wife hospitalized Monday with skin infections died
    Wednesday, said Lidia Blakitnaya of the Donetsk regional health agency.

    "Clinically, it looks very much like the cutaneous form of anthrax,"
    she said, but added that doctors were waiting for test results to
    confirm an anthrax diagnosis. 

    She said if untreated, cutaneous anthrax can lead to the often deadly
    pulmonary form. 

    Infectious diseases have become more frequent in recent years in
    Ukraine because of a steep post-Soviet decline in the quality of health
    care. 
7.1927IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1764
    AP 22-May-1997 18:17 EDT   REF6009

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Eurotunnel Okayed for Full-Frieght

    LONDON (AP) -- The company that operates the Channel Tunnel received
    clearance Thursday to restart services on its freight shuttle trains --
    the type that caught fire in November. 

    An Anglo-French commission said Eurotunnel can run its trains that pick
    up freight trucks and carry them between Folkestone, England, and
    Calais, France. 

    Eurotunnel said it will run tests for several weeks before charging
    customers by mid-June -- hoping to put this trouble behind it as the
    troubled company seeks shareholder approval of a vital debt
    restructuring. 

    Eurotunnel will be back in business on the freight truck runs, despite
    concerns that the design of its shuttle cars -- with open-lattice sides
    -- helped feed the fire by forcing oxygen in at high-speed as the
    burning train rushed through the tunnel on Nov. 18. 

    Some safety experts had warned even before the tunnel was opened that
    the design was bad. 

    "Even if absolute safety is an impossibility, Eurotunnel is determined
    to look for constant improvements in its safety measures," Eurotunnel
    co-chairmen Patrick Ponsolle and Robert Malpas said in a statement. 

    The tunnel's other businesses, including the transport of passenger
    cars and the passage of intercity Eurostar trains that take people
    between London-Paris and London-Brussels, had reopened shortly after
    the fire although damage to the tunnel slowed every journey until
    repairs were completed earlier this month. 

    A report into the tunnel's safety measures was harshly critical last
    week, saying that alarms failed to go off properly even after several
    people in France saw the flaming train drive into the tunnel, and that
    staff were inadequately trained to handle the emergency. 

    No one died though several dozen people onboard the burning train
    suffered from smoke inhalation. 

    Eurotunnel said it was addressing 36 safety improvements that were
    recommended by the Channel Tunnel Safety Authority, which advises the
    Intergovernmental Commission that gave the company its clearance on
    Thursday. 

    Eurotunnel said it was going beyond what the safety authority
    recommended, with a total of 83 improvements to its standards. But
    replacing the shuttle designs would be costly for Eurotunnel, which has
    been fighting to avoid liquidation amid billions in debt. 

    Some safety authority officials said that while they would welcome new
    train cars, the authority could not order the tunnel to come up with
    them. 

    The safety authority instead can only review Eurotunnel's proposals and
    decide whether they seem reasonably safe. 

    French authorities have investigated the cause of the fire, and recent
    press reports say arson will be the official finding. 
7.1928IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1764
    AP 22-May-1997 18:08 EDT   REF5920

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Crisis Snags Slovak Referendum

    By GEORGE JAHN

    Associated Press Writer

    BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (AP) -- Slovakia's authoritarian prime minister
    indicated Thursday that he would ignore a high court ruling affecting
    how presidents are elected, creating a political crisis on the eve of a
    crucial referendum. 

    Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar's reaction to the court decision could
    undermine the vote on the only other issue on the ballot: Should
    Slovakia join NATO? 

    President Michal Kovac, Meciar's main rival, threatened to boycott the
    vote. Key opposition parties also said they would urge their supporters
    not to participate. 

    The court ruled Wednesday that a referendum is the legitimate forum for
    changing the rules on how presidents are elected in Slovakia. 

    Kovac supporters want the president to be chosen by popular vote
    instead of by parliament, which is controlled by Meciar and unlikely to
    pick Kovac for a second term. 

    But Interior Minister Gustav Krajci reportedly ordered the question off
    the ballot on Thursday. While the committee overseeing the election
    said nothing had changed, Slovak media reported that ballots with no
    mention of the presidential election issue were being distributed at
    some voting stations. 

    The two-day referendum was to begin Friday. Kovac called an emergency
    meeting of his staff in response to Krajci's move. 

    "If invalid ballots are being handed out, I will not vote," he said in
    a radio interview. 

    Kovac was elected in March 1993 as Meciar's candidate, but the two soon
    clashed because Kovac acted more independently than Meciar liked. 

    Meciar's commitment to democracy has been questioned by the United
    States and the European Union. 

    Under Meciar, whose current term began in 1995, the pace of
    privatization has slowed. But those who criticize him face legal action
    and other kinds of intimidation. 

    Though he says he wants Slovakia in the European Union and NATO, his
    actions speak otherwise; Slovakia recently signed a military
    cooperation treaty with Russia. 

    The ballot itself seems designed to increase anti-NATO sentiment. It
    asks whether Slovakia should agree to having nuclear weapons and
    foreign troops its soil. However, neither is a precondition for NATO
    membership. 

    The alliance plans to open its ranks to new members this summer.
    Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic are thought to be the most
    favored candidates from the former Soviet bloc. 
7.1929IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1723
    AP 22-May-1997 16:30 EDT   REF5776

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cyclospora Sickens 80 in 5 States

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Cyclospora, the parasite that struck nearly 1,000
    people last year after it was apparently spread by raspberries, is
    blamed for seven outbreaks since April that have sickened 80 people
    across the country. 

    The recent outbreaks were in California, Florida, Nevada, New York and
    Texas, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. 

    The CDC is investigating the cause. It warned doctors to test for the
    parasite in people with diarrhea. 

    Last year, raspberries from Guatemala were blamed for sickening 978
    people with cyclospora in the United States and Canada. 

    Cyclospora invades the small intestine and causes diarrhea, vomiting,
    weight loss, fatigue and muscle aches. It is treatable with antibiotics
    but can last several weeks and cause dehydration while symptoms last. 
7.1930IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1787
    AP 22-May-1997 15:43 EDT   REF5738

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    New Sleep Chemical Found

    By PAUL RECER

    AP Science Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Researchers studying napping cats have discovered a
    brain chemical that helps them slide into deep slumber, a finding that
    could eventually lead to a new type of sleeping pill for humans. 

    Dr. Robert W. McCarley of the Harvard Medical School said that a
    chemical called adenosine is a signal that tells the brain when to be
    alert and when to shut down for a restful sleep. 

    McCarley, senior author of a study being published Friday in the
    journal Science, said that he and his colleagues identified adenosine
    by monitoring the chemicals in the blood of cats that were kept awake
    and then allowed to nap. Their brain waves also were monitored. 

    Cats were chosen because they are one of nature's champion sleepers,
    able to easily slip in and out of slumber as needed. The animals often
    take short "cat naps" and then spring instantly awake and alert. 

    In the study, McCarley said that the cats were first kept awake for six
    hours, "which is a long time for cats." 

    "We petted them to keep them awake," said McCarley. "Over that time,
    there was a steady build up of adenosine" in the animals' blood. 

    The animals were then allowed to go to sleep. Immediately the body
    began breaking down adenosine and the levels dropped. When the
    chemicals reached a low concentration, the cats became awake and alert.

    This cycle was repeated several times in the cats, said McCarley. 

    Adenosine, said McCarley, accumulates naturally in some brain cells
    during wakefulness. When it reaches a certain concentration, it causes
    drowsiness and sleep, he said, but at low concentrations of adenosine,
    the brain is alert. 

    "It is probably the major mechanism that causes one to become sleepy
    after you've been awake for a long time," said McCarley. "It explains
    why you get sleepy." 

    Dr. Mark Mahowald, a sleep expert and a professor of neurology at the
    University of Minnesota, said identifying adenosine as a chemical that
    contributes to sleepiness "is an important part of the puzzle," but
    provides no complete solution to sleep disorders. 

    "The wake-sleep cycle is very complex and no one chemical or part of
    the brain is responsible," he said. "Adenosine may be an important
    player in this process, but it is not alone." 

    McCarley said adenosine is known to be present in other organs of the
    body, but the sleep effects seem to concentrate in the basal forebrain.
    Cells there have special receptors, or openings, that take in the
    chemical during wakefulness, causing a steady build-up. During sleep,
    adenosine is reprocessed and released from the cells, he said. When the
    animal awakes, the cycles starts all over again. 

    "It is almost certain that the mechanism in animals is the same in
    humans," he said. This is indicated, said McCarley, because caffeine
    increases alertness and briefly chases away sleep. 

    "The stuff you likely drink in the morning -- coffee, tea or hot
    chocolate -- blocks the action of adenosine," he said. "That's why the
    universal wake-up beverages are so effective." 

    Further research may lead to a sleep medication based on adenosine.
    McCarley said such a pill would have the advantage of being a natural
    sleep-inducer, unlike some narcotic-based drugs that lose effectiveness
    over long use and can cause a post-sleep "hangover" or addiction. 

    Since adenosine is present in many organs, however, McCarley said
    researchers would have to find ways of limiting its action to the sleep
    centers of the brain. 

    And, he said, science needs to learn more about other natural chemicals
    associated with sleep. 

    "It has been hard to discover the body's natural mechanisms for
    promoting sleep," said McCarley. "This is just one of the natural
    mechanisms." 
7.1931IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1747
    AP 22-May-1997 10:33 EDT   REF5331

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Study Questions Angioplasty

    BOSTON (AP) -- Heart-bypass surgery and angioplasty are much rarer in
    Canada than in the United States -- but Canadian heart attack patients
    are just as likely to survive a year later, a new study says. 

    Defenders of U.S.-style medicine say the study, which confirms earlier
    reports, misses a key point, though: that the expensive procedures
    reduce patients' suffering. 

    The latest report, published in today's New England Journal of
    Medicine, compared the death rates among 224,258 Medicare beneficiaries
    in the United States and 9,444 elderly patients in Ontario who suffered
    heart attacks in 1991. 

    Although the death rate was slightly lower after one month in the
    United States, it was virtually the same at 34 percent in both
    countries one year following the heart attacks. 

    The study was conducted Jack V. Tu from the University of Toronto and
    other researchers in the United States. 

    Twelve percent of U.S. heart attack patients received angioplasty,
    which uses balloons to open up clogged heart arteries, compared with
    1.5 percent of Canadians. Bypass surgery, which employs small pieces of
    blood vessel to detour blood around clogged sections of artery, was
    used on 11 percent of Americans and 1.4 percent of Canadians. 

    An accompanying editorial in the journal by Dr. Harlan M. Krumholz of
    Yale University said the difference in survival does not mean the
    Canadian approach is better, since the procedures are not routinely
    performed after heart attacks solely to prevent death. Instead, a
    primary reason for improving blood flow to the heart with bypass or
    angioplasty is to relieve crippling chest pain. 

    The new study did not examine the pain issue. Earlier studies comparing
    the two countries suggest that U.S. heart attack victims suffer
    significantly less angina pain than their Canadian counterparts because
    of the wider use of bypass and angioplasty. 

    In Canada, the government funds health care, rather than a mixture of
    insurance and other sources as in the United States. The Canadian
    government controls the availability of many expensive treatments. 
7.1932IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 11:1727
    RTw  22-May-97 23:31    

    London's Big Ben to undergo major repairs

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 22 (Reuter) - Big Ben, the world famous clock that is as
    much a symbol of London as the Eiffel Tower of Paris, is to undergo
    major repairs for up to two days after stopping twice in three weeks,
    officials said on Thursday. 

    The 139-year-old giant clock that towers over the House of Commons
    ground to a halt on Wednesday afternoon for about 50 minutes until
    engineers fast forwarded its giant hands. 

    A similar problem with mechanical workings caused it to stall on April
    30. 

    Engineers are planning to stop the clock to examine its bearings which
    they believe are causing the problems. If it is very serious a shaft
    may have to be removed. 

    A must see for every tourist visiting London, Big Ben's name refers to
    the 13 tonne bell that tolls the hour. It was named after Sir Benjamin
    Hall, the commissioner of works when the bell was installed in 1859. 

    REUTER
7.1933IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:2666
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                               
    Husband wins appeal to stop wife's abortion
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 
          
    THREE judges re-imposed a court ban yesterday to stop a woman having an
    abortion against the wishes of her estranged husband.
          
    Lynn Kelly, 21, a nightclub singer, will learn today if she can go
    ahead with the termination. She had planned to end the pregnancy at an
    Edinburgh hospital one week ago but was prevented from going through
    with the operation by a temporary court order.
          
    Lord Eassie, the judge who imposed the ban, then ruled on Wednesday
    that a husband had no right in law to prevent his wife having an
    abortion and that the doctors who approved the procedure had acted "in
    good faith". However, James Kelly, 28, instructed his lawyers to appeal
    and an interim interdict stopping the termination was imposed for the
    second time at the Court of Session in Edinburgh yesterday. Details of
    the order were faxed to Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, where doctors last
    week agreed to carry out the abortion.
          
    The decision to re-impose the ban was a procedural step to allow the
    appeal to proceed after an intervention from Mrs Kelly's counsel, who
    said the termination may already have been carried out. However, it was
    later confirmed that Mrs Kelly had not had the termination and that the
    full appeal hearing could go ahead today. The hearing will be Mr
    Kelly's last chance to stop his wife ending the pregnancy. When the
    original ban was lifted this week, he said that he was "heartbroken".
          
    Last night, Mr Kelly said in an interview with ITN that he still felt
    sympathy for his wife. "I hope she has got people to support her," he
    said. "I hope she is not suffering herself through this and I hope
    maybe she can think about things and, hopefully, change her own mind
    without having somebody else do it for her. I'm still there to support
    a child."
          
    Lord Eassie said on Wednesday that under the terms of the 1967 Abortion
    Act the responsibility for terminating a pregnancy rested with doctors
    and not the courts. There is no case in Britain of a father preventing
    an abortion and Prof Sheila MacLean, professor of law and ethics at
    Glasgow University, said there was European case law that confirmed the
    legal position.
          
    The European Court of Human Rights found in 1980 that it would be
    impossible to give rights to fathers in such cases. "If they were given
    rights, then logically they would also be able to force a woman to have
    a termination," Prof MacLean said.
          
    Pro-choice groups expressed concern at the stress placed on the
    pregnant woman by the continuing court proceedings and the two interim
    interdicts.
          
    Mr Kelly, a roofer from Inverkeithing, Fife, is seeking custody of the
    baby and their 18-month-old daughter. He and his wife, who now lives in
    Edinburgh, were said to have a stormy relationship. The couple married
    in 1995 and separated this month when Mrs Kelly was eight weeks'
    pregnant.
          
    Carol Kearney, of the National Abortion Campaign, called the appeal
    court's decision "an insult to all women". She said: "If Mr Kelly wants
    a child he should seek to do this with somebody else and not impose a
    forced pregnancy on Mrs Kelly. This is clearly a breach of her human
    right to self-determination, autonomy and control over her body and
    life."
7.1934IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:2723
7.1935IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:2959
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                                      
    Bridgewater Four face a two-month wait over appeal
    
    By David Graves 
    
    THE Bridgewater Four will have to wait up to two months for the Appeal
    Court to decide if it will finally proclaim them innocent of the murder
    of the newspaper boy Carl Bridgewater.
                                                                       
    A 22-day appeal by the men against their convictions ended yesterday
    following an 18-year campaign to prove their innocence and Lord Justice
    Roch told their lawyers that the three judges hoped to deliver a
    written judgment by the end of July. "We will need some time to reach a
    decision because of the mass of evidence before us," he said.
                                                                       
    During the appeal in London, the Crown Prosecution Service admitted
    that the men's convictions were unsafe and that they should be quashed.
    The three surviving members were released on unconditional bail,
    pending the full appeal hearing, in February amid jubilant scenes after
    18 years in custody.
                                                                       
    Vincent Hickey, 44, his cousin, Michael Hickey, 35, and James Robinson,
    63, who were all jailed for life for murder, have attended most days of
    the appeal. A fourth man, Patrick Molloy, who was jailed for 12 years
    for manslaughter, died in prison in 1981, aged 53.
                                                                       
    Carl was 13 when he was killed by a single shot to the head at
    point-blank range after stumbling across a burglary at Yew Tree Farm,
    near Stourbridge, in 1978.
                                                                       
    In his closing speech yesterday, Michael Mansfield, QC, for Molloy,
    described the police case against the men as "rotten to the core" and
    claimed that a large number of officers had been guilty of serious
    malpractice. He claimed that a group of regional crime squad detectives
    who called themselves "The Syndicate" contrived "a strategy of
    deception" to persuade Molloy to make a false confession and implicate
    the others.
                                                                       
    Mr Mansfield maintained that Molloy told the officers he and the other
    men had been burgling Yew Tree Farm when Carl was murdered after being
    shown a statement by Vincent Hickey implicating him.
                                                                       
    All members of The Syndicate were at the time of the murder members of
    No 4 Regional Crime Squad based in Bilston and were seconded to the
    murder investigation, headed by Staffordshire police.
                                                                       
    He said they were led by Det Insp Jeffrey Turner, the officer in charge
    of interviewing Molloy, who decided who should question him and when.
    The officers who actually produced his confession were Det Cons John
    Perkins and Graham Leeke.
                                                                       
    Mr Mansfield also named as members of The Syndicate Det Sgt John
    Robbins, who took notes of a series of interviews with Molloy, and Det
    Sgt Dennis Walker. He claimed that Det Chief Insp Weslea Watson, a
    senior member of the Staffordshire police investigation team, was
    present when Molloy was aggressively interviewed in a cell.
                                                                       
    None of the named officers gave evidence during the appeal hearing.
7.1936IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3180
7.1937IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3257
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                             
    Homeless put back at top of housing lists
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 
                
    THE homeless will go back to the top of council house waiting lists,
    reversing Tory legislation, the Government said yesterday.
                
    Hilary Armstrong, the housing minister, said the right of homeless
    families and individuals to jump the queue for accommodation would be
    restored. Since last year, homelessness had not been considered in
    itself sufficient reason for receiving priority treatment.
                
    Ms Armstrong told a conference organised by the charity Shelter that
    the Labour Government wanted to "restore hope to homeless people". She
    said: "The Government has consistently made clear its intention to
    restore a proper safety net for families and vulnerable individuals who
    are unintentionally homeless."
                
    The minister will issue a consultation paper shortly about changing the
    rules and hopes to have the new guidelines in place by the autumn. Such
    a move would not require primary legislation. Ms Armstrong said she
    wanted to create an additional category of people to whom local
    councils can given "reasonable preference" in the housing queue.
                
    Under current rules, introduced last year through the Housing Act,
    people with disabilities or who have children can get priority but
    those who are simply homeless cannot. This was to stop people
    deliberately sleeping on the street for a period in order to jump the
    queue.
                
    "Homelessness is an affront to a civilised society," she said. "It is a
    problem that confronts us all, requiring a contribution from all
    sectors of society to ensure an effective and lasting solution."
                
    The planned change in the law is part of a number of proposals that the
    Government plans to bring forward to tackle homelessness. Ministers
    will look at ways of directing homeless families towards private,
    rented accommodation. They are also concentrating on tackling the
    number of young people sleeping on the streets.
                
    Chris Holmes, director of Shelter, welcomed the proposals. "For nearly
    three years, Shelter has been arguing that homeless people would lose
    out under the Housing Act. There was a real danger that, if not given
    priority, homeless people would, at best, be left in a series of
    insecure tenancies constantly having to move," he said.
                
    "At worst, we could have seen a rise in street homelessness. Shelter is
    delighted that the Government is to bring in new regulations that will
    go some way to provide a vital safety net for homeless people."
                
    Dr Alun Jones, chief executive of Paddington Churches Housing
    Association, said: "I am pleased at the minister's pragmatic approach
    to the problems we face and delighted that she sees housing
    associations as one of the key partners in tackling the major problems
    on housing."
7.1938IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3439
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                                  
    Man finds daughter dead after chasing intruder
    
    By Neil Tweedie and Tim King 
                                                      
    A FATHER who chased an intruder from his house returned home to find
    his 12-year-old daughter dying after being attacked.
                                                      
    The man, believed to be from Bosnia, stumbled on the intruder when he
    returned to his home in Hammersmith, west London, yesterday afternoon.
    He chased the stranger, but lost him in the streets and returned to
    find that his daughter had been assaulted. She is thought to have been
    strangled.
                                                      
    The family's neigbour, living in the flat below them, said: "The father
    of the girl came to our flat and asked me to help to push open the door
    of their sitting room because it was blocked. We went into the flat and
    pushed the door. It was jammed. But when it opened I saw the girl lying
    on the floor. Her face was blue and the father said, 'Oh my God, oh my
    God'."
                                                      
    A London Ambulance spokesman said a helicopter took a doctor to the
    house, where he treated the girl. She was taken by ambulance to
    Hammersmith Hospital, but was pronounced dead on arrival.
                                                      
    After evading the father by running through a builder's yard, the
    intruder, who was believed to have been armed with a knife, hijacked a
    car. He forced the woman driver out in full view of bystanders and
    drove off. He abandoned the car at the junction of Sulgrave Road and
    Shepherds Bush Road, leapt out and ran off.
                                                      
    The intruder was described by Scotland Yard as being of Greek or Middle
    Eastern origin, stocky, with a round face and in his mid to late
    forties. He was said to be about 5ft 6in with receding hair.
                                                      
    The victim lived with her parents and brother in the Brackenbury
    Village area of Hammersmith, an area of Victorian houses. Neighbours
    said they had moved into the house quite recently.
7.1939IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3655
7.1940IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3739
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                     
    Activist ponders anti-hunts Bill 
    
    By Jon Hibbs, Political Correspondent 
                                  
    LABOUR was faced with an awkward dilemma last night after a prominent
    anti-hunting campaigner topped the ballot for private members'
    legislation in the new Parliament.
                                  
    Government business managers sought to dissuade Michael Foster, the MP
    for Worcester, from bowing to pressure to introduce a Bill to ban fox
    hunting. Labour has long been committed to allowing a free vote in the
    Commons on the principle of outlawing hunting to hounds. But ministers
    are anxious not to antagonise peers so early in the parliamentary
    session when they have contentious devolution legislation to get
    through the Lords.
                                  
    Mr Foster, a keen angler, said he was considering taking up an
    anti-hunting Bill among a number of different offers. But he insisted
    that he would not rush into a decision: "I shall be taking time over
    the next week or so to discuss what is in the best interests of the
    City of Worcester and the people of this country because that is what I
    was elected here to Parliament to perform."
                                  
    Mr Foster is the only Labour MP to achieve a place in the top six of
    the ballot, thus guaranteeing enough Parliamentary time to get his
    chosen measure on to the statute book provided that the Government does
    not object.
                                  
    Cynog Dafis, the Plaid Cymru MP for Ceredigion, who came fifth in the
    annual ballot, said he would introduce a "green" measure to reduce
    pollution. The Road Traffic Reduction (National Targets) Bill, which is
    backed by Friends of the Earth, would impose binding reductions in the
    volume of traffic from 1990 levels.
                                  
    Other ballot winners were Dr Julian Lewis (C, New Forest E), Teresa
    Gorman (C, Billericay), Sir George Young (C, Hants NW) and John Burnett
    (Lib Dem, Devon W & Torridge).
7.1941IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3842
7.1942IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:3932
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                         
    BBC pays libel damages over TV comedy
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 
           
    THE BBC has paid undisclosed libel damages to the Outward Bound Trust
    after it portrayed a course instructor as a "deranged sexual pervert"
    in the Rowan Atkinson sitcom The Thin Blue Line.
           
    The trust brought legal action against the BBC over the comedy and over
    a Radio 4 documentary that claimed that the trust employed paedophiles
    in its adventure centres. A BBC spokesman said both allegations had
    been the result of "grave error".
           
    The trust, an educational charity, told the High Court yesterday that
    the allegations were without foundation and had caused massive damage
    to its reputation. Godwin Busuttil, for the trust, said its main object
    was to "help people live more fulfilled, worthwhile and productive
    lives by providing opportunities for personal development through
    challenging experiences in demanding environments".
           
    Referring to an edition last year of the Radio 4 documentary File on 4
    that dealt with paedophiles, Mr Busuttil said: "A statement which
    alleged that the trust had employed systematic paedophiles and child
    abusers was entirely without foundation and so caused great damage to
    its standing and credit."
           
    The Thin Blue Line broadcast "falsely portrayed an Outward Bound course
    leader as a deranged sexual pervert. The BBC now accepts its grave
    error and recognises the considerable damage it has caused to the
    trust."
7.1943IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4132
7.1944IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4225
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                            
    Driver jailed after defying his 44th ban
    
    By Paul Stokes 
                      
    A JOBLESS motorist was jailed for six months yesterday after defying
    his 44th ban. David Ferris, 38, had been sent to prison six times for
    driving when banned.
                      
    Magistrates at Sedgefield, Co Durham, were told that his latest
    offences were committed days after he was bailed on similar charges.
    When he appeared before the court last month he pleaded guilty to
    driving on March 19 while disqualified and uninsured. Yesterday he
    admitted driving again while disqualified, without insurance and with
    excess alcohol.
                      
    Bill Brabban, prosecuting, told an earlier hearing: "This gentleman has
    a horrific record as to driving while disqualified."
                      
    The court was told yesterday that Ferris was given a two-year ban on
    July 31 1995 and was banned for three years on June 17 last year. He
    had three drink-driving covictions. Michael Clarke, for Ferris, said:
    "He tells me he no longer owns a motor vehicle, and perhaps that is one
    crumb of comfort."
7.1945IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4433
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                       
    Equity storm rages round 'Baldrick'
    
    By Alison Boshoff 
                  
    EQUITY's annual conference fell into chaos with heckling and furious
    rows.
                                                                           
    Last week Tony Booth, father of Cherie Blair, had accused the leaders
    of the actors' union of embracing the "arrogance of power". The
    mild-mannered Tony Robinson, better known as Baldrick in Blackadder,
    was heckled about union policy as he took over the chair and tried to
    keep order.
                                                                           
    Delegates fell out about everything, including the timetable for the
    rest of the day. Most contentious was Action 2000, some Blairite
    reforms to union structure. Freddie Pyne, formerly of Emmerdale Farm,
    the president, was replaced in the chair after arguments about proposed
    union reforms.
                                                                           
    Mr Robinson, vice-president, tried to reassure the meeting by saying
    that there had been no lack of consultation over the reforms. He drew
    cries of "rubbish". He said: "I have written down some of the insults
    that we have been called. The real situation is this: our union is
    broke."
                                                                           
    As the conference rose for lunch, an off-stage row broke out between Mr
    Pyne and his former colleagues, Mr Booth and Louis Mahoney. Mr Booth is
    unhappy with proposed reforms to the union, which is set to shed jobs,
    reform its computer system and relax membership rules in an effort to
    pull the organisation out of debt. An Equity spokesman said: "It was a
    storm in a teacup. Several matters were fiercely debated on all sides."
7.1946IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4535
7.1947IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4630
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                                   
    Russian widow and her son can remain in Britain
    
    By Sean O'Neill 
                                 
    A BABY who was born after his father died suddenly can live in Britain
    with his Russian mother, the Home Secretary ruled yesterday.
                                 
    Jack Straw reversed a decision by Michael Howard, his predecessor, that
    Irina Sperring, 26, and her son Thomas, should be deported as illegal
    immigrants.
                                 
    Mrs Sperring discovered she was pregnant when she flew to Britain for
    the funeral of Andrew, her husband, whom she had met when he was
    teaching English in her home town of Penza, near Moscow.
                                 
    The couple had married in October 1994, but nine months later Mr
    Sperring died suddenly. Mrs Sperring travelled to Cardiff for his
    funeral and realised while she was there that she was pregnant.
                                 
    Thomas was born in March last year. But the Home Office refused her
    application to live in Britain.
                                 
    The Immigration Appeals Tribunal urged the Home Secretary to change his
    mind. "It is like a dream come true," said Mrs Sperring. "I just jumped
    for joy."
                                 
    Her mother-in-law, Margaret, said: "I had lost a son and did not want
    to lose my grandson as well."
7.1948IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4828
7.1949IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:4964
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                                    
    Yeltsin declares war on bloated Kremlin generals
    
    By Alan Philps in Moscow 
                            
    PRESIDENT Yeltsin launched a furious attack on Russia's generals
    yesterday, making clear that the armed forces would be severely reduced
    and brought under the control of budget-cutting reformers.
                            
    Angry at the army's resistance to cuts, Mr Yeltsin dismissed his "idle"
    Defence Minister, Igor Rodionov, and Chief of Staff, Viktor Samsonov,
    for failing to implement military reforms. In an address to his Defence
    Council, made up of senior military officers and government ministers,
    Mr Yeltsin said : "Every day, the soldiers get thinner and the generals
    get fatter. Generals have built dachas [country homes] all over Russia.
    They are not interested in army reform because they may lose their
    privileges. They are the main obstacle to implementing reform."
                            
    Gen Rodionov, who was appointed last year, failed to get to grips with
    reform and seemed a bewildered outsider in the tough world of Kremlin
    politics. Gen Samsonov is an army dinosaur who held the same post in
    1991. The military is hopelessly underfunded, with officers receiving
    their pay late and other ranks on starvation rations. Ageing equipment
    lies unrepaired.
                            
    Ranks have shrunk in recent years but not according to any clear plan
    or with any idea of what the new Russian army should be aiming to look
    like. "I am not just displeased; I am furious with the way military
    reform is proceeding," Mr Yeltsin said.
                            
    He had ordered Gen Rodionov to cut 200,000 jobs this year. But the
    general said the cuts would take at least four years. The general had
    said military reform was impossible without more money, a complaint
    that the budget-slashing reformers recently promoted by Mr Yeltsin do
    not want to hear.
                            
    Gen Rodionov will be remembered as the first defence minister since
    Trotsky to appear as a civilian, having swapped his uniform for a suit
    when he retired from the armed forces on his 60th birthday. He is
    replaced by the head of the strategic rocket forces, Gen Igor Sergeyev,
    who may be only a stopgap figure. A bright future is predicted for the
    most pro-Yeltsin of the top brass, Col-Gen Viktor Chechevatov.
                            
    Mr Yeltsin made clear that market-minded reformers would now be let
    loose on the military. He brought the two standard-bearers of reform,
    the deputy premiers Anatoly Chubais and Boris Nemtsov, into his
    Security Council, which advises on all aspects of national security.
                            
    Mr Nemtsov said the remnants of the massive Soviet army would be
    moulded into battle-ready mobile units. He added that the armed forces
    would have to get rid of their antiquated and brutal traditions,
    whereby discipline is enforced by sometimes deadly bullying of
    subordinates.
                            
    Mr Yeltsin has promised to create a professional army, replacing
    today's rabble of unwilling conscripts, by the year 2000. Funding is to
    be cut, from the current five per cent of gross domestic product to 3.5
    per cent.
                            
    The opposition Communist leader, Gennady Zyuganov, said Mr Yeltsin was
    to blame for the state of the army. "He left it without pay, without
    modern weaponry, without homes," he said. "He destroyed it but does not
    want to take the blame."
7.1950IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:5040
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                  
    BA jumbo pilot averts disaster
    
    By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent 
                 
    MORE than 330 passengers on a jumbo jet narrowly escaped a collision as
    another aircraft crossed its path when it was accelerating for
    take-off.
                 
    The BA flight crew were hailed as "heroes" by Bob Ayling, the airline's
    chief executive, for managing to bring the plane to a safe, though
    shuddering, halt in which six of its 18 tyres burst.
                 
    The London-bound Boeing 747 was travelling at 130mph, approaching
    take-off speed, when air traffic controllers at Chicago's O'Hare
    airport ordered it to abort as a United Airlines Boeing 737 had strayed
    on to the runway.
                 
    The BA crew, commanded by Capt Richard Westray, instantly applied
    emergency stop procedures and brought the 320-ton aircraft to a
    standstill about 300 yards from the other plane, which was carrying 100
    passengers.
                 
    Twelve seconds elapsed between the control tower issuing its
    instruction and the 747 coming to a stop. Had braking been delayed five
    seconds, a collision would have been unavoidable.
                 
    After the incident, on Sunday night, the runway was closed and
    passengers and crew filed off the plane. The following day, equipped
    with new tyres, it flew to Heathrow.
                 
    Mr Ayling said yesterday: "Capt Westray and his crew are all heroes and
    they handled this incident impeccably."
                 
    Before taking another 747 to New York, the 45-year-old pilot said the
    episode was "all in a day's work".
                 
    The Americans are investigating why the United 737 ended up on the
    wrong runway.
7.1951IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:5251
7.1952IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:5333
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                              
    Jackson 'the mother of all doting fathers'
    
    By John Hiscock in Los Angeles 
                        
    MICHAEL Jackson is such a doting father to his three-month-old son that
    the baby does not need a mother, his wife Debbie Rowe says.
                        
    The superstar, who now lives in Paris, is both mother and father to the
    child while his wife stays 6,000 miles away in Los Angeles. "He feeds
    him, he changes his diapers, he reads to him and he sings to him," Miss
    Rowe said in a television interview. "If he's having a meeting the baby
    is there. He takes naps with him. I don't need to be there because I
    would have nothing to do."
                        
    Miss Rowe married the singer in November, three months before the baby,
    Prince Michael, was born. She said she visits her husband and son in
    Paris every other weekend. The rest of the time she has a job at the
    doctor's office where she was working when she first met Jackson and
    still lives in the same apartment in the seedy Van Nuys area of the
    city.
                        
    "It's unusual," she acknowledged, "but I don't think it's weird. We are
    untraditional people. I need to be myself." She dismissed allegations
    of child molestation made against her husband, saying: "I wouldn't have
    had a child and I wouldn't leave our child there if any of these things
    were true or if I even suspected any of them were true."
                        
    Miss Rowe, 37, denied reports that the child was conceived by
    artificial insemination and that Jackson paid her to have the baby. "I
    don't need money. I would never do it for money," she said. "I did it
    because I love him."
7.1953IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Fri May 23 1997 13:5436
    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 23 May 1997 Issue 728
                                                
    Battle for supremacy over prizewinning fools
    
    By Aisling Irwin 
         
    THE award of the 1997 Darwin prize to a man who floated to 11,00 feet
    in a garden chair suspended from 45 weather balloons has been
    challenged by a rival award body.
         
    The prize for "contributions to the gene pool through self-sacrifice"
    has already been awarded, says the rival, to a lawyer whose habit of
    demonstrating the strength of his skyscraper office windows ended
    abruptly when he plunged to his death after his customary rush at one.
         
    The two Darwin award bodies launched their battle after The Telegraph
    reported that the award was won by Larry Walters. Mr Walters drifted
    into the primary approach corridor of Los Angeles international airport
    instead of sunbathing 30ft above his garden, as he had intended. But
    Jim Penberth, a computer expert from Ohio who claims to run the only
    genuine Darwin award, told New Scientist that the chair balloonist was
    not eligible.
         
    The true prize should go only to those who remove themselves from the
    gene pool through death or infertility, thus preventing their stupidity
    from being inherited, he said. Mr Penberth's award went to Garry Hoy,
    39, who worked on the 24th floor of a skyscraper in Toronto. While Mr
    Hoy had accurately calculated the strength of the panes he forgot their
    frames. One Friday evening he popped out of his office, accompanied by
    the entire window.
         
    Contenders for next year's award, says Mr Penberth, include a Russian
    blacksmith who died after the live bullet he had used as an anvil
    exploded and two American students who stepped back from a railway line
    when they heard a train - only to be killed by one flying past behind
    them.
7.1954IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:15102
    AP 26-May-1997 1:04 EDT   REF5188

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Monday, May 26, 1997
   
    INDIAN-BURIAL 

    CINCINNATI (AP) -- In what was thought to be the first ceremony of its
    kind, tribal representatives and federal officials have reburied the
    remains of as many as 25 Indians unearthed during a construction
    project. About 100 people took part in the ceremony at the former
    Fernald uranium processing site, including tribal leaders who welcomed
    the drenching rain as "tears of their ancestors." The ceremony was the
    first time Indian remains found on private land have been reburied on
    federal soil for protection purposes, said a spokeswoman for Fluor
    Daniel Fernald, the government contractor hired to clean up the site. 
   
    AIRMAN-RAPE 

    FAIRCHILD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. (AP) -- A former Air Force base
    security officer has been sentenced to 30 years in prison after a
    military jury convicted him of rape and 14 related charges. Master Sgt.
    Napolean Bailey, 39, will also receive a dishonorable discharge,
    forfeiture of all pay and reduction to the lowest enlisted rank. The
    former Fairchild Air Force Base security officer was convicted on 15 of
    the 17 charges he faced for attacks reported by three women. He could
    have faced life in prison, but will now be eligible for parole in 10
    years, a base spokesman said. Bailey may also appeal the sentence. 
   
    CLINTON-NATO 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton heads to Europe this week to chart
    a new course for NATO. The president flies to Paris Monday. On Tuesday,
    he and Boris Yeltsin will sign a pact giving Russia a formal role in
    the alliance, although without veto power. It clears the way for NATO
    to expand. The following day, Clinton will be in the Netherlands to
    meet European leaders and commemorate the 50th anniversary of the
    post-World War II Marshall Plan. En route home, Clinton will meet with
    Britain's new prime minister, Tony Blair, in London. 
   
    SIERRA LEONE 

    FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) -- Rebellious soldiers have toppled Sierra
    Leone's elected president in a bloody coup. Coup leader Maj. Johnny
    Paul Koroma said he was seizing power because the government failed to
    keep the peace following a five-year civil war. Koroma's soldiers took
    control of the legislature after heavy fighting and burned the national
    treasury. President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah fled by helicopter. Koroma
    announced in a nationwide radio broadcast that he had assumed control
    of Sierra Leone and was inviting an important rebel leader to join his
    government. 
   
    FRANCE-ELECTIONS 

    PARIS (AP) -- Delivering a setback to President Jacques Chirac,
    France's leftist opposition capitalized on discontent over record
    unemployment to win the most votes in first-round parliamentary
    elections. Chirac called the early elections, hoping to win a mandate
    from the nation's 39 million voters for more austerity and free-market
    reform. But France's 12.8 percent unemployment was an easy target for
    Socialists and Communists. A leftist victory in the June 1 runoff would
    force Chirac to share power with a leftist prime minister and
    parliament, now dominated by Chirac's Conservatives. 
   
    POLAND-CONSTITUTION 

    WARSAW, Poland (AP) -- Polish voters have adopted a new constitution
    that wipes out the last remnants of communism, according to exit polls.
    The new charter, which replaces a 1952 communist-era constitution,
    commits Poland to a market economy and private ownership, guarantees
    personal freedoms necessary for entrance into the European Union and
    ensures civilian control of the military, required for Poland's goal of
    NATO membership. Official results are expected by Tuesday. 
   
    KOREAS-FOOD TALKS 

    BEIJING (AP) -- After painstaking negotiations, Red Cross officials
    from rival North and South Korea have agreed that 50,000 tons of
    vitally needed food aid would be sent to the hunger-stricken North, a
    Red Cross official said. The food will be delivered by the end of July,
    said Johan Schaar, a Red Cross spokesman. The North Koreans agreed to
    open up more delivery routes for the aid -- three by railway and two
    through ports. Negotiators for the two sides shook hands and
    congratulated each other before entering a closed meeting. A signing
    ceremony was expected later Monday. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar began the week's trading at 115.74 yen on the
    Tokyo foreign exchange market at 9 a.m. Monday, up 0.10 yen from late
    Friday. 
   
    RANGERS-FLYERS 

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Rod Brind'amour put the NHL Eastern Conference
    Finals on ice with a goal early in the third period as the Flyers beat
    the New York Rangers 4-2. The oversized Flyers team dominated the aging
    Rangers for a 4-1 series win and will face either the Colorado
    Avalanche or the Detroit Red Wings in the Stanley Cup Finals next week.
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1955IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:15107
    RTw  26-May-97 06:00    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    TOP STORIES 

    ----------- 

    PARIS - French voters sent a severe warning to President Jacques Chirac
    , giving a jubilant left a substantial lead over the ruling
    centre-right coalition in the first round of a parliamentary election. 

    - - - - 

    TAIPEI - A flotilla of Chinese nationalists determined to challenge
    Tokyo's claim to a disputed East China Sea archipelago faced off with
    Japanese patrol boats in waters around the islands, Taiwan state radio
    said. 

    TOKYO - Japan threatened to seize protest boats from Taiwan and Hong
    Kong if activists aboard the vessels tried to land on the disputed
    island chain. 

    - - - - 

    MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan - Islamic Taleban warriors swept through
    northern Afghanistan, ousting opposition forces from three more
    provincial capitals, Afghan and Pakistan-based sources said on Sunday. 

    ISLAMABAD - Sweeping northern victories by the Taleban militia and its
    allies leave reluctant neighbours and the United Nations no real choice
    but to follow Pakistan's lead and recognise it as the government of
    Afghanistan, analysts said. 

    TEHRAN - Iran is not ready yet to recognise the Taleban Islamic
    movement in neighbouring Afghanistan, President Akbar Hashemi
    Rafsanjani said. 

    MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan - General Abdul Malik, the opposition
    military leader whose mutiny toppled Afghan warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum
    this weekend, promised a new Islamic order in the north. 

    TASHKENT, Uzbekistan - The former Soviet republics of Central Asia,
    alarmed by the rise of Moslem fundamentalism, hastily beefed up their
    border security after advances by the radical Islamist Taleban militia. 

    ANKARA - General Abdul Rashid Dostum, ousted from his fiefdom by
    Islamic Taleban fighters, vowed in the Turkish capital to continue the
    struggle for control. 

    - - - - 

    FREETOWN - Soldiers in the West African state of Sierra Leone ousted
    the civilian government and President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah flew into
    exile in Guinea. 

    LAGOS - Sierra Leonean rebel leader Foday Sankoh said he was not
    surprised by the early morning army coup. 

    - - - - 

    JAKARTA - Indonesia has been shaken by some of the worst election
    campaign violence seen during President Suharto's 30-year rule and
    nerves are on edge as the nation prepares to vote in national and local
    elections this week. 

    BANJARMASIN, Indonesia - The death toll from a shopping centre fire and
    riot in this East Kalimantan city on the island of Borneo has risen to
    142, the local Dinamika Berita reported. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - New Congo's self-proclaimed president Laurent Kabila said he
    expected to hold elections after two years and defended his government
    against charges of autocracy. 

    MBANDAKA, Congo - Laurent Kabila's rebels massacred more than 200
    unarmed Rwandan Hutu refugees at a port on the Congo River earlier this
    month and a further 140 at a village to the south, witnesses said. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is to hold urgent
    talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak after Israeli intelligence
    warned him of a danger of war with Arab neighbours, a newspaper said. 

    JERUSALEM - An overwhelming number of Palestinians in the West Bank and
    Gaza Strip think the United States favours Israel in its Middle East
    East peace mediation, according to a poll published. 

    CAIRO - Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa said his country was not
    considering scrapping a planned Egyptian-Israeli summit meeting for now
    and was waiting for the results of an envoy's visit to Israel. 

    EL BIREH, West Bank - Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed
    Rabbo called U.S. policy on peace negotiations between the Palestinian
    Authority and Israel "disgraceful." 

    - - - - 

    MILAN, Italy - Italy's Northern League party held its own "referendum"
    on forming a breakaway northern state in a trial of strength that drew
    condemnation from its mainstream political 

    REUTER
7.1956IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1567
    AP 25-May-1997 22:31 EDT   REF5084

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Six Killed in Skydiver Plane Crash

    By TOM BAYLES

    Associated Press Writer

    MIAMI (AP) -- A skydiver who felt her plane spinning out of control
    managed to leap to safety Sunday, moments before the craft spiraled and
    crashed in a sweet potato field, killing the pilot and five other
    people. 

    An investigator said the plane, which was built for four people but
    carrying seven, could have been overloaded with too much weight. 

    The woman jumped to safety just as the plane went into its fatal spin,
    her parachute canopy still opening as the Cessna went down. 

    "It was pretty much a belly flop," Metro-Dade fire Capt. Robert Suarez
    said. "It landed flat with much force." 

    Rick Dryer, a pilot who reached the scene of the crash minutes later,
    said the surviving skydiver told him she felt the plane shaking just as
    she was about to jump. 

    The 43-year-old woman, identified by WTVJ-TV as Carol O'Connell, was
    preparing to jump from an altitude of 3,500 feet when the pilot began
    having trouble, police said. When the plane made a 360-degree spin, she
    told police she decided to jump without waiting for instructions. 

    Daryl Martin, a pilot who was fishing nearby, looked up when he heard
    what he thought was a plane with engine trouble and saw it spiraling to
    the ground. 

    "One person jumped from the airplane before it went down," Martin told
    MSNBC. By the time he lost sight of the plane behind a tree line, "she
    was still floating to the ground." 

    National Transportation Safety Board investigator Jeffrey Kennedy said
    the agency will look into whether the plane was overloaded with seven
    people and skydiving gear. The plane is designed to be a four-seater. 

    After reviewing the wreckage and a videotape of the crash, Kennedy said
    the plane may not have been going fast enough after making a turn.

    "Aerodynamically, the airplane had gotten too slow and it lost lift
    with the wings -- the wings did not have enough airflow over them,"
    Kennedy said. "It's not a mechanical failure." 

    The Cessna 210 took off from Homestead General Airport and crashed
    about a mile away, its frame flattened and engulfed by flames in a
    field in a rural farming district between Miami and the Everglades. 

    One victim was pulled about 10 feet from the wreckage, but the pilot
    and five other divers were dead at the scene. Their names were not
    immediately released, although police said five were men. 

    Late Sunday afternoon, investigators peeled back the yellow and white
    sheets covering the bodies. A charred elbow of one of the victims stuck
    out from the wreckage. 

    Dryer said the owner of the plane, Tom Manning, was a passenger on the
    aircraft but wasn't flying it. There was no answer Sunday night at the
    Manning's flying company, Skydive Inc., in Homestead. 
7.1957IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:15100
    AP 25-May-1997 21:27 EDT   REF5025

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    5th-Graders Net $30,000 in Sales

    By JON MARCUS

    Associated Press Writer

    HYANNIS, Mass. (AP) -- The kids in the Barnstable Grade Five School
    invented their own board game with handmade illustrations and rules
    they made themselves. 

    Cute, huh? 

    Well, so far, they've netted $30,000 in sales in one month,
    incorporated as a business, hired lawyers, appointed a board of
    directors and begun production on a line of books, clothing and videos
    toward a target of earning more than $1 million in annual revenues. 

    "We're going to have lots of money to go on field trips or get new
    things for the school, which is a great inspiration," said Carissa
    Souza, one of the 11-year-old entrepreneurs. 

    It's a mission teachers say combines learning with necessity. This Cape
    Cod community, which has attracted large numbers of retirees without
    children in the schools, has been reluctant to increase education
    spending, and even paper and pencils are in short supply by this time
    of the year. 

    Principal Tom McDonald hopes to make the Grade Five School, which
    serves 544 fifth graders and has an annual budget of $1.3 million,
    self-supporting. 

    Practical or not, the idea has a lot of backing from the kids. 

    "We hope we can help not only our school, but all the schools and maybe
    the whole town," said Max Zemanovic, 11. 

    The students call their company the Main Street Learning Corp., after
    the town's traditional business district two blocks away, where the
    game is sold in stores. 

    They started their venture with a penny contributed by the bank where
    they opened a savings account, and ultimately raised enough capital
    from advertising to produce their Main Street Learning Game, a cross
    between Monopoly and Trivial Pursuit for which the students also made
    up 560 math, science, civics and history questions based on what they
    were studying at the time. 

    Marketing hasn't been neglected. The product got plenty of free media
    attention when an armored car company delivered the game's play money
    to the school with a police escort. 

    The game has a hand-drawn picture of the school at its center,
    surrounded by blocks of actual local businesses, from car dealerships
    to fast-food restaurants, that paid from $50 to $250 apiece to be
    included. 

    Players receive money for each correct answer, advance the game piece
    to a business based on a roll of the dice and can buy the business or
    make capital improvements. Then they collect the profits. Whoever makes
    the most, wins. 

    At $20 each, the Main Street Learning Game already has nearly sold out
    its first run of 1,000 copies. The kids are hard at work on their next
    project, a coloring book for which they already have 3,000 advance
    orders, and they're planning a line of T-shirts and neckties and a
    how-to-read videotape they hope will go into national distribution. 

    "Really, we're in a time right now where the tax base is such that
    schools have to find ways to take care of their own needs," McDonald
    said. "If you want to raise money for field trips, you hold a bake
    sale. But our vision has grown. Our ultimate goal is to fund our own
    school." 

    The students, who do their company jobs during recess and after classes
    end for the day, won an award from the regional economic development
    commission. 

    "At the beginning, they were like, 'Oh, isn't that great, a bunch of
    fifth-graders making a little game,"' said Jonathan Pass, a teacher who
    led the game's production and development team. "But then when those
    students led meetings in front of 40 to 50 people at a time, people
    really knew that we were serious." 

    Gesturing toward the stern countenances of former teachers whose
    portraits hang on the walls, Pass says: "They would have thought we
    were crazy. But in this day and age of fighting for money, it's just a
    different approach. It says it's possible for a school to fund itself."

    For all they've learned, the kids don't necessarily want to go into the
    business world when they grow up. Carissa says she wants to be a
    pediatrician or a basketball player, and Max hasn't yet decided on a
    career. 

    "I'm sure I don't want to be a businessman," he said. "It's been really
    fun, but it's a lot of work. There are meetings you have to stay after
    school for, and then you have to rush to do your homework." 
7.1958IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1568
    AP 25-May-1997 19:49 EDT   REF5481

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Attorney Lauds Teen Smoking Plan

    By TIM KLASS

    Associated Press Writer

    SEATTLE (AP) -- A state attorney general said an agreement on curbing
    teen-age smoking was a major breakthrough in talks with cigarette
    makers. 

    "We have made huge progress," said attorney general Christine O.
    Gregoire in a telephone interview Saturday. "The single most important
    issue on the table for us is the youth smoking and public health
    piece." 

    Gregoire is one of five state attorneys general involved in the
    settlement talks with tobacco firms. Twenty-nine states are suing the
    industry to recoup Medicaid funds spent treating sick smokers. 

    The companies have offered to pay at least $300 billion over 25 years
    and accept some government advertising and marketing restrictions. In
    return, they want protection from lawsuits. 

    According to Gregoire, the tobacco companies have agreed to cut
    teen-age smoking by 30 percent in five years, 50 percent in seven years
    and 60 percent in 10 years. For each percentage point missed, tobacco
    companies would have to pay $80 million or as much as $1.5 billion a
    year. 

    The states would also have to help curb teen smoking. They would have
    to meet goals of 85 percent compliance in preventing cigarette and
    other tobacco sales to minors, facing penalties for each percentage
    point they fall short. Compliance would be determined by "sting
    operations" by underage shoppers sent by law enforcement agencies. 

    Gregoire said the settlement is about more than money. 

    "There isn't enough money," she said. "How could anybody reimburse for
    costs that are estimated to be as much as $50 billion a year?" 

    Also key to the talks is government regulation of nicotine. Last month,
    a federal judge in North Carolina ruled that the Food and Drug
    Administration could regulate tobacco because it contains nicotine, a
    highly addictive substance, but barred the government from restricting
    tobacco ads. 

    Both sides have appealed. Gregoire said the states will insist on FDA
    regulation and an advertising ban when talks resume this week in New
    York. 

    "It could be a deal-breaker. Both sides could walk away from this
    issue," she said. 

    Gregoire denied reports that the settlement would restrict lawsuits by
    current smokers and people claiming illness from secondhand smoke. 

    "None of that has been agreed to. Now you're talking about liability,
    and we haven't agreed to anything on liability at all,' she said. 

    With the first case set for trial in July, Gregoire dismissed the
    likelihood of delays to allow more time to reach agreement. 

    "We don't want to do that," she said. "We're either going to have a
    settlement or we're going to trial." 
7.1959IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1544
    AP 25-May-1997 12:59 EDT   REF5321

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Air Force Sgt. Faces Rape Sentence

    FAIRCHILD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. (AP) -- A military jury that convicted
    a former Air Force base security officer of rape and 14 related charges
    took up the issue of his punishment on Sunday. 

    Master Sgt. Napolean Bailey, 39, faced a maximum penalty of life in
    prison, dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and reduction to
    the lowest enlisted rank. 

    The former Fairchild Air Force Base security officer was convicted
    Saturday on 15 of the 17 charges he faced for attacks reported by three
    women. One alleged victim was a fellow base security officer. 

    The eight-member jury panel of officers and enlisted personnel began
    deliberations on a sentence Saturday, after reaching the verdict, and
    were scheduled to resume Sunday. 

    A court-martial at the air base west of Spokane convicted Bailey on one
    count of rape, two counts of forcible sodomy, three counts of assault
    consummated by a battery, and one count each of assault with a deadly
    weapon, making a false official statement and kidnapping. 

    He also was convicted of two counts each of communicating a threat and
    obstruction of justice, and of disorderly conduct and unlawful entry,
    said base spokesman Capt. Mark Brown. 

    Bailey was found innocent of one count of rape and one count of
    communicating a threat. Brown didn't know which women those charges
    applied to. 

    Bailey was accused in February of attacking his former girlfriend, a
    28-year-old security officer now stationed at Nellis Air Force Base in
    Nevada. 

    He also was accused of attacking two civilians, a 31-year-old Veradale
    woman Bailey had dated and a Spokane woman. 

    Court documents said Bailey threatened two of the three women in an
    attempt to keep them from going to authorities. 
7.1960IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1592
    AP 25-May-1997 12:47 EDT   REF5310

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    McVeigh: Political Walter Mitty?

    By SANDY SHORE

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Prosecutors call Timothy McVeigh a deviant monster who
    murdered 168 people to further his anti-government cause. Defense
    attorneys say he's a political Walter Mitty, a dreamer who never
    followed through. 

    It is that gentler image the defense must try to get across to jurors
    who are preparing to decide McVeigh's fate, says Pat Furman, a
    University of Colorado law professor. 

    "If you've got great character witnesses who will say that's not the
    real Tim McVeigh ... then you attack it that way," he said. 

    "If you don't have those sorts of character witnesses, then you use
    legalistic means: 'Look folks, tough talk doesn't mean he did it. If we
    got punished for our thoughts, we'd all be in jail.' " 

    Defense attorney Stephen Jones has admitted McVeigh was "a political
    animal," who made no secret of his views. 

    Jones likened McVeigh to the main character in James Thurber's short
    story "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," an everyman who fantasizes
    about becoming a hero. 

    Like Mitty, McVeigh talked about taking action, but never did, Jones
    said. 

    When court resumes Tuesday after the Memorial Day weekend, McVeigh's
    attorneys will continue trying to convince jurors that others were
    involved. 

    McVeigh could face the death penalty if convicted of murder and
    conspiracy in the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah
    Federal Building, the worst act of terrorism on U.S. soil. 

    Six years ago, McVeigh was pursuing an Army career after earning honors
    in the Gulf War, but his plans soured when he quit special forces
    training after two days because he wasn't physically ready. He took a
    discharge and his interest in the anti-government movement flourished. 

    In late 1992, he joined the gun show circuit, where he fell in with
    others angry about the FBI shootout at Ruby Ridge, Idaho. After the
    government's fiery raid on the Branch Davidian complex near Waco,
    Texas, on April 19, 1993, that rage began to consume McVeigh, friends
    and relatives say. 

    His former friend Michael Fortier testified that they agreed government
    officials caused the fire and "potentially they murdered those people
    in Waco." 

    They also worried about a possible United Nations plot to form one
    government for the world, Fortier said. 

    After Waco, McVeigh became increasingly defensive. He stored weapons
    behind the doors of his Kingman, Ariz., house and stacked wood in the
    back yard as a barrier against a raid, Fortier said. 

    He used aliases, wore disguises and wrote to his sister in a sort of
    code, warning her to watch for government surveillance, witnesses have
    said. 

    And, Fortier said, McVeigh formulated a plan to bomb a federal building
    six months before the Oklahoma City building exploded. 

    Fortier said McVeigh told him the innocent people who would die would
    be like the storm troopers in the "Star Wars" movie. "They may be
    individually innocent but because they were part of the evil empire,
    they were guilty by association," Fortier said, quoting McVeigh. 

    Like a commanding general in a war, McVeigh believed the losses were
    acceptable to create a greater good, says Norman Watt, a University of
    Denver clinical psychology professor. 

    "I think clearly his thinking at the point where he was doing this was
    that of a paranoid psychotic with Messianic ambitions and aspirations
    and probably the notion that 'I am going to be a hero that is going to
    be worshipped,"' Watt said. 

    As the prosecution has worked to create McVeigh the monster, McVeigh's
    attorneys have worked to soften the intense image created when he was
    escorted out of an Oklahoma jail in an orange jumpsuit. They granted a
    few media interviews in which McVeigh smiled and maintained his
    innocence. 
7.1961IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1591
    AP 25-May-1997 23:42 EDT   REF5140

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    France Left Wins First-Round Votes

    By CHRISTOPHER BURNS

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- Delivering a setback to President Jacques Chirac,
    France's leftist opposition capitalized on discontent over record
    unemployment to win the most votes in first-round parliamentary
    elections Sunday. 

    Chirac called the early elections, hoping to win a mandate from the
    nation's 39 million voters for more austerity and free-market reform.
    But France's 12.8 percent unemployment was an easy target for
    Socialists and Communists. 

    A leftist victory in the June 1 runoff would force Chirac to share
    power with a leftist prime minister and parliament, now dominated by
    Chirac's Conservatives. That would likely brake Chirac's policies,
    criticized as threatening France's cherished system of social and labor
    protection. 

    With 98 percent of the districts counted, Chirac's coalition had 36.5
    percent of the vote, including that of the independent right; the left
    -- Socialists, Communists, Ecologists and the independent left -- had
    43.1 percent; the far-right National Front 15 percent; and the extreme
    left 2.5 percent. The rest of the vote was scattered among a number of
    minor parties. Voter turnout was 68.3 percent. 

    Chirac called the vote 10 months early, betting he and Prime Minister
    Alain Juppe could maintain control of parliament before expected new
    budget cuts, needed this year to qualify for the "euro," the European
    single currency. 

    "The president has lost his bet," leftist ex-defense minister
    Jean-Pierre Chevenement said. 

    "The proposals the Socialists have made to this country have been
    heard," said Socialist leader Lionel Jospin, who favors government jobs
    programs for youth and a shorter work week -- with the same pay -- to
    spread jobs around. 

    Juppe responded that "an eclectic coalition" on the left, "whose
    program drags us 15 years back in time, will not bring about change." 

    The first round was "a warning, a manifestation of discontent," Justice
    Minister Jacques Toubon said on TF-1 television. 

    Exit polls suggested the left was within reach of taking a majority, if
    the Socialists and Communists could form a government. A governing
    coalition needs at least 289 seats out of the 577. 

    But only a handful of lawmakers won their seats outright with a
    majority of votes, promising a tough runoff for many. Anyone winning at
    least 12.5 percent is eligible for the second round. 

    The BVA polling agency estimated the Socialists would win between 255
    and 280 seats, while the Communists would take 17 to 23 seats. 

    BVA estimated Chirac's coalition would win a combined 250 to 270 seats,
    while the National Front would win between zero and two seats. 

    To govern, Jospin would likely have to ally his party with the
    Communists, who have expressed hostility toward the euro. The last
    Socialist-Communist government, formed in 1981, ended in dispute when
    it was forced to back off some leftist policies. 

    "There is the possibility of all the left-wing forces putting together
    a coalition to construct a majority," Communist leader Robert Hue said
    on France 2 television. 

    "We are not yet at the point where we can give details of any accord
    for a future government," he added. "First we have to win that
    majority." 

    The right will have to depend on support from among members of the
    far-right National Front, though its leader Jean-Marie Le Pen appeared
    to rule out his backing. 

    Chirac "threw himself personally into the battle. He is defeated. He
    must leave," Le Pen told his supporters. 

    Le Pen is hostile to the single currency, saying it sells out French
    sovereignty. Planned for 1999, the euro is part of an effort to turn
    the 15-nation European Union into an economic superpower. But it
    requires France to cut its budget deficit by the end of this year to
    qualify. 
7.1962IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1568
    AP 25-May-1997 23:31 EDT   REF5129

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Koreas Reach Agreement on Food Aid

    By JOHN LEICESTER

    Associated Press Writer

    BEIJING (AP) -- After painstaking negotiations, Red Cross officials
    from rival North and South Korea agreed Monday that 50,000 tons of
    vitally needed food aid would be sent to the hunger-stricken North, a
    Red Cross official said. 

    The food will be delivered by the end of July, said Johan Schaar, a Red
    Cross spokesman. 

    The North Koreans agreed to open up more delivery routes for the aid --
    three by railway and two through ports. 

    Negotiators for the two sides shook hands Monday morning and
    congratulated each other before entering a closed meeting. A signing
    ceremony was expected later Monday. 

    On Sunday, South Korean Red Cross secretary-general Lee Byung-woong
    told reporters that negotiators were "close to agreement in most of the
    content." 

    "There are small points to ... finalize" when the two sides consult
    again Monday, he said. 

    Lee refused to give details. But he said North Korea had reduced its
    surprise demand Saturday for 100,000 tons of aid, with delivery by the
    end of June. 

    The United Nations estimates 4.7 million North Koreans -- a fifth of
    the population -- risk starvation this summer without massive food aid.
    A European Union diplomat in Seoul said Saturday that no food is
    reaching remote areas where it is most needed. 

    North Korea's chronic food shortages -- a result of communist
    agricultural policies -- reached a crisis point after devastating
    floods hit the country's main agricultural regions in 1995 and 1996.
    The North admitted publicly that it needed help only after the 1995
    flood. 

    The Red Cross talks began Friday with the South Korean Red Cross
    offering 40,000 tons of grain which, it said, the North Koreans
    accepted. That would be twice the amount of food aid South Korea's Red
    Cross has sent the North during the past two years, according to
    international Red Cross figures. 

    An agreement would be "a fairly important step," said Schaar. He said
    the proposed amount of aid was "a very substantial increase in what
    South Korea has supplied before in kind." 

    The talks also snagged Saturday over delivery routes for the food and
    whether aid packages would carry the names of private South Korean
    donors, said South Korean Embassy spokesman Chang Moon-ik. 

    South Korea wants North Korea to open more ports and, more
    contentiously, to accept food through the heavily guarded zone that
    divides North and South. 

    Allowing South Korean trucks bearing marked boxes of aid to cross the
    zone would be a major humiliation for North Korea, which preaches
    self-reliance, and difficult to conceal from its people. 
7.1963IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:16129
    AP 25-May-1997 23:08 EDT   REF5118

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Rebels Topple Sierra Leone Gov't

    By CLARENCE ROY-MACAULAY

    Associated Press Writer

    FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) -- Rebellious soldiers toppled Sierra
    Leone's elected president in a bloody coup Sunday, and an army major
    said he was seizing power because the government failed to keep the
    peace following a five-year civil war. 

    Soldiers led by Maj. Johnny Paul Koroma took control of the legislature
    in this small, poverty-stricken West African country after heavy
    fighting and burned the national treasury, prompting President Ahmed
    Tejan Kabbah to flee by helicopter. 

    In the first nationwide statement since the fighting began, Koroma, who
    was not widely known before the coup, said in a radio broadcast that he
    had assumed control of Sierra Leone and was inviting an important rebel
    leader to join his government. 

    The coup comes six months after the civilian government signed a peace
    accord with rebels to end the civil war. In recent weeks, however, at
    least some rebel factions had resumed fighting, leading to criticism
    that government neglect had helped revive the violence. 

    "As custodians of state security and defenders of the constitution (we)
    have today decided to overthrow the Sierra Leone Peoples Party
    government," Koroma said, "because of their failure to consolidate the
    claims achieved by the brokers of peace." 

    He accused Kabbah's government of being "nurtured on tribal and
    sectional conflict" and said poor conditions for lower-ranking soldiers
    also helped spark the takeover. 

    However, the country's ambassador to the United States, John Leigh,
    said the coup leaders were using the peace issue as a "pretext" and
    accused them of being out to "line their pockets." 

    He said said from Washington in an interview on CNN Sunday night that
    lawlessness was rampant across the country. "It's going to bring more
    hardship and difficulty to the country, and that is not the way to make
    change." 

    The coup began at dawn when mutinous troops in pickup trucks broke open
    the gates of Freetown's maximum security prison, freeing hundreds of
    prisoners, including some charged in alleged coup plots against Kabbah. 

    The troops then took over the national assembly after clashing with
    Nigerian troops who were stationed in the capital Freetown to help
    defend the civilian government against rebels, witnesses said. 

    Gun and mortar fire was heard throughout the capital. The rebels
    claimed control over the legislature and said they had burned down the
    national Treasury by nightfall. 

    President Kabbah fled to neighboring Conakry, Guinea, the Guinean
    newspaper L'Independante said. 

    Stray fire, including rocket-propelled grenades and mortars, hit the
    U.S. Embassy, 200 yards from the assembly building, according to a
    Marine guard reached by telephone. 

    The building suffered some damage but there were no casualties, said
    the guard speaking on condition of anonymity. 

    The State Department said two Americans were injured when their home
    was looted. There was no word on their names or injuries. There were no
    other reports of injured foreigners. 

    Late Sunday, national radio announced a dusk-to-dawn curfew and said
    the country's borders had been closed. Freetown's airport also was
    shut. 

    In Washington, the White House said the United States was ready to
    evacuate Americans if necessary. An estimated 400 American citizens
    living in Sierra Leone were urged to remain indoors, White House
    spokesman Barry Toiv said. 

    "We are concerned by the threat not only to civilians but also to the
    democratic process in Sierra Leone," Toiv said. 

    In his broadcast, Koroma repeated calls for all officers above the rank
    of lieutenant colonel to immediately report to military headquarters. 

    Freetown's Connaught Hospital reported four dead and 21 injured midday,
    but said further casualties were expected. 

    Residents said they were not shocked. 

    "Things had been brewing for some time," said a woman who lived near
    Kabbah, speaking on condition of anonymity. "Everyone seems mute ...
    we're just sitting tight." 

    There was looting in the well-to-do Wilkinson Road area. Mutinous
    troops targeted the homes of Freetown's Lebanese community. 

    In his broadcast, Maj. Koroma invited Foday Sankoh, the leader of the
    Revolutionary United Front that waged the bloody civil war, to join his
    government. Sankoh was being held in a Nigerian jail on arms smuggling
    charges and Koroma appealed to that country to release him. 

    Another coup spokesman, Capt. Paul Thomas, said private radio stations
    had been ordered closed and called on all foreign troops in Sierra
    Leone to return to posts. 

    The Nigerian troops are in Sierra Leone as part of a defense pact
    between the two countries to fend off rebel attacks. 

    There are also substantial contingents of troops from other west
    African nations stationed in Freetown, poised to go into neighboring
    Liberia, where a fragile peace is holding after years of civil war. 

    Kabbah, who was elected in February 1996 after five years of military
    rule, has been struggling to bring disgruntled soldiers into line, many
    of whom are angry that he has signed a peace accord last November with
    rebels. 

    The civil war had left at least 10,000 people dead and nearly a third
    of 4.5 million Sierra Leonians homeless. 

    This was the third coup since 1992, when Capt. Valentine Strasser took
    over. He promised democratic elections in February, 1996; when he
    looked ready to renege, Gen. Julius Maada Bio launched a coup, setting
    the stage for Kabbah's election. 
7.1964IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1655
    AP 25-May-1997 22:25 EDT   REF5066

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pacific States Allege Food Dumping

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- New Zealand and Australia have been
    dumping inferior and damaged foodstuffs into South Pacific island
    states, the South Pacific Commission claims in a report. 

    It says fatty mutton and lamb and out-of-date and damaged products such
    as canned milk and beans, are being sold cheaply at supermarkets and
    small stores in the Pacific Islands. 

    The commission, a New Caledonian-based watchdog group, is investigating
    complaints that New Zealand and, to a lesser extent, Australia are
    using the Pacific as a dumping ground for foods not wanted at home. 

    It warns such poor quality foods could seriously affect consumer health
    in the markets involved. 

    The commission said it had heard many complaints that the cheap
    products and mutton flaps were unsuitable for consumption and were a
    health hazard. 

    Mutton and lamb flaps are a mostly fatty cut of meat from the
    hindquarter of the sheep or lamb. If not exported, they are usually
    thrown away. 

    Eating mutton and lamb flaps contributes to heart disease, a common
    condition in the Pacific Islands that health officials are struggling
    to contain. 

    Bob Hughes, a commission nutritionist and epidemiologist, said most of
    the meat sold in the islands was from New Zealand and Australia. 

    The countries of greatest concern were Papua New Guinea and Tonga. 

    "These sorts of issues raise implications about how New Zealand and
    Australia treat (their) closest neighbors; like a dumping ground for
    poor-selling or surplus foods," he said. 

    The chief executive officer of New Zealand's Meat Producers Board, Neil
    Taylor, said that companies exporting meat were required to examine it
    before sending out shipments. 

    'I'd be very surprised if such inferior meat had been sent to the
    islands," he said. 'Sure they (flaps) are cheap but in some markets
    they serve a particular purpose and are seen as good quality." 

    His office had not received any complaints. 

    Some meat and food product exporters suggested that if there were
    inferior items sold in the lands the problem rested with the agents
    acting between the countries. 
7.1965IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1658
    AP 25-May-1997 20:47 EDT   REF5507

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Albania Police Attack Hospital

    By ALISON SMALE

    Associated Press Writer

    TIRANA, Albania (AP) -- Members of a special police force attacked a
    Tirana military hospital with armored vehicles Sunday to avenge the
    death of a colleague who died at the facility, witnesses said. Two
    staff members were injured. 

    Scores of men rampaged through the hospital after arriving in two
    armored personnel carriers, hospital staff members said. During the
    melee, the men condemned the staff for its neglect, they said. 

    Two men who injured in the assault, including the deputy director of
    the hospital, the Defense Ministry said in a statement read on
    state-run television. 

    The attack came two days after five policemen were killed during
    clashes with residents in the central Albanian town of Cerrik. 

    A sixth man died from head wounds after he and 15 other injured
    policemen were admitted to the military hospital for treatment, said a
    doctor at the hospital who spoke on condition of anonymity. 

    Sunday's attack illustrates the fear that persists in the Balkan nation
    weeks after a nationwide rebellion against President Sali Berisha that
    left 500 people dead. The uprising was triggered by the collapse of
    pyramid schemes in which many Albanians had sunk their life savings. 

    The rebellion has simmered, but large swaths of the country remain
    under the control of gangs armed with some of the hundreds of thousands
    of guns that were ransacked from state armories during the revolt. 

    Also Sunday, Berisha refused to sign a request from caretaker Premier
    Bashkim Fino to lift the overnight curfew and other measures imposed
    during the state of emergency in early March. 

    Berisha said that he was not authorized to sign such a measure.
    Parliament would have to approve it, the president said in a statement.

    In Rome, Italian newspapers reported Sunday said the Italy's foreign
    ministry was preparing to replace Rome's ambassador in Tirana after an
    eavesdropped conversation suggested Italian interference in Albanian
    politics. 

    Italian Defense Minister Beniamino Andreatta said Saturday the flap
    over Ambassador Paolo Foresti would not affect Italy's leadership of
    the 6,000-man European force in Albania. 

    The eight-nation force is trying to guarantee the safe delivery of aid
    supplies to destitute Albanians and help restore order in advance of
    June 29 elections. 
7.1966IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:1652
    RTw  26-May-97 06:22    

    Cathay Pacific cancels 18 flights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    HONG KONG, May 26 (Reuter) - Hong Kong's flag carrier Cathay Pacific
    Airways Ltd said it cancelled 18 flights on Monday after grounding all
    11 of its Airbus Industrie A330-300 aircraft on concerns over engine
    safety. 

    "Due to the current reliability problems of the Rolls-Royce Trent 700
    engine and subsequent suspension of our A330-300 services, Cathay
    Pacific regrets that 18 services will be cancelled today," the airline
    said in a statement. 

    The cancellations affected flights to Hong Kong from London and Zurich,
    flights from Hong Kong to Perth and Frankfurt, and round-trips between
    Hong Kong and Melbourne, Taipei, Tokyo, Osaka, Bangkok, Singapore and
    Denpasar, the airline said. 

    Passengers would be put on other flights wherever possible, it added. 

    The airline cancelled 18 flights on Sunday and 18 flights on Saturday.
    The cancellations forced 81 people to stay at hotels in cities around
    the airline's network on Sunday night, it said. 

    A Cathay Pacific spokesman earlier told government radio it would take
    about a week for the airline to get back on schedule. 

    "We don't have a definitive date yet. But it is probably in a week," he
    said. 

    But he said it would take much longer to resolve the engine fault that
    has also plagued Cathay Pacific' sister airline Hong Kong Dragon
    Airlines Ltd (Dragonair) and prompted the two carriers to ground their
    A330-300 fleets. 

    Dragonair operates four Airbus A330-300s with Trent 700 engines. 

    The groundings on Saturday followed an emergency landing by a Dragonair
    A330-300 at Subic Bay in the Philippines on Friday after the plane
    developed trouble in one of its two Rolls-Royce Trent 700 engines en
    route from Hong Kong to Kota Kinabalu in Malaysia. 

    It was the fifth time since November a Cathay Pacific or Dragonair
    A330-300 had made a single-engine landing. 

    Rolls-Royce said on Friday gearbox bearings were to blame for the
    problems with the Trent 700s, which were introduced in March 1995. 

    REUTER
7.1967IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:16108
    RTw  26-May-97 03:43    

    FEATURE-Big Brother watches over British villages

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Paul Majendie 

    LENHAM, England, May 26 (Reuter) - Big Brother is watching over the
    "Garden of England" and the locals are delighted. 

    For the Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) revolution that helped to
    transform Britain's crime-ridden inner cities has now hit the
    countryside. 

    Rural bliss had become a myth in Lenham, a 12th century village
    clustered round a picturesque main square and churchyard. 

    With the cost-cutting departure of the village "bobby on the beat" in
    1993, crime soared in this backwater of Kent, known as the "Garden of
    England" because of its hop farms, vineyards and blossom-filled
    orchards. 

    No shop was safe. The post office, antique shop, newsagent, chemist,
    pub and greengrocer were all smashed into and robbed. 

    Two cars were stolen every week from the village square, one broken
    into every day. Drug peddlers openly dealt in the street. 

    Old people in a village where one in four of the 2,000 residents are
    pensioners were afraid to go out. 

    Parish council chairman Derek Haselup decided enough was enough. 

    ELECTRONIC EYE REPLACES NOSY NEIGHBOURS 

    He squeezed 8,000 pounds ($13,120) from the borough council and then
    raised almost 10,000 pounds from local industry, business and residents
    to set up two remote-controlled cameras to watch over the village. 

    "Much of the crime has now simply stopped," said Haselup, surveying the
    tranquil square on a sunny spring day. For the electronic eye has
    replaced the twitching lace curtains of yesteryear's nosy neighbour. 

    "Car stealing has stopped, break-ins are extremely rare. The drug
    dealers have vanished. People now go out with confidence," he said
    beneath the all-seeing eye of the village protector. 

    The nerve centre of the surveillance operation is the linen room of the
    Dog and Bear hotel where the cameras are manned by village volunteers. 

    They have a direct line to the police and Haselup, stressing they are
    not vigilantes, said: "We are totally opposed to civilians taking the
    law in their own hands." 

    The move has put a smile back on the faces of villagers. 

    Sheila Hedges at the Dog and Bear recalls the bad old days: "We rely on
    businessmen for much of our trade. One managing director was so livid
    when his firm lost two cars in our car park in one week. We lost the
    business." 

    "Our fruit machines in the bar were forever being broken into. It was
    disgusting. Now people are delighted that something has been done at
    last," she said. 

    Civil rights campaigners say the surveillance snoops are an unwarranted
    intrusion into privacy. 

    But Haselup said: "The tapes are kept for a month and then wiped. We
    have a very strict code of practice. This is overt, not covert." 

    The council is now busy fund-raising for two more cameras so that no
    corner of the churchyard or square is left unwatched. 

    Security experts reckon that up to 250,000 surveillance cameras will be
    installed across Britain by the year 2000 in an echo of George Orwell's
    novel "1984" when Big Brother kept a wary eye on the populace. 

    STREET SURVEILLANCE DOES NOT WORRY BRITONS 

    Britons have a relaxed attitude to CCTV. A Home Office (interior
    ministry) poll showed only six percent disapproved of surveillance
    cameras. 

    One CCTV image is seared on the national consciousness. Few will forget
    the sight in a Liverpool shopping mall of trusting toddler James Bulger
    being led away to his death by his two 10-year-old killers. 

    The Irish guerrilla bombers of the luxury store Harrods were caught on
    camera. A teenage gang who raped an Austrian tourist in London were
    captured on film. 

    Police hail CCTV as an effective crime-fighting tool. Suspects
    confronted by the video evidence usually plead guilty. 

    One chief constable said it was like having 20 police officers on duty
    24 hours a day without meal breaks, holidays and sick leave.

    And from city ghettos to Lenham's tranquil village square, street
    surveillance does not worry the British as much as it does other
    Europeans, said Geoff Sullivan, professor of computational vision at
    Reading University. 

    "You don't see so many cameras in Germany. In France they are strict
    rules about what can be recorded and stored.

    RUETER
7.1968IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 11:16108
    RTw  26-May-97 03:15    

    FEATURE - Irish PM Bruton fights to keep his job

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Andrew Hill 

    DUBLIN, May 26 (Reuter) - John Bruton became prime minister of Ireland
    when the job fell into his lap. Now he is fighting to be the first
    premier in almost 30 years to keep the job. 

    Bertie Ahern thinks the job should have fallen into his lap. Now he is
    hoping that history is on his side and that voters will dump Bruton in
    a general election on June 6. 

    Opinion polls say they will. The latest says Ireland's habit of
    rejecting incumbent governments will repeat itself when voters choose
    who to lead them into European economic and monetary union (EMU) and
    the new millennium. 

    According to the polls, Bruton's three-party coalition, a marriage of
    centrist and left-leaning parties, is as much as 12 points behind the
    rival coalition of Ahern's Fianna Fail and its conservative allies, the
    Progressive Democrats of Mary Harney. 

    They all point to Fianna Fail recapturing the leadership of the nation
    that it lost in November 1994 when the government of former prime
    minister Albert Reynolds collapsed after the Labour Party withdrew its
    support. 

    LITTLE SEEN DIVIDING RIVALS 

    Little that is evident separates the two coalition groups. "Foreigners
    are always struck by how alike Irish political parties are. It's often
    more a question of personalities," one European diplomat said. 

    Job creation, a crackdown on crime and drugs and moves to lift the
    weight of taxation from those enjoying Ireland's economic boom are
    goals of both the government and opposition. Only the ways to reach
    those goals separate them. 

    "In terms of broad macro-economic policy, there is remarkably little
    difference between the major protagonists," said Dan McLaughlin, chief
    economist at Riada stockbrokers. 

    In terms of leaders, the poll pits Bruton, the dapper son of a wealthy
    farmer in his trademark double-breasted suit, against the more
    emotional and pugnacious Ahern. 

    Bruton, 50, is being projected by his supporters as a "safe pair of
    hands." Ahern's media aides present him as a man of the people in touch
    with small farmers and business. His campaign slogan is "People before
    politics." 

    Behind Ahern is the untried Mary Harney, a fiscally conservative and
    outspoken woman who is said by many of her rivals to be the best
    speaker in parliament. 

    Bruton's main ally is Labour Party leader Dick Spring, the tall,
    moustachioed foreign minister who has guided successive governments
    through a Northern Ireland peace process, a restatement of Irish
    neutrality and committed membership of the European Union. 

    Spring's switch of support to Bruton's Fine Gael in 1994 cheated then
    finance minister Ahern of the chance of succeeding Reynolds and
    becoming one of the youngest Irish leaders. 

    It delivered the prize of the premiership to Bruton, who swiftly
    cobbled together an alliance with Labour and the small Democratic Left
    party to govern. 

    Labour, which has 32 seats in parliament, is said by the polls to be
    the party most likely to lose votes and influence in the
    proportional-representation election. 

    Some polls say Labour could lose as many as 10 seats and cease to hold
    the balance of power. 

    "I don't accept that," said Spring, dubbed "Tricky Dicky" by Fianna
    Fail for pulling the plug on the Reynolds government. 

    "We will defy the pundits in this election and come back very
    strongly." 

    PAYMENTS TRIBUNAL HURTS FINE GAEL 

    The popularity of Bruton's government has declined since a tribunal
    began investigating bizarre payments to politicians by Irish
    businessman Ben Dunne. 

    There has been no suggestion that Dunne was buying political favours --
    he handed out cash to every major political party over a period of
    several years -- but Bruton's party seems to have suffered the fallout. 

    One of his brightest stars, Michael Lowry, resigned as transport
    minister last year after admitting that Dunne had paid for the 250,000
    pound ($377,000) renovation of his home. 

    Dunne admitted that he gave 1.3 million pounds to Fianna Fail's four
    times ex-prime minister Charles Haughey but the allegations do not
    appear to have hurt Ahern, the polls say. 

    After two years in opposition, snapping at the government's heels at
    every occasion, Ahern is said by aides to be ready to rule with Harney
    in an untried centre-right coalition. 

    REUTER
7.1969IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 12:58102
7.1970IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0055
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                             
    Mystery illness kills Blue Peter elephant
    
    By Jessica Berry 
    
    THE first female Asian elephant to be born in captivity in Britain died
    at Chester Zoo yesterday after a mysterious illness.
                                
    Kahra, who achieved celebrity after Blue Peter viewers were asked to
    choose her name, will be mourned by many children. Callers to the zoo
    yesterday heard from the answering machine: "All those who knew or
    worked with Kahra are devastated with the news of the loss of this
    wonderful animal. In her short life she has been a wonderful ambassador
    for her species and will be greatly missed."
                                
    The 15-month-old elephant had been refusing to eat for several days. On
    Wednesday she was taken to Liverpool University's Leahurst Animal
    Hospital.
                                
    Kahra died weighing just 800lb, far from the 3.5 tons she would have
    reached as an adult. The zoo's spokesman, Pat Kade, said: "She was only
    taking milk. In fact she should have been weaned from milk some weeks
    ago."
                                
    The elephant returned to the zoo on Thursday looking better but shortly
    afterwards collapsed. Neither her team of vets nor personal keepers
    could get her on her feet.
                                
    "All those who knew and worked with her are very upset," said Ms Kade.
    "She was hand-reared from birth and her keepers had worked with her 24
    hours a day from the day she was born. She was extremely popular with
    visitors and she will be missed by us all." A post-mortem examination
    is to held.
                                
    The zoo said that Kahra had been one of its main attractions. She was a
    mischievous elephant and would get her trunk into anything. Earlier
    this year she had to undergo surgery to remove a stone.
                                
    Her first weeks were difficult as she had to be taken away from her
    mother who was too aggressive. Early on she was reared by other female
    elephants. This is a natural step, according to Ms Kade, as the
    elephant kingdom is a very matriarchal society.
                                
    Male elephants do not look after their young. They prefer to go hunting
    and just return to mate.
                                
    Chester Zoo, where the main emphasis is on conservational breeding, is
    the first zoo in Britain to have successfully raised Asian elephants.
    Nearly half the animals there are listed as vulnerable or critically
    endangered.
                                
    There is, however, some good news for elephant-lovers. Thi-Hi-Way,
    Kahra's mother, is pregnant again - and in Belfast Zoo an Asian female
    elephant has just been born.
7.1971IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0249
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                                           
    'Life as normal' says family as abortion case continues
    
    By Sandra Barwick 
    
    A WOMAN whose estranged husband is taking legal action to prevent her
    having an abortion went for a stroll in the sunshine yesterday
    determined to lead "as normal a life as possible".
                                                                      
    Lynne Kelly, 21, smiled but said nothing when asked how she felt. Mrs
    Kelly was with her parents and her 18-month-old daughter Hazel. She
    returned to her parents' home in Edinburgh at the weekend, after
    leaving Scotland for an unknown address in England several days ago to
    avoid the pressure of publicity.
                                                                      
    Her father, Mr Falconer, 42, said that his daughter was "as well as can
    be expected". He added: "We have decided we are not going to run away
    and hide and that's it. Today my family will be going about their
    normal business."
                                                                      
    Mr Falconer said none of the family could comment until the case was
    decided. "I have never been through anything like this before and I
    hope I never will again."
                                                                      
    Her husband James, 28, a roofer from Inverkeithing in Fife, has been
    given legal permission to appeal to the House of Lords in an attempt to
    stop the abortion. Mrs Kelly sought a termination 11 days ago. During
    the case, courts have heard that Mr Kelly was convicted of assaulting
    his wife and threw her out of the marital home.                   
    
    Tomorrow the Court of Session will decide whether the House of Lords
    can deal with the matter in time. The pregnancy has reached a critical
    stage as far as abortion is concerned. Mrs Kelly, who is now 12 to 14
    weeks pregnant, faces a delay of up to two further weeks if an appeal
    to the Lords goes ahead.
                                                                      
    She may be faced with a long and painful termination by induced labour
    because of the legal delays. Relatively rapid abortion is possible in
    the earlier part of pregnancy, but after 15 weeks it is usually
    considered safest to terminate a pregnancy by inducing an early labour.
                                                                      
    It can take between 12 and 36 hours, requiring painkillers, and a
    hospital stay may be required for a further day or two for monitoring
    in case of complications. Prof Jack Scarisbrick, chairman of Life,
    which campaigns against abortion, said yesterday: "The trauma for her
    afterwards will be worse - the bonding between mother and the child has
    become more developed, and she knows more about the child. The whole
    story is so sad. We are begging her to talk to a Life counsellor."
7.1972IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0342
7.1973IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0552
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                
    Five hurt at holiday fun day
    
    By Jessica Berry 
    
    FOUR soldiers and a civilian were injured yesterday in two separate
    accidents at a family "fun day" event.
                     
    In the first incident, a private was seriously hurt when a vehicle hit
    an Army parachute slide at Ayr racecourse. Scaffolding and support
    wires crashed to the ground. Pte Andrew Nicol, who had been standing at
    the top of the 40ft slide, was taken to Ayr hospital with severe head
    and abdominal injuries. A second soldier, Pte Graeme McBride, received
    minor injuries after being struck by scaffolding. The civilian, from
    Kilmarnock, suffered a shoulder and arm injury when he fell 10 feet
    from the slide. 
                     
    Later, two members of the Army's Blue Arrow motorcycle team were
    injured during their display. Pte Colin Wilson, 19, was struck by a
    wheel when he failed to roll out of the way of an oncoming motorcycle.
    He is in a stable condition at Ayr hospital with head and neck
    injuries. The motorcyclist, L/Cpl Alistair Gill, 35, was treated for a
    minor ankle injury and later released.
                     
    The four soldiers were taking part in the displays under an initiative
    called Keeping the Army in the Public Eye. The Army is to hold an
    inquiry into the incidents, alongside that of the Health and Safety
    Executive.
                     
    The Bank Holiday brought a spate of accidents yesterday. A rock climber
    fell 200 feet to her death from a cliff on the north Cornish coast near
    St Ives. A Royal Navy helicopter crew found the body of the woman, who
    has not been named, floating 500 yards out to sea.
                     
    On the A382 in Devon a motorcyclist was killed in a head-on collision
    and a rock climber was seriously injured when he fell 100 feet down a
    cliff face near Ballycastle on the Antrim coast in Northern Ireland.
                     
    A 26-year-old man was still in a critical condition last night after
    being thrown off a revolving fair ride on Saturday in the County Antrim
    seaside resort of Portrush.
                     
    Adnan Arif, 12, was in a stable condition in intensive care at
    Addenbrooke's hospital, Cambridge, yesterday with serious head injuries
    after a Ford Transit van with 15 members of his family overturned on
    the M11. 
                     
    The AA said no major traffic jams were reported yesterday. "Warm but
    pleasant weather has prevented people from rushing out. As it is half
    term, we don't expect too many delays at the end of the Bank Holiday,"
    a spokesman said.
7.1974IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0628
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                    
    Josie gives new clues to murders
    
    
    
    A NINE-year-old girl who survived an attack in which her mother and
    sister were murdered has given detectives new information about the
    killings.
                                              
    Officers have obtained more details from Josie Russell, about the
    apparently motiveless attack at Chillenden, Kent, last July. Her mother
    Lin, 45, and sister Megan, six, died.
                                              
    Josie, who now lives with her father, Dr Shaun Russell, in north Wales,
    was questioned by two Kent officers. Dr Russell said: "They were
    excited by what she had to tell them. I think it is a matter of good
    old-style police investigating, which is going on long-term. Talking to
    Josie, they do seem to have found things to throw light on what
    happened at the time, to give them new lines of inquiry. But I don't
    inquire too deeply because there will be strategic things they do not
    wish to divulge."
                                              
    Dr Russell said it had been "the 100 per cent right decision" to return
    from Kent to north Wales, where they had lived previously. "Everything
    is back to normal in terms of Josie being happily settled and doing
    well in school," he said. "We are looking forward to getting her back
    completely to normal as soon as possible."
7.1975IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0867
7.1976IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:0933
7.1977IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1047
7.1978IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1142
7.1979IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1227
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                                      
    National went ahead because bomb threat was untrue
                  
    POLICE yesterday defended their decision to allow the rescheduled Grand
    National to go ahead last month after an IRA coded bomb warning was
    received.
                          
    Merseyside police said that two calls were made before the race on
    April 7, one a hoax. The coded bomb warning was found to be untrue. A
    spokesman said: "One threatening phone call, using an authenticated
    codeword, was received.
                          
    "After assessing and evaluating the information given, it became
    apparent that the threat was untrue. A second telephone call was found
    to be a hoax."
                          
    The decision not to evacuate Aintree was the first time a major public
    event was allowed to proceed in the face of a recognised coded bomb
    threat. John Major was among the 20,000 people at the racecourse. A
    spokesman for Mr Major said: "He was kept fully up to date with the
    possible security risks of his visit." The spokesman said he had been
    determined to go to show support.
                          
    The race had been cancelled two days earlier after police received two
    warnings. The Home Office said police had operational responsibility
    for terrorist threats.
7.1980IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1329
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                         
    Cold virus helps to treat lung cancer
    
    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 
    
    A GENE therapy that uses viruses to attack cancer has shown promise in
    early trials on patients with lung, head and neck tumours for whom
    other treatment has failed.
    
    The most common flaw that allows cancer cells to divide and spread
    endlessly - it is present in more than half of all cancers - is in a
    gene known as p53, a tumour-suppressor gene.
    
    The new technique uses a type of cold germ called an adenovirus to
    import a normal version of the p53 gene into cancers. The approach,
    developed by the Texan company Introgen, brought tumour regression in
    patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. It was even more
    effective when used with the anti-cancer drug cisplatin.
    
    In a trial on 30 patients with head and neck cancers, the treatment
    showed no serious side-effects. In another advance, pilot trials of a
    genetic treatment for ovarian cancer show considerable promise. The
    treatment, developed at Stanford University, uses modified fragments of
    "anti-sense" DNA to turn off the production of a cancer cell protein.
    
    In the trials, tumours showed substantial shrinkage after the DNA
    material was injected intravenously.
    
7.1981IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1425
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                         
    MP's father electrocuted in farm pond
                                                             
    THE father of a Conservative MP was killed when he fell into an
    electrified pond at the weekend while attempting to save his dog. 
                                                         
    William Collins, 67, was pulled from the water by his gardener, but
    died before arriving at hospital. His son, Timothy is MP for
    Westmorland and Lonsdale. Police said they believe that an electric
    pump, installed in the pond the previous day, had faulty wiring.
                                                         
    When the gardener arrived for work at the farm in Epping, Essex, on
    Saturday he saw dead fish in the rubber-lined pond and reported it to
    Mr Collins, who said he would take a look.
                                                         
    He later found Mr Collins and the dead labrador dog in the water. A
    police spokesman said: "He got a shock as soon as he touched the water.
    It is possible his rubber boots saved his life. He then turned off the
    power before pulling Mr Collins to the side and calling for help."
                                                         
    Mr Collins, who remarried six months ago, owned and ran the Hobbs Cross
    equestrian centre and had recently opened a public golf course nearby.
    The Rev Peter Chapman, the village's priest, said: "He loved that old
    dog and wading in to save it was typical of the man."
7.1982IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1650
7.1983IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1752
7.1984IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:1986
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                     
    Iran reformer faces toughest test
    
    By Christopher Lockwood in Teheran 
    
    THE landslide victory for Iran's new president, Mohammed Khatami, was
    being seen yesterday as a massive protest vote against the stifling
    oppression of mullah rule.
                                           
    But the former culture minister who was dismissed for his supposed
    "liberalism" faces a titanic struggle if he is to change anything. Last
    night, it seemed that despite the voters' apparent wish for change it
    was unlikely that Iran's attitude towards its own people and the
    surrounding world was about to change dramatically.
                                           
    Though he has emerged as the representative of the modern, reforming
    face of Iranian politics, capturing two thirds of the votes in a record
    turn-out of 94 per cent, he will be pitted against the darker,
    "medieval" side of Iran's political establishment. It is deeply
    conservative in its religious outlook: isolationist, suspicious and
    subversive in its international relations; relentlessly repressive and
    interfering in its domestic policy.
                                           
    Old and new in Iran are engaged in a contest for dominance and, despite
    the scale of Mr Khatami's victory, most of the cards are still in the
    hands of the traditionalists. Though it has an elected parliament and
    an elected president, these are only part of the equation. The
    president plays clear second fiddle to the religious figure known
    simply as Rahbar, The Leader. Ayatollah Khomeini was the first Leader,
    a man of unquestioned religious authority. After his death in 1989, the
    mantle passed to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has become steadily more
    reactionary as he has got older.
                                           
    Under Iran's revolutionary Islamic constitution, his powers are
    immense. The Leader determines the broad lines of all government policy
    and appoints the senior members of the judiciary, the armed forces and
    the television and radio networks, as well as the powerful Council of
    Guardians, which vets all of parliament's legislation for Islamic
    correctness, and the Council of Expediency, which settle conflicts
    within the complex system.
                                           
    Iran's mullahs, based in the holy city of Qom, will be intensely
    reluctant to give up their privileges. Their faction is still the
    largest grouping in the Majlis, or Parliament.
                                           
    "Of course, there will be huge difficulties," said a long-standing
    political associate of Mr Khatami. "But Mr Khatami has the ideal
    credentials: he is a clergyman, descended from the line of the Prophet
    Mohammed. Yet he has studied abroad and understands that openness in
    both politics and economics is the only way forward for Iran. It is
    also, as everyone can now see, what people want."
                                           
    Perhaps the story that reflects best on Mr Khatami is that, in the
    early Eighties, he saved the game of chess. Though it was invented in
    ancient Persia, extremists attempted to ban the game, on the grounds
    that it was "un-Islamic". It was Mr Khatami who dared to seek a ruling
    from Ayatollah Khomeini, who, after much thought, declared that he saw
    no harm in the game. His supporters say, too, that during Mr Khatami's
    11 years as Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance, a job responsible
    for censorship among much else, the hand of censor rested a little more
    lightly than it does now.
                                           
    For the past eight years, the presidency has been held by Ali Akbar
    Hashemi Rafsanjani, reckoned to be the cleverest politician in Iran,
    and a popular reformist both economically and politically. Even Mr
    Khatami's closest supporters do not rate their man above him.
                                           
    Yet under Mr Rafsanjani's rule, while Iran has experienced a degree of
    economic liberalisation, it has yet to emerge from the moral
    inflexibilities of the seventh century in social affairs. Television,
    films, and newspapers are rigorously censored. Women must cover
    themselves form head to toe in dark cloth at all times. Alcohol is
    forbidden. It takes two to three years for a book to receive its
    imprimatur, usually after heavy editing. Television satellite dishes
    are banned. In the last year or so, the enforcement of all these edicts
    has been getting tougher.
                                           
    Mr Rafsanjani, though, apparently feels differently. Yesterday, he was
    in ebullient mood as he talked to foreign journalists for two hours. He
    suggested that women might now aspire to become government ministers,
    and even declared that it was time for Iran to consider permitting the
    formation of political parties.
                                           
    Mr Khatami and Mr Rafsanjani, in his new role as head of the Expediency
    Council, will form a powerful alliance.
7.1985IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:2157
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                    
    130 die in Indonesian riot blaze
    
    By Richard Savill, South East Asia Correspondent 
    
    POLICE in Indonesia were yesterday searching the burnt-out remains of a
    shopping mall in which at least 130 people died in the country's worst
    election violence for 30 years.
         
    Red Cross workers feared that more victims would be found in the ashes
    of the four-storey Mitra Plaza shopping mall, in Banjarmasin, on the
    island of Borneo. It was set ablaze by rioters on Friday, the last day
    of campaigning in this week's general election.
         
    Last night, rescue teams were unable to enter a store in the complex
    because it was too hot. Police said most of the victims appeared to be
    looters who had broken into the mall at the height of a riot that
    erupted after members of the Muslim-dominated United Development Party
    attacked supporters of the ruling Golkar party, accusing them of
    campaigning before the end of Friday prayers.
         
    Many of the bodies were charred beyond recognition. Witnesses said some
    of the dead still clung to what remained of goods they had pillaged
    from stores in the mall. The bodies were found in groups near what had
    been 
    
    The deaths came at the end of almost a month of campaigning that had
    provoked the worst election violence in Indonesia since the start of
    President Suharto's rule in 1966.
         
    The Golkar party, the president's political machine, is expected to
    secure an easy victory in the polls, which take place this Thursday
    after a five-day "cooling-off" period at the end of campaigning.
    Although the electoral process means that a Golkar victory is certain,
    the campaign itself has provided a platform for those disenchanted with
    President Suharto's autocratic rule. Much of the violence has been
    attributed to young people who feel alienated by the political system.
         
    While President Suharto, 75, has presided over impressive economic
    growth, critics say there is widespread corruption and a widening gap
    between rich and poor. There is also resentment at favours for the
    president's tycoon children. Golkar is aiming for a clear victory to
    consolidate its grip on the People's Consultative Assembly, the body
    that "elects" the president and vice-president.
         
    It is widely expected that President Suharto will be re-elected for a
    seventh term. His eldest daughter, Siti Hardianti Rukmana, or Tutut,
    48, one of seven deputy leaders of Golkar, is being tipped for the post
    of vice-president and many believe she may one day succeed her father.
         
    The woman who has become the figurehead of opposition in Indonesia,
    Megawati Sukarnoputri, daughter of founding president Sukarno, has been
    prevented from standing in the election. She has told her supporters to
    back the United Development Party, rather than the PDI party that she
    previously led before being ousted last year in a government-backed
    move.
7.1986IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:2288
    International News Electronic Telegraph Monday 26 May 1997 Issue 731
                                              
    Plea to save British nurses from execution
    
    By Barbie Dutter 
    
    A JUDGE in the trial of two British nurses accused of murdering an
    Australian colleague in Saudi Arabia has asked the victim's relatives
    to reconsider their demand for the death penalty.
                                                                   
    Lawyers acting for Deborah Parry and Lucille McLauchlan said last night
    that the family of Yvonne Gilford had been asked "to accept as a
    principle that it may be possible to reach a conciliatory settlement".
                                                                   
    A court official at the Al-Khobar Supreme Court said the evidence
    against the nurses was "compelling". He said that, if the women were
    convicted, a plea of clemency from the victim's family might be the
    only way for them to escape execution.
                                                                   
    Their trial was adjourned for three weeks after a short hearing
    yesterday. The nurses' legal team, from the law firm of Salah
    Al-Hejailan, said the delay would allow Miss Gilford's family to
    consider the court's request to reverse the demand for a death
    sentence. If found guilty, the British women could be beheaded in
    public.
                                                                   
    Under Islamic law in Saudi Arabia, the victim's family may demand the
    death penalty or grant mercy and accept "blood money" in lieu of
    execution. But shortly after the women's arrest in December, Miss
    Gilford's brother, Frank, said that he would not accept a monetary
    settlement even if the family decided on a plea of clemency.
                                                                   
    At the trial's opening last Monday, lawyers representing the dead
    woman's relatives demanded the death penalty if Miss Parry, 41, from
    Alton, Hants, and Miss McLauchlan, 31, from Dundee, were convicted.
    They deny murdering Miss Gilford at the King Fahd Military Medical
    Complex in Dhahran, where all three lived and worked. The body of Miss
    Gilford, 55, was found on Dec 11, stabbed four times, suffocated and
    beaten.
                                                                   
    The nurses arrived at court yesterday in two police vans. They were
    dressed in traditional black Saudi cloaks but were not wearing the iron
    shackles used for last week's sessions and which led to protests from
    human rights groups. They were led to a waiting room, where they
    conferred for 30 minutes with their British and Saudi lawyers before
    entering the courtroom.
                                                                   
    Their lawyers, who presented 18 pages of evidence and documents, said
    the women were concerned at the three-week delay and were impatient to
    give their account to the court. After the hearing, Mr Al-Hejailan said
    he was confident the women would escape execution. "The course of the
    trial may take a new direction."
                                                                   
    He said Miss Parry and Miss McLauchlan had been subjected to "strong
    psychological pressure to admit to the crime, including a promise to
    leave the country".
                                                                   
    Reports yesterday also stated that the women had been forced into
    making false confessions after being repeatedly assaulted and
    threatened with rape by Saudi policemen. They retracted their
    confessions to the killing soon after being charged with murder.
                                                                   
    Michael Dark, one of their four lawyers in Saudi Arabia, reportedly
    claimed that, after their arrest, they were alternately abused
    physically and offered clemency until they cracked. "There were no
    broken bones but they were slapped around, made to stand up for hours
    without sleep and the police trod on their feet," Mr Dark told The
    Sunday Times.
                                                                   
    It is understood that the women were reluctant to raise the allegations
    earlier for fear of upsetting the Saudi government. But a Saudi
    security official in Khobar denied the reports. "The women were not
    tortured," he said. "We did not force them into confessing. Coerced
    confessions are useless to us because they don't stand up in court."
                                                                   
    The Foreign Office said the women had made allegations about the
    treatment they received to British consular staff at the end of
    December. "On the second occasion that they were seen by our consul,
    they said their confession had been extracted from them," said a
    spokesman. "We took that up with the Saudi authorities and their
    lawyers. The Saudis conducted an investigation and stated there was no
    substance to them."
                                                                   
    The Foreign Office spokesman said: "The judges adjourned the trial for
    three weeks to permit further consultation with the family of the
    victim."
                                                                   
    The trial, which opened on May 19, was adjourned until June 15.
7.1987IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Mon May 26 1997 13:26196
    etcetera | Health Electronic Telegraph Saturday 24 May 1997 Issue 729
                                   
    Why I falsely accused my family
                                            
    Anna Hunter claimed she was abused as a child. In her first interview,
    she explains her troubled past to Cassandra Jardine
                                         
    TANIA Hunter sits on the floor of her drawing-room, passing me one
    family photograph after another. Most of them show her or her husband,
    Adrian, smiling proudly alongside their three children - Anna, Nicola
    and Ben. "Look at this one," she says, crisply. "We are all in Malta,
    including Anna. Yet Anna later claimed she had been left behind in
    England with her step-grandfather, tied to a cross in the garage and
    spattered with kittens' blood."
                                         
    Another photograph shows Anna at eight years old. It was at this point
    that her father was alleged to have encouraged her to abuse her
    two-year-old brother Ben with a toy screw-driver. Ben is not in the
    picture; he was not born until a year later.
                                         
    All the photographs have dates and captions on the back. "They are
    proof that my daughter was fantasising when she claimed to have been
    sexually abused by her father and step-grandfather," says Tania. "They
    have been shown to Northumberland Social Services, yet nothing makes
    any difference. As a family, we shall for ever be labelled - and I'm
    not having it."
                                         
    Tania Hunter's anger is typical of parents who feel they have been
    wrongly accused of sexual abuse "discovered" by alleged victims during
    psychotherapy. Since it was founded four years ago, the British False
    Memory Society has been fighting for recognition that suggestive
    therapeutic techniques and inflammatory books have caused some to
    "remember" abuse that never occurred. Against them are pitted
    organisations such as Action Against Abuse, committed to believing the
    victims and convinced that an iceberg of abuse may remain to be
    uncovered. 
                                         
    The acrimony between the two groups is intense. Last week, Lady Parker,
    and two others, resigned from the management council of Refuge, a
    charity for battered women. There had been complaints that her support
    for the British False Memory Society was inconsistent with work that
    can involve abused women and children. In short, it was not considered
    possible to have a foot in both camps.
                                         
    Yet if there is a single case in this country which clearly shows that
    accusations can be false, it is that of the Hunter family. Tania Hunter
    has evidence to prove her husband's innocence - he was alleged to have
    begun abusing Anna when she was 14 - and Anna herself has long since
    withdrawn all her allegations.
                                         
    It is rare for false memory victims to retract. Most sever relations
    with their families when they make charges. Once isolated, they are
    less likely to realise that "memories", which have become so real to
    them, are in fact figments of their imagination. 
                                         
    Tania and Adrian Hunter never allowed their daughter to reject them. At
    the time the allegations were pouring out, Anna was 22 and had been
    struggling with anorexia for five years. Worryingly thin, she was
    admitted to an adult psychiatric unit in Newcastle upon Tyne, where she
    was treated by a psychiatrist who believed that eating disorders could
    be an indication of sexual abuse.
                                         
    "We were visiting Anna every day," says Tania. "We have always been a
    very close family, so we didn't stop when she started to talk of sexual
    abuse."
                                         
    Five years on, Anna is still trying to conquer her anorexia. In between
    stays in a specialist unit, she shares a flat with her brother, Ben.
    Today, she and her sister Nicola, a law student, have driven to their
    parents' home for lunch. Small, slight and girlish for 27, Anna slips
    into the room looking painfully self-conscious.
                                         
    She is anxious to talk, eager to do what she can to make up for the
    havoc she has caused. "It has been bad for me, but it has been worse
    for them," she says, acknowledging that by her actions she has put
    strain on her parents' marriage and disrupted the lives of her brother
    and sister. In a small voice, she explains how the anorexia began while
    she was head girl of her boarding school, Badminton. "I wanted to get
    into Oxford, but I felt I didn't stand a chance.
                                         
    "Perhaps I used anorexia as an excuse. Also, my best friend was tall
    and thin and had boyfriends; I felt insecure about being short, and I
    thought boys would like me if I were petite."
                                         
    Anorexia became a test of self-control which persisted through her gap
    year and her time at Warwick University. When she graduated with a 2:1
    (amazing under the circumstances), it got worse. Looking back, Anna
    believes her parents "reacted as best they could". They tried to make
    her eat and found her counsellors, but once in the psychiatric
    hospital, she feels she came under irresistible influences.
                                         
    "I was with five other women having the same treatment. We egged each
    other on to say wilder and wilder things. I was reading about sexual
    abuse and I also used to drink heavily before the therapy because it
    made it easier for me to cry. It stopped me thinking of the
    consequences."
                                         
    Sex, she admits, was a delicate subject, but it was not her father or
    step-grandfather who had upset her. Only several years later, when Anna
    was sent to another psychiatrist, did she finally mention an unpleasant
    experience with a boy from a nearby school. "I worried about pregnancy;
    I felt guilty and embarrassed. But when I was undergoing therapy, I had
    found it easier to fantasise than talk of the real incident," she says
    sheepishly. "The crazy thing was that once I'd made the accusations,
    they wouldn't let me climb back down."
                                         
    Depressed and confused, she has made numerous attempts to kill herself,
    from which her watchful parents have rescued her time and again. Only
    gradually has she, through medication and constant care, regained a
    delicate psychological balance. "This eating disorder has become my way
    of life," she admits. "It seems so simple - just eat - but I cannot
    stop weighing myself six times a day. I am 27, I have never had a job
    and I have a mental health history.
                                         
    "It is hard for me to have a boyfriend when I can't go out for a meal.
    If I hadn't wasted all those years on false memories, I might now be
    leading a normal life." 
                                         
    We have been talking alone in the sitting room. When we rejoin the
    family, there is no disguising the tension. Nicky, who has an air of
    assurance that Anna lacks, had to come down from Oxford for a year
    partly because of what was happening at home. She reminds her sister
    that she could never sustain her accusations in front of the family. "I
    should have had the guts to ask you to come along to the sessions,"
    replies Anna, looking down forlornly at the Cup-a-Soup she is sipping
    from a teaspoon. 
                                         
    Anna's father, a shy, gentle man who took refuge in work while the
    dramas raged around him, worries that he reacted wrongly to Anna's
    problems. "The crisis with Anna coincided exactly with losses at
    Lloyd's, which made the bank foreclose on my business," he explains.
    "With three dependent children, I felt I should concentrate on earning
    money and leave Tania to fight on the emotional front. 
                                         
    "Perhaps social services would have understood me better if I had gone
    beating on their door, but I never felt the accusations had anything to
    do with me." Then one day, Tania spelt out what Anna was saying. "I
    remember sitting in the kitchen and bursting into tears for the first
    time in 35 years."
                                         
    Adrian, who now runs an electronics business, returns to musing over
    why Anna - his clever, imaginative, mercurial eldest child - developed
    her eating disorder. It may, he feels, even be his fault: Anna
    inherited his short stature and broad thighs, which made her unhappy as
    a teenager. Perhaps rivalry with her sister worried her, he speculates.
    He does not share Tania's worries that she might be to blame for not
    being sensitive enough to their daughter's feelings. Throughout, he
    feels his wife has been magnificent.
                                         
    Until the accusations disturbed her upper middle-class life, Tania was
    enjoying her status in the Newcastle smart set, as the wife of a Hunter
    of the Swan Hunter shipyard family. "I was running a home, sewing,
    seeing friends and working at the Citizens Advice Bureau. We had
    holidays, we gave dinner parties," she says wistfully.
                                         
    All that has changed. Because Ben was a minor at the time of the
    allegations, social services visited Tania in her spotless home and
    urged her to consider leaving Adrian. She was incensed. "I knew from
    the first that Adrian wasn't guilty. When you've lived with someone,
    you know these things: he's too kind and too lazy." She sighs. "Adrian
    felt his relationship with Anna shouldn't be affected, but when she was
    in hospital, I couldn't let her come home and be normal with us, and
    then go back and make more allegations."
                                         
    While he remained passive, she went on the attack against the social
    services. "I suppose I was difficult," she says, "but they seemed to
    believe everything Anna told them, without question. They even told me
    they expected Anna to retract. There seemed no point co-operating."
                                         
    She also took herself off to university, doing a BA in social science
    and an MA in cultural aspects of child abuse. She learnt that an
    incestuous family usually involves a bullying father, a weak mother and
    withdrawn children who fail at school. The Hunters do not fit that
    mould.
                                         
    Yet the social services still seemed to work from an assumption of
    guilt. A five-month informal investigation was followed by a formal
    investigation in 1992. In March 1995, Northumberland Social Services
    produced an official report saying that "there is a very high
    probability (but not an absolute certainty) that Anna was the victim of
    incest". 
                                         
    Tania was so enraged by this refusal to clear the family name that she
    asked Dr John Gwatkin, a former social worker who was joint chairman of
    the 1989 investigation into ritual satanic abuse in Nottinghamshire, to
    review the case. Refusing a fee, he concluded that Northumberland
    Social Services had started from an assumption of guilt and then had
    neither made a full family assessment nor held a formal case
    conference. He concluded that there was "not a shred of evidence" and
    recommended that the case be sent to the local government ombudsman.
                                         
    Eighteen months later, investigations are still under way. The findings
    may one day make it possible for Tania to work with children and they
    may remove the Hunter family from a register of unproved cases. But
    they cannot bring back the years Anna has lost in what Gwatkin
    describes as "a senseless nightmare".
7.1988IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 10:58106
    AP 27-May-1997 0:59 EDT   REF5418

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Tuesday, May 27, 1997
   
    CANADA-SALMON WAR 

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) -- The Canadian coast guard seized a
    third U.S. fishing boat as part of a get-tough policy adopted following
    the collapse of salmon treaty talks. Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister
    Lloyd Axworthy played down the seizures, saying that as soon as an
    "assessment and examination is complete, they will be released." The
    vessels allegedly failed to obey regulations requiring that they report
    their presence to Canadian authorities and haul in their fishing gear
    when entering Canadian waters. 
   
    CLINTON-NATO 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton is on his way to meet with allies
    in Paris, where he and Russian President Boris Yeltsin will sign a pact
    clearing the way for NATO to expand. The accord gives Russia a formal
    role in the alliance, but no veto power. Clinton also will travel to
    the Netherlands to meet European leaders and commemorate the 50th
    anniversary of the Marshall Plan. The $13 billion dollar aid package
    got Europe back on its feet after World War II. On his way home,
    Clinton will stop in London to meet with Britain's new prime minister,
    Tony Blair. 
   
    WEEDSTOCK 

    FERRYVILLE, Wis. (AP) -- Sixty people were arrested over the weekend at
    the eighth annual Weedstock Festival, a pro-marijuana event that police
    said caused less trouble than expected this year. Organizers said about
    3,500 people attended. Speakers urged the decriminalization of
    marijuana and regional bands played on despite scattered rain. Since
    Friday, police have made 42 drug arrests and 18 non-drug arrests. They
    also issued 76 traffic citations and 341 traffic warnings. Last year,
    130 people were arrested. 
   
    INTERNET PRIVACY 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Netscape Communications and other high-tech companies
    plan to propose a global standard to protect the privacy of World Wide
    Web users while sharpening the ability of marketers to target them. The
    companies planned to announce a common format that would enable Web
    surfers to stop personal information from being sent automatically from
    their personal computers to Web site operators. Netscape and two other
    Internet software companies said they would submit their proposal this
    week to the Worldwide Web Consortium, which sets Internet standards. 
   
    HIRING SURVEY 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- A new survey says job seekers will find the best
    opportunities in nine years this summer as employers look to add more
    workers in an increasingly tight labor market. The study being released
    by Manpower, the nation's largest temporary staffing firm, said 30
    percent of 16,000 companies surveyed plan to expand their work force in
    the July-August quarter. Only five percent said they expect to reduce
    their staff, while 65 percent either plan no changes or didn't know,
    the survey said. 
   
    U.S.-SIERRA LEONE 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. officials are condemning a military coup which
    overthrew Sierra Leone's first democratically elected government in
    thirty years. The coup unseated President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah, who
    reportedly fled to neighboring Guinea. Coup leader Maj. Johnny Paul
    Koroma said Kabbah's government had failed to live up to a peace
    treaty. Mutinous soldiers of Sierra Leone's army ravaged Freetown, the
    capital city. 
   
    IRAN-POLITICS 

    TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- The moderate cleric poised to become Iran's next
    president paid his respects to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and pledged
    to continue on the path of the late revolutionary leader. Mohammad
    Khatami, who won Iran's first free election since the 1979 revolution,
    entered the mausoleum housing Khomeini's remains and was welcomed by
    the late ruler's grandson, Hassan. Khatami's victory is seen as a
    signal for a milder form of Islam: He won nearly three times as many
    votes over his main rival, a hard-line cleric. Khatami's liberal views
    as Iran's culture minister suggests he would ease Islamic strictures on
    daily life. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was traded at 116.66 yen on the Tokyo foreign
    exchange market at 9 a.m. Tuesday, up 0.77 yen from late Monday. 
   
    BULLS-HEAT 

    MIAMI (AP) -- The Miami Heat avoided being swept in the Eastern
    Conference finals by defeating the Chicago Bulls 87-80. Alonzo Mourning
    had 18 points and 14 rebounds and Tim Hardaway scored 25 points. Game 5
    is Wednesday night in Chicago. 
   
    AVALANCHE-RED WINGS 

    DETROIT (AP) -- The Detroit Red Wings advance to the Stanley Cup finals
    with a 3-1 victory over the Colorado Avalanche. Martin Lapointe, Sergei
    Fedorov and Brendan Shanahan scored for the Wings, who outshot the
    Avalanche 42-16. Detroit opens the finals Saturday in Philadelphia
    against the Flyers. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.1989IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 10:5868
    RTw  26-May-97 16:30    

    Reuters World News Highlights

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    PARIS - The French franc, stocks and bonds reacted sharply to upset
    gains by the left in the first round of a parliamentary election, but
    prices steadied as domestic investors saw little scope for radical
    policy changes. 

    TOKYO - After hours of high seas stand-off and several minor
    collisions, Hong Kong and Taiwan abandoned their efforts to break
    through a Japanese coastguard cordon and land on the disputed islands
    in the East China Sea, a Japanese spokesman said 

    BEIJING - South Korea to send thousands of tonnes of food aid to the
    famine-threatened North under the first direct agreement between the
    Red Cross societies of the Cold War rivals in more than a decade. 

    ANKARA - Secularist army commanders are expected to pile more pressure
    on Turkey's Islamist Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan, demanding that
    he approve the expulsion of army of officers suspected of Islamist
    tendencies. 

    ALMATY - The United Nations refugee agency played down fears that
    recent territorial gains by the Islamic Taleban militia in northern
    Afghanistan might trigger an exodus of refugees to former Soviet
    republics in Central Asia. 

    PARIS - Russian President Boris Yeltsin arrived in Paris for the
    signing of a founding act between Moscow and NATO intended to open the
    way to an eastward expansion of the Atlantic alliance. 

    KINSHASA - Self-proclaimed president Laurent Kabila's government banned
    demonstrations and political party activity in the Democratic Republic
    of Congo's capital Kinshasa until further notice, citing a need for
    security. 

    FREETOWN - Sierra Leone's new military rulers said they planned to
    bring rebels of the Revolutionary United Front into the government to
    consolidate an elusive peace in the country's civil war. 

    WARSAW - Poland's rightist opposition failed to block a new
    constitution backed by the ruling ex-communists, but it hailed the
    narrow verdict in the referendum as a boost for its election hopes. 

    Exit polls, released after Sunday's nationwide vote, showed 56.8
    percent backed the constitution and 43.2 percent opposed it. 

    BRATISLAVA - Slovakia's widely boycotted weekend referendum was
    declared officially void and a member of the Central Referendum
    Committee denounced ballot papers distributed by the Interior Ministry
    as a "massive swindle." 

    DUBLIN - Northern Ireland Protestant extremists claimed responsibility
    for an abortive bomb attack on an Irish town and threatened to carry
    out more no-warning bombings against the Dublin government. 

    MANILA - At least 29 people died as torrential rains battered the
    Philippines, flooding thousands of homes and bringing the capital
    Manila to a standstill. 

    NOUAKCHOTT - More than 60 monk seals, one of the world's most
    endangered species, have been killed by toxic algae off Mauritania's
    Atlantic coast in the past 10 days, Spanish researchers said. 

    REUTER
7.1990IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0196
7.1991IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0231
    AP 26-May-1997 23:10 EDT   REF5256

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    60 Arrested at 'Weedstock' Festival

    FERRYVILLE, Wis. (AP) -- Sixty people were arrested over the weekend at
    the eighth annual Weedstock Festival, a pro-marijuana event that police
    said caused less trouble than expected this year. 

    "I think it went very smoothly," Sheriff William Fillbach said. "If
    they took over the town or something, you could have had a mess." 

    Organizers said about 3,500 people attended. 

    From Friday to Monday night, police made 42 drug arrests and 18
    non-drug arrests. They also issued 76 traffic citations and 341 traffic
    warnings. Last year, 130 people were arrested. 

    Over the weekend, a 20-year-old man was hospitalized after he was
    beaten. He told authorities he had been using marijuana and
    amphetamines since Friday and did not know or remember his assailants. 

    A 17-year-old boy was hospitalized after police saw him trying to cross
    a highway. Officers said he told them he had sprayed himself with
    liquid LSD. They said he was disoriented and combative when officers
    stopped him. 

    Speakers addressed the crowd on decriminalizing marijuana and regional
    bands played on despite scattered rain that turned 80 acres of farm
    fields into muddy bogs. 
7.1992IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0271
    AP 26-May-1997 21:23 EDT   REF5530

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Confederate Dead Get Late Graves

    By ALLEN G. BREED

    Associated Press Writer

    NANCY, Ky. (AP) -- For 135 years, the bodies of Sgt. William Thomas
    Wilson and scores of his Confederate comrades lay unmarked in a mass
    grave on the battlefield where they fell. Just down the road, their
    Union foes lay buried in a national cemetery beneath orderly rows of
    marble headstones. 

    On Memorial Day, descendants of the more than 140 Confederates came to
    dedicate the cemetery -- and the rows of white headstones now marking
    their graves. 

    "It finally puts my mind at ease that he was somebody and he stood up
    for what he believed in," said Mary Sue Wright, of Iuka, Miss.,
    Wilson's great-great-granddaughter. 

    The North called it the Battle of Mill Springs. The South knew it as as
    the Battle of Fishing Creek. 

    Gen. Felix Zollicoffer of Tennessee decided to surprise Union forces on
    the morning of Jan. 19, 1862. He rode ahead to ensure his troops did
    not fire on each other. 

    But the surprise was lost when Zollicoffer encountered a Union officer
    in the road. Neither recognized the other as the enemy, but
    Zollicoffer's aide shouted to warn him, a skirmish broke out and
    Zollicoffer was cut down. 

    More than 140 Confederates and 39 Union soldiers died in the day-long
    battle. It is considered the North's first decisive victory of the
    Civil War. 

    The Northerners were buried in Mill Springs National Cemetery, which
    would later become one of the first 12 national cemeteries created by
    Congress. The Southerners were left to the locals to bury. 

    But the locals did not forget. In 1902, a 10-year-old girl named
    Dorotha Burton decided it was a shame that the Confederate dead were
    not honored. On Memorial Day, she gathered flowers and decorated the
    white oak under which Zollicoffer died -- the Zollie Tree. 

    On Monday, Dorothy's great-great-granddaughter decorated the stump of
    the old tree, blown down in a storm two years ago, as Confederate
    re-enactors gathered to salute the dead. The headstones are lined up in
    the order in which the Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee units marched
    into battle. 

    Amid Confederate battle flags, descendants of three of the soldiers
    sprinkled dirt from their home states around their headstones. 

    "These men can't be buried in their home states, but at least we can
    bring a little bit of their home states to them now," said Ron
    Nicholas, administrator of the Mill Springs Battlefield Association. 

    There is a stone for Zollicoffer, although his body was taken back to
    Tennessee. In the fifth row is Wilson of the 15th Mississippi. 

    "Some of the local folks talked about the restless dead here. Perhaps
    they were restless because they were forgotten," said Samuel Flora,
    commander of the Central Kentucky Brigade of the Sons of Confederate
    Veterans. 

    "No longer are these dead unnamed and unknown." 
7.1993IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0248
    AP 26-May-1997 20:40 EDT   REF5516

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cops: Mom Did Nails While Baby Died

    By HERBERT G. McCANN

    Associated Press Writer

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A woman ignored her doctor's order to immediately take
    her malnourished son to a hospital and instead took him to a salon
    where he died as she was having her nails done, police said Monday. 

    Dianna Meeks, a 25-year-old mother of five, was charged with
    involuntary manslaughter in the death of her youngest child and ordered
    held Monday on $350,000 bond. 

    She said nothing at a hearing as prosecutor Mike Goldberg outlined the
    abuse he said led to the death of Dontory Jordan. 

    Authorities said he weighed 5-pounds-11 ounces when he was born
    prematurely in March. He weighed three pounds when he died Thursday. 

    Meeks took him to the doctor for a checkup and was told to immediately
    take him to a hospital, even writing out directions, Goldberg told the
    judge. 

    Instead, Meeks dropped the baby off with a sister and went shopping.
    Later, she took Dontory and her four other children -- boys ages 6, 4
    and 2 years old, and a girl 17 months old -- to Sunny Nails salon,
    where the baby died. 

    The cause of death was failure to thrive and maternal neglect. There
    was no evidence of food in the baby's system, and he lacked body fat,
    Goldberg told the judge. 

    At the salon, an aunt noticed that Dontory, wrapped in a blanket, was
    not moving, authorities said. Paramedics were called, and the baby was
    taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. 

    Meeks said she refused to take Dontory to the hospital because she
    feared losing public assistance and of being accused of not taking
    proper care of her son, Goldberg said. 

    She faces up to five years in prison if convicted. 

    Her other children were taken into protective custody on Friday. 
7.1994IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0255
    AP 26-May-1997 20:17 EDT   REF5498

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    No More Skydiving for Sole Survivor

    By TOM WELLS

    Associated Press Writer

    HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) -- The woman who parachuted to safety as a plane
    spun out of control and crashed -- killing six -- was the least
    experienced skydiver on board. Now she plans to give up the sport. 

    "It's the kind of experience that makes you ask yourself questions
    about life," Carol O'Connell told the Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale
    in Monday's edition. "I'm thinking it's not for me." 

    The Cessna 210-5 took off from Homestead General Airport Sunday and
    crashed about a mile away in a sweet-potato field. On a videotape of
    the crash, the plane spins to the ground at a 45 degree angle, its nose
    down. 

    National Transportation Safety Board investigator Jeffrey Kennedy said
    Sunday that the plane could have been overloaded, but on Monday he said
    the plane's weight was within safe limits. 

    The NTSB will study the engine and other salvageable parts to try to
    determine if there was a mechanical failure. 

    Keith Burke jumped from the plane on Saturday and said the engine
    sounded fine. "It wasn't sputtering," said Burke, who has 1,827 jumps.
    "It was working fine." 

    O'Connell was "the only novice on board," Burke said. "All the others
    were experienced skydivers and had hundreds and even thousands of
    jumps," he said. 

    O'Connell had been standing on a small, metal platform just outside the
    cabin, ready to jump, when the plane slowed and began to twirl
    downward. 

    Realizing the plane was in trouble, she jumped from 3,500 feet without
    getting the okay from the jumpmaster. She watched the plane slam
    belly-down and burst into flames about 50 yards from a farm-to-market
    road. 

    The others would have still been sitting on the floor, still strapped
    in their seatbelts, Burke said. The centrifugal force would have
    prevented them from standing up and getting to the door as the plane
    plummeted, he said. 

    Authorities did not release the names of the victims, but friends
    identified the pilot as Jason Thomas, 25, of Miami Springs, and the
    plane's owner as Tom Manning, 44. 
7.1995IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0268
    AP 26-May-1997 18:34 EDT   REF5221

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Calif. Murder Case Leaves Confusion

    TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) -- One bullet kills a drug dealer. Two men are
    charged with murder. Which one is the shooter? 

    It was John Patrick Winkelman, the prosecutor told one jury. And it was
    Stephen Edmond Davis, he told a separate jury at their joint trial.

    Both men were convicted of murder, just an hour apart, and each faces
    the possibility of a life sentence. 

    Defense attorneys accused prosecutor Todd D. Rubenstein of misconduct.
    Rubenstein denies any wrongdoing. A hearing is scheduled for Wednesday. 

    "When you've got one bullet in a guy, you cannot argue that two
    different guys fired that bullet," said Winkelman's lawyer, Peter
    Giannini. "That's wrong." 

    Not so, said Rubenstein, who insists he simply argued "logical
    inferences that can be drawn from the evidence." 

    Rubenstein's argument is solid but troubling, legal experts say. 

    "From a legal point of view, you may be able to explain this. But from
    a common-sense point of view, it's not fair," said Laurie Levenson, a
    Loyola Marymount University law professor and former federal
    prosecutor. 

    The case stems from the Oct. 29, 1995, shooting death of Willie Yen,
    who was described by authorities as a drug dealer. 

    Davis and Winkelman, both 19 at the time, wanted to rob Yen,
    prosecutors alleged. 

    Superior Court Judge Francis J. Hourigan allowed the two separate
    juries because Davis spoke to police while Winkelman did not. 

    Davis told investigators that Winkelman fired the fatal shot. According
    to a police report, Davis said he approached Yen from behind and did
    fire his gun, but did not fire the fatal bullet. 

    In closing arguments before Winkelman's jury, Rubenstein noted that a
    witness also reported seeing Winkelman shoot Yen. 

    "The evidence is manifest," Rubenstein added. "It's unrefuted that John
    Winkelman is the actual killer." 

    A day later, Rubenstein told the Davis jury that the evidence was
    "quite clear" that Davis was the killer, basing his argument on the
    fact that Yen was shot in the back. 

    "That is 100 percent consistent with Stephen Davis firing that fatal
    round," Rubenstein said. 

    Giannini said he didn't object then because he was out of the courtroom
    during arguments made exclusively to Davis' jury. Davis' lawyer, Robert
    Courtney, similarly didn't hear the prosecutor's arguments to
    Winkelman's jury. 

    And despite the convictions, it's still not clear who fired the fatal
    shot. 

    "You've got just one bullet," said Southwestern University law
    professor Robert Pugsley. "It just doesn't add up." 
7.1996IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:02101
    AP 26-May-1997 19:31 EDT   REF5456

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S. Celebrates Memorial Day

    By MADELINE BARO

    Associated Press Writer

    PLANO, Texas (AP) -- When the band started playing for Monday's
    Memorial Day service and the American flag was lowered to half-staff,
    Navy veteran J.W. "Jim" Harper was overwhelmed. 

    "You just feel goosebumpy all over," he said. 

    Harper, who served on an ammunition ship during the Korean War, joined
    200 or so people for the ceremony in Plano, one of thousands of
    observations across the nation. 

    "Don't think for one minute that we, as Americans, were given
    prosperity, peace and freedom as a gift from our benevolent Uncle Sam,"
    Army Brig. Gen. Kathryn G. Carlson told the crowd at Plano. "The lives
    of these we memorialize today remind us that it was hard fought and
    bloodily won." 

    Some 3,000 people gathered at Arlington National Cemetery as President
    Clinton placed a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns, saying he was
    venerating "those who gave everything on behalf of our common good." 

    Elsewhere, a more recent hard-fought battle stood in the way of
    Monday's memorial. 

    At Grand Forks, N.D., where the Red River forced some 45,000 people
    from their homes last month, no visitors or observances were allowed at
    Calvary Cemetery because of flood damage. Some graves had collapsed and
    the force of the water toppled some large stone memorials. 

    "We want to repair this damage before we allow visitors into the
    cemetery for fear someone may be injured," said Bob Norman, secretary
    of the Calvary Cemetery Association. 

    In Kansas City, Mo., veterans fired a rifle salute during a ceremony at
    the Liberty Memorial. 

    "It brings back memories of the things you went through, the people you
    knew, wondering what became of them," said 76-year-old Leo Beeson, who
    watched the Kansas City ceremony and remembered his two years in the
    South Pacific during World War II. 

    Beeson recalled through tears the first night he spent on a dark beach
    during combat: 

    "You heard moaning and crying and shelling, but you were in a foxhole
    and there was nothing you could do." 

    Monday's parade in Concord, Mass., drew just a fraction of the
    thousands who once came every year. An estimated 600 people turned out,
    compared to the 4,000 who came to the Revolutionary War town's
    Patriot's Day parade last month. 

    "I'm appalled everyone doesn't turn out just for one day -- one day a
    year for guys who gave their lives," said World War II veteran Paul
    Dee, 74. "They forgot what the holiday means." 

    Navy veterans rode a small boat out into Chesapeake Bay, off Annapolis,
    Md., to drop a wreath of red and white carnations onto the water in
    tribute to those who died at sea. 

    "We experienced the loss of friends. Going through the service, I'm
    inclined to think of those friends I lost," John Quesenberry, 79, a
    retired radio man, said on the Chesapeake voyage. "You can't blame the
    younger generation (for not remembering). You either live through it or
    you don't." 

    A similar ceremony took place on Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco, as
    about 300 World War II submarine veterans, widows and onlookers dropped
    52 carnations into the bay, one for each of the subs sunk during the
    war. 

    In Dearborn, Mich., a ceremony honored a Vietnam veteran who had been
    missing since he was shot down on July 12, 1972. The remains of Air
    Force Capt. James Huard were returned earlier this year. 

    "It's hard every time," said Neil Huard, Huard's brother. "Every one of
    these ceremonies is a difficult experience." 

    On the Hawaiian island of Oahu, all traces of the hate messages
    spray-painted throughout seven cemeteries last month were gone Monday.
    The last of the graffiti, which called Hawaii a racist state, was
    removed late last week with the help of $21,000 donated for the
    cleanup. 

    Vandals can never "tarnish what our heroes left us," Honolulu Mayor
    Jeremy Harris said. 

    And more than 20,000 baseball fans in Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Stadium
    joined players on the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago Cubs in a
    moment of silence, as scenes of military burials were played on a
    scoreboard screen. The moment was organized by a group called No
    Greater Love. 
7.1997IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0244
    AP 26-May-1997 15:34 EDT   REF5015

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Paralyzed To Garden on Computer

    WESTMINSTER, Calif. (AP) -- A landscape worker left paralyzed in a car
    accident is getting another chance to sculpt flowerbeds and bushes --
    on the computer. 

    With the help of Goodwill Industries, Faustino Ambrocio is unlocking
    the gardens trapped in his mind and getting back on the job. 

    The charity is opening a $1.2 million technology training center in
    Santa Ana for people with disabilities. It is training Ambrocio to use
    a computer, a specially adapted mouse and a three-dimensional software
    program to design landscapes. 

    "There are a lot of people like me, who are incapacitated, who don't
    know where to go to get physical therapy or training for some kind of
    job," said Ambrocio, 32. "There are a lot of people that don't know
    there's hope for people like me." 

    The accident in 1995 left Ambrocio with limited use of his hands and
    arms and no use of his legs. 

    His boss, David Christensen, battled an insurance company to pay
    Ambrocio's medical bills, visited him in the hospital and built a ramp
    so Ambrocio could move back home with his wife and two sons. 

    He also encouraged Ambrocio to return to work, often sending him out as
    a supervisor on landscaping jobs. When he saw one day that Ambrocio had
    struggled to sketch a landscape, Christensen got to thinking:
    "Certainly his brain and all of his faculties are very well intact. He
    knows how to do all this stuff." 

    He contacted the state Department of Rehabilitation, which referred
    Ambrocio to Goodwill. Last week, Ambrocio produced his first design: a
    small plot that took nearly two hours to complete. 

    He knows he'll get better with practice. 

    "I don't want assistance or a handout," Ambrocio said. "I'm anxious to
    finish this training so I can get back to work." 
7.1998IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0289
    AP 26-May-1997 13:39 EDT   REF5371

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bombing Trial Stirs Harsh Memories

    By PAUL QUEARY

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Witnesses describe the horrifying sounds of the federal
    building crashing down, the screams of co-workers and friends in pain,
    and the gruesome drip of blood through layers of rubble. 

    That testimony in Timothy McVeigh's Oklahoma City bombing trial is
    forcing some survivors and victims' relatives to revisit events they
    would rather forget. 

    Rudy Guzman listened to one witness describe how he discovered the body
    of Guzman's Marine brother, Randy, by seeing the red stripe on his
    uniform trousers. 

    "I just got that picture in my mind of Randy's legs sticking out of the
    rubble," Guzman said from Oklahoma City. "That makes me relive it,
    think about what Randy went through. I hope to God he didn't go through
    pain." 

    As the prosecution wrapped up its case last week, a firefighter
    testified about the gruesome process of searching for victims after the
    April 19, 1995, blast. "We were wiping body fluids off our helmets and
    uniforms," Area Chief Mike Shannon said. 

    "I think the most difficult thing this morning for me was to listen to
    the fire chief and, you know, describing the body fluids," said Bud
    Welch, whose daughter, Julie, was killed in the Alfred P. Murrah
    Federal Building's Social Security office. 

    "This is a real tough thing, as a family member, to listen to." said
    Welch, who is attending McVeigh's trial. "I know it's important that
    the jury hear this. But then when the medical examiner was talking
    about identification, and it's almost like it's counting animals." 

    For Roy Sells, the testimony evoked thoughts of his wife, Lee, killed
    in an office of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

    "It was tough to sit through that because I know that my wife was hurt
    real bad," said Sells, who is also at the trial. 

    Attendance has been sparser than expected at a 325-seat auditorium in
    Oklahoma City where survivors and victims may watch the trial on
    closed-circuit television. 

    Bombing victims and several Oklahoma congressmen lobbied for the
    closed-circuit feed because of the costs of traveling to Denver from
    Oklahoma City. Cameras are generally banned from federal trials, but
    the special telecast was approved swiftly by Congress and President
    Clinton. 

    Survivor Nancy Ingram planned to watch the trial there, but a few
    visits gave her disturbing dreams. 

    "I've been quite surprised that the trial would bother me as much as it
    had,'' she said. 

    Many left the auditorium during the first day of testimony, which
    featured wrenching testimony by Helena Garrett, whose 16-month-old son
    was killed in the building's day-care center. 

    "People just left, they didn't want to hear anymore. As soon as they
    got an opportunity, they got up and walked out," said Connie
    Schlittler, the head of Project Heartland in Oklahoma City, a federally
    funded outreach program for bombing survivors. 

    And some didn't get that far. 

    "I haven't been going to the closed circuit here," Dan McKinney said in
    Oklahoma City. His wife, Linda, died in the Secret Service office. "I
    just can't go. It's just like it happened yesterday to me." 

    Survivors and family members who have come to Denver to attend the
    trial in person appear just as fragile. 

    "There was a lot of tears being shed," Sells said on the day the
    prosecution rested its case with a morning of hard-to-take testimony. 

    When court resumes Tuesday after the Memorial Day weekend, McVeigh's
    attorneys will resume trying to convince jurors that others were
    involved in the crime, that their client was a dreamer who talked about
    taking action but never followed through. 
7.1999IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0244
    AP 26-May-1997 13:19 EDT   REF5347

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Three Children Die in Pickup Truck

    By PAULA STORY

    Associated Press Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Three children riding in the camper shell of the
    family's pickup truck died of carbon monoxide poisoning early today
    during an overnight trip from San Francisco. 

    An 18-month-old boy and his sisters, ages 2 and 6, arrived at hospitals
    without heartbeats, and doctors were unable to resuscitate them.
    Officials said at least one of the children may have been dead for
    hours. 

    "We work to save children and it's devastating when you can't," said
    Dr. Robin Kallas, who treated the two younger children at Children's
    Hospital. 

    The family had just completed a seven-hour trip from San Francisco when
    the parents, who had ridden in the truck's cab, tried to wake the
    children about 6 a.m., authorities said. 

    The parents had looked in on the children when they stopped for food
    around 5 a.m. but didn't realize anything was wrong. 

    At the hospital, the parents "were devastated; they were crying,
    holding each other, holding me, asking to see a priest," Kallas said. 

    The family's name was not released. 

    Police Officer Joy Smith said an investigation was pending. It's not
    illegal for children to ride in a truck with a camper shell, she said. 

    Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, highly poisonous gas produced
    by incomplete combustion of fuels. A malfunctioning exhaust system in a
    car or a faulty home heating system can create dangerous fumes. The
    precise problem in the family's truck was not immediately determined. 

    Carbon monoxide affects children faster than adults, Kallas said. 
7.2000IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0235
    AP 26-May-1997 23:53 EDT   REF5401

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    IRA Bombing Suspect Gives Birth

    LONDON (AP) -- A women facing extradition to Germany in connection with
    an IRA bombing gave birth under armed guard Monday. 

    A spokesman for the campaign to free Roisin McAliskey, speaking on
    condition of anonymity, said both she and the baby, a girl, were fine. 

    McAliskey, who suffers from asthma, was taken to the Whittingdon
    hospital in north London with an armed police escort after a court
    Friday awarded her bail for medical treatment. 

    She had been held without charge in prison while fighting extradition
    to Germany. Supporters claim she has been mistreated and has lost
    weight since her arrest. 

    News reports said McAliskey's health has deteriorated in recent weeks
    and a magistrate ruled last week that she was too ill to appear at
    extradition proceedings before her baby was born. 

    German police want to interview her in connection with a June 28 mortar
    bomb attack at a British army base in Germany. Nobody was injured in
    the Irish Republican Army strike, but buildings were damaged. 

    Roisin McAliskey is the daughter of Irish activist Bernadette Devlin
    McAliskey, who became one of Northern Ireland's best-known figures in
    the late 1960s for her fiery anti-British rhetoric. 

    In 1969, as a new lawmaker, she led rioting Catholics against the
    predominantly Protestant police force in Londonderry, for which she
    received a brief prison sentence. 
7.2001IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0283
    AP 26-May-1997 22:40 EDT   REF5150

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Fabled Communist Spymaster Faces Court

    By TONY CZUCZKA

    Associated Press Writer

    DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) -- True to his reputation for slyness, former
    East German spy chief Markus Wolf has avoided a prison sentence since
    the collapse of the communist state he served. 

    Whether the fabled Cold War figure will wind up behind bars after all
    will be decided Tuesday when a court issues its verdict in Wolf's
    second trial since German unification in 1990. 

    Wolf, 74, was charged with deprivation of liberty, coercion and causing
    bodily harm in connection with the abductions of a German translator
    for a U.S. agency and an East German defector, and with the arbitrary
    detention of an East German writer. 

    Prosecutors were demanding a 3 1-2 year prison term for Wolf, saying he
    approved the operations. 

    Wolf rejected the charges when the trial at the state high court began
    Jan. 7 and branded them politically motivated. He has called for
    acquittal, saying the charges have not been proven. 

    The trial went to the heart of a continuing struggle over united
    Germany's legal handling of the communist east's legacy. 

    Former East German leaders, several of whom are on trial in Berlin for
    shooting deaths at the Berlin Wall, have blasted attempts to prosecute
    them as "victor's justice." 

    Wolf was sentenced to six years in prison in 1993 for treason. But a
    retrial was ordered in 1995 after the Federal Constitutional Court,
    Germany's highest, ruled that East German spy leaders who worked only
    in their homeland could not be tried for treason because they did not
    betray their country. 

    The Duesseldorf court dropped espionage charges against Wolf this
    month. 

    Once known as "the man without a face" for his elusiveness, Wolf was
    one of the West's most bitter foes while he ran East Germany's foreign
    spy network from 1953 until his 1986 retirement. 

    He planted some 4,000 agents in the West during the Cold War, and
    managed to steal NATO secrets for the Soviet bloc that could have been
    decisive if war had broken out in Europe. 

    In 1974, West German Chancellor Willy Brandt was forced to resign after
    a top aide, Guenther Guillaume, was unmasked as a Wolf agent. 

    Wolf fled to Moscow in 1990 but surrendered to German authorities a
    year later when no other country gave him political asylum. 

    Graying but still razor-sharp, Wolf has since turned to writing,
    including a book on Russian cooking. 

    A German magazine last week published first excerpts from his memoirs,
    "Man Without A Face," in which Wolf says the CIA offered him a new life
    if he told them everything his agents did during the Cold War.

    Two envoys of then-CIA Director William Webster offered him a
    "seven-figure sum," a new identity and a house in California if he
    cooperated in the deal, designed to keep him out of reach of German
    prosecutors, Wolf wrote. 

    The book is due out in 13 countries on June 1. 

    In the latest trial, prosecutors accused Wolf of supervising the brutal
    kidnap of an East German secret police defector and his girlfriend from
    Austria in 1962, and of ordering the 1959 detention of an East German
    writer to extort false statements branding Brandt, then West Berlin
    mayor, as a Nazi collaborator. 

    He was also charged with approving the 1955 abduction of a translator
    at the U.S. High Commissioner's office in West Berlin in a failed
    attempt to get her to spy for East Germany. 
7.2002IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0255
    AP 26-May-1997 16:02 EDT   REF5076

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Koreas Agree on Food Shipment

    By JOHN LEICESTER

    Associated Press Writer

    BEIJING (AP) -- Red Cross officials from rival North and South Korea
    overcame politics by agreeing Monday to send 50,000 tons of food to the
    hunger-stricken North by August. 

    The food, mostly corn, amounts to a six-month supply for 600,000 people
    -- more than four times the number of North Koreans currently receiving
    Red Cross aid, the agency said. 

    About one-third of the promised aid -- 15,000 tons -- already is being
    shipped by train from China, Red Cross spokesman Johan Schaar said. 

    The United Nations estimates that 4.7 million North Koreans -- a fifth
    of the population -- risk starvation this summer without massive food
    aid. The North's chronic food shortages exacerbated by devastating
    floods in 1995 and 1996. 

    The head of the North Korean delegation, Paek Yong Ho, told The
    Associated Press that the amount of promised aid was "quite small in
    comparison with the total effect of the disaster." 

    "I cannot say it's enough, but anyhow it will help," he said. 

    He said he asked for 100,000 tons of aid during the talks. The South
    Koreans originally offered 40,000 tons. 

    South Korean Red Cross officials said Monday's agreement will provide
    momentum "to increase mutual cooperation between the two Koreas on the
    basis of humanitarianism." 

    The Red Cross groups, which are closely tied to their governments, had
    not met in nearly five years before meeting earlier this month. The two
    sides had to make significant concessions to reach Monday's agreement. 

    The North Korean Red Cross agreed to accept aid labeled as having come
    from South Korea and to open more delivery routes and send food to
    areas or people designated by South Korean donors. 

    That could allow millions of South Koreans to send food to northern
    relatives -- families that were split by the 1945 division of the
    Korean Peninsula and the 1950-53 war. 

    The South Koreans, meanwhile, dropped a demand that deliveries be sent
    through the heavily guarded demilitarized zone that divides North and
    South. Such high-profile shipments would have been humiliating for the
    communist North, which preaches self-reliance. 
7.2003IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:03136
    AP 25-May-1997 19:56 EDT   REF5486

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pharmacists Refusing Prescriptions

    By JANE E. ALLEN

    AP Science Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Fearing that she would become pregnant after a
    romantic night with her husband, Michelle Crider asked for help. 

    Instead, she got a deadlock -- with pharmacist John Boling. 

    When her doctor, Myron Schonbrun, asked Boling to supply Crider with
    Ovral birth control pills -- take two pills immediately, then two more
    within 12 hours -- the pharmacy manager at Longs Drug Store in
    Temecula, Calif., refused. 

    "I kind of understood immediately," Schonbrun recalled. At that dosage,
    Ovral was a morning-after pill, meant to prevent a fertilized egg from
    implanting in the uterus, and Boling disapproved. 

    But Schonbrun knew that though Crider deeply wanted another child,
    pregnancy made her deathly ill. So the doctor tried to finesse the
    problem. He asked Boling to provide a month's supply of Ovral, to be
    taken one a day, like any contraceptive. 

    Boling again refused. He said he "knew what it was going to be given
    for," Schonbrun recalled. 

    Boling's revolt is just the beginning. With the FDA's recent
    proclamation that morning-after pills are safe and effective, corner
    druggists across America could increasingly find themselves in the
    middle of conflicts that pit personal beliefs against patient rights. 

    And in coming years, pharmacists will face even more serious challenges
    when the RU-486 abortion pill is approved, or if other states follow
    Oregon in legalizing drugs for physician-assisted suicide. 

    The pharmacists are caught in a Catch-22. The American Pharmaceutical
    Association, with 48,000 members, supports a pharmacist's right of
    refusal -- but says that right must not override a patient's right to
    treatment. 

    In other words, pharmacists must find a way to accommodate their own
    beliefs, as well as those of the patient. That could mean referring a
    prescription to another pharmacist -- a prospect that might satisfy
    neither the scruples nor the competitive fires of the dissenting
    druggist. 

    "Ethics demands that it's what you ought to do for the patient, not for
    yourself," said Richard Abood, a professor of pharmacy practice at
    University of the Pacific School of Pharmacy in Stockton, Calif. 

    "The pharmacist might be a little repulsed to give it to another
    pharmacist, but ... sometimes you've got to do things that are
    uncomfortable." 

    In fact, Crider -- who has taught contraception to migrant workers --
    eventually got her prescription from a nearby Vons supermarket. 

    "I'm still very angry," she said. "Without knowing my situation, he
    could have affected a huge part of my life. What if there had been no
    other pharmacy to go to?" 

    The process was "demeaning," says Crider, 28, the mother of a
    2-year-old girl. 

    Boling, whose behavior brought a reprimand from Longs, declined to be
    interviewed for this story, citing instructions to refer all queries to
    company headquarters in Walnut Creek, Calif. 

    "Failure to serve a customer is the issue here," said Clay Selland,
    treasurer and spokesman for the 339-store chain. 

    "He was disciplined because he should have offered another option to
    the doctor. Our policy is that ... he needs to send it along to another
    pharmacist that's on duty, to another Longs store ... or refer it on to
    a competing pharmacy." 

    Still, Longs officials acknowledge that there is no written policy, and
    pharmacists and women's advocates complain corporations are not making
    their policies clear to the men and women who actually fill
    prescriptions. 

    Crider is not the first woman to encounter a pharmacist or institution
    unwilling to furnish morning-after pills. 

    At the University of Florida in Gainesville in 1989, a university
    pharmacist declined to fill a student's morning-after prescription. He
    left the public university after it could not accommodate his First
    Amendment rights to a religious objection without the considerable
    expense of hiring additional pharmacists. 

    In 1991, the mother of a rape victim brought to Daniel Freeman Marina
    Hospital in Marina del Rey, Calif., requested information about a
    morning-after pill, but the Catholic facility declined. 

    An appeals court found the hospital had an obligation to inform the
    victim about the method and where to obtain it. 

    Spurred by anti-abortion forces, pharmacists groups in California,
    Louisiana, Puerto Rico, and Alberta, Canada, have adopted policies that
    affirm the right of a druggist to claim conscientious objection on
    religious, moral or ethical grounds. 

    Similar proposals are under consideration in another dozen states,
    according to Bo Kuhar, executive director of Ohio-based Pharmacists for
    Life International. He said a morning-after referral would conflict
    with his pro-life beliefs. 

    A pharmacist now "has to decide which is more important, his principles
    or the threat of a reprimand or a dismissal," Kuhar said. 

    But Mary Ellen Hamilton, Planned Parenthood public affairs vice
    president for Riverside and San Diego counties, said no third party has
    the right to intervene in a personal decision made between a woman and
    her doctor. 

    "It's scary and disturbing," she said. 

    Meanwhile, the lives of pharmacists are likely to become even more
    complicated. In February, the 5,500-member California Pharmacists
    Association passed a resolution supporting pharmacy participation in
    the legal distribution of medical marijuana. 

    Richard E. Kane, the owner of the Oakdale Pharmacy in Encino, Calif.,
    and the sole pharmacist there, says he would handle legalized marijuana
    or RU-486 despite the specter of protest. 

    "As an independent pharmacist, you do things above and beyond what a
    chain would do," said Kane. "You make the same kind of commitment to
    how you handle these (controversial) prescriptions ... You believe the
    patient comes first." 
7.2004IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0385
    RTos 27-May-97 05:30    

    Oklahoma Bomb Trial to Resume on Tuesday

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DENVER (Reuter) - The defense in the fast-paced Oklahoma City bombing
    trial will renew its counterattack to the government's claim that
    Timothy McVeigh planned and carried out the bombing of the federal
    building that killed 168 people, when testimony resumes Tuesday. 

    Court was not in session on Monday because of the Memorial Day holiday.
    To date the defense has called 19 witnesses to the stand in an effort
    to cast doubt on the prosecution's evidence that claims to tie McVeigh
    to the April 19, 1995 attack on the Alfred P. Murrah federal building. 

    The defense has tried to undermine the government's time line, its
    evidence that McVeigh used a telephone calling card to shop for
    components to make the bomb and a witness who identified McVeigh as the
    man who rented a Ryder truck in Junction City, Kansas that was
    allegedly used in the bombing. 

    The defense has also suggested that others and not McVeigh were
    responsible for the bombing. 

    McVeigh, whom government prosecutors have portrayed as a right-wing
    fanatic out to avenge the deaths of 80 Branch Davidian cult members in
    a confrontation with federal agents at Waco, Texas in 1993, has pleaded
    not guilty. If convicted, the Gulf War veteran faces the death penalty. 

    While the prosecution got high marks from legal analysts for its
    well-crafted presentation of 137 witnesses in 18 days, lawyers say not
    to count the defense out. "They're making a lot more headway than most
    of us predicted," said Scott Robinson, a Denver trial attorney. 

    But Robinson said the defense must provide a coherent theory that
    presents an alternative to the prosecution's case in order to explain
    several factors, including why McVeigh's picture was captured on a
    fast-food restaurant surveillance tape in Junction City the day the
    Ryder truck was rented. 

    The closest the defense has come to this is to suggest that the real
    bomber may have died in the blast. The defense is expected to rest its
    case this week. 

    After the Oklahoma state medical examiner testified that an
    unidentified leg was found in the rubble of the Murrah building, a
    British forensic expert said it was possible for someone close to a
    bomb to disintegrate when it blew up. 

    The testimony of Thomas Marshall, a retired state pathologist for
    Northern Ireland, backed up the defense theory that the bomber may have
    died in the huge blast. 

    Someone usually missed people killed in bombings, Marshall said. "When
    nobody misses them, it reinforces the suggestion that the deceased is
    involved in the bombing," he said. 

    But while the defense may have scored some points with the jury with
    Marshall's theory, testimony from another witness did not turn out as
    well as the defense would have liked. 

    A woman who lost her two children and her mother in the blast and whose
    leg had to be amputated to free her from the rubble testified that she
    now remembers seeing not one, but two people leaving a Ryder truck in
    front of the Murrah building just minutes before the blast. 

    Daina Bradley, 21, had previously said she saw one man get out of the
    truck and that he matched the description of John Doe No. 2, an
    olive-skinned man for whom a nationwide manhunt was launched. The man
    was never caught. 

    The descriptions for sketches of John Doe No. 1 and John Doe No. 2 were
    furnished by employees at the truck rental depot where prosecutors say
    McVeigh rented the truck used in the bombing. The government says
    McVeigh was John Doe No. 1. 

    Chief defense attorney Stephen Jones in his opening statement said that
    Bradley had only seen one man and he was not McVeigh. 

    Bradley, who has a history of mental illness, admitted that the first
    time she had told anybody about a second man was at a recent meeting
    with defense attorney Cheryl Ramsey. 

    REUTER
7.2005IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0398
    RTw  26-May-97 20:45    

    French markets slump on shock results, then steady

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
      
    By Christine Tierney 

    PARIS, May 26 (Reuter) - French stocks and bonds and the franc tumbled
    on Monday after the left staged a surprise victory in the first round
    of a parliamentary election. 

    The CAC-40 stock index plunged to its biggest single-day loss in more
    than four years as the prospect of a Socialist-led government stunned
    investors who had bought the market on expectations that the
    centre-right would win handily. 

    The index closed down 108.16 points, or 3.91 percent, at 2,654.74, its
    biggest fall in percentage terms since October 1992. The biggest losers
    were shares in companies involved in privatisations and restructurings
    that risk being halted. 

    "The stock market, putting its trust in opinion polls showing the right
    would win, had treated the election as a non-event. We are going to pay
    for it," said a share dealer. 

    The franc and bonds also reacted sharply to the first-round results,
    but prices steadied as traders anticipated that a radical shift in
    policy, particularly on European monetary union, was unlikely even if
    the left won the runoff on Sunday. 

    "The feeling, particularly in the bond market, is that the two major
    parties on the right and the left are committed to meeting the
    Maastricht criteria (for monetary union) -- not in the strictest sense,
    but close enough to get in on the first round," said Merrill Lynch
    market strategist Joanne Perez. 

    "So even if the Socialists get in, we don't expect a real increase in
    the deficit in the next year or two," she said. 

    But analysts cautioned that the markets will be nervous and volatile
    until the final vote. 

    Pressure ran high in late trading as non-residents sold French assets
    despite a briefly bullish moment when Prime Minister Alain Juppe said
    he would step down whoever won. 

    "Juppe had the courage to get needed reforms and restructurings under
    way but maybe someone else has a better chance to win the election," a
    trader said. 

    Tuesday could be another rough day for the French markets, the bourse
    in particular, with the reopening of the U.S. and British financial
    markets after a long holiday weekend. 

    "When the Americans wake up and see there may be Communists in the
    government, there'll be a second blow," said IFF Bourse trader Olivier
    Blitz. 

    Final results showed the Socialists, Communists and other left parties
    took 40.22 percent of the vote, the ruling RPR-UDF coalition and other
    moderate rightists 36.50 percent and the far right National Front 14.94
    percent. Ecologists won 6.81 percent. 

    The franc fell to 3.3755 to the German mark after the first vote
    projections on Sunday night and sank as low as 3.3784 on Monday before
    steadying at 3.3773 in late afternoon trade. It had traded at 3.3712 on
    Friday. 

    A dealer at a French bank said he did not expect the franc to fall
    below 3.3825 on the view that a European single currency was unlikely
    to be derailed by a Socialist government. 

    "The only risk is that the foreigners will be wary of the Communists,"
    he said. 

    Traders said there was no sign that the Bank of France had intervened
    on Monday to defend the currency. 

    June PIBOR futures sank as much as 35 basis points to 96.12 before
    climbing back to 96.20 in late trade. The June bond futures contract,
    which dropped as low as 128, was trading at 128.32 at 1720 GMT. 

    The bourse suffered more because foreigners account for a bigger share
    of the activity and because equities would be more exposed if a
    Socialist government halted structural reforms. 

    The hardest-hit French stocks were those involved in privatisations and
    government-ordered restructurings. 

    Dassault Aviation (AVMD.PA), slated to merge with state-owned
    Aerospatiale, was suspended limit-down all day on fears Aerospatiale's
    planned privatisation might be blocked. 

    Defence electronics firm Thomson-CSF fell 9.60 percent to 171.30 francs
    on concerns its privatisation also may be stopped.

    REUTER
7.2006IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 11:0392
    RTos 26-May-97 22:52    

    N.Ireland Loyalists Threaten More Bombs

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    DUBLIN, Ireland (Reuter) - Northern Ireland Protestant hardliners
    claimed responsibility Monday for a failed bomb attack on an Irish town
    and threatened to carry out more surprise bombings against the Dublin
    government. 

    The Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF), a recently-formed grouping of
    extremists fighting to maintain British rule of Northern Ireland,
    issued its warning in a telephone call to a Belfast television station. 

    The caller used a recognized code word, Ulster Television, which
    received the statement, told Reuters. 

    The threat came in the run-up to Ireland's June 6 elections and
    followed a campaign by their ideological foes, the Irish Republican
    Army (IRA), which disrupted Britain's May 1 elections with bombs and
    threats. 

    The IRA, which seeks an end to British rule to reunite the province
    with Ireland, wrecked Britain's premier horse race, the Aintree
    steeplechase, and caused traffic chaos on more than one morning in an
    attempt to publicize its cause. 

    The LVF said Sunday's bomb in Dundalk, some five miles from the
    Northern Ireland border, failed to explode because of "technical
    difficulties which have now been sorted." 

    "Further attacks will continue as long as Dublin interferes in Ulster's
    affairs. The attacks will take the form of no-warning bomb attacks as
    in Dundalk," the extremists said. 

    Irish Foreign Minister Dick Spring, a key player in an Anglo-Irish
    Northern Ireland peace process, said the Dundalk bomb was "extremely
    worrying" because of moves to get multi-party Northern Ireland peace
    talks moving with fresh momentum. 

    Irish police were alerted to the Dundalk bomb after a caller to a
    Belfast newspaper said devices had been left at the town and at Dublin
    airport. 

    No bomb was found in a search of Dublin airport but a device with an
    exploded detonator and commercial explosive was discovered in a Dundalk
    alleyway off the main street. 

    Loyalists, so-called because of their allegiance to Britain, accuse the
    Irish Republic of seeking to carry out a constitutional claim to
    Northern Ireland under the guise of an Anglo-Irish Northern Ireland
    peace process. 

    The main Loyalist groups, the Ulster Volunteer Force, Ulster Freedom
    Fighters and Red Hand Commando, are supposed to be observing an October
    1994 cease-fire but have been blamed by police for a series of recent
    attacks. 

    Spring said Britain and Ireland would discuss the Loyalist ceasefire,
    which has allowed their political spokesmen to take part in the Belfast
    talks resuming June 3. 

    He meets Britain's Northern Ireland Secretary, Mo Mowlam, in Dublin
    Thursday and said, "We will obviously be considering all the ground and
    considering the consequences of Dundalk." 

    Spring, apparently reversing a government position, said that a vote
    for Sinn Fein in the Irish election could be considered a "vote for
    peace." 

    Irish Prime Minister John Bruton said last month that a vote for Sinn
    Fein, which is contesting the June 6 poll, was a vote "of support for
    the IRA and its campaign of killing and murder." 

    Spring's statement followed a relaxation by Britain and Ireland on a
    ban on contacts with Sinn Fein to punish it for the ending of a
    17-month cease-fire last year by its IRA allies. 

    The two governments hope that Sinn Fein will secure a new IRA truce
    which would enable it to join the Belfast talks. 

    Loyalists fear that the governments may make concessions, especially on
    the key issue of arms surrender, to enable Sinn Fein to join the
    negotiations. They have warned that any such moves will be violently
    disputed. 

    The LVF is thought to comprise dissidents from the main Loyalist
    organizations who have wanted to resume their guerrilla war since the
    IRA ended its own cease-fire in February last year.

    REUTER
7.2007IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:3031
7.2008IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:3462
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                        
    Woman in abortion case may keep baby
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 
    
    THE woman at the centre of a legal wrangle with her estranged husband
    over the future of their unborn child has said she may decide to keep
    the baby if her planned abortion is delayed much longer.
             
    Lynn Kelly, 21, a nightclub singer, arranged a termination 10 days ago,
    but has been banned by three separate court orders from going ahead
    with it. She is now 14 weeks pregnant, and has been advised that she
    will soon reach the stage at which doctors will have to induce labour
    to carry out an abortion.
             
    Yesterday she pleaded with her husband - through a Scottish tabloid
    newspaper - to stop his court action, and said she would have "very
    strong doubts" about going ahead if she had to go through labour.
             
    But in a rival publication James Kelly, 28, from Inverkeithing, Fife,
    was quoted as saying: "I've come this far and there is no point in
    stopping now." Mr Kelly lost his action to stop the abortion in the
    Scottish courts, but hopes to take his case to the final stage in the
    legal process by having his case heard by five judges in the House of
    Lords.
             
    On Saturday, three appeal judges at the Court of Session in Edinburgh
    rejected Mr Kelly's case, but gave his lawyers until today to determine
    when the Lords may be able to hear a final appeal. The court re-imposed
    an interim interdict to stop the abortion going ahead - a procedural
    move that still allows the legal process to continue - which runs out
    at 2pm today.
             
    Mr Kelly's solicitor, Wendy Sheehan, admitted yesterday that due to the
    Whitsun holiday the appeal might not be heard in the Lords before next
    Monday. If that is the case, the Scottish judges will have to decide
    whether to extend the interdict for another week.
             
    Mrs Kelly, who already has one child, has been living with her parents
    in Edinburgh since the marriage broke up at the beginning of this
    month.
             
    During the case, the courts heard that Mr Kelly was convicted a year
    ago of assaulting his wife.
             
    Mrs Kelly described the past two weeks as a nightmare and said she had
    considered suicide. "Whatever happens to this baby will be my
    decision," she told the Daily Record, with whom she has a contract.
    "The way things are just now, I will carry on with the abortion. But if
    the matter is delayed further by the courts, then I may have to
    reconsider."
             
    James Kelly is seeking custody of the unborn baby and the couple's
    18-month-old daughter, Hazel. At the Court of Session in Scotland last
    week Lord Eassie ruled that under the 1967 Abortion Act the father had
    no legal right to stop the abortion.
             
    The case then went to appeal, and three judges, led by Lord Cullen, the
    Lord Justice Clerk, found on Saturday that a foetus had no right to
    continued existence if a mother decided to exercise her right to an
    abortion.
7.2009IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:3546
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                         
    EU figures confirm 'fishing disgrace'
    
    By Charles Clover, Environment Editor 
    
    THE Government's admission of "disgraceful" levels of illegal fishing
    by British fishermen, disclosed in The Telegraph yesterday, was
    described by the European Commission in Brussels last night as "an
    exact description of the situation". 
                                                      
    The extent of "black" landings in Britain, which fisheries inspectors
    say amounts to half of all landings of cod and saithe in Scottish ports
    where most of Britain's fish is landed, was in line with the latest
    advice provided by scientists. A commission spokesman stressed,
    however, that under EU law it was the Government's responsibility, and
    not the responsibility of Brussels, to take action.
                                                      
    The spokesman said: "This is very good news for us. Finally, we have
    started to put the focus on where the problems are. The fishing sector
    has been a political football for too many years without any political
    will to solve problems. This is beginning to put the debate on the
    right level. This is not a world of saints and martyrs. Each nation has
    its own speciality. If the Spanish are good at things like hidden
    holds, the British fishermen are good at manipulating logbooks and
    black landings."
                                                      
    Officials said that the commission had few means to ensure Britain
    cracked down on the illegal fishing. It has 24 inspectors who monitor
    the effectiveness of inspectors in member states. Many of these were
    pre-occupied with disputes between tuna boats and with Canadian
    fishermen.
                                                      
    If significant abuses are suspected, the commission is entitled to take
    legal action, but this can take years. Emma Bonino, the fisheries
    commissioner, was more likely to put political pressure on errant
    nations to sort out their own problems, said a source.
                                                      
    Options available to the Government include re-deploying the money it
    gets from the EU on more enforcement. Some of this money requires
    matching funds from the Treasury.
                                                      
    The commission is also inviting the Government to make its own
    proposals, by next year, for the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy,
    particularly on the replacement of the quota system that experts
    believe has utterly failed to protect fish stocks.
7.2010IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:3732
7.2011IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:3857
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                                  
    England near top of world violent crime league
    
    By Jon Hibbs, Political Correspondent 
    
    THE Government pledged to intensify its drive against crime yesterday
    after a survey found people were more likely to be victims of violence
    in England and Wales than almost anywhere else in the developed world.
                            
    Alun Michael, the Home Office minister, said the findings highlighted
    "an appalling record" by international standards which exposed
    Conservative claims that serious crime had fallen in the last years of
    the previous administration.
                            
    But Michael Howard, the former Home Secretary, condemned the results as
    misleading. He said the survey was based on "pretty dubious" statistics
    that highlighted the perception of victims rather than offences
    reported to the police.
                            
    He said a rival report on crime in developed countries, conducted by
    the OECD and submitted when he was at the Home Office, indicated that
    Britain and Greece had benefited from the joint highest international
    fall in recorded crime between 1993 and 1995.
                            
    Mr Howard said the 1996 International Victimisation Survey, prepared by
    the Dutch justice ministry in co-operation with the Home Office, was
    based on 20,000 interviews in 11 countries.
                            
    Germany and Italy had declined to take part, he said, while the figures
    excluded homicides where Britain had a better record than the United
    States.
                            
    The full survey is not expected to be published until July but a leaked
    version yesterday showed that people in England and Wales faced the
    highest risks of being burgled or having their car stolen. So-called
    "contact" crimes like robbery, assaults and sexual attacks on women
    were running at levels comparable to America, it said.
                            
    However Northern Ireland came out as safest of the countries surveyed,
    which included Austria, Canada, Finland, France, Switzerland, Sweden
    and Scotland.
                            
    Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, told the Police Federation conference
    last week that one third of people in England and Wales claimed to have
    been victims of crime - a worse record than the US and exceeded only by
    the Netherlands. Yesterday Mr Straw vowed to cut police paperwork and
    get more officers out on patrol to tackle Britain's "shocking and
    startling" record of street crime.
                            
    He said he would stick to existing spending limits but create more beat
    bobbies by attacking bureaucracy. He also promised to give the police
    extra powers to end their "frustration" in the uphill struggle against
    what he described as "neighbourhood disorder, local terrorisation by
    criminal neighbours and high levels of juvenile crime". He also accused
    the Major government of failing to tackle "or to even notice" the
    country's crime problem.
7.2012IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:40100
7.2013IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:4143
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                                        
    Reform of justice system seeks greater co-ordination
    
    By David Millward 
    
    PLANS for an overhaul of the criminal justice system are being drawn up
    by the Government, with ministers looking to bring greater
    co-ordination to the police, courts and probation service.
                                                                  
    Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, and John Morris, the Attorney General,
    believe that the combination of high crime and falling conviction rates
    indicate that root and branch reforms will be needed. Mr Morris will
    shortly announce a full inquiry into the Crown Prosecution Service. It
    will be headed by a High Court judge, who is expected to call in
    outside management consultants.
                                                                  
    The inquiry will examine a issues such as how the CPS decides on which
    cases to pursue, why some charges are dropped and its overall
    performance.
                                                                  
    Labour has already announced the appointment of 43 chief prosecutors,
    each of whom will be in charge of cases bought by the police force in
    their area. Although the prosecutors, by being named officials, will
    have a high profile in their local areas, ministers are loath to
    compare them to district attorneys working in America.
                                                                  
    By matching the CPS and police force boundaries, Labour hopes to ensure
    the smoother running of cases by cutting down on the loss of files or
    witnesses and other difficulties that have dogged the service.
    Officials at the Home Office, the Lord Chancellor's Department and the
    CPS have already held meetings to draw up proposals for further
    reforms.
                                                                  
    Another likely change will result in the Probation Service's
    administrative boundaries being brought into line with the CPS and
    police forces. This again is seen as a way of ensuring the three arms
    of the judicial system run more smoothly together.
                                                                  
    Officials are already concerned at what they regard as "rubbing points"
    between the services, which have at times behaved as rivals rather than
    colleagues. Courts are being urged to tighten up on paperwork "so that
    agreed information reaches the right place in the right time".
7.2014IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:4250
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                      
    Teenager killed in kickboxing bout
    
    By Toby Harnden, Ireland Correspondent 
    
    A TEENAGE kickboxer died yesterday after collapsing in the ring as his
    family watched him compete in a local tournament. It is believed to be
    the first fatality in the sport.
                             
    Sean McBride, 18, never regained consciousness after being kicked on
    the back of the head during a bout in his home town of Dungannon, Co
    Tyrone, on Friday. He was carried out on a stretcher in front of his
    parents and three sisters. Doctors at the Royal Victoria Hospital,
    Belfast, pronounced him clinically dead on Sunday and his life support
    machine was turned off.
                             
    His death is likely to lead to a review of safety in kickboxing
    tournaments. Billy Murray, the Belfast-based world champion, said the
    sport was not regulated effectively and opponents were often
    mismatched. "If this was controlled at Government level, this would not
    have happened. It is a tragedy for sport and it was a totally
    unnecessary death. The Sports Council now has to sit up and do
    something."
                             
    Mr McBride's mother, Mary, said her husband and three daughters had
    been at the tournament. "He seemed to be all right and then suddenly he
    dropped. We tried to reach him but couldn't get through the crowd.
    Football and boxing was his life. I didn't want to stop him fighting. I
    didn't want to be on his back because I knew it meant too much to him.
    Sean trained two nights a week and every Saturday."
                             
    In September Mr McBride had been driving a car that crashed, killing
    his best friend, Kieran O'Hagan, 16.
                             
    Paul Hughes, 22, secretary of the Killeshil club where Mr McBride
    played Gaelic football, said his team mates were shattered by his
    death. "He had only started to get over that car accident. He took it
    very badly. Sean was a popular, happy-go-lucky sort of person and
    everybody liked him."
                             
    Kickboxing was established about 20 years ago in the United States by
    karate experts who wanted to match themselves against the best
    exponents of Thai boxing, a discipline devised around 3,000 years ago
    in Thailand.
                             
    A cross between karate and boxing, it involves kicks, punches, jumps,
    holds and throws. Points are scored for accuracy rather than damage
    inflicted. Punches and kicks to the face are banned, although blows to
    the forehead are allowed.
7.2015IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:4330
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                          
    Bullied girls tried to kill themselves
    
    By Auslan Cramb 
    
    THREE 14-year-old girls have tried to commit suicide after being
    targeted by bullies because they refused to smoke.
                                              
    The third-year pupils at Keith Grammar School, Banffshire, each took an
    overdose of paracetamol tablets in separate incidents over a 12-week
    period. One girl had to be taken by air ambulance to the Scottish Liver
    Transplant Unit in Edinburgh after swallowing 18 of the painkillers.
    Her family said they knew nothing of the bullying she was suffering at
    the hands of other girls until she started to vomit the day after
    taking the pills.
                                              
    None of the girls has been identified, and the school has refused to
    comment, but Kevin Gavin, the director of education for Moray council,
    said action had been taken to deal with a "girl gang" responsible for
    the bullying. Education officials have also provided counselling for
    the families of the three girls.
                                              
    The three teenagers, who are not friends, told their parents that they
    were singled out because they chose to study at night rather than
    staying out late drinking and smoking with some of their classmates.
                                              
    The bullying was not physical, but they said they were subjected to
    name-calling and "mental abuse". The first suicide attempt was in
    February, and the third one was last week.
7.2016IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:4455
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                              
    Children fail to respond to fitness regime
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 
    
    EFFORTS to improve fitness in children by putting them through
    strenuous programmes of gym routines do not work, researchers have
    found.
         
    Against a background of concerns about falling levels of fitness in
    children, nine- and 10-year-old girls were put through their paces by
    Dr Joanne Welsman at Exeter University. For eight weeks, 40 children
    took part in floor and step aerobic classes for 25 minutes, three times
    a week, or trained on cycle machines.
         
    But at the end of the period, there was no change in peak aerobic
    fitness, which should improve stamina and endurance, or the capacity of
    muscle cells to use up oxygen. Nor was there any improvement in heart
    rate. In adults, regular aerobic exercise will reduce heart-rate during
    rest and exercise and improve the heart's ability to return to a normal
    rate after exertion. Finally, there was no change in the levels of
    blood fat in the participating children.
         
    Writing in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, Dr Welsman, of the
    children's health and exercise research centre at Exeter, says it may
    be more beneficial simply to encourage children to be more active
    generally and that insisting on regular vigorous exercise could be a
    waste of time.
         
    The findings are controversial. Why the children failed to respond to
    the exercise programme is not clear. Some experts have suggested that a
    "trigger point" exists at a certain age, below which children are
    unable to improve aerobic fitness.
         
    Others have insisted that there is no evidence that pre-pubescent
    children are any less responsive to training than older people.
         
    Concerns have been growing about fitness in British children as they
    take part in less and less exercise in favour of computer games and
    television. Explanations include a cut in school sports, more children
    being ferried by car and fewer children playing outside and cycling
    because of worries about safety.
         
    A year ago, the Armed Forces reported that it was finding fewer fit
    recruits among 16-year-olds, with almost half being initially rejected
    by the Army, largely because of their physical and medical fitness.
    However, this was not a new problem. Physical education became
    compulsory in schools in 1902 following evidence provided by the
    recruitment campaign of the Boer War.
         
    By 1987, 35 per cent of schools provided less than two hours of PE a
    week to pupils. At that time, the Department of Army Recruitment found
    that it was unusual for potential recruits to fail the physical fitness
    test.
7.2017IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:4742
7.2018IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:4853
    International News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                        
    Freetown ignores return to work plea
                                                                         
    AFTER a night of killings, looting and destruction, and with mutinous
    troops riding through the streets shooting into the air, residents of
    the Sierra Leone capital, Freetown, yesterday ignored an appeal by
    their new rulers to return to work.
                              
    The mutineers, led by Major Johnny Paul Koroma, accuse President Ahmed
    Tejan Kabbah, who has fled the country, of promoting "tribalism" which
    led to the resumption of a devastating rebel war earlier this month.
    The city centre was ravaged in the aftermath of fierce fighting, with
    major government buildings smouldering from fire. The takeover by
    lower-ranking troops in the Sierra Leone army left at least 15 dead and
    40 injured.
                              
    "Our intention is not selfishly motivated. It has to do with issues of
    the state," one of the coup's spokesmen, Capt Paul Thomas, said on
    national radio. He added that the civilian government was trying to
    "polarise" Sierra Leone and gave as an example the introduction of two
    Bills that journalists saw as an attempt to muzzle the press. "To
    ensure the smooth running of the state, we are asking all government
    employees to report for duty today," Capt Thomas said.
                              
    Soldiers travelled the otherwise empty streets in vehicles commandeered
    from civilians and aid agencies, carrying rocket-propelled grenades,
    AK-47s and sub-machine-guns, occasionally firing into the air. A crowd
    watched the 10-storey Bank of Sierra Leone burning from the top
    downwards. The Ministry of Finance had burnt to the ground. Bullet and
    mortar holes pocked the American embassy building.
                              
    Government troops guarded the State House, President Kabbah's office,
    and prevented people from approaching closer than 50 yards. The State
    House was the scene of the fiercest fighting between the mutinous
    troops and a Nigerian contingent assigned to protect Freetown from
    rebel attacks. Heavy artillery exchanges lasted through much of Sunday.
                              
    By the end of fighting on Sunday evening, the coup leaders said they
    had made their peace with the Nigerians and other West African troops
    stationed in Freetown. Capt Thomas warned them not to challenge the new
    government again. "We will not appreciate any foreign intervention in
    our internal affairs to jeopardise the security of our people," he
    said.
                              
    Some of the other West African troops are stationed in Freetown ready
    to intercede if fighting resumes in neighbouring Liberia, also ravaged
    by years of civil war.
                              
    A statement issued in the name of Kofi Annan, the United Nations
    Secretary-General, condemned the looting of UN offices, the
    commandeering of its vehicles and the taking into custody of local
    staff working for the UN. 
7.2019IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Tue May 27 1997 13:5183
7.2020IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:23102
    AP 28-May-1997 1:01 EDT   REF5325

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
   
    TEXAS TWISTERS 

    JARRELL, Texas (AP) -- The deadliest tornadoes in a decade ripped
    through central Texas from Waco to Austin. More than 50 homes in the
    Double Creeks Estate in the small town of Jarrell, 40 miles north of
    Austin, were leveled by one of several twisters. Thirty people were
    confirmed dead and rescue workers planned to search for survivors
    throughout the night. A town of less than 1,000 people, Jarrell was
    largely destroyed by a tornado in 1989 that killed one, injured 28, and
    severely damaged or destroyed 35 homes and 12 mobile homes. 
   
    COURT-CLINTON 

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court has ruled unanimously that Paula
    Jones may pursue her sexual harassment case against Bill Clinton while
    he is still president. She has accused him of asking her for oral sex
    in 1991 while he was governor of Arkansas. Clinton denies it. Jones'
    attorneys say she might consider a settlement deal that includes an
    apology and restores her reputation. 
   
    CLINTON-EUROPE 

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) -- President Clinton is in the Netherlands
    to mark the 50th birthday of the Marshall Plan, the sweeping U.S. aid
    program that helped rebuild Western Europe after World War II. Clinton
    also is to hold talks with European Union officials. The president
    arrived from Paris, where he attended the signing of the NATO-Russia
    security accord. 
   
    NATO-RUSSIA 

    PARIS (AP) -- President Boris Yeltsin vows that Moscow will no longer
    aim missiles at NATO allies, in a move western leaders called a
    surprise, but "a welcome one." Yeltsin joined 16 NATO leaders,
    including President Clinton, to sign a historic accord between Moscow
    and the military alliance formed 48 years ago to curb Soviet ambitions.
   
    BRITAIN-GLOBE THEATER 

    LONDON (AP) -- The Globe Theater has reopened, 350 years after it last
    hosted a play. As in the original Globe, the only seats are in the
    balconies around the stage. For opening night Tuesday, the groundlings,
    the patrons standing in front of the stage, paid a penny each for
    admittance -- just what their Elizabethan predecessors were charged.
    The original Globe was built in 1599 but destroyed in a fire in 1613. A
    version rebuilt in 1614 was demolished in 1644 to make way for new
    houses. 
   
    MOLINARI-RESIGN 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Rep. Susan Molinari, the keynote speaker at last
    summer's Republican National Convention, will resign her New York seat
    in Congress to become an anchorwoman for a new CBS news program,
    sources say. Molinari was expected to announce her plans Wednesday. She
    will serve in the House until Aug. 1, a source close to Molinari said.
    The Staten Island congresswoman will anchor "CBS News Saturday
    Morning," which will being airing this fall, said a source at the
    network. 
   
    SIERRA-LEONE 

    FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) -- A battle is brewing between troops loyal
    to ousted President Ahmed Tehan Kabbah and army mutineers who overthrew
    his civilian government in a coup d'etat Sunday. Kabbah's loyalist
    forces are being backed by Nigerian soldiers, who have began arriving
    in response to his request for help in restoring order. Rumors of an
    impending battle sent people who had been foraging for food fleeing
    back to their homes. The U.S. State Department advised Americans to
    stay indoors. 
   
    AT&T-SBC 

    NEW YORK (AP) -- AT&T and a company formed by two of its Baby Bell
    offspring are in talks to join forces in a $50 billion merger that
    would be the largest in history, sources confirmed. A marriage between
    AT&T and SBC Communications would be the largest in corporate history
    by far. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- Stock prices started higher Wednesday in Tokyo and the
    dollar was higher against the yen. The Nikkei rose 82.21 to 19,972.10.
    The dollar cost 116.72 yen, up 0.64. In New York, the Dow rose 37.50 to
    close at a record high of 7,383.41. The Nasdaq was at 1,409.21, up
    19.49. 
   
    ROCKETS-JAZZ 

    SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- Karl Malone had his highest-scoring game of the
    Western Conference finals with 29 points and shut down Charles Barkley
    defensively as the Utah Jazz moved within one victory of the NBA Finals
    with a 96-91 win over the Houston Rockets. It was the 22nd straight
    home victory for the Jazz, who haven't lost at the Delta Celter since
    Feb. 23. They will look to wrap up the series Thursday night in
    Houston, but they'll have to become the first team to win a road game
    in this series. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by MARCO LEAVITT 
7.2021IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3675
RTw  28-May-97 06:42    
    
Odds and Ends

Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that
have moved separately. 
    
  Sinking feeling as movie "Titanic" release delayed 
    
  LOS ANGELES - Release of "Titanic," the movie about the ill-fated
liner, has been put back six months, fuelling rumours it is
struggling to avoid more financial and artistic icebergs. 
    
     Paramount Pictures announced on Tuesday that instead of its
anticipated summer release, "Titanic" will open in theatres across
the United States and Canada on Dec. 19 
    
     The film, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Kathy
Bates, David Warner and Bill Paxton, has been rumoured for some time
to be in trouble and some reports said the movie's budget had
ballooned to around $200 million. 
    
     The trade magazine Variety quoted sources as saying the total
cost could be $285 million, making "Titanic" the second most
expensive movie of all time after "Cleopatra" which in 1963 cost the
equivalent of $300 million in 1997 dollars. 
    
     - - - - 
    
  Lost wallet puts escaped prisoner back behind bars 
    
  GENOA, Italy - An escaped Italian prisoner was back behind bars on
Tuesday after he lost his wallet and police telephoned him to come
and collect it. 
    
     Luigi De Chirico, 36, slipped away from a company where he was
allowed to work during a four-month prison sentence in the central
town of Terni, but lost his wallet containing identity papers and
his cellphone number. 
    
     A police officer called De Chirico on his cellphone and
arrested him when he arrived -- on a stolen moped -- to pick up the
wallet. De Chirico now faces fresh charges of evading jail and
theft. 
    
     - - - - 
    
  Angry S.Korean worker showers city with money 
    
     SEOUL - A construction worker, embittered by South Korea's
corrpution scandals, threw two months worth of his salary out of a
Seoul hotel room window on Tuesday, witnesses said. 
    
     "If you politicians need the money that badly, take it," he
shouted. "This money would keep my wife and children alive, but I've
sprinkled it for you." 
    
     The man who, was not identified, threw four million won
($4,488) worth of 1,000 won bills onto the street where pedestrians
scrambled to grab the money, witnesses said. 
    
     They said the worker was later detained by police. 
    
     South Korea is embroiled in several corruprion scandals, with
two former presidents Chun Doo Hwan and Roh Tae-woo behind bars for
bribery. 
    
     President Kim Young-sam's second son was arrested earlier this
month on charges of bribery, and Kim himself is under pressure by
opposition parties to disclose details of his 1992 election campaign
financing. 
    
    REUTER
7.2022IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3863
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                              
    Father ends battle to stop wife's abortion
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 
                    
    A FATHER who went to court to stop his estranged wife having an
    abortion abandoned his battle yesterday, clearing the way for the
    termination to go ahead.
                    
    James Kelly, 28, who was expected to take his case to the House of
    Lords next week, said he did not want to bring a baby into the world
    knowing it would be unloved by its mother. Pro-life groups said the
    case proved that "abortion on demand" was available and called for the
    reform of the 1967 Abortion Act.
                    
    Mr Kelly had already lost his case in the Scottish courts and an appeal
    to the Lords was his last chance of stopping the termination. Cardinal
    Thomas Winning, leader of the Catholic Church in Scotland, said he
    regretted the development, which amounted to a "death sentence" on the
    unborn child.
                    
    Three judges at the Court of Session in Edinburgh ruled on Saturday
    that a foetus had no right to life if its mother wanted an abortion,
    but continued a ban on Lynn Kelly's operation to allow the appeal. The
    judges, led by Lord Cullen, the Lord Justice Clerk, lifted the court
    order yesterday after being told of the father's sudden change of
    heart. Mr Kelly, of Inverkeithing, Fife, said afterwards that he still
    hoped that his wife would change her mind.
                    
    Mrs Kelly, 21, a nightclub singer, is now 14 weeks pregnant and
    indicated this week that she had doubts about having an induced labour,
    which might be required because of the delay. Her solicitor, Beverley
    Johnstone, said yesterday: "Lynn will reflect on what has happened to
    her and will make a decision now that she has been given a choice about
    whether to proceed with the termination or not."
                    
    The couple have been telling their stories in rival newspapers. Mr
    Kelly was quoted in The Sun yesterday, saying: "I feel as though I have
    let my unborn baby down, let myself down and let everyone down. But I
    can't go on with this."
                    
    He added that he had decided to end his case because it could take some
    time to hear the appeal, and by then his wife would be carrying "a
    whole baby".
                    
    Mrs Kelly, who is contracted to the Daily Record, has alleged that her
    husband had "a secret love child" - a three-year-old girl whom, she
    claimed, he had not seen for nine months. She said: "He has been saying
    he has gone to the courts to save his unborn child. But this is a man
    who will not even see his own flesh and blood."
                    
    Cardinal Winning, who this year offered financial support to pregnant
    women to stop them having abortions, said: "All that will have been
    proved is that, as the law stands, a baby can be aborted for the most
    trivial of reasons, such as parental disagreement or career problems."
                    
    The cardinal added that the case had highlighted the flaws in the 1967
    Abortion Act, which "allows effective abortion on demand".
                    
    Ann Furedi, director of the pro-choice Birth Control Trust, said that
    if "abortion on demand" existed, Mr Kelly would not have had his case
    heard in court. 
7.2023IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3958
    AP 28-May-1997 1:29 EDT   REF5339

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Horse-Drawn Wagon To Pick up Trash

    By ANNE WALLACE ALLEN

    Associated Press Writer

    BRISTOL, Vt. (AP) -- Patrick Palmer beat out the competition to become
    Bristol's garbage man because he had what others didn't -- a horse and
    carriage. 

    Selectmen in this historic, 200-year-old town were impressed by
    Palmer's plan to pick up the trash -- sans truck. 

    "This is pretty unique; that's why he got the bid," Town Administrator
    Bob Hall said Tuesday, Palmer's first day as the new village trash
    hauler. 

    Palmer and his two draft horses, Luke and Zack, cover their 8-mile
    route at a leisurely pace, moving through the traffic of Bristol's one
    main street without a hitch, and stopping briefly every once in a while
    to let Palmer's nephew, Jake, jump off to throw the trash into the
    wagon. 

    The route, which he covers twice -- once to pick up garbage and once to
    pick up recycling -- takes all day. 

    Selectmen for the town of 3,900 chose Palmer over three other bidders
    even though two of the contenders -- both private citizens with trucks
    -- put in bids that were $600 or $700 lower than his. Palmer will be
    paid $15,600 for the year. 

    "I think Bristol's trying to create a friendly image, a small-town
    atmosphere," Hall said. 

    Prindle Wissler Mullin, an artist from Middlebury who stopped in
    Bristol for lunch, said she hoped the town's decision to hire Palmer
    signaled a trend away from modernization and development. 

    "We're going in the other direction, hopefully," said Mullin, 85. 
    Palmer, 50, drew some waves and greetings from friends, but no undue
    notice as he passed through the village. 

    "If I had a bigger rig, or more room in there, it would be just as
    quick as the truck," Palmer said. 

    If the horses leave anything behind, Jake picks it up with a shovel and
    throws it in the wagon. 

    Palmer is Bristol's first private trash collector; until now, the
    village has done the job itself. 

    "I think that $600 (above the lower bids) is well worth it," said
    Suzanne Widlicka, whose home and clothing store is on Palmer's route.
    "It's our past and it's worth preserving." 
7.2024IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3931
    AP 28-May-1997 0:23 EDT   REF5302

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Prosthetic Arm Left in Taxi Trunk

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Taxi drivers in New York City are on the lookout for a
    12-year-old cellist's prosthetic arm, which she accidentally left
    behind in the trunk of a cab. 

    The girl and her baby sitter rode in a taxi on May 21 and left the
    artificial arm behind in a blue duffel bag, Taxi and Limousine
    Commission spokesman Allan Fromberg said Tuesday. 

    "They didn't get a receipt, driver's medallion number or license
    number," Fromberg said. "What we think happened is, it's sitting in a
    trunk and that driver doesn't know it's there. So we've been spreading
    the word in the industry." 

    The girl, whose name was not released, has been playing the cello since
    age 5 and needs the arm to play but can otherwise function without it. 

    Fromberg is optimistic about the outcome. 

    "We've had a lot of happy endings with cab drivers. They have really
    come through in a clinch in cases like this," he said. "One three
    months ago returned a bag with about $40,000 in cash." 

    And about a month and a half ago, tenor Placido Domingo recovered a
    briefcase packed with handwritten notes and music that he left in a
    cab, Fromberg said. 
7.2025IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3929
    AP 28-May-1997 0:22 EDT   REF5291

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Armored Car Spills Money on Road

    LINCOLN PARK, Mich. (AP) -- Cars pulled over on a freeway after an
    armored truck spilled hundreds of thousands of dollars during rush hour
    Tuesday, and police say one person may have sped off with as much as
    $20,000. 

    The driver of the truck reported hearing a "whooshing" noise while
    driving south on Interstate 75 in suburban Detroit. Two bags of money,
    mostly in $20 bills, had dropped out of the truck and broken on the
    interstate. The bags held between $200,000 and $600,000, according to
    police Lt. Tim Reedy. 

    He said when police arrived, 10 to 15 cars had pulled off the freeway. 

    "People who wanted to steal booked," Reedy said, "but people that
    wanted to turn money in stayed and helped us pick it up." 

    Reedy said two motorists were stopped with $300 from the truck, and
    police were looking for a man who might have taken as much as $20,000. 

    Police did not yet know Tuesday evening how much money was recovered. 

    The company that police identified as the owner of the truck, Wolverine
    Dispatch Inc. of Comstock Park, declined comment Tuesday night. 
7.2026IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3960
    AP 27-May-1997 23:36 EDT   REF5138

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Cancer Doctor Acquitted of Contempt

    By JOAN THOMPSON

    Associated Press Writer

    HOUSTON (AP) -- A doctor accused of violating a court order against
    shipping his unproven cancer treatment across state lines was acquitted
    of contempt on Tuesday. 

    Dr. Stanislaw Burzynski, 54, smiled and shook hands with his attorneys
    after the verdict was read. Supporters, some in tears, clapped and
    shouted. 

    Burzynski faced a single count of contempt alleging he violated 1983
    and 1984 court orders barring him from shipping his experimental
    "antineoplastons" treatment outside Texas. 

    "I never doubted that we were going to win," Burzynski said outside the
    courthouse. "It's a great day for us." 

    The federal jury deliberated three hours. It was his second trial; his
    first ended in March with a hung jury on 75 counts. 

    The Polish-born doctor has said that antineoplastons, which he
    discovered in human urine and now makes synthetically, serve as
    biochemical switches that "turn off" cancer genes. 

    Burzynski's terminally ill patients and their family members insist the
    treatment is their only hope after conventional therapy failed. 

    "Today my prayers have been answered," said a jubilant Mary Jo Siegel
    of Pacific Palisades, Calif., who says the treatment put her cancer
    into remission. "What (the verdict) means is medical freedom for all of
    us." 

    Clinical trials on the treatment, which were approved by the Food and
    Drug Administration, are now under way, required by the court after
    Burzynski was indicted in 1995. 

    "The positive to come out of the prosecution is that it literally
    forced Burzynski into the system," assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Clark
    said. "It forced him, with the FDA, to get together and study this drug
    the way it's supposed to have been studied." 

    A postal inspector testified that she caught one of Burzynski's
    employees shipping the compound outside Texas in 1995. Defense lawyers
    argued the worker was acting on his own and made a mistake. 

    Burzynski and his Burzynski Research Institute were indicted in 1995 on
    75 counts of mail fraud, contempt and violating FDA rules by
    introducing the experimental treatment into interstate commerce. 

    After the first trial, U.S. District Judge Sim Lake dismissed 34
    counts. Last week, prosecutors dropped all but one of the 41 remaining
    charges. 
7.2027IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3943
    AP 27-May-1997 23:20 EDT   REF5111

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Floss Stops Shark Bite Bleeding

    By TOM BAYLES

    Associated Press Writer

    MIAMI (AP) -- A quick-thinking nurse used dental floss to save her
    boyfriend from bleeding to death after a shark attack in the Bahamas. 

    A shark shredded Wilbur Wood's right arm while he was spearfishing off
    Spanish Key in the northern Bahama Islands on Monday. The shark was
    apparently trying to snatch a fish on the end of Wood's spear and bit
    Wood in the crook of his arm. 

    Wood, 54, a Gainesville veterinarian, was in serious but stable
    condition Tuesday at Broward General Medical Center in Miami. 

    His girlfriend, Gail Brooks, was credited with saving his life by using
    dental floss to tie off an artery in his arm. "She gave him the
    opportunity to live," said hospital spokesman Chuck Malkus. 

    "She clamped the artery with her fingers, went back on the boat, got
    dental floss and with other people's help, she found the artery and
    that's all it took," Dr. Imad Tabry said.  More surgery is needed
    before doctors will know if Wood will regain the use of his arm. 

    The couple wasn't granting interviews Tuesday afternoon. A hospital
    spokesman said the attack happened so quickly nobody got a look at the
    shark to determine its size or species. 

    George Burgess, director of the International Shark Attack File located
    at the Florida Museum of Natural History, said the Caribbean reef
    shark, a smaller species, has been involved in a number of recent
    attacks. 

    "We've had several incidents where they've come in to grab a fish off a
    spear," he said. 

    Burgess said a tiger shark or a bull shark could also be to blame. 
7.2028IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3967
    AP 27-May-1997 22:47 EDT   REF5043

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    U.S., Canada Stall Salmon Talks

    By TIM KLASS

    Associated Press Writer

    SEATTLE (AP) -- Talks between the United States and Canada on dividing
    Pacific salmon were postponed Tuesday after a fourth U.S. fishing boat
    was seized by Canadian authorities. 

    Skippers of the four boats were charged with failing to obey
    regulations that require them to notify authorities and haul in their
    fishing gear when entering Canadian water. 

    The regulations have been in effect since last year, but were not
    enforced until last week when talks on the salmon treaty broke down.
    One boat was seized Tuesday, one on Monday and two on Sunday. 

    State Department spokesman Nicholas R. Burns said the seizures "created
    an atmosphere inimical to progress in these talks and is unhelpful to
    efforts to find a solution to the Pacific salmon dispute."

    The talks, which were to resume Friday, are being delayed "until a more
    favorable climate for discussions can be achieved," Burns added. 

    "The U.S. hopes that Canada will release these vessels immediately and
    refrain from seizing others with the goal of resolving the salmon
    problem in the spirit of compromise and good neighborliness," he said. 

    The Christina, based in Seattle, was detained before British Columbia
    Premier Glen Clark met for nearly half an hour with Gov. Gary Locke and
    agreed to disagree about how to end the "salmon war." 

    Upon arriving at the governor's office Tuesday afternoon, Clark called
    the delay in treaty talks "completely unacceptable." 

    "We believe conservation has to take first priority and obviously the
    United States does not think that way," Clark said. "I think Canada has
    to increase the pressure on the United States now." 

    Said Locke after the meeting: "I think that all sides just need to
    perhaps just lower the temperature." 

    On Tuesday, a boat captained by Robert Ayers was taken to Port Hardy at
    the northern tip of Vancouver Island. Ayers is to appear in court
    Wednesday. 

    The three other skippers paid a fine of about $220 each earlier Tuesday
    as ordered by a Provincial Court judge in Port Hardy and were allowed
    to retrieve their boats, The Canadian Press reported. 

    The "hail-in" requirement carries a maximum penalty of about $360,000,
    but Judge Brian Saunderson said the skippers were political pawns in an
    international dispute. 

    Canada says U.S. fishermen have been catching roughly 4 million more
    salmon each year than they should be, costing the Canadian industry $45
    million each year. 

    It began cracking down shortly after the collapse of negotiations on
    sharing and management of fish under the Pacific Salmon Treaty, which
    covers the waters off Oregon, Washington, British Columbia and
    southeast Alaska. 
7.2029IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3956
    AP 27-May-1997 20:18 EDT   REF5718

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Developments in McVeigh Trial

    By The Associated Press

    TAINTED EVIDENCE?: FBI scientist Frederic Whitehurst testified that he
    believed the Oklahoma City bombing evidence was handled by
    inexperienced people and put at risk of contamination. Under
    cross-examination, however, he said that, while he knew of
    contamination risks, "I have no knowledge of any actual contamination
    of any evidence in this case." 

    CONFLICTING TESTIMONY: Whitehurst said FBI agent David Williams told
    him a truck shard embedded with ammonium nitrate crystals was
    unreliable because it was found by a civilian. Williams testified he
    didn't remember having that conversation with Whitehurst. FBI chemist
    Ron Kelly testified earlier he removed it from a parking lot across the
    street from the bomb scene. 

    FBI CRITIC: John Ryan Ford Lloyd, a forensic scientist from Great
    Britain, backed up testimony by Whitehurst. He said he found many of
    the FBI's procedures "unacceptable" and a "matter of concern." Lloyd
    was particularly critical of the packaging of McVeigh's clothing in a
    paper bag because explosives residue could seep in or out of the bag. 

    REPORT FINDINGS: U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch said he may allow
    into evidence a section of a scathing Justice Department report dealing
    with FBI scientist Roger Martz's testing on McVeigh's clothing. The
    report criticized for Martz for failing to inspect the clothing through
    a microscope before vacuuming up particles for examination. 

    WITNESS DENIED: Matsch refused to allow the defense to call Carol Howe,
    a former federal informant with ties to white-supremacist groups. Ms.
    Howe might have raised the possibility of a larger conspiracy in the
    Oklahoma City bombing. Her attorney said Matsch ruled Ms. Howe's
    testimony irrelevant. 

    KANSAS RAIN: Metropolitan State College meteorology professor Anthony
    Rockwood testified it likely was raining in Junction City, Kan., when
    McVeigh allegedly walked from a McDonald's to Elliott's Body Shop to
    pick up a Ryder truck two days before the bombing. Prosecutors noted no
    one carried umbrellas when they were captured on the McDonald's video,
    including McVeigh. 

    DEFENSE RESTS?: When asked if the defense would rest its case
    Wednesday, defense attorney Stephen Jones told reporters, "I wouldn't
    be surprised." 

    WHAT'S NEXT: The defense intends to call witnesses to discredit the
    testimony of key prosecution witnesses Lori and Michael Fortier. One of
    the planned witnesses said she needed to consult a lawyer overnight
    because her testimony could deal with drug use and may incriminate
    her.
7.2030IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3943
    AP 27-May-1997 21:31 EDT   REF5740

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    German Bomb Physicist Dies

    By COLLEEN BARRY

    Associated Press Writer

    BERLIN (AP) -- Manfred von Ardenne, a prolific inventor and physicist
    who began his atomic research in Hitler's Germany and later helped the
    Soviets develop a nuclear bomb, has died at age 90. 

    Von Ardenne died Monday afternoon at his home in Dresden, his secretary
    said Tuesday. The cause was listed as old age. 

    Von Ardenne's work developing a cyclotron, a particle accelerator used
    for nuclear research, won him the attention both of German scientists,
    who successfully discouraged his research, and of the Soviets, who in
    turn drafted him. 

    His innovation of a process for splitting isotopes to enrich uranium
    proved key to the Soviets' success in creating a nuclear bomb. 

    Von Ardenne later said the Soviet bomb helped bring parity to the
    U.S.-Soviet arms race. "It was our contribution to atomic peace," he
    said. 

    After working for the Soviets, he established a scientific institute in
    the East German city of Dresden in 1955. 

    Though he never joined the communist party, his research earned him
    great personal freedom and a life style typical of the East German
    elite, including a mansion overlooking the Elbe River. 

    Von Ardenne started his career in science as a teenage inventor,
    creating radio and television components during the pioneering days of
    broadcasting, and later medical equipment. Von Ardenne is still known
    in Germany as "the father of television." 

    He is survived by his second wife, Bettina, a daughter and three sons.

7.2031IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3943
    AP 27-May-1997 17:38 EDT   REF5205

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Pope Heads German Talks on Abortion

    VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope John Paul II presided over talks with Roman
    Catholic bishops on whether the church in Germany should continue to
    participate in a counseling system for women considering abortions. 

    The German church, which says the counseling has helped many women
    change their minds about having abortions, has resisted pressure from
    the Vatican to leave the program. 

    Under German law, women seeking abortions need certification showing
    they know about offers of help for mothers and children. 

    Besides the pope and 27 German bishops, attending the session were
    Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican's secretary of state, and Cardinal
    Jozef Ratzinger, the pope's guardian of orthodoxy. 

    Meanwhile, two German doctors asked Germany's highest court Tuesday to
    block a new law in the southern state of Bavaria banning abortion-only
    doctors practices. 

    The German state's conservative ruling party, the Christian Social
    Union, passed the law last summer. The law, which takes effect July 1,
    states that doctors may not derive more than 25 percent of their income
    from abortions. 

    In court Tuesday, Bavarian Social Minister Barbara Stamm argued that
    abortion-only practices violate the concept of protecting unborn life
    because doctors who are financially dependent on performing abortions
    will be less likely to advise a pregnant woman about other options. 

    Dr. Friedrich Stapf of Munich and Dr. Andreas Freudemann of Nuremberg
    said the new law would ruin them financially and inconvenience women
    seeking abortions by making them travel farther. 

    Stapf and Freudemann together perform about 6,000 abortions a year --
    two thirds of all abortions done in Bavaria, their attorneys said. 

    The court is expected to rule in mid-June. 
7.2032IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3982
    AP 27-May-1997 17:06 EDT   REF5115

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Japan Fears Killer Stalking Youths

    By BRAVEN SMILLIE

    Associated Press Writer

    TOKYO (AP) -- It was a particularly shocking discovery for a nation
    unaccustomed to violent crime: On Tuesday, a janitor at a junior high
    school found the severed head of an 11-year-old retarded boy. 

    In the mouth, a nearly incomprehensible note scrawled in red ink
    taunted police. "Can you stop me?" it asked, according to national
    media that have made the killing their top story. 

    That message, the mutilated body of Jun Hase, and the recent slaying of
    a schoolgirl in the same neighborhood have raised fears that a serial
    killer is preying on the western city of Kobe. 

    "This is really horrible. I don't understand how it could be done.
    We'll all have to pull together," said Atsuko Hashimoto, principal of
    the boy's elementary school in Kobe, a city devastated by a 1995
    earthquake that killed 6,300 people. 

    Jun had been missing since Saturday, when he left his home alone to
    visit his grandfather, who lives in the neighborhood. Three days later,
    the custodian discovered Jun's head in a small courtyard in front of
    the school -- a different school from the one Jun attended. 

    The sixth grader had died of strangulation or suffocation about two
    days earlier, said police spokesman Ryoji Kajiwara. Police have not
    released any information on whether the crime was sexual. 

    Later Tuesday, a body believed to be his was found near a drainage pond
    on a small hill 500 yards from where the head was discovered, said
    Takahiko Yoto, a spokesman for the Hyogo state police. He said the
    boy's father identified the head, but the body had yet to be confirmed
    as belonging to Jun. 

    Police were investigating whether Jun's death was linked to two
    assaults in March in his quiet residential neighborhood, located about
    270 miles west of Tokyo. One girl was killed and another seriously
    injured. 

    The girls attended a different elementary school than Jun, but all
    three victims were found in the same half-mile area. Kajiwara said
    police did not know if the other attacks involved sexual assault. 

    Since the March assaults, adults in Kobe have been walking children to
    school in groups. 

    Another police spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity, said
    Tuesday the brief note found in the boy's mouth included several
    obscure Japanese words, including "Onibara," which translates as
    "devil's rose." 

    Last year, a popular drama on the Fuji Television network featured a
    series of fictional slayings in which the bodies of several victims
    were found, each with a rose in its mouth. Police would not say whether
    they see that as a clue in the most recent case. 

    The head had been mutilated with a sharp object, including cuts on the
    lips. The police spokesman said no arrests have been made. 

    The recent killings were reminiscent of those committed by serial
    killer Tsutomu Miyazaki eight years ago. 

    Miyazaki was sentenced to death last month for killing and mutilating
    four girls ages 4-7 in 1988 and 1989. He burned the body of one
    4-year-old and left her bones on her parents' doorstep. He also wrote
    letters to the media and to the victims' families taunting the police. 

    He was arrested in July 1989. Police later found thousands of
    pornographic videos and comic books -- many extremely violent -- in the
    room where he lived with his parents. Numerous videos and photos of the
    victims were also found. 

    Japan has a policy of not announcing when executions are carried out,
    so it was not clear if Miyazaki was hanged. 
7.2033IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3981
    AP 27-May-1997 16:10 EDT   REF5005

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Chirac Hopes To Salvage Elections

    By JOSEPH SCHUMAN

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- Hoping to salvage a victory from a surprise election
    setback, President Jacques Chirac urged voters Tuesday not to
    compromise France's economic progress by voting the Socialists back
    into power. 

    A coalition of Chirac's Rally for the Republic party and the centrist
    Union for French Democracy won only 29.9 percent of the vote in
    Sunday's first round of parliamentary elections. 

    It was the conservatives' worst first-round showing in nearly four
    decades -- and it prompted the resignation of Chirac's unpopular prime
    minister, Alain Juppe. 

    Moving quickly to control the damage, Chirac warned the nation Tuesday
    night that the Socialists could jeopardize economic austerity reforms
    if elected in this Sunday's runoff vote. 

    "Last Sunday, I heard your message," Chirac said in a televised
    address. "The situation remains fragile. Be warned not to compromise
    everything at the moment when we are collecting the first fruits of our
    efforts." 

    A majority of French voters apparently rejected Chirac's requested
    mandate for austerity measures aimed at enabling France to join the
    single European currency, the euro, planned for 1999. 

    "I hope that the majority you choose will not risk fragilizing the
    construction of Europe," the president said in this speech. 

    The Socialist Party and its leftist allies won 40.6 percent of the vote
    Sunday with promises to fight the country's record 12.8 percent
    unemployment rate first. 

    The far-right National Front -- which claims a united Europe sells out
    French sovereignty -- won another 15 percent of the vote. 

    Chirac dissolved the National Assembly last month and called elections
    10 months early, gambling Juppe could muster support for the reforms
    despite the strikes and protests against them. 

    But Socialist leader Lionel Jospin focused his campaign on ousting
    Juppe, who was at one point the most unpopular prime minister since the
    1950s. 

    "I became a scapegoat," Juppe told the daily newspaper Le Sud-Ouest. "I
    never imagined I would be an obstacle to the (conservatives') victory." 

    Chirac's conservative coalition could still pull off a victory if it
    can win some of the 32 percent of voters who didn't cast ballots in the
    first round. Some far-right voters may also swing toward the
    conservatives. 

    National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen said he will tell his
    supporters Thursday how to vote Sunday in districts where his party has
    no chance. 

    Countering the conservatives' free-market reforms and austerity plans
    aimed at spurring the economy, Jospin has proposed youth jobs programs
    and shorter work weeks with the same pay to spread jobs around. 

    Still, even if the Socialists win, its not clear they and other leftist
    parties could put their differences aside to form a coalition
    government. 

    Chirac would be forced to share power with a Socialist prime minister
    -- sure to be Jospin -- in an alliance that could slow France's bid to
    join the planned launch of the euro. 

    To qualify for the euro, France needs to cut its budget deficit from
    last year's 4.2 percent to 3 percent this year, a difficult task in the
    face of record unemployment. 
7.2034IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:3969
    AP 27-May-1997 19:13 EDT   REF5680

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    CDC: Syphilis Cases Plummet

    By TARA MEYER

    Associated Press Writer

    ATLANTA (AP) -- New cases of syphilis, a disease once feared as much as
    AIDS is now, have fallen to their lowest level in the United States in
    40 years, the government said Tuesday. 

    And health officials say it's possible to wipe out the sexually
    transmitted disease. 

    In 1996, there were 4.4 new cases of syphilis for every 100,000 people,
    the lowest since the 3.9 cases per 100,000 recorded in 1956-57, the
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. 

    Half of the 11,624 new U.S. cases last year occurred in 37 counties,
    mostly across the South. Seventy-three percent of the nation's counties
    reported no new cases at all. 

    "When the disease is this low and this local, it gives us a historic
    opportunity to talk about elimination," said Dr. Judith Wasserheit,
    director of the CDC's sexually transmitted disease prevention division.
    "I can't say when at this point." 

    The CDC dedicates $106 million a year toward preventing sexually
    transmitted diseases, about $80 million of it through state and local
    health departments. 

    Syphilis peaked in 1990 with 20 cases per 100,000 people. The 1996 drop
    may be merely a trough in the disease's normal cycle; epidemics usually
    emerge every seven years. But Mrs. Wasserheit also credits health
    departments' efforts to push prevention in communities with high rates. 

    "Without a push now, it's likely we will face rising rates," she said.
    "We made this mistake before in 1956. We decided we had won and this
    country cut back resources for prevention of syphilis." 

    Syphilis is caused by a bacterium called treponema pallidum. The
    disease starts out as painless sores on the genitals, rectum and
    tongue. 

    Left untreated, it can worsen into a rash that spreads throughout the
    body, with mouth sores, fever and joint pains. Then the bacteria hide
    out for a while. Patients seem fine, but the disease is spreading to
    bones, the spinal cord and the heart. At that point, syphilis can cause
    insanity and death. 

    Because of the open sores, people infected with syphilis are more
    likely to become infected with the AIDS virus. And pregnant women who
    get syphilis can miscarry, or their babies can be retarded. 

    While there is no vaccine to prevent the disease, syphilis can be cured
    if treated early with antibiotics. Penicillin has been the main
    treatment since 1947. 

    Syphilis once caused the same kind of fear that AIDS does now, said
    Allan Brandt, who teaches medical history at Harvard University. During
    the Depression and World War I, there were major health campaigns
    against syphilis. 

    "There was a lot of talk about mandatory screening, lots of talk about
    premarital screening and screening in newborns," said Brandt, who wrote
    a history of the disease. 
7.2035IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:4080
    RTw  28-May-97 07:24    

    Glaxo(GLXO.L) drug helps HIV patients with herpes

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    By Jonathan Birt 

    LONDON, May 28 (Reuter) - British drugs group Glaxo Wellcome Plc said
    on Wednesday its anti-viral drug Valtrex was effective in preventing
    repeat attacks of genital herpes in people with HIV and AIDS. 

    The company said an international study, involving more than 1,000
    individuals carrying the HIV virus, showed Valtrex prevented repeat
    attacks in 86 percent of people infected with genital herpes.

    The results of the year-long trial was due to be presented to the
    European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases in
    Lausanne, Switzerland, on Wednesday. 

    The condition, caused by the herpes simplex virus, is particularly
    debilitating to people whose immune system is weak, and can lead to
    further illnesses and even death. 

    The company has also applied for approval to use Valtrex to prevent
    repeat attacks of genital herpes in otherwise healthy individuals. 

    The company said separate trials had shown an 85 percent success rate
    in preventing recurrence of attacks in people with healthy immune
    systems. 

    Glaxo Wellcome's out-of-patent drug Zovirax is the current standard
    treatment for shingles and genital herpes. 

    Valtrex, a follow-up drug launched in 1995, currently has approvals for
    treating shingles and tackling genital herpes attacks once they have
    developed. 

    The company is now seeking approval in Europe and the United States to
    allow sufferers to take Valtrex tablets daily to extend the gap between
    attacks and prevent them from occurring at all. 

    Glaxo's international director of infectious diseases, Alison Murray,
    told Reuters the study was the largest-ever into the suppression of
    genital herpes among people with HIV. 

    Genital herpes can cause stabbing pains, swollen glands, painful
    urination, blisters and sores. After a severe initial attack the virus
    lays dormant, waking up periodically and producing a fresh outbreak. 

    The condition is worse in people with HIV, with attacks lasting for up
    to 15 days compared with four or five in non-HIV individuals.

    "As the disease (HIV) progresses, the outbreaks can become more
    protracted and more debilitating," said Murray. She said the onset of
    large genital ulcers could also lead to secondary infections. 

    Murray said that 86 percent of HIV-affected people who took Valtrex
    were free from recurrence of genital herpes during the 12 months of the
    trial, compared with 83 percent who took aciclovir, sold by Glaxo
    Wellcome as Zovirax. 

    Valtrex also has dosing advantages over Zovirax. Doctors found two 500
    milligram tablets a day was the ideal dose for people with HIV,
    compared to a recommended dose of four tablets for aciclovir. 

    Murray told Reuters there was also "a distinct trend" suggesting that
    Valtrex was more effective than aciclovir in preventing recurrence. 

    She said the study suggested  30 percent fewer recurrences in patients
    taking Valtrex, but that drop-out rates from the year-long study
    prevented this being shown as statistically significant. 

    "There is a very strong indication that it is more effective than
    aciclovir," Murray said. 

    Glaxo Wellcome is also examining the possibility that the HIV virus and
    herpes simplex virus interact and aggravate each other, said Murray. 

    REUTER 
7.2036IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:40107
    RTw  28-May-97 03:44    

    FEATURE-These are warriors? China's troops enter ...

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.

    FEATURE-These are warriors? China's troops enter Hong Kong 

    By James Flannery 

    HONG KONG, May 28 (Reuter) - They look like the nicer kind of
    youth-camp guides that middle class parents might like to see
    supervising their kids on vacation. 

    In this non-conformist era of outrageous behaviour, your mother would
    approve. They are clean-shaven with short haircuts and wear berets,
    shirts with neck-ties, crisply-tailored slacks and a serious,
    responsible air. 

    Making perhaps the most downbeat advance in military history, these
    earnest-looking young men are Chinese troops entering Hong Kong in a
    tourist-style coach. 

    Their arrival signals historic change in the most nondescript way. And
    Hong Kong, soon to be handed by Britain to China, seems fairly laid
    back about receiving them, too. 

    "Their biggest problem here so far is understanding why the British
    insist on driving on the left-hand side of the road -- some political
    gesture?" said one official. 

    Any connection between these representatives, whose natty turnout
    resembles crusading American evangelists, and the troops who shot down
    their unarmed, massed, pro-democracy compatriots in the 1989 Tiananmen
    Square killings, seems highly improbable. 

    But this is indeed the advance guard of the People's Liberation Army
    garrison for Hong Kong, set to return to China on July 1 after a
    century and a half of British colonial rule. 

    NO WEAPONS, CIVILIAN-TYPE CLOTHES, BRITAIN SAYS 

    In public, they wear civilian-type clothes and carry no weapons before
    the handover, at Britain's request. 

    As they stare solemnly from an air-conditioned bus, they give every
    appearance of a slightly bewildered tourist group. A male choir,
    perhaps, but they're not at all vocal. 

    Appearances are deceptive. These are almost certainly fighters, trained
    to kill in combat, just like the welcoming scarlet-hatted British
    troops of the Black Watch Regiment. 

    China evidently wants to make a good impression on the nervous
    residents of Hong Kong who have vivid memories of the Tiananmen
    shootings which provoked mass protests here in 1989. 

    The advance party is clearly handpicked from the ranks of the
    three-million-strong PLA, the world's largest military force. 

    It could scarcely be more low profile. There are no bands, no flags, no
    parades for the second team's arrival. There are no civilian rallies,
    either of welcome or protest. Minutes later, they disappear into former
    British barracks. 

    They will guard Hong Kong, a territory of 6.4 million population in
    China's deep south. 

    Their presence already here is yet another sign that China is intent on
    wiping out an historic humiliation in Britain's 1841 military seizure
    of Hong Kong, then a backwater of the rickety old Manchu empire. 

    A 66-strong second advance party arrived in mid-May, joining 40 who
    came in April. A third and final advance group of 90 members will enter
    Hong Kong on May 30. 

    PERFORM "SACRED DUTY," GENERAL TELLS TROOPS 

    Major-General Liu Zhenwu, commander of the future garrison in Hong
    Kong, urged the advance party "to carry on the fine traditions of the
    PLA, and to perform the sacred duties entrusted to them by the country
    and people" at a send-off ceremony on the Chinese side of the border. 

    China plans to establish a Hong Kong garrison of up to 10,000 troops
    after the handover, about the same number as the British garrison at
    its peak, although some of the PLA soldiers may remain just over the
    border in China proper. 

    Sporting their dark-blue berets and crisply-starched outfits, the 66
    PLA men crossed the frontier in a convoy comprising a large
    air-conditioned bus, green army trucks, jeeps and a black Audi. They
    brought supplies and communication equipment. 

    The latest group wore a new uniform, unveiled earlier this month. The
    shirts feature a shoulder badge and another badge with the soldier's
    name in Chinese characters and romanised Chinese. 

    NEIGHBOUR CALLS SOLDIERS "GUARDIAN ANGELS" 

    This will help identify a soldier to both Hong Kong's 98 percent
    Chinese population and a mainly-foreign minority of residents who do
    not know the Chinese language. 

    The latest arrivals represented army, navy and air force sections of
    the PLA, identifiable by their respective green, blue and white shirts. 

    REUTER
7.2037IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:4031
    RTw  28-May-97 00:52    

    Britain to relax immigration rule - newspaper

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 28 (Reuter) - Britain's new Labour government plans to
    alter a controversial marriage immigration rule affecting thousands of
    people seeking to settle in the country, a newspaper said on Wednesday. 

    Under the new regulation, it will be up to immigration officials to
    prove a person married primarily to be able to settle in Britain, The
    Guardian said. 

    It said the government made the decision last week and Home Secretary
    (interior minister) Jack Straw was expected to announce the details
    within two weeks. 

    Under the existing rule, introduced in 1980, people could be refused
    entry if immigration officials judged that the primary purpose of the
    marriage was to settle in Britain. 

    "Critics have called it the 'catch 22' of the immigration system with
    applicants having to prove a negative -- that they were not getting
    married simply to come to Britain," the newspaper said. 

    The Guardian said the government is also considering other reforms such
    as the restoration of appeal rights to family members who are refused
    entry visas to Britain for births, weddings and funerals. 

    REUTER
7.2038IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 11:4149
    RTw  27-May-97 23:06    

    Canadian police seize eight tonnes of hashish

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    MONTREAL, May 27 (Reuter) - The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)
    said on Tuesday it had seized eight tonnes (8.82 U.S. tons) of hashish
    valued at C$64 million ($47 million) over a 10-month period as a result
    of an international drug investigation. 

    The investigation culminated in a police operation in the Montreal area
    early on Tuesday that was expected to involve 350 police officers
    executing 29 arrest warrants, the RCMP said. 

    The police added that nine other arrests were expected on Tuesday in
    the the Netherlands, Beligum and Switzerland. 

    Authorities in several countries, including the United Kingdom, United
    States, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates and the British colony Hong
    Kong cooperated with Canada in the investigation, Canadian police said. 

    Law enforcement and judicial authorities in those countries were acting
    on a formal request for mutual assistance made by the Canadian
    government at the RCMP's request. 

    The investigation began in 1993 in Montreal when the Royal Bank of
    Canada (RY.TO) advised the RCMP of suspicious financial transactions. 

    An alleged criminal organization was suspected of laundering the
    proceeds of crime generated by the importation and traffic of narcotics
    in Canada, police said. 

    The hashish was seized in four police operations between October 1995
    and August 1996. 

    The largest quantity of hashish, 6.6 tonnes (7.2 U.S. tons) valued at
    C$53 million ($39 million), was seized in Anvers, Belgium in August
    1996. The shipment had gone by boat from Karachi to Anvers and was
    destined for Montreal, the RCMP said. 

    Another shipment was heading from India to Montreal by plane via
    Houston, Texas. Police did not provide details on where that shipment
    was seized. 

    The RCMP said searches were under way in connection with the drugs and
    the proceeds of criminal offenses. Restraint and special warrant
    searches were issued against assets illegally obtained by some members
    of the alleged criminal organization, the police said. 
7.2039IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 15:5848
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                     
    Noose rebel halts runway bailiffs
    
    A PROTESTER with a noose around her neck has halted bailiffs trying to
    clear the site of Manchester's proposed second runway.
                                                      
    The young woman, who has attached the rope to a tunnel entrance, would
    be hanged if the trap door to the tunnel were opened, Randal Hibbert,
    the Under Sheriff of Cheshire, said. The device made opening the door
    "virtually impossible", he said.
                                                      
    The protester, one of four holed up in a tunnel at the Sir Cliff
    Richard OBE Vegan Revolution Camp, has also attached herself to
    reinforced concrete in an attempt to thwart the bailiffs. A spokesman
    for the protesters said the woman had secured herself early yesterday
    as bailiffs began their eviction of the camp. He said she had
    volunteered to put herself in this position "to stop the bailiffs
    entering the tunnel and to delay them as long as possible".
                                                      
    A diagram showing her position and that of the noose was pasted on the
    door to the tunnel and the woman was not expected to be in any
    immediate danger, the spokesman said.
                                                      
    However, Mr Hibbert, who is leading the operation to evict the
    "eco-warriors" from the site in the Bollin Valley, Cheshire, said: "We
    are thinking of ways and means to get her out." He told reporters that
    he planned to investigate claims that protesters had embedded butane
    gas cylinders into concrete blocks which could explode, injuring
    bailiffs and tunnellers. Mr Hibbert refused to speculate on the "booby
    traps" around the camps, which are said to include glass, barbed wire
    and nails.
                                                      
    The Cliff Richard camp, where up to 30 protesters in seven tree houses
    50-60ft above ground are defying climbing specialists, presented the
    worst obstacles so far, Mr Hibbert said.
                                                      
    Two camps, Ziontree and Wild Garlic, were cleared over the Bank Holiday
    weekend, but the Cliff Richard camp's two tunnels were "going to prove
    more difficult", he said. Bailiffs were yesterday in contact with the
    tunnellers, who were being supplied with compressed air to prevent them
    from suffocating.
                                                      
    Attempts to clear the Cliff Richard camp began at 8am yesterday, and by
    mid-morning nine protesters had been arrested. Mr Hibbert said that
    bailiffs had evicted four protesters on the ground and a further five
    from the trees. He said bailiffs had now cleared three of the six camps
    on the site, which is owned by Manchester Airport.
7.2040IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:0231
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                     
    Britons complete trek to the Pole
    
    By Colin Randall, Chief Reporter 
    
    FOUR British women were celebrating last night after completing the
    final leg of the first all-female expedition to the North Pole.
              
    While the sponsor, McVitie's, called the feat "one of the classic
    British sporting achievements of recent times", Robert Swan, the
    British explorer who was the first to walk to both poles, said it
    should not overshadow the even more remarkable achievement of their two
    female guides. "It is a proper achievement, but it has to be seen in
    the context of a relay," he said. "The guides have taken it one step
    further."
              
    Five British teams, each of four women, made the trek of more than 500
    miles from Ward Hunt Island, Canada's most northerly tip, in relays,
    the first women to do so without huskies or machines.
              
    Their guides, Matty McNair, 45, an American, and Denise Martin, 30, a
    Canadian, who run adventure travel firms, covered all five stages. The
    four Britons who reached the Pole were Caroline Hamilton, 32, a banker
    turned film financier from London; her business partner, Pom Oliver,
    45; Zoe Hudson, 30, a physiotherapist; and Lucy Roberts, 27, a
    journalist.
              
    Last night, the women were due to be joined by relatives and supporters
    for a brief ceremony at the Pole. They are expected back in Britain
    next week.
7.2041IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:1179
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                 
    Homosexual pair claim right to surrogate baby
    
    By Paul Stokes 
    
    TWO homosexual men who want to share a surrogate baby with a lesbian
    couple said yesterday that it was their "God-given right" to have
    children.
                                                           
    But the appeal by Russell Conlon and Chris Joyce for a lesbian willing
    to conceive a child through artificial insemination provoked criticism
    from churchmen and the Mothers' Union. The pair, both unemployed, claim
    that they were rejected as foster or adoptive parents six months ago on
    the grounds that they are disabled and live on state benefit.
                                                           
    They say they are deeply committed to one another and in December they
    arranged a blessing of their relationship, which they consider as
    strong as a marriage. Mr Conlon, 39, is unable to have children because
    of an hereditary illness and Mr Joyce, 32, would serve as sperm donor
    for the surrogate. Although they would not rule out a heterosexual
    mother, they would prefer a "parent sharing" arrangement with a lesbian
    couple.
                                                           
    Mr Conlon, a former stonemason, who has arthritis and brittle bone
    syndrome, said: "It is our God-given right to be parents and have
    children. We have a lot of love and experience to give. We both feel we
    are committed to each other and ready to bring up a child. Last
    November we were turned down by the local social services to become
    foster parents on the grounds of our disabilities. Then a few months
    later they told us we couldn't adopt either, because we were disabled
    and on benefit. But that is just a smokescreen because we are gay."
                                                           
    He has known Mr Joyce, who has epilepsy, for 12 years. They are
    currently advertising in the gay press for lesbian couples willing to
    enter into a reciprocal parenting arrangement. It means that the child
    would have two "fathers" living together in one house and two "mothers"
    in another, regardless of its biological parents.
                                                           
    The two men who live together in a council house in Collyhurst,
    Manchester, say the surrogacy arrangement they are hoping for is not
    illegal. Mr Joyce said: "I appreciate having two mums and two dads
    could be confusing for a child and no one is a perfect parent. But I
    have wanted children all my life and now I've found the right person I
    want to go ahead. Being gay doesn't mean we can't be good parents. We
    have both had a number of HIV tests and it is up to each gay couple to
    vet each other."
                                                           
    Their stated intention has outraged those involved in encouraging
    traditional family values. A spokesman for the Mothers' Union
    considered any such arrangement as potentially damaging for the welfare
    of the child. He said: "If the baby was shipped around between two
    homes instead of having a mum and dad in the same house it would be
    very confusing. In this case the child would not be growing up in the
    usual family unit with the influence of both genders in the home."
                                                           
    The Rev Ian Brown, vicar of St Paul's in Haliwell, near Bolton, Lancs,
    also considered it "the wrong environment" in which to bring up
    children. He said: "People must be responsible for their own children.
    Youngsters have to have proper role models and we're moving away from
    the stable family unit, which is a terrible thing."
                                                           
    Nicholas Winterton, Conservative MP for Macclesfield, considered it
    "unnatural and totally wrong" to seek to bring up a child in such a
    situation. "God help us, what is the world coming to? I don't want to
    harass those who have a different leaning, but children should not be
    subjected to this abnormality," he said. "I hope society will decide
    that it is wrong that children and babies should become a pawn in the
    need for individuals to gratify their emotions." 
                                                           
    A spokesman for Manchester's social services department confirmed that
    an application had been received from the two men to adopt a child. He
    said that a medical report into their circumstances had been requested
    in accordance with statutory requirements before a final decision can
    be reached.
                                                           
    "Once the medical report on this couple is received it will be
    considered by our Adoptions Panel who will then determine whether it is
    appropriate for their application to proceed," he said.
7.2042IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:1285
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                                 
    Soldiers executed for cowardice could be pardoned 80 years on
    
    By Tim Butcher, Defence Correspondent 
    
    ALL 307 cases of First World War soldiers executed for cowardice are to
    be reviewed after a lengthy campaign for a blanket pardon, the Ministry
    of Defence announced yesterday.
                                                                      
    Campaigners said that a pardon for all cowardice cases should be
    granted because the men were routinely denied the right to defend
    themselves and there was little appreciation of the psychological
    damage caused by life in the trenches.
                                                                      
    Some veterans' groups said each case should be considered individually
    to ensure that genuine cowardice cases were not overlooked. "If wrongs
    from the past can be put right that is one thing, but new wrongs should
    not be created," one veteran said.
                                                                      
    The review is expected to take months and to involve hundreds of
    personnel files recently made public at the Public Record Office in
    Kew. Details of who will carry out the review and its terms of
    reference and timetable are yet to be settled.
                                                                      
    The Government is already committed to reviews into war pensions and
    arms sales in addition to a more strategic review of all aspects of
    defence policy, to be announced today.
                                                                      
    Announcing the review of the First World War cowardice cases, John
    Reid, the Armed Forces minister, said he was sympathetic to the plight
    of men who had served on the Western Front. "From where we stand today,
    we can only imagine the horrors of life in the trenches then and seek
    to understand what those who experienced it went through," he said.
    "That is why I am prepared to look again at these cases.
                                                                      
    "However, we are over three-quarters of a century away from these
    events and no one should underestimate the difficulties and
    complexities of reviewing such matters. Nor, in addressing one
    perceived injustice, would I wish to create others. Therefore while I
    fully understand the concern and feelings aroused by this issue, I
    would not wish to build up hopes prematurely."
                                                                      
    A Labour backbencher, Andrew Mackinlay (Thurrock), who has been among
    the leaders of a campaign to have the cases reopened, repeated his
    calls for a Royal Pardon.
                                                                      
    "I want for these men the Royal Pardon but in a sense these men have
    already been exonerated by the highest court in the land, British
    public opinion," he said. Mr Mackinlay added that he was "delighted"
    with the announcement of the review and said it was "indicative of the
    new mood in Whitehall".
                                                                      
    A move to pardon the soldiers was supported by a third of the present
    Cabinet when it was tabled in the Commons last year by Mr Mackinlay.
    His amendment to the 1996 Armed Forces Bill was defeated but he has
    tabled another Commons motion this week calling for a pardon.
                                                                      
    Labour MPs were given a free vote on the issue last year and Mr
    Mackinlay's amendment was supported by Dr Reid, eight members of the
    present Cabinet (Margaret Beckett, David Clark, Alistair Darling,
    Donald Dewar, Frank Dobson, Clare Short, Chris Smith and Jack Straw)
    and Nick Brown, now Government Chief Whip.
                                                                      
    A Royal British Legion spokesman said: "It has been our policy for some
    years that in the light of current medical evidence, First World War
    Servicemen executed for cowardice should be pardoned. We will be
    contacting the Government to add our voice to the current debate."
                                                                      
    Kathy Stevenson, for the Western Front Association, said: "Each case
    needs to be reviewed individually. A lot of our members would not be
    happy with a blanket pardon. For some people it wasn't their first
    offence - they had already been cautioned - and so a pardon might not
    be appropriate for them."
                                                                      
    Two Tory MPs said the difficulties of carrying out an accurate review
    80 years after the events threatened to undermine its value. Julian
    Brazier said: "I am against in principle trying to unearth history
    after three generations."
                                                                      
    Peter Viggers said: "It is clearly a popular and populist thing to do,
    but I remain very cautious about reopening matters that happened more
    than half a century ago." A former member of the Commons Defence Select
    Committee, he added: "I am not aware of any case of military law not
    being properly carried out over 50 years ago - where do you stop?"
7.2043IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:1437
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                     
    21 cases in fresh E coli outbreak
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scottish Correspondent 
    
    SEVENTY patients and around 100 members of staff were being screened
    for E coli food poisoning at a Scottish hospital yesterday after 21
    people became infected by the potentially lethal bacterium.
                                                                           
    Doctors at Falkirk Royal Infirmary said they had no idea what had
    caused the outbreak, which has affected eight members of staff and 13
    elderly patients. The infection has been found in three geriatric wards
    at the hospital, which was involved last year in treating victims of
    Scotland's worst E coli epidemic when 19 people died.
                                                                           
    Samples have been taken from those carrying the organism, and
    environmental health officers have screened the hospital kitchens. But
    it is possible that the source of the infection is outside the
    infirmary as relatives of the patients in the wards bring food to the
    hospital. 
                                                                           
    The patients involved are aged 72 to 95 and are said to be "frail", but
    no one is in a critical condition. The seven nurses and one member of
    the domestic staff who are infected have been sent home.
                                                                           
    The patients have been isolated in their wards, and visitors are being
    given gowns and masks to wear. The three wards have a total of 70
    patients and 100 members of staff, who are all being screened in an
    attempt to stop the outbreak spreading.
                                                                           
    Sam Galbraith, the Scottish health minister, said people should be
    concerned but not alarmed. He added that following the lessons learned
    in last year's outbreak, which was linked to a butcher's shop in
    Wishaw, Lanarkshire, the correct procedures were being followed.
    However, Dr Derek Sinclair, of the Central Scotland Healthcare Trust,
    which runs the three wards, admitted he had "no clue" about the source.
7.2044IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:1763
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                               
    MoD reveals secrets of Britain's chemical warfare programme
    
    By Tim Butcher, Defence Correspondent 
    
    IN a symbolic break with the past, the Ministry of Defence yesterday
    published a detailed history of Britain's chemical weapons programme
    confirming that all stocks of such weapons for offensive use were
    destroyed in 1957.
    
    The 238-page document said a research capacity had been maintained at
    the chemical weapons establishment at Porton Down for purposes of
    self-defence. Lesser research facilities were kept until the late 1970s
    at an RAF site at Portreath, Cornwall. The Ministry of Defence also
    disclosed that the Royal Military College of Science at Shrivenham,
    Oxon, which is a private-sector operation, still produces "small
    quantities of toxic chemicals for research and teaching purposes".
    
    The work at Shrivenham is believed to focus on research aimed at
    protecting British troops from attack by chemical weapons. The
    document, entitled Declaration of Past Activities Relating to Its
    Former Offensive Chemical Weapons Programme, was made public as a
    condition of Britain's adherence to the Chemical Weapons Convention,
    which came into force on April 29.
    
    The report said a Cabinet Defence Committee recommendation in 1963 that
    Britain should develop a limited retaliatory capability was never acted
    upon. "For a variety of reasons, including economic pressures and
    political reluctance to re-arm with these weapons, the recommendation
    was never implemented," the document states.
    
    Porton Down was established as an active research facility to develop
    defensive and offensive chemical weapon capabilities following first
    use of them by Germany in the First World War. "This remains the UK's
    only facility for research into chemical defence today," the document
    states, in spite of the confirmation of research at Shrivenham.
    
    In 1925 Britain signed the Geneva Protocol aimed at removing the threat
    of chemical weapons use in the future and disposed of its existing
    stocks of charged munitions. Research and development continued for
    defence purposes. Offensive capability was rebuilt when international
    tensions rose during the 1930s, and a production plant for mustard was
    set up in 1936. In 1939, mustard gas production began. 
    
    Chemical weapons were not used in the Second World War but considerable
    stocks of bulk agent and munitions were built up between 1939 and 1945.
    After the war the Committee on Chemical Warfare concluded that stocks
    could be scaled down, though a decision was also taken to focus on
    nerve agents as the basis for future chemical weapons.
    
    Research produced some new munitions but there was no mass-production
    of nerve-agent weapons.The need for a new mustard bomb for retaliatory
    purposes led to the development of a 1,000lb bomb and an order for
    10,000 of the devices was approved in 1951.
    
    In the same year the Nancekuke facility at Portreath opened for pilot
    production of nerve agents, though by 1956 it was to concentrate on
    defensive work. In 1956, the Cabinet Defence Committee decided to halt
    the development of large-scale production of nerve agent, and in 1960
    Britain announced that it would dispose of its offensive chemical
    weapons stocks.
    
7.2045IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:1971
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                            
    Girls guilty of bullying that led to classmate's suicide
    
    By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent 
    
    TWO girls were found guilty yesterday of taking part in a gang attack
    on a clever classmate who killed herself because of their bullying.
                                                       
    Five weeks after the assault, Katherine Jane Morrison, 16, received a
    telephone warning that she would be beaten again and have her head
    shaved if she did well in her exams. The following day her parents
    found her dead in her bedroom. She had swallowed a bottle of pills and
    left a note saying she was unable to face bullies at her school, the
    Nicolson Institute in Stornoway, Western Isles.
                                                       
    The teenager, known as KJ, was said to be a bright pupil who passed
    exams with ease. She hoped to go to university and her ambition was to
    work in America. She had gained five As and two Bs in her Standard
    Grade exams and was expected to pass all her Highers. At Stornoway
    Sheriff Court yesterday, Michelle McBratney, 17, and Lee Ann Murray,
    16, both of Stornoway, were found guilty of repeatedly punching her on
    the head and body, pushing her to the ground and repeatedly kicking her
    and knocking her head against a window.
                                                       
    McBratney was also found guilty of assaulting the fifth-year pupil in a
    separate incident earlier the same evening. Katherine was treated in
    hospital following the attack by an all-girl gang outside a Woolworth's
    store on Dec 15, 1995. Caroline Harbourne, 17, a friend of the dead
    girl, told the court that someone hit Katherine on the head with an Irn
    Bru bottle. She estimated that the kicks and punches went on "for about
    15 minutes".
                                                       
    Another witness, Sharon Macleod, said a crowd of around 25 young people
    gathered to watch the assault but nobody tried to stop it. She added
    that Murray asked the onlookers if anyone wanted "a free punch".
    McBratney claimed in courtthat there had been a reconciliation between
    herself and her classmate before she died.
                                                       
    But Frank Redman, the procurator fiscal, said: "You know KJ cannot put
    her side. There was no reconciliation. It is just a callous lie to save
    yourself. You took part in a cowardly gang attack."
                                                       
    Sheriff Ian Cameron, who deferred sentence until June 10 for reports,
    said it was clear from the evidence that other unidentified girls had
    taken part. Yesterday, the victim's grandmother, Christine Morrison,
    76, cried as she said: "When she died, part of us died too. She meant
    so much to us, our only granddaughter who never spoke out of turn to us
    and loved us."
                                                       
    Her grandfather, Donald Morrison, 82, said: "Days before she died,
    Katherine told us she was going to sit five Highers. My son Ali was
    going to reward her by taking her to Florida. We can only think this
    was about jealousy."
                                                       
    The girl's parents, Iain, 47, a mental health project care worker, and
    her mother, Millie, were not in court to hear the verdict and were too
    upset to comment on the case. Mr Morrison said after the earlier
    hearing that his daughter had never admitted that she was being
    bullied, but had suffered from depression after the assault.
                                                       
    "The night before she died a friend had passed on a warning," he said.
    "Some girls had said that if my daughter passed any Highers she would
    be beaten up and have her head shaved." He said his daughter got up at
    7am every day to wash her hair which was her "pride and joy".
                                                       
    Earlier this week, it was revealed that three 14-year-old girls at
    Keith Grammar School, Banffshire, had tried to commit suicide after
    bullying. Brian Wilson, a Scottish Office education minister, whose
    children might go to the Nicolson Institute, last night pledged to do
    his best to stamp out bullying in Scottish schools.
7.2046IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:2038
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                      
    Children who are abused 'turn into violent adults'
    
    By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent 
    
    EXPERIENCING violence while young alters the brains of adolescents,
    making them more aggressive as adults, scientists say today.
                                                                     
    The discovery is one of the first to define a biological explanation
    for the connection between violence in childhood and in adulthood. The
    researchers believe that children born to violent parents may not
    inherit aggression, but may become violent as their brain structure
    adapts to abuse.
                                                                     
    The research is being presented at Johns Hopkins University in
    Baltimore, Maryland, on the way in which hormones can alter the
    structure of the brain and profoundly change behaviour. The scientists
    were following up a study which found that people with a history of
    fighting and assault had unusual levels of a hormone known as
    vasopressin.
                                                                     
    The scientists believe that they have now shown, through studies of
    hamsters, how youthful experiences can change levels of this hormone in
    adults. They took a group of adolescent hamsters - which had been
    weaned but were not fully developed sexually - and subjected some to a
    threat or an attack every day. Then they left them to grow to adulthood
    without any further interference. 
                                                                     
    Once they were adults the hamsters behaved very differently to their
    siblings, which had not been attacked. "These animals are very, very
    aggressive," said Prof Craig Ferris of the department of psychiatry at
    the University of Massachusetts Medical Center. 
                                                                     
    The abused hamsters attacked smaller hamsters whereas their siblings
    ignored them. But when hamsters of the same size or larger were put
    into the abused hamsters' cages, they ran away. Prof Ferris said: "The
    bottom line is that an early insult can cause long-term effects."
7.2047IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:2250
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                     
    Reform of judge selection delayed
    
    By Terence Shaw, Legal Correspondent 
    
    PLANS by Lord Irvine, the Lord Chancellor, to set up a Judicial
    Appointments Commission to open the appointment of judges to wider
    public scrutiny would require legislation that is unlikely to be in
    place before late 1999.
                                    
    Although a consultation paper on reforming the judicial appointments
    machinery is expected to be published later this year, the need for
    reform is not regarded as a top priority by Lord Irvine. His main
    concern is the launching of his promised early review of the previous
    government's proposals for reform of the legal aid scheme coupled with
    implementation of Lord Woolf's proposals for reform of the civil
    justice system. There would also be no opportunity for legislation in
    the Government's crowded programme for the current session of
    Parliament.
                                    
    The setting up of a commission on which lay members would play a
    greater role with representatives of judges and the legal profession in
    advising on appointments was not a commitment in the Labour manifesto.
                                    
    But Lord Irvine has long been in favour of such a commission to enhance
    public confidence by dispelling some of the secrecy surrounding the
    present appointments system and the image of the judiciary as an
    oligarchy perpetuated by the judges and the profession.
                                    
    Many critics believe that a more open system would help to improve the
    poor representation of women and members of the ethnic minorities among
    the judiciary. Under Lord Irvine's plans a Judicial Appointments
    Commission would build on the reforms of his predecessor, Lord Mackay.
    He introduced open competition for judicial appointments at the level
    of circuit judge and below and advertisements inviting applications and
    specifying job descriptions and the selection criteria.
                                    
    At present there are 22 lay interviewers sitting on appointment panels.
    Most of the six men and 16 women are justices of the peace with
    experience of both interviewing and the judicial system. Lord Irvine
    has made it clear that he wants to see this system extended to the High
    Court.
                                    
    He risks a clash with some senior members of the judiciary who fear the
    proposed commission could undermine judicial independence and diminish
    the role of judges. But before his appointment as Lord Chancellor, he
    frequently stressed the importance he attaches to upholding the
    independence of the judiciary and the need for appointments to the
    bench to be made on merit alone.
7.2048IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:2449
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7.2053IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:3843
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                           
    Cold cure is recalled over dosage error
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 
    
    THOUSANDS of packets of a common cold remedy are being recalled because
    some have the wrong dosage instruction which, if followed, could make
    people feel sleepy during the day.
    
    Some boxes of Night Nurse Capsules have been sent out containing
    instructions for the Day Nurse products. These advise consumers to take
    two tablets four times a day.
    
    A spokesman for the manufacturers, SmithKline Beecham, said yesterday:
    "If you took that many Night Nurse tablets there would not be a true
    overdose situation but it would make you feel sleepy all day. 
    
    The Night Nurse instructions say you should take two tablets at night
    before you sleep. They are intended to help someone with a cold have a
    good night's sleep. The Day Nurse insert says you should take two
    tablets four times a day."
    
    The problem applies only to Night Nurse Capsules with the batch number
    BN466E.
    
    SmithKline Beecham is recalling 17,000 packets as a precautionary
    measure, although it believes that only several hundred are affected.
    The spokesman said: "We think there may have been a production line
    problem and we are unsure how this could have happened. This is a
    precautionary measure. The correct dosage is printed on the Night Nurse
    packet."
    
    The spokesman said hhe thought it unlikely that people would take the
    tablets through the day when they had bought a product to be used at
    night. Customers who find that their cold cure contains the wrong
    advice are being asked to return it to the pharmacist, where it will be
    replaced.
    
    The error came to light when two customers rang to say they had found
    the wrong leaflets in their packs. The spokesman said the firm had not
    had any reports of customers suffering ill effects as a result.
    
7.2054IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:4088
7.2055IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:4359
7.2056IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:4327
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                
    Pc who lied for son in murder hunt is jailed
    
    By David Millward 
    
    A POLICE officer who concealed evidence in a murder inquiry to protect
    his son was jailed for four years yesterday.
                                     
    Pc Edmund Ross, 46, was found guilty of hindering the investigation
    into the murder of Shamsuddin Mahmood and attempting to defeat the ends
    of justice. Mr Mahmood, 26, a waiter, was shot while working at an
    Indian restaurant in Kirkwall, Orkney, on June 2 1994. It was the
    islands' first murder in 25 years. Ross's son, Michael, 18, remains a
    suspect in the police investigation.
                                     
    Ross showed no emotion as Lord Maclean jailed him at the High Court in
    Inverness but his lawyers said he was likely to appeal. The judge told
    him: "To attempt to defeat the ends of justice as a police officer, by
    frustrating a murder investigation, strikes at the very heart of the
    criminal justice system. You knew where your duty lay and you wilfully
    failed to carry out that duty."
                                     
    During the six-day trial the court heard that Ross, a firearms expert,
    concealed the fact that the murder bullet was the same calibre and bore
    as a number of others at his home. He did so to prevent suspicion
    falling on himself or his family.
7.2057IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:4537
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                 
    Married men stay mummy's boys
    
    
    
    MEN are tied to their mothers' apron strings for life, with many only
    leaving home to get married, according to a survey published yesterday.
                                 
    According to a poll of more than 500 women by NOP Consumer Market
    Research for Bella magazine, one in 10 women says she comes second to
    her mother-in-law and one in three says that her partner refuses to
    hear a bad word said about his mother.
                                 
    A Bella spokesman said: "Nationally, almost a third of women said their
    partner won't hear a single word against the woman who brought him into
    the world. So it's better for daughter-in-law to keep quiet if his
    mum's a bossy old battleaxe."
                                 
    Even after they have flown the nest, men cannot stop going home, either
    to enjoy home cooking or to have their dirty clothes washed. The survey
    revealed that 80 per cent of men in the North and 40 per cent in the
    South visit their mother every week.
                                 
    Southern men seem less inclined to keep the bond between mother and son
    - a fifth only see their mother on special occasions, like birthdays,
    Christmas and Easter. A third of men went straight from home into
    marriage.
                                 
    Jackie Highe, editor-in-chief at Bella, said: "Men seem to have become
    spoiled and it's time they stood on their own two feet. But maybe women
    have themselves to blame for taking over where mum left off."
                                 
    But when it comes to birthdays and special occasions devotion does not
    seem to add up to much. Fewer than half the men send their mothers
    gifts or cards on birthdays and anniversaries, leaving their wife or
    girlfriend to do it for them.
7.2058IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 16:4937
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                      
    Lamborghini importer gets the hump
    
    By Michael Fleet 
    
    THE importers of one of the world's most expensive sports cars are
    asking their local council not to inflict one of life's modern
    inconveniences on them.
           
    Porsche Cars, which also brings in the 30 or so Lamborghinis sold each
    year in Britain, is fighting a council plan to install speed humps on
    the road leading to its British headquarters on the outskirts of
    Reading, Berks. The firm says the problem is that the streamlined
    Lamborghini has such a low ground clearance that with two adults on
    board it may grate on a speed hump.
           
    "This is nothing to do with the speed of these cars," a spokesman said.
    "All our testing is done within the speed limit. We are concerned about
    the problem of the ground clearance for these particular humps."
           
    Newbury district council wants to install humps which are 75mm high.
    The Lamborghini Diablo has a ground clearance of 100mm when stationary.
    When two people are on board that is reduced perilously close to the
    height of the humps.
           
    "We have nothing against speed humps and have some on our own
    driveway," the spokesman said. "But those are only 50mm high. If these
    new ones were installed we would worry about customers' cars being
    damaged."
           
    She conceded that Lamborghini drivers often had to face this peril
    whenever driving in towns or cities. But putting them outside the
    company headquarters would make life difficult. A report before the
    council committee which will decide whether to install the humps said a
    Lamborghini should be able to negotiate the humps "unless driven at
    speed".
7.2059IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 17:0383
7.2060IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 17:0533
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                          
    Soldier denies murdering Israeli girls
    
    By Anton La Guardia in Amman 
    
    AHMED Daqamseh, the Jordanian soldier who opened fire on an Israeli
    school party, killing seven girls and wounding five others, pleaded not
    guilty to murder and attempted murder at the beginning of his military
    court trial near Amman yesterday.
                                            
    If found guilty he could be sentenced to death. He has previously
    admitted opening fire on the girls while they were visiting "Peace
    Island" on the Israeli-Jordanian border on March 13.
                                            
    Daqamseh, 26, is becoming the unlikely idol for a growing number of
    Jordanians deeply disenchanted with King Hussein's peace treaty with
    Israel. At the time of the shooting he was regarded by most as a crazed
    killer. King Hussein travelled to Israel to kneel at the feet of the
    grieving families, and later rebuked the army for not shooting Daqamseh
    on the spot.
                                            
    But, in the eyes of a surprising number of Jordanians, the King's
    uncompromising stance has turned Daqamseh into the underdog. "He is a
    hero," said Najib Rashadan, a former Jordanian chief justice and now
    head of the Popular Committee for the Defence of Ahmed Daqamseh. "What
    he did was the natural reaction to the Jewish soldiers who have killed
    many Arabs and were never punished. The girls would eventually have
    gone into the army."
                                            
    Daqamseh's supporters claim that the schoolgirls had mocked him while
    he prayed. "If someone makes fun of you while you are praying, you
    don't have to take it," said his mother.
7.2061IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 17:0737
    International News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday 28 May 1997 Issue 733
                                                          
    Eurotunnel to lose latest duty-free fight with ferries
    
    By Terence Shaw, Legal Correspondent 
    
    EUROTUNNEL appears set to lose another legal action to stop the sale of
    duty-free goods on Channel ferries which it claims leads to unfair
    competition for drivers and passengers.
                                   
    In a case referred by the Paris commercial court to the European Court
    of Justice in Luxembourg, the advocate general advised the court
    yesterday to uphold European directives which allow duty-free sales to
    continue until June 1999. Although the company operates duty-free shops
    at both ends of the tunnel, it has challenged the validity of the
    directives, which extended concession sales for travellers between
    member states because they unfairly favoured ferries.
                                   
    It claimed that profits from the more favourable conditions of selling
    duty-free goods on the boats enabled ferry companies to adopt a pricing
    policy which unfairly undermined its share of the cross-Channel market.
    After losing a similar action in the High Court in London in 1995
    because the case was out of time, Eurotunnel started proceedings in the
    Paris courts against SeaFrance.
                                   
    Other ferry companies, the International Duty Free Confederation and
    the Airport Operators Association intervened in the case to support
    SeaFrance in defending the validity of the directives. Yesterday
    Guiseppe Tesauro, the advocate general assigned to the case, said that
    although the validity of the directives could be challenged there was
    no reason to conclude they were invalid. Although opinions of the
    advocates general are not binding on the European Court, they are
    normally followed by the judges.
                                   
    A spokesman for Eurotunnel said it had wanted the validity of the
    directives tested in the Luxembourg court but had failed to achieve
    this through the English court.
7.2062IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 17:0825
7.2063IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 17:1145
7.2064IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!"Wed May 28 1997 17:1341
    <Picture: Microsoft Office 97><Picture: Microsoft>
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                                    
    Russian rocket crashes                          
    
    A ROCKET carrying a Russian military eavesdropping satellite exploded
    and crashed within a minute of launch last week, marking a significant
    blow to the troubled space programmes of Russia and Ukraine.
                                     
    The explosion was caused by an emergency shutdown of the rocket's first
    stage engines nine miles up, 48 seconds after it was launched from
    Kazakhstan's Baikonur cosmodrome, Russia's military space forces said.
                                     
    The remnants of the two-stage, 57-metre long Zenit-2 booster and the
    Kosmos series military satellite it was carrying crashed on the steppe.
    No one was hurt. The Kosmos satellite was probably a Tselina-2
    intelligence satellite that listens in to communications and tracks
    radar, among other things, commented Dr Jonathan McDowell, editor of
    Jonathan's Space Report.
                                     
    He added that an upgraded three-stage version of Zenit-2 was to be used
    to launch commercial satellites from the Pacific Ocean under the
    international Sea Launch project. The failure would worry backers of
    that.
                                     
    Russia's space programme, long lacking the former Soviet clout and
    funding, has recently suffered a series of setbacks, including the loss
    of the Mars 96 probe, and a fire, a coolant fluid leak and a failure of
    the main oxygen-generating system aboard the manned Mir space station.
                                     
    The incident could harm not only Russia's space programme but also that
    of Ukraine, since both are hoping that Zenit - made of Ukrainian and
    Russian components - will be widely used for commercial satellite
    launches by foreign nations. "Ever since the fall of the Soviet Union
    its reliability has gone down," said McDowell. "It is hard to get
    parts, quality control is down and the launch rate is down."
                                     
    Baikonur, the former Soviet Union's main cosmodrome, is used by Russia
    under an agreement with Kazakhstan. "I don't think it will influence
    our cooperation," Ukraine's Security Council chief Volodymyr Horbulin
    said. "But it is very, very bad."
7.2065IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Wed May 28 1997 17:17198
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                                           
    Smutty fingerprints . . . lust makes the world go round
    
    Pornography on the Internet provokes a lot of indignation. But Michael
    Bywater argues that sex and technology have always marched hand in
    shameful hand
              
    MICROSOFT, Apple, BT, US Robotics, Compaq, Netscape, Kodak, Nikon,
    Panasonic, Sony. What all these companies, and thousands more, have in
    common is they all share, wittingly or unwittingly, in the profits from
    pornography.
              
    Like it or not, pornography drives each new, convenient visual
    technology with its atavistic power. In the Internet Age, it might come
    hurtling down BT telephone lines, into a US Robotics modem and on to
    the screen of a desktop Power Mac or handy Armada laptop. Maybe it was
    shot on Kodak film with a trusty Nikon, or digitised on a Panasonic
    scanner, or fed from a Sony Betacam. However it got there, it is there,
    and today it's driving the Net.
              
    Opinions vary on how much Net use is connected with pornography. I
    spent an hour last week invisibly watching people's searches on one of
    the most powerful Web and Usenet search engines using the snoop program
    Voyeur (voyeur.mckinley.com/cgi-bin/voyeur.cgi).
              
    Admittedly, you have to make the odd educated guess. Someone searching
    for "wet breasts babes" counts as a certain hit. Someone searching for
    "birds" might be an ornithologist, so I gave them the benefit of the
    doubt. But what of someone searching for "thailand latex"? It could be
    a pervert; could be an innocent with an interest in the rubber industry
    in South-East Asia. Score: 50 per cent.
              
    But even with such modest scoring, I estimate that porn is occupying
    around 10-15 per cent of traffic on the Net. This is quite enough to
    drive the technology forward; but you have no need to take my word for
    it. The first great leap in Internet use was the setting up of the
    Usenet "news groups". John Gilmore, who started the alt. (for
    "alternative") newsgroups with alt.drugs, has said unequivocally that
    it was "only when alt.sex was created [that] there was a sudden
    explosion of interest in the alt. groups".
              
    We shouldn't be surprised. In BBC2's "Computers Don't Bite" series
    recently, the American hacker Midge said "Love, Sex, Secret, God and
    Money are the five most popular passwords in the US." Given that
    pornography - particularly for the young males who are the Internet's
    most enthusiastic inhabitants - impinges on at least two of those
    preoccupations, we might think 10-15 per cent on the low side.
              
    But it's nothing to do with computers. New technologies have always
    been led, at least in part, by the less respectable desires of the
    sexiest animals on the planet - men, specifically young men in the
    throws of testosterone meltdown looking for displacement, preferably
    with flashing lights, or at least something flashing.
              
    Photography, for instance, has always had an appeal for unfulfilled
    males. We might worry about Charles Lutwidge Dodgson's (Lewis
    Carroll's) carefully titillating photographs of young girls. We may
    question the motives of Edward Muybridge, who in the late 19th century
    published a series of photographs ostensibly revealing the mysteries of
    human locomotion, the humans in question being generally naked and
    well-formed.
              
    But there were less equivocal examples, such as Henry Hayler, perhaps
    the world's first porn baron. Better-known as a Victorian society
    sculptor, Hayler was put under surveillance by the Metropolitan Police,
    who, in due course, raided his house and discovered 130,248
    pornographic prints made from more than 5,000 negatives.
              
    Hayler was a professional, expending considerable time and money on his
    business, and, of course, using up-to-the-minute reprographic
    technology. And in doing so, he was following in a great tradition.
    Erotic cave-paintings pre-date the last Ice Age.
              
    Innovations in pottery-decoration techniques were instantly turned to
    the production of erotica in the Greece of the fourth century BC. Two
    hundred years later, the new woodblock printing was put to enthusiastic
    use in the Han Dynasty erotica of China.
              
    Movable type and mass publishing, which the starry-eyed believed would
    bring the Word of God to the people, was soon being used to deliver a
    more secular message. In 1655, Samuel Pepys bought himself a copy of
    L'Escholle des Filles, which he describes as "the most bawdy, lewd book
    that ever I saw, rather worse than Puttana Errante," and which he read
    in the secrecy of his bedroom (just like any Net-surfer holed up with
    modem, computer and drawn curtains) "where I did read through
    L'Escholle des Filles; a lewd book, but what doth me no wrong to read
    for imagination's sake and after I had done it, I burned, that it might
    not be among my books to my shame." At least he didn't have to remember
    to overwrite his deleted JPEG files to avoid accidental recovery by
    snooping parents.
              
    Closer to our own time, photography - which had come into being for
    practical purposes in the 1830s - was eagerly seized upon by Victorian
    pornographers. As David Hebditch and Nick Anning, in their book Porn
    Gold - Inside the Pornography Business, say: 
              
    "Photography had all the benefits the porn trade needed. It made few
    demands on the quality of the viewer's imagination. It could be
    appreciated by an illiterate, needed no translation required few
    artistic skills in its production, and the end-product could be
    marketed in bulk."
              
    By the time photography had become at least tolerably wieldy, with
    short exposures and Maddox's gelatine dry plate of 1871, Henry Hayler
    had already set up shop. The same enthusiasm greeted the invention of
    motion pictures, with some suggestion that the first "stag movies" were
    being made as early as 1896. Certainly by the beginning of the Great
    War, there was high demand for classic silent blue - or rather
    black-and-white - shorts such as The Free Ride, aka The Grass Sandwich,
    shot on 16mm film.
              
    But true mass-market pornography had to wait until the late Sixties,
    when colour photolithography improved picture quality and dramatically
    reduced costs. One of the first to take advantage of this new
    technology was Berth Milton, proprietor of the now-huge Private empire
    in Sweden.
              
    Hebditch and Anning claim that in the following two decades, 250
    million copies of hard-core pornographic magazines were published in
    Europe alone - "more than one copy for every other member of the
    population of greater Europe, including Scandinavia".
              
    The next porn-driven technology was the introduction in 1969 of light,
    cheap, 8mm film equipment. Designed for the domestic market, 8mm and
    Super-8 may have been popular with fond fathers filming the kiddies at
    Whitstable, but it also found favour in the form of 10-minute "loops"
    projected from coin-operated machines in peep-show booths.
              
    The Theander brothers of Denmark produced more than eight million loops
    in the following decade, after which the technology became obsolete
    with the invention of the video cassette.
              
    Videos have achieved market penetration way beyond the wildest dreams
    of the porno magazine publishers. Initially, they were shown, like the
    8mm loops, in commercial peepshows. As video player prices fell, blue
    videos became objects of home consumption; and as camcorders became
    cheaper, a thriving market in amateur pornography sprung up,
    particularly popular in America, Germany and France, where it is said
    by one producer, the curiously named Philippe Cochon, to be the
    fastest-growing sector of the market.
              
    Even without the Internet, there's a wide range of distribution
    channels, from the informal video-swap clubs - we'll show you ours if
    you show us yours - to the semi-professional amateurs, 99 per cent
    women, who either offer to act out viewers' private fantasies and send
    on the tape for a fee, or to appear in front of punters' own camcorders
    for a rather larger fee.
              
    At the "top" end of the trade, there are smooth operators like Cochon
    who, operating from a tacky flat in a Paris gallerie, offers
    enthusiastic amatrices (unpaid) the chance to exhibit themselves with
    equally enthusiastic, equally unpaid chaps, and sell the result at a
    very healthy profit.
              
    There's not a communications technology which hasn't been seized upon
    by pornographers and, with equal enthusiasm, by their client,e. Rooms
    full of disgruntled ladies of uncertain years pose as ardent nymphettes
    for undiscerning callers. Polaroid cameras may have been invented so
    that Edwin Land's little daughter didn't have to wait to see the
    pictures come out, but they were rapidly used to avoid that
    embarrassing trip to the chemist.
              
    And now, of course, the Internet. Usenet groups and World Wide Web
    sites offer the chance to peer at every aspect of human sexuality, from
    the curious to the grotesque, from the strenuous to the clearly
    dangerous. The list of digital tools which have driven, and been driven
    in their turn, by wired pornography is endless: JPEGs, MPEGs, Sparkle,
    .MOV, .AVI, streaming videos, sound files, GIFs,
    compression/decompression routines, viewers, encrypters and, of course,
    scanners, without which none of these images would have ever reached
    the Net.
              
    For the professional pornographers, it's bad news. If pornography
    occupies 15 per cent of net traffic, at least 80 per cent of that is in
    the form of copyright violations. The very uncensorability of the
    Internet is a blatant threat to the pornographers' interests. They
    wheedle, weave, coax and beckon, always up to something new.
              
    Currently it's the "Adult Verification" scam, where heavy-breathing
    Net-surfers have to hand over their credit card numbers in exchange for
    a password to an ostensible third party, ostensibly proving they are
    over 18.
              
    Needless to say, the porn site operators get a hefty cut; needless to
    say, there are more "Adult Verification" services than you could shake
    a stick at. And while the alt.sex newsgroups may have driven Usenet and
    hence the Internet as a whole, they have now become clogged with spam -
    tacky commercial come-ons - and the original anarchic free-porn-for-all
    enthusiasts, happily scanning in their copyright violations, are these
    days operating their own commercial Web sites, now that cheap home
    CD-burners have come on to the market.
              
    So it goes. Sex, Secret and Money leap on the technology and ravish it
    ever onward with gleeful cries, denounced by the faction of Love and
    God; as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be. You can see
    why they are dismayed; but one is astonished that they seem to be
    surprised.
7.2066IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:56102
    AP 28-May-1997 23:58 EDT   REF5213

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Wednesday, May 28, 1997
   
    ALASKA TOBACCO TAX 

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- Alaska will soon be collecting $1 on each
    pack of cigarettes -- the highest state tax in the nation. The new law,
    which goes into effect Oct. 1, boosts the tax on cigarettes from 29
    cents to $1 per pack and triples the tax on other tobacco products. The
    increase would push the cost of a pack of cigarettes to about $3.
    Washington now has the highest state cigarette tax at 82.5 cents a
    pack, though Hawaii's is scheduled to rise to $1 a pack in 1998 and
    California legislators are debating a 50-cent increase to 87 cents a
    pack. The federal cigarette tax is 24 cents. 
   
    McVEIGH 

    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's attorneys rested their case after 25
    witnesses in just 3 1/2 days, ending with video footage and wiretaps
    portraying the government's star witness as an opportunist who sold out
    an innocent man. The prosecution case had featured 137 witnesses in 18
    days. Jurors are to return tomorrow for closing arguments, followed by
    jury instructions and deliberations. Sources said U.S. District Judge
    Richard Matsch is considering sequestering the panel throughout
    deliberations. 
   
    EU-CLINTON 

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) -- President Clinton and European leaders
    overcame divisions and reached a tentative trade agreement Wednesday.
    The agreement is expected to boost trade by nearly $50 million. Among
    it provisions, companies will be able to introduce products to each
    other's markets more quickly. Months, even years of red tape will be
    eliminated if the agreement is approved by the 15-member European
    Union. 
   
    CONGO 

    KINSHASA, Congo (AP) -- Armed soldiers broke up a peaceful march
    through the capital Wednesday, firing into the air and causing a
    stampede among protesters defying President Laurent Kabila's ban on
    political demonstrations. About 1,000 people marched in supporter of a
    popular opposition activist who was passed over for a senior government
    post. It was the first serious challenge to Kabila since he ousted
    dictator Mobutu Sese Seko on May 17. Late Wednesday, Kabila issued a
    decree outlining the power structure for the interim period before an
    assembly drafts a transitional constitution. Kabila has promised this
    will take place within 60 days of his taking power. While the decree
    calls for independent executive, judiciary and eventually legislative
    branches, it reserves the greatest powers for Kabila himself. 
   
    INDONESIA ELECTION 

    JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Voting has begun in Indonesia's national
    elections, despite threats of a boycott by opponents of President
    Suharto's ruling Golkar party. The 27-day election campaign was marred
    by violence in which nearly 300 people died. Some opposition groups
    urged voters to boycott the ballot to protest sweeping restrictions on
    political activity. A limited boycott would not likely affect the
    election outcome, but it would be seen as a slight to Suharto's
    government. More than 125 million of Indonesia's 200 million people are
    eligible to vote in the tightly controlled election for 425 seats in
    the largely ceremonial, 500-member parliament. The other 75 seats are
    reserved for the military. Voter turnout is usually 90 percent. 
   
    HOLY COW 

    KFAR HASIDIM, Israel (AP) -- Ten-month-old Melody, believed to be the
    first red heifer born in the Holy Land in two millenniums, seems happy
    just lying around in the shade. But debate over her theological import
    highlights the growing rupture between religious and secular Israelis.
    In ancient times, the ashes of a red heifer were mixed with spring
    water to purify high priests before they entered the Temple. Some fear
    extremist groups might interpret Melody's birth as a sign that the time
    is right to rebuild the Temple on the site that now houses some of the
    holiest shrines in Islam. Mainstream religious groups have not rallied
    around the cow, but some secular Israelis see her as a threat and say
    she should be destroyed. 
   
    MARKETS 

    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar was trading lower against the yen early
    Thursday. It was changing hands at 115.38 yen, down 0.97 . The Nikkei
    Stock Average fell fell 76.91 points to 20,274.43 . In New York, the
    Dow Jones industrial average closed at 7,357.23, down 26.18. The Nasdaq
    was at 1,410.18, up 0.97. 
   
    HEAT-BULLS 

    CHICAGO (AP) -- For the fifth time in seven years, the Bulls are going
    to the NBA Finals. Michael Jordan atoned for an 0-for-14 start the
    previous game by scoring 15 of his 28 points in the first quarter
    Wednesday night as Chicago eliminated the Miami Heat from the Eastern
    Conference finals with a 100-87 victory. Bulls center Luc Longley
    outscored $100 million man Alonzo Mourning 14-13 and Chicago reserves
    excelled after All-Star forward Scottie Pippen couldn't play after
    spraining his left foot about 6 1/2 minutes into the game. 
   
    AP NewsBrief by JESSE STONE 
7.2067IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5665
    RTw  29-May-97 04:20    

    WORLD NEWS HIGHLIGHTS AT 0200 GMT

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    FRANKFURT - Germany's powerful Bundesbank and the Bonn government
    entered open conflict as the central bank rejected Bonn's plans to
    revalue its assets and the government said it would go ahead
    regardless. 

    - - - - 

    MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan - Afghan forces drove the Taleban from this
    northern city after a ferocious 15-hour battle, dealing the Islamic
    militia one of its worst setbacks since it seized the capital Kabul in
    September. 

    - - - - 

    PARIS - Socially-minded Philippe Seguin and free-marketeer Alain
    Madelin have emerged as a risky "dream team" for the ruling
    centre-right three days before the second decisive round of France's
    parliamentary election. 

    - - - - 

    WASHINGTON - Faced with the prospect of an embarrassing trial laced
    with lurid details, President Bill Clinton must decide whether to seek
    an out-of-court settlement in the sexual harassment lawsuit brought by
    Paula Jones. 

    - - - - 

    KINSHASA - Self-proclaimed president Laurent Kabila has decreed himself
    sweeping powers to run the Democratic Republic of Congo until the
    adoption of a new transitional constitution. 

    - - - - 

    LONDON - Britain is set to revive its special relationship with the
    U.S. as President Clinton flies in for the "Tony and Bill" show with
    new Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair. 

    - - - - 

    SINTRA, Portugal - Secretary of State Madeleine Albright goes into NATO
    talks representing a U.S. position in favour of inviting three rather
    than five or more former Warsaw Pact states as new members of the
    Western alliance, U.S. officials say. 

    - - - - 

    GENEVA - Neutral Switzerland, accused of hoarding the wealth of Jews
    murdered by Hitler, sold the bulk of its wartime arms exports to Nazi
    Germany, according to Swiss diplomatic archives published for the first
    time. 

    - - - - 

    NEW YORK - Bob Dylan has called off a European tour after being
    admitted to a hospital suffering from a potentially life-threatening
    infection, his publicists said. 

    REUTER
7.2068IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5698
    RTw  29-May-97 06:06    

    Odds and Ends

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    The following is a collection of human interest stories that have moved
    separately. 

    Tennis 'Bad boy' insists it takes two to Tarango 

    PARIS - Volatile American Jeff Tarango's antics during his second round
    French Open match against Thomas Muster will not impress the
    authorities at Wimbledon as they prepare to receive him back to the All
    England Club next month. 

    Tarango has yet to confirm whether he plans to play at Wimbledon, but
    knows he is still a marked man after being suspended and hit with a
    record fine in 1995 when he walked off court during his third round
    match against German Alexander Mronz. 

    Accusing French referee Bruno Rebeuh of being "the most corrupt
    official in the game" -- an allegation later retracted -- earned him
    censure from all sides, yet he shows no signs of adopting a lower
    profile. 

    While Tarango completed his match this time, losing in four sets to the
    1995 French champion on Wednesday, it did not end amicably. 

    The two men, at times acting more like the schoolchildren packed into
    the stands for Kids Day at Roland Garros, engaged in an ill-tempered
    affair littered with name-calling, mimicking and taunts. 

    It ended with the Austrian refusing to shake Tarango's hand amid
    deafening boos and whistles. 

    - - - - 

    China investors admitted to hospital over stocks 

    SHANGHAI - More than 20 people in the Chinese city of Tianjin have been
    admitted to hospital with heart and other ailments stemming from
    anxiety caused by sharp price fluctuations on the stock markets in
    recent days, the Shanghai securities newspaper said. 

    The newspaper said many new investors on China's stock markets were not
    prepared for the possible risks. 

    One Tianjin resident, a laid-off worker, borrowed 120,000 yuan to
    speculate in stocks and in just two days lost 230,000 yuan, triggering
    a heart attack, it said. 

    - - - - 

    Diana confesses her ambition to be ballerina 

    LONDON - Princess Diana confessed she would love to have been a
    ballerina but grew too tall. 

    She confessed to her dancing ambitions when surrounded by 65 ballerinas
    appearing to publicise the largest production of "Swan Lake" ever
    staged in Britain. 

    Diana told the London Times she had once wished to be a ballerina but
    grew too tall. "I rather overshot the mark," she said.

    The world's most photographed woman teased cameramen and told them "Get
    on with it" as she posed with English National Ballet dancers who held
    their poses as long as she did her smile. 

    She is the patron of the ballet, one of the few charity commitments she
    has maintained since divorcing heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles. 

    - - - - 

    Top Hollywood hairdresser Guilaroff dies 

    LOS ANGELES - Sydney Guilaroff, considered by many to be the greatest
    hairdresser in Hollywood history, who created "the look" for the top
    MGM female stars, died aged 89. 

    Guilaroff, credited with giving Claudette Colbert her distinctive bangs
    and turning a naturally blonde Lucille Ball into a redhead, died at the
    Beverly Hills Rehabilitation Centre after a long illness, a spokeswoman
    said. 

    Discovered in New York in the 1930's by Joan Crawford, Guilaroff was
    the first hairdresser to be given a screen credit for his work. 

    The spokeswoman said actor Roddy McDowell had recently lobbied the
    Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to have a special award
    given to Guilaroff. 

    The English-born stylist, who grew up in Winnipeg, Manitoba, also
    counted many of Hollywood's greatest beauties as his friends and wrote
    about them in his recently published memoirs. 

    REUTER
7.2069IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5655
    AP 29-May-1997 0:35 EDT   REF5462

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Five Hasidim Accused of Fraud

    By LARRY NEUMEISTER

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Five residents of a Hasidic community were charged
    Wednesday with stealing tens of millions of dollars in government aid
    by creating phony school programs and businesses to obtain government
    grants. 

    The 21-count indictment, unsealed in Manhattan federal court, alleged
    the five residents of New Square, 35 miles northwest of New York City,
    and a Brooklyn man created the programs to obtain government grants,
    loans and subsidies to benefit the community and a seminary. 

    The defendants, all staff members at Toldos Yakov Yosef Seminary in
    Brooklyn, face from five to 20 years if convicted of conspiracy, mail
    fraud, wire fraud, embezzlement and other charges. They're to be
    arraigned June 5. 

    New Square accused prosecutors of waging a vendetta against its 6,000
    residents with raids that reminded some Holocaust survivors of
    experiences in Nazi Germany. 

    During a three-year investigation, government agents have pounded on
    residents' doors at 6 a.m., "which conjures up the worst of their
    memories," said a spokesman, Rabbi Mayer Schiller. 

    The defendants helped to enroll thousands of New Square residents in
    post-secondary educational programs to obtain tens of millions of
    dollars in federal Pell Grants and other financial aid, the indictment
    said. 

    Most of the students were enrolled in "independent study" programs that
    allowed them to study at home, and some obtained aid for 10 years or
    more without ever receiving a degree, the indictment said. 

    The defendants were also accused of defrauding the state and federally
    funded Tuition Assistance Program, the Small Business Administration
    and a federal rental subsidy program. 

    New Square's kind of Judaism is three centuries old. The sect
    originated in the Ukraine and still preserves the Yiddish language as
    its mother tongue. 

    The site was first developed in 1957, when four families moved from
    Brooklyn and dozens more followed with "dreams of living in peace and
    quiet and getting on with their lives," Schiller said. 

    "That's all been shattered by this." 
7.2070IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5727
    AP 29-May-1997 0:29 EDT   REF5443

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Judge Sets Unabomber Hearing

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- A judge on Wednesday scheduled a hearing in
    July to determine whether prosecutors can introduce evidence from
    Unabomber explosions not mentioned in the indictment against Theodore
    Kaczynski. 

    U.S. District Judge Garland Burrell Jr. set the hearing over the
    objections of Kaczynski's attorneys, Quin Denvir and Judy Clarke, who
    had urged that a ruling be delayed until the start of the Nov. 12
    trial. 

    Prosecutors had asked for a hearing before November to avoid arguments
    during trial over the admissibility of evidence. 

    Kaczynski, 55, is charged with four California explosions that killed
    two people and injured two others. He also faces separate charges in
    New Jersey in the bombing death of an advertising executive.

    In all, the Unabomber is blamed for 16 bombings that killed three
    people and injured 23 others between 1978 and 1985. Prosecutors have
    said they believe Kaczynski is responsible for all of the explosions,
    but some of the cases are too old to prosecute. 
7.2071IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5731
    AP 29-May-1997 0:16 EDT   REF5434

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Lawyer: Troubled Teen Fit for Trial

    NEW YORK (AP) -- One of the two baby-faced youths accused in last
    week's gruesome slaying in Central Park finally appeared in court
    Wednesday after several days of psychiatric tests. 

    Christopher Vasquez, 15, was arraigned on a murder charge and ordered
    held without bail at a juvenile facility. The arraignment had been
    delayed four days while he underwent a psychiatric exam.  The boy's new
    attorney, Arnold Kriss, asked the judge to continue a suicide watch for
    Vasquez. 

    But, Kriss added, "There is no doubt in my mind that Mr. Vasquez is fit
    to proceed." 

    The comment -- and a change in lawyers -- appeared to end speculation
    that Vasquez would mount some type of insanity defense. 

    Vasquez's 15-year-old girlfriend and co-defendant, Daphne Abdela, was
    also being held without bail. Both have been charged as adults with
    murder and robbery. 

    Vasquez is accused of repeatedly stabbing 44-year-old drinking
    companion Michael McMorrow early Friday morning and then, with Abdela's
    help, mutilating the body and dumping it in a lake. 

    Both teens are due back in court on June 16. 
7.2072IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5741
    AP 28-May-1997 23:24 EDT   REF5143

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Bomber's Brother Convicted

    By LARRY NEUMEISTER

    Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- An Egyptian man who had lived in the United States for
    a dozen years was convicted Wednesday of helping his brother escape the
    country after bombing the World Trade Center. 

    Mohammed Abouhalima, 33, could get up to 15 years in prison at
    sentencing Sept. 22 for aiding and abetting. His lawyer said he will
    appeal. 

    It was the fourth terrorism trial since the 1993 bombing to end in a
    conviction. 

    Abouhalima, an Egyptian who lived in Avenel, N.J., was accused of
    helping his brother escape to Egypt by driving him to Kennedy Airport
    days after the bombing, which killed six people. 

    Mahmud Abouhalima was quickly captured and returned to the United
    States. He was convicted with three others in the bombing and is
    serving 240 years in prison. 

    Telephone records and an informant's tapes were used as evidence
    against Mohammed Abouhalima. The defense argued that Mahmud wanted to
    keep his brother in the dark so that he could take care of six children
    belonging to the two families. 

    Prosecutors said that before the bombing Mohammed had already developed
    ties to terrorists and even let Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman use his
    apartment for a news conference. 

    Abdel-Rahman and nine others were convicted in 1995 of conspiring to
    bomb New York City landmarks and assassinate Egyptian President Hosni
    Mubarak. He is serving a life sentence. 
7.2073IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5753
    AP 28-May-1997 21:10 EDT   REF5898

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Jury To Deliberate Megan's Law Case

    By MELANIE BURNEY

    Associated Press Writer

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- The man accused of raping and killing Megan Kanka
    knows what happened to the 7-year-old girl, but is taking "all the
    weight" for the real killer, his attorney said Wednesday. 

    Jesse K. Timmendequas could face the death penalty if convicted of
    killing the girl who inspired a nationwide movement to protect children
    from sexual predators. The jury was to begin deliberating Thursday. 

    The July 1994 slaying sparked public outrage after neighbors learned
    Timmendequas had two prior sex convictions. The victim's mother
    campaigned for new laws to notify neighbors when sex criminals move
    into an area. 

    Versions of "Megan's Law" were passed in New Jersey and other states
    and President Clinton last year signed a federal bill. 

    In closing arguments, Barbara Lependorf suggested that Timmendequas,
    36, confessed to protect his two roommates, also convicted child
    molesters. 

    "There were three men that lived in that house. So Jesse confesses,
    takes all the weight," Lependorf said. 

    "I am not standing here and telling you Jesse had nothing to do with
    this," she added. "He obviously had guilty knowledge. He knew what went
    on in that house. He was involved." 

    The remarks were the first time the defense has acknowledged
    Timmendequas had something to do with the killing. 

    Prosecutor Kathryn Flicker said the roommates had alibis and said there
    was no forensic proof linking them to the case. 

    She said Timmendequas disclosed details only the killer would know and
    led police to a park where Megan's body was found the day after she
    disappeared. 

    "His killing was so cold and so calculated that it is chilling in the
    extreme," Flicker said. 

    Prosecutors say Timmendequas lured Megan to his house across the street
    to see a puppy, then raped and strangled her in his bedroom.
    Timmendequas told police he had been watching the girl for weeks. 
7.2074IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5782
    AP 28-May-1997 19:55 EDT   REF5877

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Spelling Bee Stumps Many Students

    By DEB RIECHMANN

    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- T.J. Sweeney wasn't exactly sure about that second
    vowel in "optimistic." He fished for clues. 

    The 12-year-old honor student from South Bend, Ind., asked the
    definition and the word's origin. He wanted it used in a sentence, too.

    Finally, he screwed up his face, stared at the ceiling and said:
    "o-p-t-o-m-i-s-t-i-c." The bell sounded. He was out, hurrying off the
    stage in tears. 

    Spelling can be stressful. 

    This year, 245 students are competing in the two-day Scripps Howard
    National Spelling Bee, which ends Thursday. The champ receives $5,000
    and other prizes, including a laptop computer. There were 170 students
    remaining after the first four rounds of competition Wednesday. 

    They conquered words like "limnology," the study of freshwater, and
    "pasquinade," a noun meaning satire or lampoon. They were asked easier
    ones like "retina" and "gruel," but most were tough ones like
    "excogitate," to consider thoroughly, and "obsequious," which means
    exhibiting compliance. 

    Between words, the contestants -- all dressed in white polo shirts --
    sat on stage, fidgeting, looking around the hotel ballroom or biting
    their nails. Yellow boards printed with their contestant number hung
    around their necks. 

    Wednesday's competition was not without controversy. 

    Albert So, 13, of Bradford, Mass., struggled with the word "foppery,"
    which means having a foolishly vain quality. After mispronouncing it
    several times as "thoppery," he began to spell it with a "th." 

    The judges stopped him and corrected his pronunciation. He then
    correctly spelled the word "f-o-p-p-e-r-y." After the judges consulted,
    the bell rang. Albert was out. He stuffed his hands in his jeans, shook
    his head and strode off the stage. 

    "You got robbed, man," contestant Mark Shawhan, 13, of Delmar, N.Y.,
    told him during the lunch break. 

    Mary Brooks, a judge, said Albert was disqualified because he initially
    began to spell the word with a "th." 

    "Our rules say that once the letters are uttered, you own them, and
    they can't change," Brooks said. 

    Albert, who studied more than 30 hours for the bee, was perturbed, but
    said: "It doesn't matter. I can watch more HBO." 

    Others spellers had trouble distinguishing between the letters "j" and
    "g." 

    Nicole Granroth, 13, of Highland, Mich., misspelled "gibberish" with a
    "j." Brandon Kennedy, 11, of Mexico City, Mexico, misspelled
    "legibility" as "lejubility." But Ben Briggs, 13, of Grand Rapids,
    Mich., was successful with "judicious." His mother is a lawyer. 

    Robby R. Schrum, 14, of Crown Point, Ind., was scheduled to compete in
    the morning session but was busy at the national geography bee, which
    was being held Wednesday in Washington. He missed his first word --
    "sciolistic," an adjective relating to the pretentious attitude of
    scholarship. 

    Alex Carter, 12, of South Charleston, W.Va., tried to trick the
    official pronouncer. His word was "oneiric," which is suggestive of
    dreams. 

    "The etymology, please," Carter asked. "The spelling, please."  The
    crowd snickered. The pronouncer didn't answer. Carter spelled it right
    anyway. 
7.2075IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5779
    AP 28-May-1997 19:51 EDT   REF5872

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Trainees Accuse Sgt. in Sex Case

    By DAVID DISHNEAU

    Associated Press Writer

    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- Five Army trainees testified
    during a drill sergeant's court-martial Wednesday that they had sex
    with him and he told them to keep quiet about it. Some were told it was
    part of a "game." 

    Four of the women indicated the sex was consensual with Staff Sgt.
    Vernell Robinson Jr., while a fifth contended she was raped by
    Robinson, although a rape charge against him was dropped Tuesday. 

    The woman's allegation brought a call for a mistrial from Robinson's
    lawyer. The military judge denied the request and reminded the jury
    that Robinson does not face a rape charge. 

    Robinson, 32, is charged with sexual misconduct for having sex with the
    five trainees at Aberdeen last year and with interfering in the
    investigation against him. Nine of the 20 counts carry maximum
    five-year prison terms. 

    The fifth woman, a 21-year-old Army Reserve specialist, testified that
    Robinson took her to a hotel and raped her two days after she arrived
    at Aberdeen. She said she had sex with him at least six more times
    before reporting him for harassment before she left in early September. 

    During the drive to the hotel, Robinson "started talking about 'the
    game.' He told me about drill sergeants and privates getting together,"
    the woman said. "He told me many privates were involved and as long as
    the privates were squared away, nobody would find out about it." 

    Prosecutors said "the game" was code for a secret sex ring run by
    Robinson and at least two other Aberdeen drill sergeants who would
    single out trainees for sex in return for favorable treatment during
    training. 

    Staff Sgt. Wayne Gamble is scheduled to testify Thursday about "the
    game" as part of a plea agreement in his own sexual misconduct case. 

    Robinson's court-martial is the third stemming from an investigation at
    Aberdeen that has led to criminal charges against 12 staff members and
    triggered a probe of sexual misconduct at U.S. military bases
    worldwide. 

    At least three of the five women testified Wednesday under a grant of
    immunity from prosecution. The Army's rule against consensual sex
    between superior officers and subordinates applies to both. 

    Pvt. Darla Hornberger, 30, testified she had sex twice with Robinson
    after flirting with him at a bar, and she also had sex with Gamble. 

    Robinson said "Gamble had told him he had slept with me and I was
    really good and he wanted to try it for himself," Ms. Hornberger
    testified. 

    She said she didn't want to have sex with Robinson, but "I was ashamed
    of myself, I felt humiliated and felt I had no right to tell him no." 

    Prosecutor Capt. Scott Lawson said in his opening statement that
    Robinson abused his authority by persuading the women to have sex with
    him. 

    "He viewed sex with trainees as a perk of his job. When he wasn't
    getting sex from his trainees, he was out there trying," Lawson said. 

    The defense postponed its opening statement until the start of its
    case. 

    The offenses allegedly occurred from April to September 1996, when
    Robinson was a drill sergeant at Aberdeen, a training and weapons
    testing center 30 miles northeast of Baltimore. He is married but
    estranged from his wife. 
7.2076IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5759
    AP 28-May-1997 19:20 EDT   REF5621

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Reactions to McVeigh Case

    By PAUL QUEARY

    Associated Press Writer

    DENVER (AP) -- Charles Tomlin has tried to keep an open mind while
    watching the Oklahoma City bombing trial, part of his search for the
    truth about the death of his son. 

    But after the defense rested Wednesday following just 3 1/2 days of
    testimony, Tomlin said he was ready to place blame on Timothy McVeigh. 

    "I don't think they ever had anything," said Tomlin, whose 46-year-old
    son Ricky died in the bombing. "It just didn't make much sense. There
    was no evidence that McVeigh didn't do it." 

    Legal analysts agreed that McVeigh's attorneys were able to recognize
    the weaknesses in the government's case, but did little to capitalize
    on them. 

    "After two years and millions of dollars, that you'd only have a
    four-day defense case is stunning," said Andrew Cohen, a Denver trial
    attorney. 

    "I don't see that he's made any inroads anywhere on the attacks the
    prosecution's made," added Irven Box, an Oklahoma City defense
    attorney. "I would say that I put on more evidence in defense of a DUI
    than he's put on in this case." 

    Much of the defense case was cut when U.S. District Judge Richard
    Matsch refused to allow theories of a larger conspiracy involving
    foreign and domestic terrorists. 

    That left the defense with only attacks on the identification of
    McVeigh as the man who rented the bomb-carrying Ryder truck, the
    scientific evidence handled by the embattled FBI laboratory, and the
    testimony of star prosecution witnesses Michael and Lori Fortier, who
    said McVeigh told them months before of his plans to bomb the federal
    building. 

    Box and Cohen both noted that lead attorney Stephen Jones failed to
    offer jurors an alibi or affirmative proof of McVeigh's innocence,
    which were both promised in his opening statements. 

    "The fact that Jones failed to deliver on that is going to be a big
    factor," Cohen said. 

    "They didn't have a whole lot to work with, so they did the best they
    could," Paul Heath, who was on the fifth floor of the federal building
    when the bomb hit. 

    "I wouldn't even have to deliberate," said Marsha Kight, whose
    daughter, Frankie Merrill, died in the federal building's credit
    union.
7.2077IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5780
    AP 28-May-1997 19:18 EDT   REF5608

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Health Experts Eye Tobacco Talks

    By MIKE ROBINSON

    Associated Press Writer

    ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) -- Negotiators appealed to public health experts
    Wednesday for support in talks with the tobacco industry, but they ran
    into widespread doubt that cigarette makers could be trusted on any
    worthwhile deal. 

    "The industry's record of deceit and lethal behavior makes it highly
    likely that any agreement will be full of loopholes and that the intent
    of the agreement will be ignored by the tobacco industry," said Dr.
    Dave Cundiff of Louisville, Ky., a board member of the American
    Association of Public Health Physicians. 

    He was among dozens of experts who attended an American Medical
    Association meeting to air concerns about negotiations between state
    attorneys general and the tobacco industry. The negotiations resume
    Thursday in New York. 

    The goal is a settlement that would eliminate all but a small amount of
    cigarette advertising, reduce teen-age smoking and compensate smokers
    who develop health problems as a result. 

    In exchange, the tobacco industry wants 30 attorneys general to drop
    lawsuits they have filed against the cigarette makers, along with some
    other concessions. 

    Public health officials have divided sharply over whether reaching the
    agreement is a good idea. 

    Much of Wednesday's meeting was taken up by a debate between
    Mississippi Attorney General Mike Moore, chief negotiator for the
    states, and representatives of Minnesota Attorney General Hubert H.
    Humphrey III, the leading critic of the settlement negotiations. 

    "To settle with the tobacco companies before we have all the facts,
    including the industry's self-proclaimed 'privileged' documents, is to
    buy the proverbial pig in a poke," Humphrey said in a letter
    distributed at the meeting. He was in Israel, but sent three members of
    his staff to argue against the talks. 

    Moore said a broad peace settlement with the industry is needed because
    decades of lawsuits against cigarette makers by individual smokers have
    gotten nowhere. 

    "The tobacco companies are not worried about individual smoker cases --
    they have beaten them for 50 years," Moore said. 

    He outlined a partial agreement already reached with the tobacco
    industry that would limit cigarette advertising to adults-only
    magazines and counter displays and provide $500 million from the
    industry for an anti-smoking campaign. 

    The changes would reduce teen smoking by 30 percent in five years and
    60 percent in a decade, he said. 

    Moore conceded that a number of sticking points remain to be
    negotiated, including cigarette makers' hope for immunity from
    liability lawsuits in exchange for a fund containing billions of
    dollars to compensate victims of smoking-related diseases. 

    Moore said negotiators will not agree to total immunity. 

    The other obstacle appeared to be how much the Food and Drug
    Administration will be able to regulate the nicotine content of
    cigarettes. A federal court in North Carolina recently ruled that the
    FDA already has complete authority to regulate tobacco, but the
    industry is appealing. 

    Moore said if the talks don't seem promising within the next two weeks,
    "it'll be time to go back home and prepare my opening arguments." 

    The case is set for trial July 7. 
7.2078IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5721
    AP 28-May-1997 22:26 EDT   REF5927

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Denmark Bans Spanking by Parents

    COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -- By the slimmest of margins, Denmark joined
    its Nordic neighbors Wednesday in prohibiting parents from spanking
    their children or using other kinds of corporal punishment. 

    After a heated debate in parliament, the bill squeaked by in a 51-50
    vote. 

    Opponents contend the measure is too intrusive. Tove Fergo of the
    Liberal Party said the law will "criminalize parents using normal
    methods to raise their children." 

    There was no immediate word on when the law will take effect or what
    the penalties will be for violators. 

    Sweden, Norway and Finland also have banned spanking. 
7.2079IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5765
    AP 28-May-1997 18:05 EDT   REF5465

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Saudi: U.K. Nurses Face Death

    By FAIZA SALEH AMBAH

    Associated Press Writer

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Two British nurses accused of
    murder in Saudi Arabia will not be spared beheading because of their
    citizenship if found guilty, a Saudi official said Wednesday. 

    "We will implement whatever the court decides. We will not take
    nationalities into account," said the Saudi government official, who
    spoke on customary condition of anonymity. 

    The case of Deborah Parry and Lucille McLauchlan has received wide
    attention in the West because executions in Saudi Arabia are often
    carried out by beheading. No Westerner has been executed in the
    oil-rich kingdom. 

    "We would prefer" that the women are not executed, said the official,
    referring to the international outcry that would result. "But if the
    court decides they are guilty, we cannot make an exception for them,"
    he said. 

    Parry and McLauchlan are accused of killing Australian Yvonne Gilford,
    55, on Dec. 11 in her room at the King Fahd Military Medical Complex in
    the eastern Saudi city of Dhahran, where all three nurses worked.
    Authorities said she was stabbed four times, beaten and suffocated. 

    The women pleaded innocent to the charges at the opening of the trial
    last week. The trial was to resume in June. 

    Under Saudi laws, convicted murderers are executed only if the victim's
    family wants it. The family can also grant clemency and demand
    compensation known as "blood money." 

    In Australia, the brother of the slain nurse said he wants the
    executions to go forward if Parry and McLauchlin are convicted, despite
    a request from the judge hearing the case that he consider withdrawing
    the demand. 

    "It's something I'll have to live with, these are the things we'll be
    thinking about and thinking about," Frank Gifford said at his home in
    Jamestown. "But at the moment we stand by our decision." 

    Parry, 41, and McLauchlan, 31, deny murdering Gilford and have
    retracted confessions they gave police. They say they confessed only
    because they were told they could go home without facing prosecution. 

    Defense lawyer Salah Hejailan said the women will appeal to Gilford,
    and set up a trust fund in the slain nurse's name. He has also offered
    to fly Gilford to visit the jailed nurses at his personal cost. Gilford
    has declined the offer. 

    In Britain, a lawyer said the families of the two nurses are planning a
    three-day trip to Saudi Arabia on Friday to visit the women and meet
    with their Saudi lawyers. 

    "The two women have not been convicted, and talk of the death penalty
    is putting them through hell at a time when the evidence has not been
    tested," said Rodger Pannone, a lawyer for Parry's family. 
7.2080IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5788
    AP 28-May-1997 17:39 EDT   REF5406

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Chirac's Pulls Out New Strategy

    By CHRISTOPHER BURNS

    Associated Press Writer

    PARIS (AP) -- Faced with the possibility of losing his parliamentary
    majority, President Jacques Chirac has taken to warning voters about
    the threat of the left. 

    On Tuesday, he said Europe would be weakened. On Wednesday, he brought
    the message closer to home, saying France itself would wind up
    directionless. 

    Chirac's stepped-up offensive is rare for this country, where
    presidents usually remain on the sidelines in legislative campaigns.
    Until this week, Chirac has followed that tradition. 

    Meanwhile, the stock market slid Wednesday on fears that the left will
    win Sunday's runoff elections, and Chirac's allies sought to soften
    their line on austerity measures aimed at European integration. The
    belt-tightening has been extremely unpopular with voters. 

    In Sunday's first round of voting, the left won a majority on the
    strength of public anger over record 12.8 percent unemployment. 

    "France cannot change course at just anytime without taking serious
    risks," Chirac said Wednesday in a statement. "A change of direction
    would steer inevitably toward confusion ... and a weakening of our
    country." 

    Chirac dissolved Parliament last month and called elections 10 months
    early, hoping that Prime Minister Alain Juppe could rally support for
    economic reforms aimed at preparing France for the euro, the single
    European currency planned for 1999. 

    But a majority of voters Sunday appeared to deny Chirac his requested
    mandate for the reforms. The Socialist Party and its leftist allies won
    40.6 percent of the popular vote, while Chirac's coalition won only
    29.9 percent -- the worst first-round showing by the conservatives in
    decades. The far-right National Front took 15 percent.

    In response, Juppe, the prime target of the left's wrath, promised
    Monday to step down next week no matter who wins. But there were
    indications the concession may have been too little, too late. 

    Though French law bans the public release of opinion polls within a
    week of elections, three French banks said their private surveys
    suggest the left will win. Bank officials briefly discussed the polls
    results on the condition the banks not be identified. 

    The French stock market's CAC 40 index fell 3.6 percent on news of the
    polls, which provoked fear that the left would slow down the
    conservatives' financial reforms, including ambitious sell-offs of
    state-owned companies. 

    Chirac's governing conservative coalition could still pull off a
    victory if it can sway the one-third of voters who opted not to take
    part in round one. Some far-right voters may also swing toward the
    conservatives. 

    To pique their interest, Juppe himself suggested Tuesday that the
    budget deficit need not fall from 4.2 percent to 3 percent of gross
    domestic product for France to qualify for the euro. He said the figure
    "will be decided on intelligently," and that 3.1 percent or 3.2 percent
    should suffice. 

    Juppe appeared to be moving toward the Socialists' stand that
    qualifying for the euro should be based on a "trend" toward
    deficit-cutting and not a strict figure. 

    Juppe's most likely successor in the event of a conservative victory,
    outgoing National Assembly President Philippe Seguin, said he hopes
    that after the euro comes into being "we will loosen" fiscal policy. 

    "We need to restart growth," he told the newsweekly l'Express. 

    Socialist leader Lionel Jospin, meanwhile, sought to dispel doubt that
    he could form a government with a Communist Party hostile to the euro. 

    "There won't be different orientations in the government," he insisted
    on RTL radio. But asked to elaborate, he said only: "We discussed these
    problems ahead of time. We know where we are and, in time, we'll
    decide." 
7.2081IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5728
    AP 28-May-1997 17:15 EDT   REF5065

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    Egypt Sentences Artifact Swindler

    CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- A man who convinced Egypt's culture minister that
    he had found a tomb filled with gold artifacts -- when none existed --
    was sentenced to seven years in prison Wednesday. 

    A criminal court convicted Hamdi Abdel-Naiem, 37, in absentia. He has
    been a fugitive since hoodwinking Culture Minister Farouk Hosni. 

    Abdel-Naiem was convicted of swindling and using forged identity cards
    for illegal purposes, said police officials, who spoke on customary
    condition of anonymity. 

    Abdel-Naiem met with Hosni in 1996, using a forged ID card, and claimed
    he had found a tomb brimming with golden Pharaonic relics near Aswan,
    440 miles south of Cairo. 

    Police said he later admitted dreaming up the scheme, hoping Hosni
    would reward him immediately. Instead, Hosni ordered an airplane and
    flew with Abdel-Naiem and antiquities officials to the site. 

    Abdel-Naiem fled when the plane landed, but police found him weeks
    later. He escaped a second time earlier this year and remains at
    large.
7.2082IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5839
    RTw  29-May-97 06:56    

    Elephant ``pill'' makes for jumbo sex drive

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 29 (Reuter) - Hormone implants meant to control South
    Africa's growing number of elephants instead drive bull elephants wild
    with lust, New Scientist magazine reported on Thursday. 

    The birth control implants keep the females in a continuous state of
    heat, according to conservationists who have been testing them out. 

    The elephant population in South Africa's Kruger Park has been growing
    with poaching under better control, and gamekeepers, unhappy with
    having to cull the elephants, thought they would try birth control. 

    But oestrogen implants modelled on human birth control methods
    backfired badly when tested in 10 cow elephants. 

    "They were in this state of continual false oestrus, and the bulls
    would not leave them alone," Ian Whyte, the park's elephant specialist,
    told New Scientist. 

    "When we tracked them from the air, we would find a cow on her own
    surrounded by up to eight bulls. That sort of thing, we feel, is not
    the way we want to treat the elephants." 

    The excited bulls also sometimes separated the cows from their babies. 

    The magazine quoted Jay Kirkpatrick, an expert in wildlife
    contraception at Zoo-Montana in Billings, as saying hormonal birth
    control was abandoned there in the 1970s because of its impracticality
    and the changes in behaviour it produced. 

    Instead, scientists are testing an anti-sperm vaccine that causes the
    female's body to reject sperm. 

    REUTER
7.2083IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5844
    RTw  29-May-97 01:01    

    Polluted water causes life of crime, expert says

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    LONDON, May 29 (Reuter) - Polluted water can cause brain damage that
    turns ordinary people into violent criminals, New Scientist magazine
    reported on Thursday. 

    It quoted a U.S. research showing that toxic metals in drinking water
    were linked to crime rates. 

    Roger Masters of Dartmouth College in New Hampshire compared crime
    figures from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) with information
    on industrial discharges of lead and manganese from the Environmental
    Protection Agency (EPA). 

    He found a definite link between pollution figures and levels of
    murder, assault and robbery. Counties with the highest pollution levels
    had crime rates triple the national average. 

    "The presence of pollution is as big a factor as poverty," Masters told
    New Scientist. 

    Masters has written about his findings in a book, Environmental
    Toxicology, to be published later this year. He says there is a
    physical basis for the phenomenon. 

    Experiments have shown lead can inhibit the action of glial cells,
    which help clean up unwanted chemicals in the brain. Other tests have
    shown manganese can interfere with levels of the neurotransmitters
    serotonin and dopamine -- chemical messengers linked with mood and
    behaviour. 

    "It's the breakdown of the inhibition mechanism that's the key to
    violent behaviour," Masters said. 

    "This quite likely has something in it," Ken Pease, director of the
    Applied Criminology Research Unit at the University of Huddersfield,
    told New Scientist. 

    "But I think the approach badly needs individual data to nail it down." 
    REUTER
7.2084IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5890
    RTw  28-May-97 23:59    

    Defense rests in Oklahoma City bombing case

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    By Ellen Wulfhorst 

    DENVER, May 28 (Reuter) - Attorneys defending accused Oklahoma City
    bomber Timothy McVeigh rested their case on Wednesday after a four-day
    assault on the FBI's scientific investigation and the credibility of
    government witnesses. 

    The defence case was brief and streamlined -- just 25 witnesses --
    compared to the prosecution's 137 witnesses in 18 days. 

    Closing arguments begin on Thursday, with jury deliberations to follow.
    The 29-year-old Gulf War veteran faces the death penalty if convicted
    in the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah building that
    left 168 dead and more than 500 injured. 

    McVeigh's attorneys concentrated on an attack on the motives of
    government witnesses, questioned the FBI's handling of evidence and
    called their own witnesses to undermine the prosecution. 

    After defence testimony ended, lead government prosecutor Joe Hartzler
    appeared exuberant and confident, giving a "high-five" greeting to a
    friend. 

    Denver trial attorney Scott Robinson gave the defence effort a mixed
    review, saying, "The defence did a remarkable job ... representing the
    most hated man in America. They did attack almost every aspect of the
    government's case. But what they didn't do was explain away the
    evidence against McVeigh." 

    Missing from the defence case were theories once promoted by defence
    attorney Stephen Jones that the bombing may have been the work of
    right-wing extremists based in America or overseas. 

    McVeigh's attorneys had made several trips out of the country, part of
    what published reports said was a $10 million defence effort. 

    On the last day of testimony, defence attorneys played wire-tapped
    telephone conversations designed to discredit star prosecution witness
    Michael Fortier. He can be heard telling friends he knew McVeigh and
    hoped to make "one cool mill" -- or $1 million -- by selling his story
    to the media. 

    "I'll just give them something juicy," he said, adding he knew nothing
    about McVeigh's alleged crimes. He described McVeigh as having been "in
    the wrong place at the wrong time." 

    Fortier and his wife Lori testified earlier that McVeigh told them of
    his rage toward the federal government and his plans to bomb the
    federal building in Oklahoma City. 

    While the couple said they did not tell authorities the truth because
    they were implicated and terrified, Fortier made no mention on the
    tapes of being scared. 

    The defence, hoping questions about the FBI's investigation could
    induce jurors to question its findings, focused on standards and
    procedures at the agency's crime lab. 

    The lab was found contaminated with explosives residue just weeks after
    the bombing, FBI agent Frederic Whitehurst testified. But he said he
    had no proof any evidence was tainted. 

    He cast doubt on the ammonium nitrate, said to be a key ingredient in
    the bomb, found by the FBI on a piece of the Ryder truck allegedly used
    in the blast. Whitehurst said the chemicals should in fact have been
    washed away by rain. 

    The jury also heard British explosives expert John Lloyd say he was
    unconvinced by the FBI findings. He questioned the residue found on
    McVeigh's clothing and earplugs. If McVeigh handled as much ammonium
    nitrate as the government claimed, he said, traces should have turned
    up elsewhere, such as on his boots or in his car. No traces were found. 

    The chemical residue was the prosecution's best scientific evidence
    against McVeigh, who was wearing the clothes when he was arrested soon
    after the blast by a state trooper who noticed his car was missing a
    license plate. 

    His attorneys also raised the specter of "John Doe No. 2," an
    unidentified suspect who was never found. They proposed that an
    unidentified leg -- found at the bomb site and never explained -- could
    have belonged to the actual bomber. 

    REUTER
7.2085IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5828
    RTw  28-May-97 22:05    

    British nanny accused of murder denied bail again

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    BOSTON, May 28 (Reuter) - Massachusetts' highest state court on
    Wednesday denied bail to a British au pair accused of killing a
    9-month-old infant left in her charge. 

    Lawyers for Lousie Woodward, 19, of Chester, England, who is accused of
    murdering Matthew Eappen, had argued that their client posed no risk of
    flight and had submitted a thick file of affidavits from her parish
    vicar, school teacher, neighbours and members of parliament attesting
    to her good character. 

    But Supreme Judicial Court Justice Charles Fried denied their motion
    for bail in a one-paragraph ruling that read in part: "There was a
    lengthy argument by counsel for the parties and upon consideration of
    all the papers including post-argument submissions ... (bail) is denied
    as there was no error law committed by the trial court." 

    Woodward, who has been kept in the state's only prison for women since
    her arrest in February, has another hearing set for Friday before
    Middlesex County Superior Court Judge Hiller Zobel, the trial judge who
    denied her first request for bail. 

    REUTER
7.2086IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 10:5855
    RTos 29-May-97 04:26    

    Bob Dylan Hospitalized with Heart Infection

    Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.  All rights reserved.
  
    NEW YORK (Reuter) - Bob Dylan has called off a European tour after
    being admitted to a hospital suffering from a potentially
    life-threatening infection, his publicists said Wednesday. 

    London media reports said the 56-year-old singer/songwriter was
    hospitalized in New York but a spokeswoman for Dylan said her office
    did not know where he was being treated or what his condition was. 

    "This past weekend, Bob Dylan was admitted to hospital suffering from
    severe chest pains. His condition has been diagnosed as histoplasmosis,
    a potentially fatal infection which creates swelling in the sac which
    surrounds the heart," Dylan's London publicists said. 

    Dylan will remain in the hospital until his doctors are confident his
    condition has improved, they added. 

    His New York publicists said they hoped he would be well enough to go
    through with a U.S. tour slated for August. 

    The singer was due to perform in Ireland, Britain and Switzerland
    during the summer tour. Van Morrison, who was to appear with him in
    London June 7, said he would still perform. 

    Dylan recently completed a swing through Canada and the Northeast and
    last appeared in Los Angeles earlier this month. 

    He released his first album in 1962 and is considered the most
    influential songwriter of his generation, with such classics as
    "Blowin' in the Wind," "The Times They Are A-Changin," "Subterranean
    Homesick Blues," "Like a Rolling Stone," and "Tangled Up in Blue." 

    Dr. David Pegues, an infectious disease expert at UCLA Medical Center,
    said histoplasmosis is caused by a fungus, which is extremely common in
    certain parts of the United States. 

    "It's not unusual," he told Reuters. "If untreated, sure it could kill
    him ... but it's an eminently treatable and curable illness, and I'm
    sure Mr. Dylan has the best medical supervision." 

    He said people in Dylan's case would be treated either orally or
    intravenously with a course of anti-virals, and would be out of action
    for a few weeks at least. 

    In recent years, Dylan has looked haggard as he fulfilled a grueling
    touring regimen, and he rarely seemed animated while performing.
    However some friends reported that he was looking relatively chipper
    and had even given up smoking. 

    REUTER
7.2087IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 13:54118
7.2088IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 13:5547
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                        
    Police to take on Internet criminals
    
    By John Steele, Crime Correspondent 
    
    A UNIT to deal with crime on the Internet is to be recommended by the
    National Criminal Intelligence Service following a study of criminal
    misuse of information technology.
                              
    NCIS's work has highlighted a number of areas of growing criminal
    involvement, including a switch by drugs barons into software piracy
    and possible terrorist use of the Internet. Criminal attempts to
    penetrate electronic payments systems also continue to grow. Its
    analysis, presented to an international conference in London this week
    on organised crime, will form the basis of recommendations to the
    Government for tackling electronic crime.
                              
    Another recommendation, confirmed yesterday by John Abbott, the deputy
    director of NCIS, will be for an urgent review of police powers to
    intercept e-mail and other forms of Internet communication. Project
    Trawler, the NCIS study, has disclosed evidence that organised
    criminals use the secure private communications provided by the
    Internet, sometimes with encryption of their messages, to conduct
    criminal business.
                              
    Police try to persuade Internet service providers to give them access
    to communications, as they do with telephone operators. But there is
    concern that the law does not give them sufficient powers to intercept
    e-mail.
                              
    The piracy of computer software is seen by some criminals as more
    profitable than drugs. NCIS research has also shown a growth in piracy
    of music, with criminals copying compilations put on the Internet by
    music enthusiasts and turning them into bootleg CDs.
                              
    Animal rights campaigners are known to have interfered with web sites
    advertising fur in the United States and at least one terrorist group
    on the Continent is known to have used encrypted Internet
    communications. NCIS officials believe that it is a "logical next step"
    for terrorist groups to use the Internet.
                              
    Albert Pacey, the director of NCIS, said: "What seems to be emerging is
    a new police beat on the information highways. What is needed is not
    the generalist officer but specialist officers with technical knowledge
    and expert support. The issues need addressing before criminals get
    ahead of law enforcement."
7.2089IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 13:5774
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                              
    Britain may ban German beef over BSE fears
    
    By David Brown, Agriculture Editor 
    
    THE Government may ban imports of beef from Germany and other EU
    countries which do not observe Britain's strict abattoir hygiene
    controls to protect consumers from mad cow disease, John Cunningham,
    Minister of Agriculture, signalled yesterday.
                                                                  
    But he made clear that a decision, which would embroil the Government
    in its first clash with the European Union, must be taken at the
    highest level of Government, including the Prime Minister.
                                                                  
    While insisting that the Government did not intend to take "unilateral"
    action against imports from other EU countries, Dr Cunningham conceded
    that it might have little choice if curbs are called for in the next
    few days by the Government's independent Spongiform Encephalopathies
    Advisory Committee (SEAC).
                                                                  
    Some members of the committee, which advises the Government on BSE and
    its human equivalent, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), are demanding
    curbs on any imported beef which does not comply with the British
    hygiene controls.
                                                                  
    They say it is nonsense to import increasing amounts of meat from other
    countries which have suffered BSE in their cattle herds while it is
    produced to lower hygiene standards than British beef.
                                                                  
    The British beef is banned from export anywhere in the world on the
    grounds that it might pose a risk to health. SEAC provoked the beef
    crisis in March last year when it announced a possible link between BSE
    and a new form of CJD in young people. So far, 15 people have died from
    the new form of the fatal brain illness. There is one other "probable"
    victim.
                                                                  
    The Conservative Government followed every recommendation by the
    committee. Dr Cunningham said "If SEAC advises us to act, I will have
    to refer this advice to the Prime Minister. Then we will publish that
    advice."
                                                                  
    It would be "difficult not to act" if SEAC called for curbs. "At least
    it would be action based on scientific opinion," he added. There was no
    uniformity in Europe, he said, on ways of dealing with specified
    offals, including the thymus, spleen, brain and other materials deemed
    most likely to harbour the deadly BSE agent. In some countries, cattle
    brains are still a delicacy.
                                                                  
    He had persuaded the EU Commission to reconsider an earlier decision
    not to impose Britain's tough controls, introduced before and after the
    beef crisis broke last March, on all countries in the community.
                                                                  
    He identified Germany, where resistance to British beef exports is
    strongest, as one country which did not observe the controls. Germany
    has suffered a handful of BSE cases. Prof John Pattison, chairman of
    SEAC, said yesterday: "The committee has already met to discuss the
    question of imported beef and is now considering its position. I hope
    that a recommendation to ministers can be made by the end of this week.
    It may be before the weekend or just after.
                                                                  
    "I cannot pre-empt the committee's decision. We will report to
    ministers, who will decide what action to take. It will also be up to
    ministers to decide whether to publish our advice. The previous
    Government did and I see no reason why this Government will not do the
    same."
                                                                          
    Farmers and meat industry leaders are angry that beef imports from
    Germany, Holland, France and Ireland, which have all suffered cases of
    BSE, have been soaring in recent months to take advantage of a recovery
    in sales on the British market.
                                                                          
    These imports have hit cattle prices, now running at about 91p a kilo,
    about 6p a kilo lower than at the height of the beef crisis last year.
7.2090IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 13:5972
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                                  
    Diet drugs must be last resort, say guidelines
    
    By Celia Hall, Medical Editor 
    
    NEW guidelines were published yesterday to help to stop private clinics
    and GPs who wrongly prescribe powerful appetite suppressant drugs for
    slimmers.
         
    The Royal College of Physicians said the drugs fenfluramine and
    dexfenfluramine should be used only as a last resort for people whose
    health was threatened by being seriously overweight. In the first
    report on the safe use of slimming drugs, it said that other medication
    including addictive amphetamines, diuretics, which reduce the body's
    water content, and thyroid hormones to speed up the metabolism should
    not be used as aids to weight loss.
         
    A third appetite suppressant drug, phentermine, could be prescribed but
    was only licensed for use over 12 weeks. Two years ago Tom Sackville,
    then a junior minister, said slimming drugs should be banned because of
    fears of side-effects and reports that slimming clinics were readily
    prescribing the drugs to women who were not overweight but merely
    wanted to be thinner.
         
    The Department of Health asked the college to report on the use of
    slimming drugs. Dr Peter Kopelman, who chaired the RCP working party,
    said yesterday that the benefits for weight loss in obese people
    outweighed the "very small" risks of the drugs, which have been
    available for 30 years.
         
    The report said that in rare cases the drugs could produce a serious
    side-effect, giving rise to high blood pressure in the lungs and heart.
    The insidious onset of this condition might be difficult to detect.
         
    It recommended that fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine should only be
    prescribed after three months, when dieting and exercise regimes had
    failed, and patients should be carefully monitored.
         
    The drugs should not be used for more than 12 months because long-term
    effects were not known. If a weight loss of 10 per cent had not been
    achieved after three months they should be discontinued. 
         
    Dr David London, registrar of the RCP, said that the General Medical
    Council was interested in the findings. It was hoped that the
    recommendations would be included in the GMC's current review of
    professional standards. The RCP report also said that private doctors
    who prescribed the drugs had to tell patients' GPs in writing, to avoid
    interactions with other drugs.
         
    "We do not know the size of the problem of inappropriate use of the
    drugs in private clinics but we would fervently discourage their use in
    people who are not overweight," said Dr London.
         
    The report Overweight and Obese Patients said the incidence of obesity
    in England had doubled between 1980 and 1994, increasing in men from
    six per cent of the population to 13.8 per cent and in women from eight
    per cent to 17.3 per cent. A simple definition of being overweight was
    a waist measurement of 35 inches in a man and 32 inches in a woman and
    for obesity, 40 inches in a man and 37 inches in a woman.
         
    A spokesman for the GMC said yesterday that it had issued guidance in
    1993 on prescribing slimming drugs and advised patients to consult
    their GPs about weight problems before going to private practitioners.
         
    Irresponsible prescribing was seen as serious professional misconduct,
    he added. "But the GMC can't take any action unless we receive a
    complaint about a specific practitioner who would have to be seen to be
    prescribing irresponsibly."
         
    GMC guidance was that the main treatment for obesity was an appropriate
    diet.
7.2091IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0042
7.2092IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0174
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                   
    Blair warned on Whitehall posts
    
    By Rachel Sylvester, Political Staff 
    
    TONY Blair is in danger of breaching Civil Service rules by appointing
    too many Labour Party staff to Government positions, the Whitehall
    watchdog said yesterday.
                                                   
    Sir Michael Bett, the Civil Service First Commissioner, urged the Prime
    Minister not to make any more political appointments to Civil Service
    posts without first gaining Parliamentary approval. 
                                                   
    He said he would be "very concerned" if American-style "political
    patronage" replaced the British tradition of non-partisan appointments.
    He believed that this would undermine the principle of "free and open
    competition" for Civil Service posts, which is central to the ethos of
    Whitehall. 
                                                   
    "If there was a horde appointed without proper fair and open
    competition of course . . . I would be very concerned," he said. "That
    would be a direct breach of the principle."
                                                   
    Sir Michael, a former chairman of British Telecom, said that, unlike
    the American system, the British Civil Service had always prided itself
    on its ability to move effortlessly between governments.
                                                   
    "I am not American, I am British," he said. "If we were to move towards
    an American system of all change, or at least a lot of senior civil
    servants change, as one government takes over from another, then I
    would be concerned because it would be a constitutional departure from
    what we have today. It may be that that is a constitutional departure
    that the Government and Parliament wants, but if they do want it, it
    should be done openly."
                                                   
    It emerged yesterday that Mr Blair had to obtain a special ruling from
    the Queen before he could appoint advisers with the power to give
    orders to civil servants. The Prime Minister obtained a Order in
    Council on May 3 allowing him to make three political appointments to
    No 10.
                                                   
    Following this change in the rules, Alastair Campbell became the first
    political Press Secretary at No 10 for more than 20 years and Jonathan
    Powell was appointed to take over as the Prime Minister's private
    secretary. The third post has not yet been filled.
                                                   
    Two political appointments to the Downing Street press office - Tim
    Allen and Hilary Coffman - are not included because these members of
    staff are classified as special advisers.
                                                   
    Sir Michael said he had been consulted about the order and made it
    clear that he would not accept more than three political appointments
    to the Prime Minister's office.
                                                   
    Senior Tories are expressing concern about what they see as the
    politicisation of the Civil Service. Alastair Goodlad, the Tory Chief
    Whip, complained in the Commons about a "massive increase" in the
    number of political appointments early in the new regime. 
                                                   
    The First Division Association, which represents senior civil servants,
    is compiling a full list of political appointees because it is
    concerned that some may be taking jobs traditionally done by civil
    servants.
                                                   
    The Cabinet Office stressed that there had been no fundamental change
    in ethos. "The Government is committed to a strong and impartial Civil
    Service by clearly distinguishing political advice and support. In this
    way the political impartiality of the permanent Civil Service is
    reinforced," a spokesman said.
                                                   
    The Prime Minister wrote to Sir Robin Butler, head of the Civil
    Service, 10 days after taking power, thanking him for the "superlative
    way" in which his staff had handled the change.
7.2093IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0237
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                 
    Row with EU on works councils
    
    By Joy Copley, Political Staff 
    
    THE Government is heading for a conflict with the European Commission
    over plans to extend the number of companies in Britain that would be
    forced to set up works councils.
               
    The commission intends to launch a consultation document next Wednesday
    on what European sources admitted last night was a "very sensitive
    issue". There have been behind-the-scenes rows about the political
    appropriateness of introducing such controversial plans at an early
    stage in the life of the Government. 
               
    In effect, the new rules would apply only to the UK and Ireland because
    most other countries already have some form of consultation and
    information rights for workers. Currently only multi-national companies
    employing more than 1,000 workers throughout Europe, including a
    minimum of 150 in any two countries, are obliged to establish councils
    under a social chapter directive, which came into force last September.
               
    But the new plans being floated are for works councils to be set up in
    all national companies possibly with as few as 50 employees. The
    Government would oppose this as a possible hindrance to
    employment.Ministers fear that the outcome of the consultations could
    be "too prescriptive" and would resist any outcome that suggested that
    all small and medium-sized firms in Britain should be forced to set up
    councils.
               
    Tony Blair has been keen to foster a new positive relationship with
    Europe but has said that employment policy should not be dictated by
    Brussels. Robin Cook, the Foreign Secretary, made clear in a speech to
    the TUC yesterday that Britain would carefully scrutinise all further
    directives to make sure that they boosted rather than hindered
    employment.
7.2094IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0358
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                                 
    Scout mistress suspended for being too strict
    
    By Will Bennett 
    
    A SCOUT mistress has been suspended after 19 years of service because
    she was accused of being too strict and upset parents by complaining
    about their sons' behaviour.
               
    Ross Tyrrell, who kept order by shouting, raising her hand in the air
    and blowing her whistle, has been asked to resign as a Beaver pack
    leader in Halesworth, Suffolk. But Mrs Tyrrell, 56, is appealing
    against the suspension and says that most parents support her
    no-nonsense approach to running the group of six- to eight-year-old
    boys.
               
    She said: "You have to raise your voice sometimes to keep order when
    you are trying to control a group of excited young boys who are all
    running around. I just believe that boys need to be kept in order if
    they going to get the most out of being in the Beavers." 
               
    She said that when she asked the reason for her suspension she was told
    that three parents had complained about her disciplinary methods and
    had accused her of being old-fashioned.
               
    She said: "I could not believe I was being thrown out for simply doing
    my job properly. I feel I am the victim of a great injustice. Smacking
    boys is banned and I have never done it. My usual way of keeping
    control is to raise my right arm in the air. When I do that the boys
    know that they have to be quiet and put their arms up as well. I also
    have to shout but I do not pick on any boys and I do it to all of them.
    My last resort is blowing my whistle but that happens rarely."
               
    Mrs Tyrrell said that one mother objected when she complained to her
    about her son's behaviour and that she had also disagreed with the
    mother of a boy with special needs whom she had difficulty controlling.
               
    Nigel Busby, Halesworth group scout leader, said: "There is no problem
    with Ross as a leader and she has given good service to the group. But
    in recent months I have received a number of complaints about the way
    she has disciplined boys and approached parents to complain.
               
    "I removed her from her post for bringing the group into disrepute,
    after taking advice from senior members of the Scout movement in
    Suffolk. She has not been flexible and she has upset people."
               
    John Fogg, spokesman for the Scout Association, said: "There have been
    a variety of difficulties and problems including complaints from
    parents about the way in which the Beaver colony was being run. The
    group scout leader has been left with no choice but to ask her to
    depart from scouting.
               
    "On our training courses we say that shouting at young people is not
    conducive to developing their trust and encouraging them. We do not
    encourage it. There are other ways of attracting young people's
    attention, like remaining perfectly silent until they stop what they
    are doing."
7.2095IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0562
7.2096IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0626
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                       
    Cleaner left bank open for business
    
    By David Graves 
    
    BARBARA Macdonald had seen advertisements about banks being available
    all hours, but she was surprised to find one open but deserted.
                                                                     
    Unable to get any money from a cash dispenser on a Saturday shopping
    trip, she thought the Midland branch in Petersfield, Hants, might be
    one of those open for weekend business. As she pushed the wooden front
    door, it opened. She walked in to find the branch deserted. 
                                                                     
    Other shoppers followed her and their calls to discover whether anyone
    was there were met with silence. "People were coming and going,
    thinking how weird it was that the bank was empty," she said yesterday. 
                                                                     
    The tills were unmanned. The door leading to a "secure" office was
    open, said Mrs Macdonald, a journalist, of Camberley, Surrey. She
    called police on her mobile phone.
                                                                     
    Mike Goddard, a Midland Bank spokesman, said yesterday that the branch
    had been left open all night after the front door had been
    inadvertently left unlocked by a cleaner. "We can assure customers that
    their confidential files and money were not accessible," he said.
7.2097IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0784
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                                     
    Australian orphans return to home they never knew
    
    
    
    A GROUP of British and Irish women arrived at Heathrow yesterday on a
    "sentimental journey" from Australia to their home countries.The trip
    marked 50 years since they were sent abroad as abandoned children to
    begin a new life.
                                                     
    Singing Advance Australia Fair, the women were met at the airport amid
    emotional scenes with friends and families they had never met.
                                                     
    Most of the 40 became wards of nuns at an orphanage when they arrived
    by ship in Perth with other British emigrants in 1947. They were all
    abandoned by their mothers and given to British orphanages that decided
    to send them to Australia where they seemed to have a bright future
    compared with Britain after the Second World War.
                                                     
    The women, aged 54 to 64, were brought up by the Sisters of Nazareth at
    Nazareth House at Geraldton. Some were looking forward to meeting
    relatives for the first time and others plan to revisit birthplaces
    they do not remember.
                                                     
    Most have families of their own and are glad to be Australian. But many
    harbour bitterness about the process that took them to the other side
    of the world. Sheila Pearce, the woman behind the journey and a
    59-year-old great-grandmother, said: "We lost our country and our
    heritage. We lost everything when the governments decided to send us
    out there.
                                                     
    "I'm Australian now but I was born Irish. When I went back, I was a
    foreigner in my own country." Valerie Standen, 58, who was sent to
    Australia in 1953, hoped to meet her sister, whom she has not seen for
    45 years.
                                                     
    "We had a marvellous time in Australia," she said. "It's a beautiful
    country and it could not really have been better. It felt very strange
    coming here for the first time." Mary Cooper, 59, who was originally
    from Newcastle upon Tyne, set sail on the Austerius in 1947 and said:
    "I don't feel any bitterness. I was taken to Australia and I have had a
    great marriage and I have a wonderful family. I could not have asked
    for anything more.
                                                     
    "The conditions in the orphanages were good and, if I lived my life
    over again, I would not change it." Both British and Australian
    governments refused funding for the trip. The Sisters of Mercy, Sisters
    of Nazareth and the Perth-based lobby and fundraising group Child
    Migration Fund provided the financial assistance. Sister Sheila Sawle,
    Sister of Mercy deputy congregation leader, said the journey was
    important for the women to resolve painful aspects of their pasts.
    "It's like a self-help project," she said.Organiser Sister Leonie
    O'Brien said the women would return to Australia having exorcised any
    demons they might have had. "It is 50 years since they were sent to
    Australia and some of them were very young when they went."
                                                     
    Eileen Ashby, 57, was eight years old when she was sent from an
    orphanage in Cheltenham, Glos. "I did not have a clue what was
    happening," she said. "We ended up in Southampton and, the next minute,
    we spent six weeks on a boat.
                                                     
    "When we arrived, someone said we were in Australia but it could have
    been anywhere. We ended up at another orphanage and I really thought I
    was back at the same one." Eileen, who is making the journey with her
    husband Brian, 51, said she never knew until years later what had
    happened. She then began the search for her Irish mother, Kathleen,
    with whom she was reunited six years ago. "It was not until I left the
    orphanage at 18 that I returned for information." The orphanage had no
    record of her origin except a birth certificate with the wrong name on
    it. However, after 30 years of searching, she found her Irish mother,
    who has since died. "Six years ago I found my mother and nine brothers
    and sisters in Ireland. Mum felt very guilty because she always thought
    I was still in England. When she got the message after 30 years, she
    nearly collapsed."Valerie Standen, 57, looked forward to seeing her
    mother's grave for the first time and Anne Moncaster, 64, was reunited
    with a brother.
                                                     
    In Britain, the Child Migrants Trust, which is campaigning for an
    investigation into the "shameful" policy of migrating children to
    Commonwealth countries without the consent of their parents, said:
    "Time is of the essence for many child migrants still waiting to be
    reunited with their families. We failed them once when they were
    vulnerable children. Let us not fail them again."
7.2098IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:0838
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                       
    Woman saves 40 as coach driver dies
    
    By Paul Stokes 
    
    A WOMAN steered 40 fellow passengers to safety when the driver of their
    coach collapsed while the vehicle was travelling at 50mph on the M6.
                                                                       
    Eva Dobson, 39, manoeuvred herself into the driving seat and pumped the
    footbrake to bring the coach-load of screaming passengers to a stop
    against the crash barrier.
                                                                       
    Mrs Dobson, of Hetton-le-Hole, Sunderland, was riding in a front row
    when she saw the driver fall from his seat. The 50-seater coach began
    swerving towards the central reservation near the Burton services north
    of Lancaster.
                                                                       
    Police said that her actions almost certainly avoided a disaster for
    the passengers on their return from a trip to Blackpool. The driver,
    Frederick Oxley, 64, of Ryton, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, was found to have
    died from a massive heart attack.
                                                                       
    Mrs Dobson said: "I didn't have time to think, I just acted on impulse.
    I could see the driver seemed to be in difficulties as we pulled on to
    the M6. Suddenly he keeled over and the bus started to veer across the
    road.
                                                                       
    "I jumped up and grabbed the wheel. I got into the seat and pumped the
    brakes until we came to a stop against the crash barrier.
                                                                       
    "I just sat there with my fingers gripping the wheel and my feet still
    jammed hard on the brake. I must have gone into shock."
                                                                       
    Mrs Dobson, a mother of three, said she had never driven such a large
    vehicle before. She added: "I will never go anywhere on a bus again. So
    many of us could have been killed if the bus had gone over the central
    reservation or even dropped down into the field on the other side."
7.2099IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:11100
7.2100IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:1371
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
                                                  
    Open and shut case for university quiz victors
    
    By Hugh Muir 
    
    THE Open University team that scored the highest number of points ever
    achieved on University Challenge has broken its own record.
                                          
    The four students, with ages ranging from 33 to 72, scored 415 points
    against Charing Cross Medical School, whose team could muster only 65
    points. The total was achieved in the semi-final which was screened
    last night, and was the highest in the quiz show's 27-year history. The
    350-point margin of victory was also the largest during the programme's
    run of more than 700 editions.
                                          
    It eclipsed the Open University team's last triumph in January when it
    beat University College, Swansea, by 395 points to 85. The Swansea team
    was shell-shocked by its defeat but there was an indication last night
    that the students from Charing Cross were prepared for the worst.
                                          
    As the gong signalled the end of the contest, each team member raised
    their fingers to their heads and pretended to shoot themselves. Jeremy
    Paxman, the quizmaster, told them: "There's nothing much I can say to
    console you after that. You just never got going and you are obviously
    having a bad day."
                                          
    The winning team comprised Harriet Courtney, Martin Heighway, Peter
    Bissett and Ida Staples - the oldest member. Mrs Courtney, the team
    captain - who has also led a team to victory on Radio Two's Town and
    Country Quiz - said: "I was absolutely delighted with the result but we
    never kept our eyes on the score during the contest. All we wanted to
    do was to get as many questions right as possible and win. We never
    expected we would do as well as we did. Our victory was down to close
    teamwork and the combined breadth of knowledge of the team. I just felt
    sorry for the others but they took it all very well. It was not age or
    experience that won, it was quickness on the buzzer and a great
    memory."
                                          
    Her husband Richard, himself an Open University graduate, said the
    victory was achieved by playing to their strengths. "Mrs Staples was
    the great expert on classical music and travelling, Peter Bissett had a
    wide breadth of general knowledge and Martin Heighway's reflexes on
    pressing the buzzer first was crucial.
                                          
    "My wife made an exceptional captain because she had an uncanny ability
    to pick out which of the answers her team-mates gave to her on bonus
    questions were right. She in effect played a great balancing role
    between the rest of the team."
                                          
    Charing Cross's captain, Mike Smith, 20, said: "We knew they were
    superior. The youngest player was nearly twice my age. They were older
    and wiser, but we didn't think it was going to be that bad. It was just
    such a relief at the end when it was all over. Afterwards we got
    horrendously drunk."
                                          
    Mr Smith, from Worthing, Sussex, who went to school at Christ's
    Hospital in Horsham, Sussex, added: "Our team originally got together
    around a quiz machine in a bar. We're a very different team to those
    that normally enter. After our defeat everyone went out clubbing. The
    Open University bunch were so outgoing that even Ida came out for a
    drink with us. The whole thing was very good-spirited."
                                          
    Mrs Stokes said she was not surprised by the her team's wide margin of
    victory. "If you find yourself up against four young men who are all
    doing the same subject, it makes life very difficult for them. Our team
    had a breadth of knowledge. I have got a good memory and I have
    travelled a lot."
                                          
    She said that the only drawback to being a mature competitor was that
    she was slightly slower on the buzzer.
7.2101IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:1446
7.2102IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:1635
7.2103IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:1860
    International News Electronic Telegraph Thursday 29 May 1997 Issue 734
              
    Hong Kong
    
    CHINA has ordered its state-controlled media to avoid seven "forbidden
    zones" when covering the transfer of power in Hong Kong at the end of
    next month.
                                                              
    Prominent among them is any reference to Britain's recent policies in
    the territory, or speeches by British officials. With reports about
    Hong Kong's "return to the motherland" dominating the controlled but
    often ill-disciplined media, Beijing is keen to ensure that the blaze
    of nationalistic coverage remains politically correct.
                                                              
    The instructions, issued by the Communist Party's Propaganda
    Department, were disclosed in yesterday's Ming Pao, an independent Hong
    Kong newspaper. They require mainland journalists to avoid reporting
    "any incident or factors unfavourable to the transition".
                                                              
    News organisations that wish to carry reports of Britain's activities
    in the territory must use copy from the official Xinhua news agency -
    an organisation under Beijing's control which acts as China's
    diplomatic representation in Hong Kong. Xinhua officials have been the
    principal local adversaries of British policy and, through the
    newspapers they control, have launched vicious personal attacks on
    Chris Patten, the Governor.
                                                              
    Other "forbidden zones" include reports of labour disputes in the
    territory, and coverage of social conflicts or serious crime in the
    mainland. The recovery of sovereignty will be subjected to blanket
    coverage in Beijing. For 72 hours from the morning of June 30, China
    Central Television will broadcast reports on celebrations and other
    events in Hong Kong and across China.
                                                              
    The focus will be on the handover ceremony shortly before midnight on
    June 30, when the Union flag will be lowered, and the yellow-starred
    emblem of the People's Republic raised over the territory for the first
    time.
                                                              
    British and Chinese officials began another round of talks in Hong Kong
    yesterday in an attempt to finalise details of the historic occasion.
    It is to be attended by 4,000 VIPs and has been billed as Asia's party
    of the century. Aware that "correct" media coverage will shore up
    confidence in their rule at home, China's leaders are keen to ensure
    that the matter is reported with a uniform tone of pride and rejoicing.
                                                              
    But they are also know things could go wrong. Hong Kong's return has
    the potential to spark all sorts of questions among mainland Chinese -
    especially those from inland parts of the country. Among them are: why
    have provinces bordering Hong Kong been allowed to get so rich? And:
    why are Hong Kong people allowed to continue to enjoy their capitalist
    lifestyle and freedoms under Chinese rule?
                                                              
    Beijing has sought to kill off some of these controversies by making
    overt comparisons between the wealth of Guangdong, the province
    bordering Hong Kong, and the poorer hinterland, another forbidden zone
    for the media.
                                                                        
     Government House in Hong Kong is to used as a VIP guest house after
    the transfer of power, and part of it might be turned into a museum.
7.2104IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:2042
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                         
    Penguin power pushes propellers aside
    
    A SHIP that flaps its way through the water like a penguin is to be
    built in the United States after engineers realised that the bird is
    much better at moving through the water than a propeller-driven boat. 
                                                
    Humans have been using propellers for over 150 years but researchers
    have been uncomfortable with the knowledge that the aquatic world, with
    150 million years of evolutionary experience behind it, has ignored
    propellers as a means of moving through water. 
                                                
    After studying the fins of a various fish, the researchers, from the
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, realised that penguins slide
    through water at least 15 per cent more efficiently than boats. From
    videos of swimming penguins, the researchers watched the birds'
    pectoral fins waft towards and away from each other. The sideways
    forces cancelled each other out and the resulting thrust was almost
    entirely forwards.
                                                                       
    Last month the engineers, led by Prof Michael Triantafyllou,
    demonstrated a 12ft computer-controlled boat with two "oscillating
    foils" based on the same principles. The foils on the prototype boat
    look just like two rudders at the back of an ordinary boat, but they
    work in an entirely different way. Two large motors swivel the foils
    towards and away from each other in a rudder-like movement. Two smaller
    motors also make the foils twist slightly.
                                                                       
    By ensuring that the foils work together to make an opening and closing
    motion, their sideways forces cancel each other out - just as with a
    penguin. 
                                                                       
    The prototype boat's maiden voyage in Charles River, Boston, was a
    success. Triantafyllou has now agreed with a shipyard to build a 40ft
    wide, 150ft long version of the penguin-inspired ship. With larger fins
    mounted underneath the stern the efficiency could be even better, he
    says. And the fish-like wake is difficult to detect, which could be an
    advantage for military vessels. 
                                                                       
    The group's first attempt at fish-like propulsion led to Robotuna, the
    world's first robot that moved by imitating the movement of a tuna.
7.2105IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Thu May 29 1997 14:2231
    etcetera | Connected Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 27 May 1997 Issue 732
                                               
    Seeing the light with a revolutionary T-ray
                                             
    THE days of the X-ray, fuzzy and hazardous, could be numbered. Its
    successor, the T-ray, is being groomed for use. T-rays give sharper
    pictures and are much safer, says an American team, which claims that
    they could be used for everything from medicine to checking baggage. 
                                                                    
    In the electromagnetic spectrum, terahertz rays (hence "T-rays") sit
    between infrared rays and microwaves. T-rays have a very high
    frequency, more than a trillion cycles per second. Until now, say
    researchers, no one has been able to produce technology that can
    harness them properly.
                                                                    
    Prof Xi-Cheng Zhang, a physicist at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
    New York, and colleagues are working on producing pictures with
    resolutions down to a tenth of a millimetre - far sharper than images
    produced by the X-ray machines in hospitals and airports. 
                                                                    
    To create the ray they begin with pulses from a titanium-sapphire
    laser. Each pulse lasts just a few trillionths of a second. The
    principle is to split the beam; convert one half into T-rays with which
    to probe the target object; and then use the second half to discover
    what has happened to the first half once it has done its work. 
                                                                    
    Zhang is optimistic that applications will soon be ready. But Professor
    Jamie Weir, dean-elect of the Royal College of Radiologists, warned
    that it could be years before the T-ray replaces X-rays. Weir, who is
    also Clincal Professor of Radiology at Aberdeen University, said: "It
    deserves to be looked at for the future. It is very early days."
7.2106IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:13103
    AP Top News at 1 a.m., EDT 
                             
    Friday, May 30, 1997 
                             
    McVEIGH 
                             
    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's fate will be placed in hands of 12
    jurors and eight alternates on Friday. They will be sequestered in a
    hotel after Judge Richard Matsch reads them their instructions. In
    closing arguments, the defense urged jurors not to be swayed by
    sympathy for the Oklahoma City bombing victims, after a prosecutor
    delivered a wrenching summation that portrayed him as a terrorist.
    McVeigh could get the death penalty if convicted for the 1995 blast
    that killed 168 people. 
                             
    ARMY-SEX 
                             
    ABERDEEN, Md. (AP) -- Army Staff Sgt. Vernell Robinson Jr. was
    convicted of having sex with five female trainees and interfering with
    the investigation against him. Robinson is the third Aberdeen staff
    member convicted of sexual misconduct since the Army revealed in
    November that the scandal had spread to bases worldwide. Defense
    attorney Capt. Art Coulter acknowledged in his closing arguments that
    Robinson had sex with five trainees, but urged the jury to avoid making
    him a scapegoat. ``There was a lot going on at Aberdeen. Sergeant
    Robinson may be not the only problem here,'' Coulter said. 
                             
    CLINTON 
                             
    LONDON (AP) -- President Clinton reiterated support for British Prime
    Minister Tony Blair's peace initiative in Northern Ireland. Speaking
    after his first meeting with his newly-elected counterpart, Clinton
    hinted that American troops may have to stay in Bosnia past mid-1998.
    But he spoke hopefully about Iran's election of a moderate cleric as
    president. Clinton is on the last leg of a European trip on which he
    dealt with trade, NATO expansion, and celebrated the 50th anniversary
    of the Marshal Plan. 
                             
    HUMAN ANCESTOR 
                             
    MADRID, Spain (AP) -- A new human ancestor has been discovered in
    Spain. ``Homo antecessor,'' a common predecessor of both Neanderthals
    and modern man, was a tall, lanky being who looked much like us except
    for a protruding brow and heavy jaw. The species hunted game some
    800,000 years ago in the forests of the Iberian peninsula. The new
    findings are being published in the journal Science tomorrow and
    support a redrawing of the human family tree to include many dead
    branches. 
                             
    INDONESIA ELECTIONS 
                             
    JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Indonesia's ruling Golkar party routed all
    challengers in tightly controlled elections, initial returns show. The
    victory followed a monthlong campaign wracked by violence that has left
    more than 100 people dead. If Golkar's lead for the largely ceremonial
    parliament holds, the party of President Suharto and the military will
    easily win its sixth straight victory since 1971 in Indonesia, the
    world's most populous Muslim nation. 
                             
    SIERRA LEONE 
                             
    FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) -- Mutineers who overthrew Sierra Leone's
    elected government have rushed troops into the interior, aiming to
    capture the country's lucrative diamond industry. Clashes in the region
    left at least 21 dead. The fighting came as Nigeria warned it might use
    force to restore President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah, who fled the country
    Sunday. The United Nations has begun to evacuate foreign nationals and
    the Pentagon announced that 250 American citizens will be flown out of
    Sierra Leone Friday because of sporadic gunfire in the ravaged capital,
    Freetown. 
                             
    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS 
                             
    TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -- The Israeli Cabinet is reportedly considering
    a plan for final settlement with the Palestinians that would give them
    far less land than they demand. The proposal that news reports said is
    under discussion calls for 40 percent of the West Bank to be placed
    under Palestinian control, much less than the 90 percent they seek. But
    it still brings Israel much closer to accepting a Palestinian state on
    part of the territory many religious Jews consider their biblical
    birthright. Under the 1993 Israel-PLO accords, the sides have until May
    1999 to reach a final deal on the difficult issues of borders,
    Palestinian statehood, the fate of Jewish settlements, east Jerusalem
    and Palestinian refugees. 
                             
    MARKETS 
                             
    TOKYO (AP) -- The dollar inched higher against the yen in early
    trading, up 0.20 yen to 116.54. The Nikkei is at 20,266.83 points, down
    45.40. In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average closed at
    7,330.18, down 27.05. NYSE advancers led decliners 1,460-1,068. The
    Nasdaq fell 7.14 to 1,403.04. 
                                                                           
    JAZZ-ROCKETS 
                                                                           
    HOUSTON (AP) -- The Utah Jazz are in the NBA Finals for the first time
    in their history, thanks to a buzzer-beating 3-point shot and a
    fantastic fourth quarter by John Stockton. Stockton swished the
    wide-open, game-winner from 25 feet away as the clock was expiring to
    give Utah a dramatic 103-100 victory in Game 6 of the Western
    Conference finals. It capped Utah's comeback from a seven-point deficit
    in the final two minutes and put the Jazz into the championship round
    against the Chicago Bulls. Game 1 of the NBA Finals is Sunday evening. 
7.2107IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:1548
    World News
    
    Updated at Thursday, May 29, 1997, at 1:00 pm Pacific time.
                            
    *Reuters World News Highlights* 
                            
    SINTRA, Portugal - NATO ministers angrily accused Bosnian leaders
    Thursday of failing to comply with the terms of the 1995 Dayton peace
    accord and warned that the allies' patience was wearing thin. 
                            
    LONDON - President Clinton said Thursday the Bosnian peace process was
    behind schedule and great efforts were needed to stabilize the country
    if U.S. troops were to leave on time in June 1998.  
                            
    SINTRA, Portugal - Several NATO states expressed support Thursday for
    inviting as many as five new members into the alliance when it opens
    its doors to former communist foes next month, alliance diplomats said.
     
                            
    KINSHASA - President Laurent Kabila took office as head of state of the
    Democratic Republic of Congo Thursday, promising to hold elections in
    April 1999 and to bury the legacy of ousted dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. 
                            
    URSBERG, Germany - German Finance Minister Theo Waigel Thursday
    rejected calls to resign over his controversial plan to revalue
    Germany's gold and currency reserves and insisted the revaluation was a
    necessary step. 
                            
    BRUSSELS - Europe's single currency plans looked increasingly shaky
    Thursday as Germany's finance minister tried to reassure markets that a
    row with his powerful central bank would not derail the euro. 
                            
    LUANDA - Angolan troops have overrun the diamond-rich northeast,
    driving thousands of civilians from areas held by the former rebel
    UNITA movement in the biggest military offensive in Angola for two
    years, military and diplomatic sources said on Thursday. 
                            
    PUL-I-KHUMRI, Afghanistan - The Taleban militia advanced further into
    opposition territory in northeast Afghanistan Thursday despite its rout
    in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, witnesses and Afghan source
    said.  
                            
    PARIS - France's increasingly confident opposition left ridiculed the
    ``odd couple'' cast in the role of saviours of the center-right
    Thursday while the conservative government struggled to avert defeat in
    Sunday's parliamentary election. 
    
    Copyright 1997 Reuters. 
7.2108IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:1728
    Catcher Won't Have To Wear Cup
             
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
             
    BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) -- Melissa Raglin has won. The 12-year-old
    catcher doesn't have to wear a cup.
             
    Melissa became the talk of the nation last week when an umpire enforced
    a league rule barring anyone -- male or female -- from catching without
    wearing a cup, a hard piece of plastic designed to protect the
    testicles.
             
    The league had insisted girls could get injured just like boys. Melissa
    scoffed at that, even taking the field with a cup tucked into her sock.
             
    After a week in the outfield, though, she relented May 22 and agreed to
    wear a groin protector designed for girls so she could start catching
    again.
             
    Before Thursday night's playoff game, however, the Babe Ruth Baseball
    League told Melissa she didn't have to wear the protector.
             
    "I do feel like I won," Melissa told WSVN-TV in Miami before heading
    off to the ballpark. "The rule changed and I'm happy about that."
             
    Messages left Thursday evening at the league's national headquarters in
    Trenton, N.J., and its local offices in Boca Raton were not immediately
    returned.
7.2109IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:19136
    McVeigh Lawyer Accuses Prosecutors
               
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
               
    DENVER (AP) -- Timothy McVeigh's attorney urged jurors Thursday not to
    be swayed by sympathy for the Oklahoma City bombing victims, after a
    prosecutor delivered a wrenching summation that portrayed McVeigh as a
    terrorist who killed children in the warped belief he was a patriot.
               
    With closing arguments completed, the judge sent the 12 jurors and six
    alternates to a hotel, where they will be sequestered through
    deliberations, which begin Friday after the reading of jury
    instructions.
               
    Using McVeigh's own words against him, prosecutor Larry Mackey said the
    168 people who died in the April 19, 1995, blast were not "tyrants
    whose blood had to be spilled to preserve liberty."
               
    "And certainly the 19 children that died that day were not storm
    troopers who had to die because of their association with an evil
    empire," he said.
               
    "Who are the patriots and who is the traitor?" Mackey asked. "Think
    about that."
               
    Mackey described how McVeigh set the fuse on the truck bomb and could
    see the toys and cribs in the federal building's day-care center on his
    way to his getaway car, with only a "wall of windows" to protect the
    children from the blast.
               
    "America stood in shock. Who could do such a thing?" he said. "It has
    fallen to you, members of the jury, to answer this question. ... The
    answer is clear -- Tim McVeigh did it."
               
    Speaking just above a whisper, Mackey looked at the jury of seven men
    and five women and said, "It is now time to render justice. ... On
    behalf of the United States, I ask that you render a verdict of
    guilty."
               
    By the end, one juror and more than dozen bombing survivors and
    relatives were crying.
               
    But in the defense summation, lead attorney Stephen Jones said the
    prosecution based much of its case on emotion. He urged jurors not to
    be swayed by sympathy the way the O.J. Simpson jury was swayed by race.
               
    "All of us understand the victims' plight," he said. "They are not the
    property of any side to this lawsuit. Their collective loss belongs to
    the country."
               
    Rather, Jones argued, jurors should focus on the prosecution's
    evidence, which he said was badly flawed. He said the worst witness of
    all was Michael Fortier, who testified under a plea deal that McVeigh
    had revealed bombing plans months in advance.
               
    Fortier and his wife, Lori, according to Jones, implicated McVeigh to
    save themselves from prosecution and to make a quick buck by selling
    their story.
               
    "This is my bottom line," said Jones. "They're not important to the
    case. They're not believable. Put everything they said aside. Forget
    them."
               
    Jones also said investigators botched the case from the start and then
    tried to hammer the evidence and witnesses to fit preconceived theories
    of McVeigh's guilt. He said investigators even convinced witnesses to
    change their stories, altering their description of people and events.
               
    He said the government produced no witness who saw McVeigh building a
    bomb, no witness who saw him in Oklahoma City the day of the bombing,
    and witnesses who saw him rent the Ryder truck who admittedly made a
    mistake in their description of John Doe 2.
               
    "They made a rush to judgment. It looked good when they got him ... but
    it didn't come together," Jones said. "The known facts didn't fit the
    theory."
               
    Jones also suggested the real bomber died in the blast. "That's
    certainly the experience with other terrorists. That's not unique
    here," he said.
               
    McVeigh, who could get the death penalty if convicted of murder and
    conspiracy in the blast, sat at the defense table in a familiar pose:
    head hunched over, hands clasped in front of his face.
               
    Reading the 11 counts against McVeigh, Mackey contended that the
    government's case amounted to "promises made, promises kept," while
    Jones failed to prove his opening-statement claim McVeigh was innocent.
               
    He said McVeigh was either an evil bomber "or he was the unluckiest man
    in the world," who just happened to be arrested 75 miles from the bomb
    scene carrying literature announcing his intent, with explosives
    residue on his clothing.
               
    The prosecutor said McVeigh's own writings and anti-government
    literature showed he was motivated by rage over the deadly 1993
    government siege at Waco, Texas. And he said McVeigh was fixated on
    "The Turner Diaries," a racist novel that describes the terrorist
    bombing of a federal building.
               
    McVeigh had hoped to incite a second American revolution by making
    "blood flow in the streets of America," the prosecutor said, "but the
    only blood that flowed in the streets was the blood that Tim McVeigh
    shed of the victims inside that building."
               
    Retracing the prosecution's case, Mackey contended that everything from
    physical evidence to eyewitness testimony proved McVeigh hatched the
    bombing plot in the fall of 1994, then with co-defendant Terry Nichols
    purchased or stole the explosives materials.
               
    McVeigh, according to the prosecutor, confided his plans to the
    Fortiers and personally rented the Ryder truck that carried the
    ammonium nitrate-fuel oil mixture bomb.
               
    Showing jurors the ghostly security-camera image of a Ryder truck
    traveling toward the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building just minutes
    before the bombing, Mackey said, "McVeigh was driving the truck."
               
    "You can't see it from the picture," he said, "but you can see it from
    all the evidence in this case."
               
    Mackey said all the plans came together on the morning of April 19, the
    anniversary of Waco, when McVeigh parked the Ryder truck in front of
    the building.
               
    "McVeigh lit the fuse and left the truck ... at that point in time
    nothing is going to stop this bombing," he said. "You can't turn back
    the hands of time. The hands of time fell to rest that morning at
    9:02."
               
    He then cited the testimony of Helena Garrett, who lost her
    16-month-old son, Tevin, in the bombing.
               
    "He died. This bomber didn't care," Mackey said. "The only thing he
    cared about was bringing down the Murrah building on top of its
    occupants."
7.2110IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:2036
    Six Arrested in Mich. Child Abuse
           
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
           
    YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) -- Six people were accused Thursday of luring a
    young girl into a filthy, roach-infested house and molesting her.
           
    State police said at least five more people would be arrested on
    similar charges, and that at least 15 children, from 16 months to 9
    years old, were molested between July 1996 and January of this year.
           
    Troopers on April 16 arrested 31-year-old Harvey Santure in the house,
    which sits in a quiet, tidy neighborhood west of Detroit.
           
    Santure was jailed on eight counts of first-degree criminal sexual
    conduct with a child under 13. He was arraigned on six of those charges
    Thursday and pleaded innocent.
           
    Judge Ann Mattson denied bond for Santure and ordered a mental
    competency exam.
           
    State Police Detective Sgt. Fred Farkas said detectives investigated
    Santure last year on similar charges but did not have enough evidence
    to arrest him.
           
    Santure lured his victims by befriending adults, "and as a result,
    parents trusted him and he became a baby sitter," State Police Lt. Brit
    Weber said.
           
    Police arrested five other adults Wednesday on criminal sexual conduct
    charges: three men, ages 30, 31 and 72, and two women, ages 50 and 64.
           
    The state took five children into custody after the arrests.
           
    Police said three dogs seized from the home also may have been sexually
    abused.
7.2111IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:24115
    Bible Belt, Wild West Spar Over Topless Texans
    
    By Sam Walker
    
    CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
    
    When Laura Weston moved to Bachman Lake, Texas, 12 years ago, it was a
    sleepy neighborhood troubled only by the roar of jets landing at Love
    Field.
    
    Since then, she's begun to see prostitutes and drug dealers roaming the
    streets as she drives her children to school. She's heard gunshots in
    the night. She's watched bulldozers level buildings that once housed
    dry cleaners and family restaurants.
    
    The culprits, Ms. Weston says, are the growing number of topless bars
    that have opened nearby. For years, she's been complaining to lawmakers
    that these establishments wink at the criminal activity they attract.
    For years, the problem has been getting worse.
    
    As sex-based businesses continue to multiply throughout the nation, the
    question of how to best limit their effect on the surrounding community
    is one that many cities and states will soon be facing. But here in
    Texas, a backlash is already brewing. Houston's city council passed
    tough new regulations in January, and the Dallas City Council approved
    similar measures Wednesday.
    
    Dangerous precedent?
    
    While neighbors like Weston applaud these efforts, club owners have
    banded together to fight them in court. Not only are the new laws
    puritanical and overbroad, they say, but they set a dangerous precedent
    for government meddling in the entertainment business.
    
    For a state that has always kept one boot in the "Bible belt" and
    another in the Wild West, it's a defining moment.
    
    "This is part of a longtime conflict in Texas," says William Hawes, a
    University of Houston professor who has studied the issue.
    
    "The state's cowboy image goes along with the honky-tonk idea, but
    there's also a conservative, family-values bent that tempers it."
    
    The Dallas ordinance, which would force sexually oriented businesses to
    maintain a 1,000-foot distance from homes, schools, parks, churches,
    and each other could force as many as 29 topless clubs to close or
    relocate.
    
    Mandatory minimums
    
    Houston's ordinance, which takes effect next month barring defeat in
    federal court, will double the mandatory minimum distance between clubs
    and residential areas, churches, and schools to 1,500 feet.
    
    It will require clubs to maintain a certain level of lighting in all
    areas and impose a three-foot no-touch zone between customers and
    entertainers. All dancers must register with the city, undergo a
    background check, and pay $29.
    
    So far, 1,100 topless dancers in Houston have applied for permits, and
    many clubs have already brightened their premises. But the new law, by
    some estimates, will force as many as 103 of the city's 119 sex-based
    businesses to relocate.
    
    The primary objection to the spread of these clubs is their propensity
    to attract crime. An analysis prepared for the Monitor by the Texas
    Alcoholic Beverage Commission shows that sex-based businesses receive
    five times as many citations as other restaurants and bars.
    
    These citations include everything from drug abuse and prostitution on
    the premises to the sale of alcohol to minors. Police studies in
    Houston have shown that crime rates tend to increase in areas where
    topless clubs are concentrated.
    
    In the past, many such businesses have avoided existing laws by
    registering as retail outlets or private residences. "Some of these
    clubs hold themselves out as legitimate businesses, but they're all
    pretty much on the edge," says Houston Police Capt. R.B. Chandler.
    "They're not policing themselves properly."
    
    City attraction
    
    Yet some observers say the new regulations go too far. According to
    Professor Hawes, some of the more upscale "gentlemen's clubs" in
    Houston have not slowed the growth of commercial districts and have
    helped the city attract conventions.
    
    If this ordinance stands, he adds, it could give the city the power to
    monitor other types of live performances, including plays or even ice
    shows, that contain nudity or sexual themes.
    
    "There are no children in these places, and nobody's being forced to go
    inside," he says. "I don't think most adults need a handful of other
    adults making judgments for them."
    
    Bob Furey, president of the Colorado Bar and Grill in Houston,
    characterizes the ordinance as a publicity stunt in advance of the
    coming mayoral election. The worst part it, he says, is the effect it
    will have on dancers - many of whom rely on the income to support
    families.
                                                                 
    Some women have decided not to register, because they do not want their
    real names on the public record. Not only are they concerned about
    stalkers, he says, but some worry that the information could prevent
    them from obtaining future employment. It's ridiculous, he says, that
    some dancers could be jailed for accidentally coming within three feet
    of a customer.
                                                                 
    "There's so much real crime going on in Houston," he says. "I don't
    think that's where the city's funds need to be spent."
                                                                 
    To Texans like Weston, however, such arguments do not overcome the
    images of squalor they associate with these establishments. "Ever since
    these clubs opened, my neighborhood has begun to look like Beirut," she
    says. "I don't think my children need to be exposed to this."
7.2112IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:2689
    Brooklyn Girl Wins Spelling Bee
                                     
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                     
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Convinced she was about to win the National Spelling
    Bee, 13-year-old Rebecca Sealfon shouted each letter of her last word
    into the microphone "e-u-o-n-y-m" and raised her arms high.
                                     
    "Yeah!" she screamed Thursday before balancing the trophy cup atop her
    head. The home-schooled teen-ager from Brooklyn, N.Y., placed eighth in
    the Scripps Howard-sponsored contest last year, but this year she was
    the champ, beating out Prem Murthy Trivedi, 11, of Howell, N.J.
                                     
    "I knew I could figure it out," Rebecca said about "euonym," defined as
    an appropriate name for a person, place or thing.
                                     
    She won $5,000 -- which she plans to save for college -- books and
    other prizes, including a laptop computer. Prem earned $4,000 for his
    second-place finish. Sudheer Potru, 13, of Beverly Hills, Mich., won
    the $2,500 third-place prize.
                                     
    "This was incredible luck," Rebecca said. "There were words I did not
    know in every round."
                                     
    Rebecca was so nervous that she asked to wait her turn off the stage.
    Rumors circulated that she was sick, but Rebecca said she was just
    nervous. "I couldn't stand it," she said.
                                     
    Jittery or not, she spelled 22 words correctly, including "vaporetto,"
    a small steamboat; "hippogriff," a legendary animal; and "bivouac," a
    temporary camp. Her first challenge was the 16-letter word
    "sesquicentennial."
                                     
    Some of the 245 contestants spelled words by syllables. But Rebecca
    spelled letter-by-letter, often stopping after each one to cup her
    hands over her mouth. "I was thinking what letter was next and I was
    whispering the letter to myself," she explained.
                                     
    After each success, she raised her arms in the air and bounded off the
    stage.
                                     
    For the last nine rounds, she battled only Prem, who was competing in
    the national spelling bee for the third time. Prem lost after he added
    an extra "l" to the word "cortile," a courtyard.
                                     
    Prem, who likes to study archaeology, swim and play chess and
    basketball, remained poised throughout the contest, calmly enunciating
    each letter into the microphone. He was disappointed, but said he'll
    try to qualify again next year.
                                     
    Nerves began to fray Thursday as the two-day competition droned on,
    speller-by-speller, word-by-word, letter-by-letter. As the competition
    progressed, the words got harder and more spellers were disqualified.
                                     
    Briana Lyn Delaney, 13, of Lake Charles, La., correctly spelled
    "nuciform," "lienholder" and "postponable." But the seventh grader who
    likes to write stories and poems in both English and French was tripped
    up by her fourth word.
                                     
    "Araneiform?" she asked in disbelief. The word means like a spider.
                                     
    She pronounced it twice. The pronouncer repeated the word. Then, Briana
    said it again.
                                     
    "What is the language of origin?" she asked, stalling.
                                     
    She repeated the word two more times into the microphone, and then
    asked the pronouncer to use it in a sentence. "Oh, OK," she said, and
    she proceeded to misspell it "a-r-a-n-e-a-f-o-r-m."
                                     
    The bell dinged. Briana, dressed in a long blue skirt, bobby socks and
    pink shoes, walked off the stage, her head hanging down as she clutched
    a small stuffed toy.
                                     
    The contest, however, was not without humor.
                                     
    Courtenay L. Glisson of Oxford, Miss. asked for her word, "succorance,"
    to be defined and used in a sentence. Looking for more clues, she
    finally asked the official pronouncer: "You have anything else you can
    give me?"
                                     
    The audience laughed.
                                     
    "It's a noun," offered pronouncer Alex J. Cameron, chairman of the
    English department at the University of Dayton, Ohio.
                                     
    Courtenay tried to spell it, but failed. The bell rang and the
    14-year-old, clad in hiking boots and jeans, strode off, leaving yet
    another vacant seat on the stage.
7.2113IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:28102
    Indonesia Ruling Party Wins Vote
            
    By GEOFF SPENCER Associated Press Writer
            
    JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Indonesia's ruling Golkar party routed all
    challengers in tightly controlled elections, initial returns showed
    Thursday. The victory followed a monthlong campaign wracked by violence
    that left nearly 300 people dead.
            
    If Golkar's lead for the largely ceremonial parliament holds, the party
    of President Suharto and the military will easily win its sixth
    straight victory since 1971 in Indonesia, the world's most populous
    Muslim nation.
            
    Unrest appears to be rising, however. Deadly riots rocked many parts of
    the country during the campaign. In the deadliest incident, 133 people
    were killed last Friday when rioters set fire to a shopping mall in
    Banjarmasin on the island of Borneo, 560 miles northeast of Jakarta.
            
    And as many as 22 people were reported killed in rebel attacks in the
    disputed territory of East Timor. A rebel spokesman reported numerous
    arrests on election day in the former Portuguese colony in what
    residents said was the worst violence there in two years.
            
    Elsewhere, about 3,000 voters who accused local officials of rigging
    the vote threw stones at government buildings and damaged cars Thursday
    in Sampang, a town 400 miles east of Jakarta.
            
    Analysts fear chronic violence could develop unless the government does
    more to narrow the gap between rich and poor, eliminate corruption and
    allow some reforms in a political system that tolerates little dissent,
    especially in East Timor, invaded by Indonesia in 1975.
            
    ``Golkar will win. But even so the government will have to consider
    greater democratic reform,'' said Arbi Sanit, a professor in political
    studies at the state-owned University of Indonesia.
            
    Official results are not expected for at least a week. But with 77.5
    percent of the vote counted, electoral officials said Friday that
    Golkar had 70.6 million votes out of 96 million tabulated.
            
    The two other parties allowed by the government to contest the ballot
    had just a fraction of that: the Muslim-oriented United Development
    Party with 22.7 million votes, Indonesian Democratic Party 2.7 million.
            
    Golkar had 73.5 percent of the vote counted so far, the United
    Development Party 23.6, and the Indonesian Democratic Party 2.9
    percent.
            
    Several government critics were charged with subversion or barred from
    running -- including pro-democracy leader Megawati Sukarnoputri -- in
    balloting for 425 seats in parliament. The other 75 seats are reserved
    for the military.
            
    ``The electoral system is rigged against the opposition, legally,
    structurally and in day-to-day practice,'' said Sidney Jones of the New
    York-based group Human Rights Watch Asia.
            
    Real power in Indonesia is vested in the president and his Cabinet.
            
    The Golkar victory makes it all but certain that the new legislature
    and 500 other government appointees will elect Suharto, 75, to a
    seventh five-year presidential term next year.
            
    ``The president was happy,'' said Memet.
            
    Golkar's apparent victory came despite threats that some voters would
    boycott the election to protest restrictions on political life.
            
    Megawati, dismissed last year as leader of the Indonesian Democratic
    Party, earlier denounced the election as unfair.
            
    She refused to vote but stopped short of telling her supporters to do
    the same, advising them instead to ``follow their consciences on
    polling day.''
            
    Voting is not compulsory in Indonesia, but inciting people to abstain
    is a crime.
            
    Suharto cast his ballot in Jakarta soon after the polls opened. Four of
    his six children, all of whom voted with him, were candidates and are
    expected to win office.
            
    About 130,000 police and soldiers were deployed to maintain order at
    polling stations across this nation of 13,667 islands, which extends
    3,000 miles along the equator.
            
    Nearly 300 people were killed during the campaign, including gangs from
    rival parties that clashed and victims of auto accidents during chaotic
    street parades.
            
    Security was particularly tight Thursday in East Timor, a day after
    rebels fighting for independence staged attacks in four towns.
            
    There were conflicting accounts of the death toll. Roman Catholic
    Church sources and witnesses said as many as 16 soldiers, four rebels
    and two civilians were killed. Police said the toll was 14 dead and
    that no soldiers were among those killed.
            
    Portugal, still recognized by the United Nations as the administrator
    of East Timor, criticized holding the election there, saying it was
    illegal.
7.2114IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:2967
    Jury Convicts Aberdeen Sergeant
                                          
    By DAVID DISHNEAU Associated Press Writer
                                          
    ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. (AP) -- An Army drill sergeant on Thursday
    became the third staff member at this troubled military base to be
    convicted this year of having sex with female trainees.
                                          
    Staff Sgt. Vernell Robinson Jr. was convicted of having sex with five
    female trainees and interfering with the investigation against him.
                                          
    The military jury of six men and one woman acquitted Robinson on one of
    the 20 counts against him, wrongful interference with the U.S. mail.
    The jury will decide Robinson's sentence after a hearing on Friday.
                                          
    He faces a maximum sentence of up to 60 1/2 years.
                                          
    The conviction was the third stemming from an investigation at Aberdeen
    that led to criminal charges against 12 staff members and triggered a
    probe of sexual misconduct at U.S. military bases worldwide.
                                          
    As the verdict was read, Robinson stood at attention. After speaking
    with his lawyers, he smiled, shook the hand of a fellow soldier and
    left the courtroom followed by his mother and a brother.
                                          
    He and his lawyers refused to comment after the verdict. The judge on
    Tuesday ordered them not to talk to the media about the case.
                                          
    Three members of the jury that convicted Robinson also convicted Staff
    Sgt. Delmar Simpson of 18 counts of rape and 29 other offenses one
    month ago. Simpson is serving a 25-year prison sentence.
                                          
    Capt. Derrick Robertson is serving a four-month sentence after pleading
    guilty in March to adultery, sodomy and other offenses.
                                          
    Of the nine others charged at Aberdeen, three face court-martial, three
    have not learned what type of proceeding they face, two agreed to be
    discharged in lieu of court-martial and one was cleared of sexual
    misconduct charges.
                                          
    Robinson, 32, was accused of taking part in a sex ring that preyed on
    female trainees.
                                          
    Earlier Thursday, Staff Sgt. Wayne Gamble testified that he had warned
    Robinson that he was becoming careless in pursuing relationships that
    could get him in trouble, but Robinson ignored him.
                                          
    ``He said, `The game is good and I'm a gangster,''' Gamble said. ``I
    took it to mean he felt untouchable.''
                                          
    Gamble, one of six men who allegedly seduced and shared trainees,
    testified under a grant of immunity from prosecution as part of a plea
    agreement in his own sexual misconduct case, which goes to a
    court-martial on Tuesday.
                                          
    Gamble said he, Robinson and the four other sergeants selected young
    women as potential sexual partners as they arrived from basic training
    for three months of advanced individual training.
                                          
    ``You'd get a feel for them; you get a knack,'' he said.
                                          
    Defense attorney Capt. Art Coulter acknowledged in his closing
    arguments that Robinson had sex with five trainees, but urged the jury
    to avoid making him a scapegoat.
                                          
    ``There was a lot going on at Aberdeen. Sergeant Robinson may be not
    the only problem here,'' Coulter said.
7.2115IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 11:3127
    Southeast Asia Polio Cases Plunge
                                            
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                            
    ATLANTA (AP) -- Large-scale immunization campaigns in Southeast Asia
    have all but eradicated polio from one of the last regions plagued by
    the paralyzing disease, the U.S. government said Thursday.
                                            
    Polio cases throughout the region plunged 96 percent from 25,711 cases
    in 1988 to 1,116 last year, the Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention said.
                                            
    Since 1994, all 10 countries in the region have conducted at least one
    campaign in which all children were given the vaccine, even if they had
    had it before.
                                            
    In December and January, the oral polio vaccine was given to 165
    million children under 5 in six Southeast Asian countries, including
    Bangladesh and Thailand.
                                            
    India -- which vaccinated 117 million children on Dec. 7 and 127
    million on Jan. 18 -- has seen polio cases drop 69 percent, from 3,263
    cases in 1995 to 1,005 cases in 1996.
                                            
    The World Health Organization hopes to rid the world of polio by 2000.
    The disease has been eliminated from North and South America, and at
    least 150 countries now report no cases.
7.2116IJSAPL::ANDERSONNow noting in colour!&quot;Fri May 30 1997 14:0969
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 30 May 1997 Issue 735
                                 
    Euro timetable faces collapse
    
    By Joy Copley, Political Staff 
    
    THE European single currency will be "dead in the water" if the
    Socialists win the election in France on Sunday, senior Government
    sources said yesterday.
                                  
    They argue that it would be a second devastating blow to monetary union
    following the Bundesbank's refusal to help the German government to
    meet the criteria for membership of the new single currency.
                                  
    The Bundesbank has reacted bitterly to its government's plans for
    revaluing German gold reserves to help to balance the nation's books
    and keep within the strict target figures set by Brussels.
                                  
    British ministers now privately believe that the final nail in the
    coffin for an EMU start date of 1999 will come if Lionel Jospin, the
    Socialist leader, becomes French prime minister at the weekend.
                                  
    The French socialists have made it clear that they would not institute
    the swingeing cuts necessary to meet the convergence criteria and M
    Jospin has accused Germany of "dubious" accounting methods to ensure
    qualification for the single currency.
                                  
    Kenneth Clarke, the former chancellor, said yesterday that the German
    government's actions strengthened the case for delay of the single
    currency as the European Commission continued to insist that it would
    go ahead on schedule in 18 months. 
                                  
    Yves-Thibault de Silguy, the European Economics Commissioner, inisted
    that monetary union was still firmly on track and declared: "There is
    no question of cooking the books or fudging the figures"
                                  
    The Treasury would make no official comment last night on the German
    government's controversial proposal to revalue its national gold
    reserves.
                                  
    But senior Government sources pointed out that Gordon Brown, the
    Chancellor, had repeatedly stressed that there were "formidable
    obstacles" to joining the first wave of EMU in 1999 and that the latest
    developments proved this was the case.
                                  
    "If the Socialists win the French election at the weekend then, let's
    face it, the euro is virtually dead in the water," said one source.
                                  
    Ministers believe that there is no need for the Government officially
    to change its position by ruling out a single currency in the first
    wave because it is more sensible to stick to the "wait and see" policy
    and watch events unfold.
                                  
    Mr Clarke, a strong pro-European, said the Bundesbank warning meant
    there could be a "substantial delay" to the single currency. He told
    BBC Radio 4's World at One: "It would be quite wrong if any country
    were to go ahead unless they were genuinely convergent and had
    permanently put behind them excessive government debt and borrowing,
    and got the other features of their economies right so that they fit
    together and can benefit from a common currency and common interest
    rates."
                                  
    Vincent Cable, the Liberal Democrat economic affairs spokesman, said:
    "We welcome the Bundesbank's firm line on Germany's deficit and its
    refusal to countenance fudged fiscal measures.
                                  
    "Germany should have to observe the same fiscal discipline as all other
    EU nations. The Bundesbank's firm line also underscores the importance
    of Central Bank independence."
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    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 30 May 1997 Issue 735
                                              
    Patient grew cannabis after hospital tests
    
    By Hugh Muir 
    
    A MAN given cannabis as a painkiller during Home Office tests grew the
    drug when the research finished, a court was told yesterday.
                                                   
    Andrew Betts, 30, who suffers from an incurable stomach illness, was
    the sole subject of licensed tests at Hammersmith Hospital in west
    London which enabled him to halve his daily intake of morphine. This
    led to a dramatic reduction in his side-effects and meant that he was
    no longer clinically depressed.
                                                   
    But when the tests came to an end Betts, Britain's only known sufferer
    of Familial Mediterranean Fever, an inherited and non-fatal condition,
    was forced back on to morphine with a dosage usually prescribed for
    terminally-ill cancer patients.
                                                   
    He then grew 45 cannabis plants from seed at his home using tin foil,
    lighting, a fan and propagator, said Roger Smart, prosecuting, at
    Maidstone Crown Court, Kent. Despite an unsophisticated, make-shift
    greenhouse, some of the plants grew to four feet tall.
                                                   
    They were discovered after police received a tip-off and raided his
    semi-detached house last August. Mr Smart said the plants were found in
    the back garden and cellar of the house where a room had been lined
    with silver foil and other drug production equipment.
                                                   
    Had they matured, the estimated total yield of all the plants would
    have been 220 grammes. Betts would have grown the plants and selected
    the female ones which contain higher levels of THC, the active
    ingredient in cannabis.
                                                   
    He would then have sampled them and disposed of the rest by feeding
    them to his pet chinchillas. "Betts said that, if the police had not
    found the plants, he would have picked and dried the leaves before
    smoking them in cigarette papers," said Mr Smart. "He admitted he knew
    it was illegal to have cannabis other than as part of the Home Office
    trials."
                                                   
    He had two previous convictions for drug-related offences. In 1987, he
    admitted supplying cannabis resin and in February, 1994, he admitted
    smuggling 300 grammes of herbal cannabis through Harwich. He received a
    six-month conditional discharge for the second offence.
                                                   
    Penelope Barrett, defending, said: "It would be easy for an observer of
    this case, particularly in light of his previous convictions, to report
    him as some kind of menace to society but this is an extremely unusual
    set of circumstances.
                                                   
    "The drug was not to be pedalled but kept for him. He was not seeking
    to cause direct harm to anyone else but to alleviate what he saw as a
    very real dilemma. His position was that he was caught between the
    devil and deep blue sea. Take such levels of morphine and he was like a
    zombie; do not take take it and the pain was crippling."
                                                   
    Betts, a father of three, of Gillingham, Kent, originally denied the
    charge of cultivating cannabis but changed his plea to guilty after Mr
    Recorder Peter Morgan ruled that his defence of necessity or duress
    could not be put before a jury.
                                                   
    Conditionally discharging him for two years, the judge said: "Although
    I admit to great sympathy for the defendant and the pain he suffers I
    cannot bend the law as I see it for his sake. You will not be justified
    or excused if you repeat the offence or use cannabis when not under
    licence."
                                                   
    Outside the court, Betts's wife, Lesley, said she was not happy about
    the outcome. "I would rather the case had gone to trial," she said. "It
    is unfair that he was not even given a chance."
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    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 30 May 1997 Issue 735
                                                          
    Schoolboy dies after 80ft fall while 'surfing' on lift
    
    By Paul Stokes 
    
    A 10-year-old boy was killed taking part in a dangerous craze known as
    "lift-surfing".
                    
    Paul Illingworth was riding on top of a lift at 14-storey Farndale
    Court, Swarcliffe, Leeds, where he lived with his mother, Jean, and
    brother Cal, 20, when he fell 80ft down the lift shaft. He was dead on
    arrival at nearby St James's Hospital.
                    
    Paul's mother said yesterday she knew that her son had gone
    lift-surfing before but after she warned him of the dangers he had
    promised not do it again. She said: "I don't know why he has done it. I
    can't understand it. He always kept his promises in the past, but he
    wanted to be part of the gang."
                    
    Det Insp Bob Quantock, of West Yorkshire Police, said: "They watch the
    lift coming up and can stop it and then step on top of it and ride up
    and down. It would appear the boy was holding the door open while he
    was stood on top of the lift, but before the other two had pressed the
    button to stop the lift completely, he let the door go. The lift jerked
    off and he was caught by it and dragged off."
                    
    Insp Quantock added: "It is not a game, it is stupidity." Paul was with
    his friends Nigel Dunwell, 16, and Ian Leaverland, 10, when the
    accident happened. 
                    
    Nigel said: "He was closing the doors gently so they wouldn't make any
    noise, but the lift moved too quickly and he got his hand caught
    between the doors of the lift and the floor.
                    
    "He was dragged down by his arm and we tried to drag him up, but it
    happened so quickly. We saw his body being pulled down the gap and
    heard him scream - then nothing. I was terrified and frightened. I
    thought he was mucking about at first. Ian was in a bad state as well.
    Neither of us could believe it had happened."
                    
    He warned others against taking part in the practice. Police, the
    Health and Safety Executive and Leeds city council, which runs the
    tower block, have begun separate inquiries. A report is being prepared
    for the coroner.
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    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 30 May 1997 Issue 735
                                                             
    Girls 'fondled by dentist as he pretended to adjust bibs'
    
    By Michael Fleet 
    
    A DENTIST fondled the breasts of women patients as he pretended to
    adjust their bibs before examining their teeth, a court was told
    yesterday.
                       
    Mark Draper, 37, was charged after a girl of 13 complained to her
    mother that he had touched her nipple. A few minutes later the mother
    herself had her breast touched as she sat in the dentist's chair. The
    mother and daughter decided initially not to complain but a few months
    later a friend told them that she too had been indecently assaulted by
    Draper at his practice in Shepperton, Surrey.
                       
    Together they reported him to police. Detectives discovered 12 other
    women or girls with complaints against Draper. The dentist yesterday
    denied 15 charges of indecent assault between Oct 1994 and Aug 1996 at
    Kingston Crown Court. Lydia Barnfather, prosecuting, said Draper had
    even touched women while his dental nurse was in the room, but on those
    occasions he waited until her back was turned.
                       
    She told the court that the alleged incidents started three months
    after Draper joined the Shepperton Dental Surgery and continued until
    he left. "During that time he frequently and repeatedly touched and
    stroked the breasts and nipples of some of his female patients as they
    lay in the chair. Some of these women would dismiss the touching as
    accidental but because of the nature and repetition of the touching
    they soon realised they were deliberate.
                       
    "You will hear that some of the women became convinced they were slyly
    orchestrated as to appear accidental. The defendant would adjust the
    bib across the chest of the patient repeatedly and unnecessarily, and
    in doing so touch and stroke their breasts. He would put his fingertips
    over their nipples. When he was arranging a suction pipe along the
    chest he would cup and stroke the breasts. These assaults often
    occurred when there was a dental nurse in the room but when her back
    was turned. Some of these women never thought they were accidents. Some
    of their breasts were physically pinched."
                       
    The mother, daughter and their friend made the complaint in July last
    year against Draper, of Kilburn, north London. When interviewed by
    police, Draper denied deliberately fondling any of his patients.
                       
    Miss Barnfather said: "The defendant said he was unaware of having
    touched anyone's breasts and if he had, it must have been by accident.
    He says all 15 of those complainants have got it wrong. It is nonsense.
    The complainants are certain. Some who initially gave him the benefit
    of the doubt became certain because of the repetition. The contact was
    deliberate and sexually motivated."
                       
    One woman, a 40-year-old civil servant, told the court that she folded
    her arms over her breasts while Draper was treating her. She said:
    "Several times while my teeth were being examined the bottom of the bib
    was moved. He just kept touching it as if he was moving it, but didn't
    actually move it. I felt very uncomfortable. He was touching my bust
    and I didn't think it was necessary to touch the bib at all."
                       
    She had three appointments with Draper during 1994 and 1995 and she was
    allegedly touched during the first two visits. "On the third occasion I
    folded my arms across my chest because I felt so uncomfortable the
    previous two times. He put the bib so that it laid over my arms and
    didn't touch it during that trip." The woman said she was too
    embarrassed to complain to the dentist. 
                       
    Another alleged victim claimed that during emergency treatment she felt
    her breast being brushed against. On a second visit she felt her right
    nipple being touched. "After it happened three or four times I looked
    down and could see him touching with his fingertips. I knew it was
    deliberate."
                       
    Draper's wife, Amy, was at court to hear the allegations against her
    husband, who now works for a different dental practice in north London.
                       
    The case continues.
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    UK News Electronic Telegraph Friday 30 May 1997 Issue 735
                            
    Asian doctors 'face bar'
    
    By Celia Hall 
    
    JUNIOR doctors with Asian surnames are nearly 50 per cent less likely
    to be shortlisted for National Health Service hospital jobs, a survey
    claims today.
                                                     
    In addition only one in 10 hospital trusts sent out ethnic monitoring
    questionnaires with the application forms which they are required to
    do. Pairs of fake CVs were sent to 50 hospital trusts in response to
    genuine advertisements for senior house officers. One application bore
    an English surname and one an Asian surname. Twenty-six doctors with
    English surnames were short-listed compared to 18 with Asian surnames. 
                                                     
    In a letter to the British Medical Journal, Dr Sam Everington and Dr
    Aneez Esmail, both vice-presidents of the Medical Practitioners' Union,
    accuse consultants of racial discrimination. Alan Milburn, health
    minister, said: "NHS employers are accountable for meeting equality
    goals. The survey suggests this is not the case."
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    International News Electronic Telegraph Friday 30 May 1997 Issue 735
                                     
    Euro-judges back Britain over law
    
    By Terence Shaw, Legal Correspondent 
    
    BRITAIN won a case brought by the Brussels Commission yesterday
    accusing it of failing to protect consumers from defective products.
                             
    Brussels claimed that Britain had not properly implemented a 1985
    European directive strengthening protection for consumers. But judges
    at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg dismissed the case and
    ordered the Commission to pay costs.
                             
    The directive required EU countries to bring in laws making producers,
    such as drug companies, strictly liable for death or injury caused by
    their defective products without victims or their relatives having to
    prove negligence. But it allowed countries to opt for a "development
    risks" defence under which producers could escape liability if they
    could prove that scientific and technical knowledge at the time the
    product was in circulation was not such as to enable the existence of
    the defect to be discovered.
                             
    Brussels claimed that, in implementing the directive in the 1987
    Consumer Protection Act, Britain used wording giving producers of
    defective products a wider exemption from liability than the directive
    permitted. It argued that Parliament had broadened the defence to a
    considerable degree and converted the directive's strict liability into
    mere liability for negligence.
                             
    But the judges said Brussels had failed to make out its claim that the
    result would not be achieved through British legislation. Yet Brussels
    had not referred to any decision of British courts interpreting the
    domestic provisions inconsistently with the directive. There was
    nothing to suggest that British courts would not interpret the
    provisions of the 1987 Consumer Protection Act in the wording and
    purpose of the directive.