4Haitian president 'prays for the dead The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 3, 1994 - 7 Sec'y of State shies away from k : i 0visit Los Angeles Times PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - U.S. combat troops sealed off voodoo rosses and took up sniper positions atop tombs yesterday to guard Presi- dent Jean-Bertrand Aristide, as the former exile ventured into public for the first time since his Oct. 15 return - kneeling at a cemetery and two churches to pray for Haitian priests, politicians and the thousands who died for him and his democratic cause un- der three years of military rule. Bugles played "Taps" as Aristide 1*ouched foreheads with fellow priests, hugged an orphan he once adopted and waved to adoring throngs during three one-minute appearances before being whisked back to the National Palace by scores of U.S. Army es- corts in full battle gear. The Roman Catholic priest- turned-politician then ended the final day of a marathon holiday festival for *he dead with a dinner at his suburban villa for President Clinton's national security adviser, Anthony Lake. U.S. officials said Lake's two-day visit here is aimed partly at urging Aristide to speed up efforts to rebuild the nation's democratic institutions. Lake also visited U.S. Army troops in the northern town of Cap Haitien and a Special Forces unit in the rural town of Grand Riviere, to help shore *p military morale in the prolonged mission dubbed Uphold Democracy. Today, Lake is due to meet Haitian business, religious and political lead- ers, among them Smarck Michel, Aristide's nominee for prime minis- ter whose appointment has been be- fore the nation's plodding Parliament for more than a week. SeniorU.S. officials saidLake plans to tell Haitian leaders of the Clinton administration's concerns about delays in crucial parliamentary and local elec- tions. Originally scheduled for Decem- ber, the polls for more than 2,000 na- tional and local offices may not take place until next February or March, and the administration has vowed to keep the U.S. intervention force in Haiti until after those elections are held. But U.S. officials in Haiti sought to temper any appearance of urgency in Lake's visit, stressing that Aristide has won high marks for his earnest, though time-consuming, process of institution-building and neutralizing Haiti's armed and angry political right. "What appears to be a slow process is also a careful process," said U.S. Embassy Spokesman Stanley Schrager. "President Aristide is reaching out to a lot of people. He's working the phones, and talking to many former enemies. It's better than rushing into something." Clearly, Aristide did reach out yesterday, and seemingly in many directions at once. With U.S. Army snipers posted on rooftops surrounding the capital's Sacre Coeur Church, Aristide stood at atten- tion with eyes shut tight for a half- minute. Then he knelt and touched the base of a towering gray cross, near the spot where his campaign financier and Haiti's former justice minister were brutally gunned down in separate inci- dents by military agents last year. Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration considered having Secretary of State Warren Christo- pher make a ground-breaking visit to Vietnam while traveling through Asia this month but decided the time still was not right, Christopher disclosed yesterday. Although leaders of other coun- tries such as Japan and France have visited Vietnam, no top-level Ameri- can official has been to Hanoi since before the Vietnam War. The Clinton administration lifted the long-standing trade embargo against Vietnam last February but balked at having Christopher stop in Hanoi for what would be a major new step in relations between the two coun- tries. "I've concluded that the situation isn't quite ready for me to stop in Vietnam. I think for a secretary of state to go there.... I think we have to see some more progress on the MIA and POW issue," said Christopher, referring to the search for Americans missing in action from the Vietnam War. "The time will come, but it's not here yet." The secretary also said relations with China have not improved enough for President Clinton to travel there, despite China's persistent lobbying for a presidential visit. "I think the relationship will have to develop in a more positive way before the presi- dent is prepared to go," he declared. "I hope it will develop in that manner," he added. Vietnam remains a politically sensitive subject for the Clinton administration, both because of the MIA issue and because of Clinton's successful effort to avoid military service during the Vietnam War. Christopher made his remarks in a breakfast session at the Los Angeles Times' Washington bureau, during which he also made these points: The administration hopes to talk about "preservation of democracy" with Latin American leaders at a "Summit of the Americas" in Miami next month. "I hope what we did in Haiti would be a lesson to coup plot- ters that they cannot lightly overthrow a duly elected president," he said. He did not say which Latin American government, if any, might have coup plotters. One of the administration's top priorities in foreign policy next year will be to work on new ways of bring- ing together Western and Eastern Europe. "One of President Clinton's dreams is to have an integrated Eu- rope with no dividing lines," Christo- pher said. "Nothing like the Warsaw Pact line, nothing like the Berlin Wall in the future." Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide prays in Port-au-Prince yesterday. He laid a wreath of yellow zinnias dedicated to the memory of the two. Antoine Izmery had helped finance Aristide's successful 1990 run for the presidency. He was rakedwith gunfirejust outside Sacre Coeur front gate following a protest mass a year ago. Justice Minister Guy Malary was executed soon after in similar gangland fashion as he drove past the church en route to his office. Palestinian teacher linked to Jihad killed in car bomb blast OUTDOOR RECREATION/NCRB student coordinator, starting Jan. '95. 15 hrs./wk., $7.50/hr. Grad student pref. Position demands diplomacy, maturity, familiarity w/ outdoor gear, some management background. Work-study OK. Call Adrienne or Jan at 763-4560 for more info. PRESS PERSON NEEDED Part-time, A.B. Dick printing press with T-Head, experience required. 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But there also were fears the as- sassination signaled the beginning of a cycle of political murders in the struggle between the mainstream Fatah wing of the Palestine Libera- tion Organization and groups opposed to the peace process. Abed, who worked part-time in the press office of Islamic Jihad, had been arrested without charges last May and held for about two weeks by the Palestinian Police. They questioned him about his activities in the Islamic Jihad, a rival organization that often joins with Hamas in opposing the peace pro- cess. They also questioned him about a May 20 attack in the Gaza Strip that killed two Israeli soldiers. He was released without charges. Before his release, his family had bitterly complained of the arrest and the Islamic Jihad had warned the Pal- estinian police of consequences. Abed was killed as he was ready- ing to leave the College of Science and Technology, where he taught chemistry, in the Khan Yunis town of the Gaza Strip. According to ac- counts, a powerful bomb exploded either as he opened his car door or started the ignition. His hands and legs were blown off, and he died later at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis. Married, with four children, Abed worked after classes at a press office in Gaza known to be associated with Islamic Jihad. Family members and associates at the press office said his affiliation was only with the political wing of the organization, and not the "military" side that carries out spo- radic attacks on Israelis. After the Oct. 19 attack on a bus in Tel Aviv by a suicide bomber who killed 22, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin had angrily insisted Israel must retaliate without being restricted by laws. Following a closed Cabinet ses- sion the next day, Rabin and other officials said plans had been made, but they refused to elaborate. The London Observer reported the Cabinet had agreed to "eliminate" leaders of the radical Palestinian groups. 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But in late Su September, WCCO-TV, a CBS affiliate in Minneapo- do lis, shook up the familiar for- On mula of crime and violence that dominates local televi- by sion news. Ur After a motorist had been dragged from his car in north Cit Minneapolis and fatally shot m by bicycle-mounted attack- ers, WCCO explained to its Vic viewers why they should not feel afraid. Most of the region's residents, anchor Don Shelby intoned, were rarely exposed to the "clear but limited pattern" of random murder. For a medium that has spent two decades honing and expanding its re- begun tinkering with their old ways of covering crime. Adherents' claim that they are responding to a public weary of hyped crime coverage, while many industry veterans belittle 'the moves as shallow attempts to attract attention and boost ratings. veral recent studies have ggested that crime covera; es appear to influence fear ie report released this yeas the Chicago Council on ban Affairs found that the :y's news stations devoted ore than half their air time oience. Editors at WCCO routinely erase tapes of bodies on gurneys, wounded gunshot victims and bloodied crime scenes from the 5 p.m. newscast - although those images often appear on later broadcasts. WMAR in Balti- periments as "a marketing technique," said veteran consultant Eric Braun. Whether the experiments catch on elsewhere may well depend on how stations respond to an unresolved question about television s impact: does its emphasis on crime reflect or inflame the public's sense of insecurity? Several recent studies ge have suggested that crime coverage does appear to in- r. fluence fear. One report re- leased this year by the Chi- cago Council on Urban Af- fairs found that the city's news stations devoted more than half their air time to violence. And preliminary to evidence from a University of California, Berkeley, psy- chiatric study of California and Utah children who watched coverage of the Polly Klass murder reveals lingering effects ranging from loss of sleep to a shared sense of peril. Klass, 12, was slain after being abducted from her Northern California home last year. Much of this research has come msic I i I