t 7 xlowp"aNeiiiLo Fighting returns to northeast Bosnia * Warm weather sparks return to battlefront SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina I(AP) -Balmy spring weather sparked a return to all-out combat yesterday along a broad battlefront in northeast Bosnia. Reports from the warring sides and from U.N. military observers in- dicated fighting in the Majevicamoun- tains near the city of Tuzla reached its most intense level since the Muslim- led government launched an offen- sive March 20. Government radio said Bosnian Serb rebels fired more than 2,000 mortar and artillery rounds at govern- ment positions. Fierce fighting was reported around a strategic Serb-held communications tower that govern- ment troops almost captured last month. The Serb news agency SRNA said Serb forces held their lines against "high intensity" attacks on the TV tower and inflicted heavy casualties on government forces. The renewed fighting came after a week's lull due to heavy snow. U.N. observers, whose movements in the area are restricted, said there were no signs of major changes in the front lines following last week's govern- ment advances. Maj. Herve Gourmelon, a peace- keeper spokesman, also reported heavy fighting on another front around Mount Vlasic in central Bosnia. Government gains on each front two weeks ago prompted threats of Serb counterattacks and provoked Serb shelling of civilian areas in sev- eral towns. The government says it will not halt its offensives until the Serbs ac- cept an international peace plan that would reduce their share of Bosnia from the 70 percent they control to 49 percent. In Sarajevo, U.N. officials failed in attempts to see two Swiss on a UNESCO-sponsored cultural project seized Monday by Serbs at a check- point en route to Sarajevo airport. The checkpoint violates a 1992 agreement giving the United Nations control over that route. The two Swiss had hitched a ride with Danish soldiers in a U.N. van and told the peacekeepers they had no ocameras or film, U.N. spokesman Alexander Ivanko said. He said Serb police found a hidden camera and f ilm. The two were accused of "anti- Serb propaganda" and were detained in the Serb-held suburb of Ilidza. A German relief agency worker detained over the weekend after mak- ing a wrong turn from Sarajevo air- port into Serb territory would be re- leased soon, Serb officials said. An American and four French- men from a French relief agency, who made a similar wrong turn, have been held by the Serbs almost a month. Ivanko said they were expected to be tried on charges they aided Bosnian government troops. The three-year war has left more than 200,000 people dead or missing. It broke out after members of the Bosnian Serb minority rebelled againstavote by Muslims andBosnian Croats to secede from Serb-dominated Yugoslavia. 11 children die in India from vaccine NEW DELHI, India (AP) - An- gry villagers ransacked and burned a government-run health clinic in West Bengal state where 11 children died and 38 others fell ill after taking oral polio vaccine. At least 34 children are in serious condition in local hospitals, Press Trust of India news agency said. The vaccine dosage was given Monday. Police fired gunshots in the air to disperse the crowd, which also had set on fire homes of some medical The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 5, 1995 - 5 Iraqi biological weapons alarm U.S. officials AP PHOTO Hospital workers assist a wounded civilian yesterday in Zamboanga City, 400 miles south of Manila. GunmenJ" rai Phillipine town; fighting kills 100, injre03 Urea 30 WASHINGTON (AP) - The Clinton administration registered alarm yesterday that Iraq may be de- veloping biological weapons for its offensive arsenal and weighed tougher economic sanctions against Iran. In dual warnings, President Clinton said Iraq "could be regain- ing" a capacity to produce biological weapons while Secretary of State Warren Christopher said there was "strong evidence" Iraq had such in- tentions. At an unannounced White House meeting, meanwhile, Christopher pushed for a ban on U.S. trade with Iran, including purchase of Iranian oil by American companies who sell the oil abroad. Among those attending were Anthony Lake, Clinton's na- tional security adviser, and Deputy Defense Secretary John Deutch. The meeting explored ways to make U.S. policy toward Iran more effective, a senior administration of- ficial said afterward. "We are in the process of developing a range of op- tions for the president's consider- ation," the official said. There will be further meetings, said the official, who spoke on condi- tion of anonymity. Christopher told a Jewish group that no other country employs terror- ism more systemically than Iran to further its goals. On Iraq, Clinton said his concern was based on the fact that Iraq had not accounted to U.N. monitors for im- ports of suspicious technology. As a result, he said, "we have no assurance they are not regaining the capacity to move forward with weapons of mass destruction." In Baghdad, meanwhile, Iraq re- fused for a second day to let a Polish diplomat see the two jailed Ameri- cans, David Daliberti ofJacksonville, Fla., and William Barloon of New Hampton, Iowa. The Americans were sentenced to eight years on March 25 for illegally entering Iraq. Much of Iraq's formidable arsenal of weapons of mass destruction was wiped out in the 1991 Persian Gulf War. But Christopher said, "We now have strong evidence that Iraq is con- ducting a large program to develop biological weapons for offensive pur- poses. "And yet today," he said, "con- fronted with that evidence, Iraqi offi- cials just continue to dissemble and to lie." ZAMBOANGA, Philippines (AP) - About 200 Islamic separatists at- tack a southern Philippine town yes- terday, plundering banks and stores, burning buildings and fighting troops flown in to defend the town. At least 100 people died and 30 more were injured before soldiers drove the rebels into the forest, mili- tary officials said. President Fidel Ramos declared a state of emergency in Ipil, a town of 50,000 people on the island of Mindanao, about 480 miles south of Manila, and put all troops on Mindanao on alert. The government said the heavily armed men were members of Abu Sayyaf, a Muslim group fighting for a religious state in the southern Philip- pines. The group has been linked to a plot to kill Pope John Paul II and blow up American airliners over the Pacific. Police said they found a banner in Ipil marking the Abu Sayyaf's third anniversary. The group surfaced pub- licly in 1993. The gunmen, who arrived on boats, trucks and a bus, waited for a signal to raid four of the town's seven banks simultaneously at midday, according to radio reports and the military. They also ransacked at least one ,I jut jumped out of the window. I don't know who fired at our bus. " - Miguela Mondido shooting victim department store and set many build- ings on fire to confuse police and soldiers, said military spokesman Maj. Fredesvindo Covarrubias. Radio reports said in late afternoon thick smoke filled the town, and one witness who arrived in Zamboanga by bus called Ipil "a burning inferno." Miguela Mondido, who was shot in her left arm, was among Il injured flown to Zamboanga. One of them died there. Mondido said she saw a truck full of men heading for the center of town. "When the truck reached the com- mercial district, the armed men im- mediately jumped out of the truck and I just heard shooting," Mondido said. "I just jumped out of the window. I don't know who fired at our bus." She said the men wore military uni- forms. Other witnesses reported seeing rebels in red headbands, and said some wore short pants and civilian clothes. National police chief Recaredo Sarmiento said in a television inter- view that police could only confirm that 23 people had been killed, but the military in Zamboanga and the inte- rior secretary said at least 100 had died. Covarrubias said another 30 were wounded. The military has accused Abu Sayyaf of bombings and ransom kidnappings whose targets included American and Spanish missionaries and Filipino businessmen. In Janu- ary, two soldiers died and eight were wounded when the military stormed an Abu Sayyaf stronghold. A former Abu Sayyaf officer who recently surrendered to authorities said yesterday's raid was retaliation for the arrests of six Muslim extrem- ists over the weekend. "There are many more such attacks that will fol- low," Edwin Angeles told the Manila television station ABS-CBN. The extremists, who police said had ties to Abu Sayyaf, allegedly were recruiting followers for terrorist at- tacks. They also allegedly had ties to Ramzi Yousef, who faces trial in New York for allegedly masterminding the 1993 World Trade Center bombing that killed six people. Look Your Best For That Big Job interview Dascola Barbers 615 E.Liberty Off State M-F 8:30-5:20 Sat Til4:20pm No Appointments Needed The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society is now accepting petitions for "Grand Duke" (fall 195)for: Director, music director, set and costume designer Call 434-4722 by April , 1995 Mt. Rushmore moves to Russia MOSCOW (AP) - Russians strolling through Gorky Park will soon look up at giant plastic faces of four former U.S. Presidents in a replica of Mount Rushmore. The replica will go on display in the central Moscow park later this month as part of a new attraction. The busts of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson and Theodore Roosevelt will be slightly more than half the size of the originals, carved in stone in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Yesterday, Lincoln's nearly 40- foot head was lying on its side, dusted with newly fallen snow. His golden brown nose was scratched, apparently in transit. The German construction firm FAB also is putting up several new rides, including a Dutch roller coaster touted as only the second of its kind in the world. First lady finishes trip to Indian subcontinent COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) - Winding up a 12-day journey through the storied lands of the Indian sub- continent, Hillary Rodham Clinton said yesterday the poverty and prom- ise she saw along the way had rein- forced her determination to help women gain a stronger voice. Mrs. Clinton said she and her 15- year-old daughter, Chelsea, came away "overwhelmed ... by the conditions that some of the people we saw and met were living in, but also very moved by how people were attempting to make the most of whatever situation they found themselves in." Their travels through Pakistan, In- dia, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka took them from the grandeur of presi- dential palaces and the splendor of the Taj Mahal to the slums of New Delhi. Professional women told Mrs. Clinton of the obstacles they had over- come in this male-dominated society; vegetable vendors told of their yearn- ing to send their daughters to school. "It's been a remarkable combina- tion of experiences for me," Mrs. Clinton said in an interview with the American reporters who had traveled with her, adding that it would take some time to sort out its full meaning. The first lady defended her decision to avoid confronting her hosts directly about widespread human rights abuses in the region, saying her effort to im- prove the lot of women and girls was itself a campaign for human rights. "I don't think girls and women get as much attention on a regular basis as some of the well-publicized other in- stances of human rights concerns," she said. "I believe we have to emphasize as much as possible that the denial of education, the denial of basic health care, the denial of basic choices to girls is a human rights issue." It was a demonstration of the fine diplomatic line Mrs. Clinton tried to walk during her visit that it drew muted grumbling from both activists disappointed that she tried to steer clear of controversy and from reli- gious fundamentalists who believe that women should remain in their homes, subordinate to men. TRUNK SHOW". ON FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1995 THE US REPRESENTATIVE FOR BADA INTERNATIONAL WILL BE IN OUR SHOWROOM TO INTRODUCE THE OKIO AND BADA EYEWEAR COLLECTIONS. k A Columbia Review INITENSIVE MCAT PREPARATION