.Rab' NATION/WORLD iniS "".'s" asassm Shows no *remorse TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Even as guards hauled him away to a life behind bars, convicted assassin Yigal Amir showed no remorse about gunning down Israel's prime minister. The 25-year-old former law student told the Tel Aviv court in his final statement yesterday that Yitzhak Rabin had to be killed because his efforts to ake peace by giving up land to the r abs were a calamity for the Jews. "Everything I did, I did for God, for the Torah of Israel, the people of Israel and the land of Israel," Amir said. He dismissed the three-month proceedings as a show trial and told Judge Edmond Levy: "May God help you." It was a typical proclamation by the determined young man who shocked the world and exposed the deep rifts in rael by walking up to Rabin, reaching tween security men and shooting him twice in the back with hollow-point bullets Nov. 4. Thethree-judgepanelconvictedAmir and ordered the maximum sentence - life in prison for murdering Rabin, as W11 as six years for wounding his body- guartL aParole seems out of the question for the-slightly built defendant, who throughout the trial exasperated his udge and many Israelis with his appar- ent indifference and unrepentant atti- tude. Looking at his sister Hadas at his sentencing, Amir pointed upwards, as if to suggest that everything was in God's hands. His black curly hair covered by a black skullcap, Amir yawned as Levy described him as a "wild growth" and The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 28, 1996 - 13A Senate passes line-item veto bill; Clinton set to sign Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - In a move that would shift power from the legislative branch to the White House, the Senate passed a landmark measure yesterday granting presidents authority to veto individual spending items in bills with- out rejecting the entire measures. By a vote of 69-31, the Senate ap- proved legislation giving the executive branch a powerful tool that all modern presidents have requested but all previ- ous Congresses had denied them. The House also was expected to pass the line-item veto without difficulty tomorrow and send it to President Clinton, who says he is eager to sign it. Sponsors of the legislation hailed it as an extraordinary gesture by Con- gress to voluntarily surrender some of its power over the federal purse strings in effort to restrict the kind of excessive federal spending that has resulted in a $3.7 trillion debt. "In effect, we're taking action against our interest," said Senate Majority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss). "We are showing that we can rise above politics and take an action because it will be the right thing to do for our country." The law would allow the president to surgically remove individual programs in appropriations bills, cancel targeted tax benefits aimed at 100 or fewer ben- eficiaries or erase spending on new entitlement programs. "The president can no longer say, 'I didn't like having to spend on that waste- ful project, but it was part ofa larger bill I just couldn't say no to,"'said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who has worked toward a line-item veto for 10 years. "Under a line-item veto, no one can hide." Under current law, influential legisla- tors regularly insert so-called pork-barrel legislation in popular bills to win special projects for their states or districts. Opponents of the measure, however, warned that Congress was disturbing the delicate balance of powers struck by the Founding Fathers. "The control of the purse is the foun- dation of our constitutional system of checks and balances," Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) said. "The control over the purse is the ultimate power to be exer- cised by the legislative branch to check the executive." Calling Congress' action "rank her- esy," Byrd accused his colleagues of ush- ering in a new order where presidents could use the device to pressure Congress into rubber stamping their agendas by threatening tokill legislators' pet projects if they defy the White House. "What senator is willing to surrender his independence of thought and action and speech to an already powerful ex- ecutive?" Byrd added. Congressional efforts to grant presi- dents line-item veto authority date back to 1876, but never before has Congress agreed to cede such control to the presi- dent. The decision by Republicans to sup- port the measure at a time a Democrat is sitting in the White House reflects their understanding of the mounting frustra- tion the public feels about the balloon- ing federal debt. Under the measure, any savings that result from line-item vetoes would be earmarked for deficit reduction. AP PHOTO Yigal Amir sits between court guards at Tel Aviv's district court yesterday prior to his conviction in the assassination of Isreali Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin. Ami, who was sentenced to life imprisonment, told the court he did everything for God. suggested Israel must re-evaluate an educational system that was failing to instill sufficient values. Levy noted Amir is highly intelligent -his lawyers say tests placed his IQ at 144, far above average. But he also "has narcissistic and schizoid tendencies and sees the world in terms of black and white," Levy added, summarizing a court-ordered psychiatric exam. "With premeditation and amazing calm, he decided that the death of the late prime minister was the only way to stop the peace process he opposed and he took this path to its very end," Levy said. Amir tried to yell something after the sentence was pronounced, but guards quieted him and hustled him out of the courtroom. The conviction and sentence were hardly a surprise: Amir was caught at the scene and confessed. An amateur video shows Amir loitering by Rabin's car and shooting the premier as he was about to leave a Tel Aviv peace rally. Still, the trial transfixed Israelis, who were deeply shaken by the first high- level assassination in their modern his- tory. Rabin's widow struggled to find the right words. "What was left to prove?" Leah Rabin asked. "I have nothing to say about the verdict or the sentence. I do not wish him (Amir) anything because ... for me he does not exist." Prime Minister Shimon Peres, who shared the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize with Rabin and PLO chief Yasser Arafat, said the punishment "pales in compari- son to the crime." Yesterday's four-hour session ended a trial that at times seemed like a circus. Levy would often groan as witnesses struggled to understand the broken He- brew of defense lawyer Jonathan Ray Goldberg, an American immigrant. At times Amir himself took over cross- examination, earning more scorn from the judge. ajor assures that British beef is safe E -Panther LONDON (AP) - The bad news fo 'rime Minister John Major is that , toring public confidence in Brit- 'sh beef after the mad cow disease scare may take $4.2 billion and five years. The worse news is that after a politi- cally disastrous week, his Conservative Pagty probably won't be in power that long. Major is trying to assure people that British beef is safe. "We have said so and the scientists Gave said so," he said in a television interview yesterday. "What has hap- pened is collective hysteria, partly me- dia, partly opposition (politicians), partly European." But at supermarkets and fast-food counters across Britain, consumers have returned a resounding vote of no confi- dence in Major's assurances. Beef sales have slumped in Britain and its largest former export markets. Thee McDonald's, Burger King and ,'impy fast-food chains are withdraw- ing British beef. And yesterday, the European Union ordered Britain to stop ex- porting its cattle, beef and beef prod- ucts to any part of the world. Greek authorities confiscated more than 50 tons of British beef stored at ware- houses around Athens. And the Dutch Agriculture Ministry ordered the laughter of up to 64,000 British alves imported in recent months to the Netherlands. The revolt against British beef was ignited by the government's disclosure la'week that its scientific advisers believe that mad cow disease "most likely" was the source of 10 cases in Britain of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, which kills people by destroying their brains. British beef farmers, as they watch their $6-billion beef industry disinte- grate, are pressuring the government to do something. The National Farmers Union is press- ing for the destruction of all cattle older than 30 months-up to 15,000 animals a week for five years. Agriculture Minister Douglas H ogg told a parliamentary committee yes- terday that would cost $825 million a year. A Scottish meat processor called for even more drastic action - destroying any herd in which even a single case of mad cow disease is found. That could cost $9 billion in all. "There has to be a deliberate policy to end BSE (mad cow disease), or it will recur again and again," said Fred Duncan, chair of Grampian Country Food Group Ltd. of Aberdeen. His company, which normally sells 650 tons of beef a week, has sold only 12 tons in the past week. Duncan said he has laid off 150 workers and expects to lose more than $2 million by mid- April. Tens ofthousands ofjobs are at stake - on farms, in slaughterhouses and trucking companies. The developments dominate newspapers and news broad- casts. It's an easy issue for opposition par- ties to exploit. Following the government announce- ment last week, Labor Party leaderTony Blair said that he, like Major, was con- fident in the safety of British beef and would continue to eat it. Ex-Panther may be innocent Jailed since 1972, Elmer Pratt may have been framed by FBI on murder charge LOS ANGELES (AP) - The last time Jeanne Hamilton saw Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt was in 1972, when she and otherjurors convicted the former Black Panther of murdering a school- teacher. Hamilton now believes they sent an innocent man to prison. Pratt, 48, and his lawyers plan to return to court today to seek a new trial. Hamilton wants to be there. "I'm scared to death, and I want to look at him and tell him I'm sorry," said Hamilton, a schoolteacher. Pratt contended he was in Oakland, 400 miles away, the night Carolyn Olsen, 27, was shot to death in 1968 during a robbery on a Santa Monica tennis court. Her husband, Kenneth Olsen, was wounded. Pratt is in a North- ern California prison and has served 24 years of a life sentence. Pratt's case has become a cause celebre, prompting protests and draw- ingsupport from Amnesty International, the American Civil Liberties Union and members of Congress. Defense attorneys say prosecutors withheld key evidence as part of an FBI frame-up. "I didn't know I was up against the entire government," said Johnnie AP MOTO Jinny Pratt, sister of Geronimo Pratt, stands near a "free Geronimo Pratt" sign during a rally promoting the freedom of her imprisoned brother in the Leimert Park section of Los Angelos on Sunday Cochran Jr., who as a young lawyer years before the O.J. Simpson case rep- resented Pratt. Cochran has failed four times to get a new trial. This time, he says he has more evidence and six witnesses who will verify Pratt's whereabouts. The defense also claims to know who com- mitted the crime, although both men are now dead. They defense this time also has the help of crusading lay minister Jim McCloskey, whose Princeton, N.J.- based Centurion Ministries specializes in exonerating those wrongly con- victed. It was largely due to McCloskey's report on the Pratt case that led District Attorney Gil Garcetti to agree to review the case in 1993. Frustrated at no re- sponse, Cochran and co-counsel Stuart Hanlon filed a request to overturn the conviction, and a judge set a deadline for the district attorney to reply this week. Prosecutors, however, have asked Superior Court Judge Michael Cowell for a three-month extension to gather FBI documents. At Thursday's hearing, the two sides are expected to take up the request. FBI spokesperson Kiara Andrich re- fused to comment on allegations of an FBI frame-up of Pratt. And Deputy District Attorney Brentford Ferreira, who is reviewing the case, said, "We believe he had a fair trial." While there's disagreement on the fairness of Pratt's trial, there's no dispute the case is deeply rooted in the political turbulence of the late 1960s. *Floaters' die fryig to reach a northern dream The University of Michigan Program for the Study of Complex Systems Second Annual Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex Systems Los Angeles Times BROWNSVILLE, Texas-The body of John Doe No. 95-036751, one of 14 undocumented migrants to wash up along this short stretch of the Rio Grande last year, was clad only in beige underwear vith thin, red, checkered stripes. His trim, 20ish frame was bloated. His lips and eyelids had been devoured by turles. Otherthan adarkovalbirthmarkon the right side ofhis chest, there was no way to identify him-no wallet, nojewelry, no tattoos - not even enough skin on his fingers from which to draw prints. many come from villages or ranches, never having learned to swim. Most remove their clothing and identifica- tion, ferrying them in plastic bags above their heads. If they slip or panic, warm waters and carnivorous aquatic life quickly deform their features. When theirbodies surface, it is upon the shores of some of the poorest counties in America, ill-equipped to handle the human detritus of an international mi- gration crisis. What invariably surprises most first- time visitors is the shallow, almost pa- FOR MSA PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT Jefe & Me~sh March 28, 1996 Morning Session 9:00 -9:15 9:15 - 10:30 10:30 - 10:45 10:45 - 12:00 Afternoon Session The Michigan League - Hussey Room Opening Remarks Homer Neal, Vice-President for Research The University of Michigan Hidden Order: How Adaptation Builds Complexity John H. Holland, The University of Michigan BREAK Chaotic Evolution of the Solar System Jack Wisdom, Massachusetts Institute of Technology i