2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 11, 1997 NATION/WORLD I Man faces life sentence for 1991 slaying NEW YORK (AP) - A black man who was acquitted by a state jury of murdering a Jewish scholar during a 1991 riot in Brooklyn was convicted in ,,Weral court yesterday of violating the ictim's civil rights in the stabbing. Lemrick Nelson Jr., 21, cried and put his head on the table as he heard the ver- dict that could bring him life in jail. As he was led out of court, his supporters angrily chanted: "No justice! No peace!" Also found guilty was another black man, Charles Price, 43, who was accused of inciting a black mob to "get Jews.' The conviction stemmed from the slaying of 29-year-old Yankel Rosenbaum, who was attacked in a riotous furor after a 7-year-old black boy was accidentally struck and killed by a car driven by an ultra-Orthodox Jew. Rosenbaum, a Hasidic history stu- dent visiting from Australia, was the only person killed in four nights of vio- lence in Brooklyn's racially mixed Crown Heights section. Nelson was acquitted of murder in 1992 by a mostly black state jury, out- raging politicians and Jewish leaders, who demanded federal intervention. Two years later, Attorney General Janet Reno ordered a civil rights investigation that led to the federal charges. The federal jury - two Jews, three other whites, three blacks and four Hispanics - reached its verdict after 20 hours of deliberations over four days. "To persevere does bring results," said Rosenbaum's brother, Norman, who came from Australia for the trial and had fought to get the case reopened. "The American people should know that this is a good day for justice." Although it was the second criminal trial for Nelson stemming from Rosenbaum's death, it was not consid- ered double jeopardy because the charges were different and the case was tried in federal court. In similar fashion, two Los Angeles police officers acquit- ted of state charges in the 1991 beating of Rodney King were later convicted in federal court of violating his civil rights. Federal prosecutors argued that Rosenbaum was deprived of his civil rights in being randomly attacked on a public street because of his obvious religious garb. The car accident that had sparked the violence involved a motor- cade carrying the Lubavitcher Hasidim's spiritual leader, the Rebbe Menachem Schneerson. Price had not been previously charged in the attack; he was identified only recently from videotape of the rioting. Prosecutors said because of Price's NATIONALEPOR American Airlines hope to avert strike WASHINGTON - With 90,000 jobs and travel plans for more than 200,000 people a day in the balance, American Airlines and its pilots turned to a federal mediator yesterday in an effort to stave off a holiday-weekend strike. If no agreement is reached by midnight Friday, the end of a federally mand cooling-off period, the pilots have threatened a strike and the airline has sai would shut down. That would hobble a fifth of the nation's air-travel capacity, leav- ing ticketed passengers without a ride. A federal mediator will shuttle proposals between representatives of the nation's largest domestic airline and the Allied Pilots Association at a downtown hotel. The Fort Worth, Texas-based airline, a division of AMR Corp., has promised to try to accommodate passengers by helping them find seats on other airlines if a strike is called. But that may be a difficult promise to keep with most seats on other carriers filled going into the Presidents Day weekend. "We would ask that our passengers be somewhat flexible," said American spokesman John Hotard. The National Mediation Board asked for the same from the two sides in the ta "I think we're going into this with an open mind. It a very focused situation," said mediation board chairman Kenneth Hipp. "We hope it will be a short week." American and its pilots are butting heads over compensation and job security. AP PHUTO Christine Yaris and Trevor Headley, lawyers for Lemick Nelson Jr., face reporters outside federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y. yesterday. I"' FI ' 1 U U BE WELL-PREPARED fo r your GRE General Exam by learning to make the key distinctions which result in superior scores. You learn more than shortcuts and test-taking techniques, so that you master the essential principles of the exam. 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I thought Kato Kaelin was more credi- ble" referring to Simpson's erstwhile houseguest whose disjointed, some- times bumbling testimony highlighted the criminal trial. One white male juror said, "I had trouble believing what he was telling me. It seemed like he was just wait- ing to get the questions done" before denying the allegations against him. The jurors said they had consid- ered the plaintiffs' allegations that police had planted evidence against Simpson and had uniformly rejected them. Several of the panelists said they attached considerable impor- tance to DNA blood evidence and the bloody glove found by police behind Simpson's estate the night of the murders, but that their conclusion that Simpson committed the murders was based on the accumulation of circumstantial evidence. Goldman's father, Fred, said after the verdicts: "I think what you saw in this Itrial was truth, and lies on the other side. I think that's what the jury saw and saw clearly." Test Prepara MCAT* DAT#GMAT*L'SAT*GRE:Psych racially charged case. The riots con- tributed to the 1993 defeat of the city's first black mayor, David Dinkins, who was faulted along with police in a state report for a slow response to the violence. MacDougal changes testmony WASHINGTON (AP) - Convicted Whitewater partner Jim McDougal is now telling independent counsel Kenneth Starr that then-Gov. Bill Clinton knew about an illegal 1986 loan issued to McDougal's wife at the time, according to The New Yorker magazine. ABC News reported Sunday night that McDougal has told that news agency the same thing. Both McDougal and President Clinton have testified under oath that Clinton did not know about the loan and was not present at a 1986 meeting where it was discussed, as alleged - also under oath - by David Hale. Hale is now serving a federal prison term after pleading guilty td charges stemming from his issuance of the loan, backed by the federal Small Business Administration, to Susan McDougal. Both McDougals, along with former Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker, were convicted by a Whitewater jury in Little Rock, Ark., last year in a trial where Clinton's alleged involvement in the $300,000 loan was an issue. Some of the money from the loan was used to purchase land for a real estate development near Little Rock. The land originally was purchased for the Whitewater Corp., in which Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton were equal partners with Jim End Susan McDougal. The development then was transferred to a corporation owned solely by the McDougals, and The New Yorker says Susan McDougal took the lead role in attempting to sell and market the lots in a project called Lorrance Heights. Clinton has testified, via video tape, that not only did he not pressure Hale to make the loan to Susan McDougal, but that he did not know about the loan and did not know about Lorrance Heights. PANAMA CITY BEACH, FL 'MAR from $22 a niht ay from $25 oxpttmreare~uut!a night Stay here and party here.Two beacifront hotels with a party ngh Wub right In the middle. Free keg party on arrival, beer par- tes nighy, Itve bands day night hot ock & roll and reggae, sex on the beach and bldN contests, two hot dancerooms, ller D. S80-874-7 101 tes w sobm an ntec o - lIA , .. E~ AROUND THE WORLD Albanian protests turn violent, 2 dead ALBANIA - Anti-government pro- testers attacked riot police yesterday trapping and beating some policemen and stripping them of uniforms, guns and shields that were then set ablaze in a bonfire in this southern port. Police fired into the air and fought with the rock-throwing demonstra- tors, in the worst rioting during a month of unrest that began over a pyramid scheme-gone-bust. Two peo- ple were killed and 81 injured, state TV reported. Prime Minister Alexander Meksi went on national television to urge his countrymen, for decades the poorest in Europe, not to join unrest "that aims at pushing Albania into economic col- lapse.' The flashpoint of riots over the get- rich-quick pyramid schemes, proved nearly impossible to contain yesterday when the police were attacked. Police responded by firing into the air. Some stood on the roofs of buildings and threw stones down on the crowd. State TV reported that Arthur Rustemi and Maliq Banushi were kiW yesterday, but gave no further details. Devil-mania causes problem for Egypt CAIRO, Egypt - Devil-busting has been the order of the day in Cairo since police swooped into homes on the night of Jan. 22, rounding up scores of upper- class teen-agers and young adults. ' crime? They were accused of losing their religion and worshiping the devil. But any factual basis for the arrests was mostly lost in the pell-mell media race to pile on accounts of body-snatch- ing, blood-gurgling, sex-orgying youths - and predictably, in Egypt's Israel-lait- ing media, the Zionist influence always was hovering in the background. Government officials continue to assert that there are Satanists in Egt, but some have backed off recently saying no one so far had admitted it. - Compiled fom Daily wire reports. Tobacco industry fighting regulations GREENSBORO, N.C. -- The tobacco industry yesterday asked a federal judge to block the Clinton administration's controversial plan to impose tough new federal regulations to reduce smoking among young peo- ple. During a daylong hearing in a crowded U.S. District Court courtroom, attorneys representing the tobacco industry and other businesses that would be affected by the plan argued that the federal Food and Drug Administration had grossly over- stepped its authority. "We are dealing with a revolutionary expansion of FDA authority over a major industry that it has never before regulated," said Washington attorney Richard Cooper, representing the tobacco industry. Lawyers representing the govern- ment, meanwhile, countered that FDA Administrator David Kessler was well within his legal authority to take the action, which was neces- sary to counter a teen smoking epi- demic. "The commissioner hasn't acted willy-nilly here," said Just' e Department attorney Gerald KY. Kessler, he said, "has looked at a seri- ous health problem;' and tried to fash- ion a reasonable response. Chilean site shows earliest Americans DALLAS - Archaeologists have concluded that humans lived in southern Chile 1,300 years earlier than previ - ly thought - challenging beliefs a t how the New World was first inhabited. The findings contradict the Clovis theory - that humans who migrated from Asia established the first major New World culture on the high plains of North America around 10,906 to 11,200 years ago. Other ancient settle- ments were thought to originate from the Clovis settlements -named for the distinctive fluted spear points founi Clovis, N.M. .:>:>: . The American Jewish Committee on the topic What Being Jewish A ,.:.: Means to Me The contest has been established to encourage thoughtful and creative expression on topics of concern to the Jwish people. * Entries may be in the form of essays of 2,500 to 3,000 words. Entries employing other forms of expression (video, fiction, :. poetry, drama, painting, sculpture) may also be submitted. Contest is open to all undergraduates k{ currently enrolled full-time at accredited institutions of higher learning. A distinguished panel of judges will eval- uate entries and determine the winners. Written entries should be submitted typed and double-spaced. All entries must include both school and permanent addresses and telephone #. numbers. All entries must include a brief n biography of the entrant. FUNDING Winning entries will be included in a PROVIDED BYpublication of theAmerican Jewish THE SUSAN publitte AND JACK Committee. LAPIN FUND First prize will be awarded at the Annual w . fo ry .......... -..- .... . : : 1 ..t.* .ta1. ......- R * - i... .L .- - .: The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub- scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 7840552: Circulation 704-0558; Classified advertising 7940557: Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7540550. E-mail letters to the editor to dMily.ettersutmich.edj, World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/dally/. EDITORIA L S TA FF Josh Whit e, Editor in Chief NEWS Joi S. Cob , Manegmng O Edtor EDITORS: Jeff Eldrdge, LaWe Mark, Anupame Readdy, Will Wesiss. STAFF: Janet Adamy, Orion Campbell, Prachval Chakravorty, Megan Esley, Marla Hackett, Jennifer Harvey, Heather Kamins, Amy Klein, Jeffrey Kosseff, Marc Ughtdule. Carrie Lima, Chiai Metinko. Tim O'Connell, Katie Plone, Susan T. Port, Alice Robinson, Matthew Rochkind, David Rossman, Erick M. Smith, Ann Stewart, Alit K. Thavarjah, Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Jenni Yachnin. EDITORIAL in Marsh, E ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Paul Serilla. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Juson Steffer. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Kristin Arla, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Godstein, Scot Hume, vki Kunlyukl, Jim Lneser, James Miller, Portha Mulhopadhyay, Zachary M. Raimi, Jack SCNila. Meoan Sehimpf, Ron Steiger, Matt WIesatt. SPORTS Niiolas J. Cotonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Will McCaill, Danielle Rumore. . STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka, Even Braunstein, Chis Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedborg, Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Knudsen, Chad Kujala, Andy L tek, Fred ' 'nk, .J. Lua Brook'M'G'hey, Afsn Mohmadi, Shar 'R''u, Prmnay Rddy. Sarah Rontal, Jim Rose, Tracy Sandler, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Barry Sollenberge, Nile Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS brn A. iOnatt, JeniMr PetinsM, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker, Elan A. Stavres. SU&-EDITORS: Use Harwin (Music), Hao-Jin Kim (Campus Arts), Bryan Lark (Film), Elliabeth Lucas (Books), Kelly Xintaris (TV/New Media). STAFF: Dean akopoulos. Coli Barbs. Eugene Bowen, Neal C. Carruth. Antho Cham.n, Karl Jones, Emily Lambert, Kristin Long, Stephanie Love. Jams Miller, Aaron Ronnie, Julia Shini, Andes Smlth.Undall, Philip Son, Proahantt Tamaskar, Christopher Tkacztyk, Michael PHOTO Mrki Me , Sara Stillman, Et STAFF: JoshhBSias, Jonnofer Braehy-blt, Aja Dulileva Cohen, John Kraft, Marae Myers. Sully Park.,iten Schaefer. Jeannie Servas.' Jonathan SummeC, Joe We'ate,-warren.i, COPY DESK Jason mo, EIor STAFF Lydia Alspach, Allyaan HtiJiU wKtlaSpewek, David Ward, Jan Woedeard ONIJNE Aam Poleck, BEdItor STAFF: Julio Gurdlan, Scott Wilcox, GRAPHICSh rae gsHard or . .. . .P _,_ . .,._w...._ w... u __n I se..,A- . ii r