I 2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 27, 1997 - NATION/WORLD 49 bodies fiund in Calif., mass suicide 'sAngeles Tues SAN DIEGO - Police found at least 49 bodies in a luxurious home in the elite northern San Diego county suburb of Rancho Santa Fe last night and described the gruesome scene as a mass suicide. Distraught neighbors said they believed members of a religious cult or sbme out-of-state group had been living at the ranch house. They reported that the people living in the house dressed in black and called themselves monks. Deputies reportedly approached the sprawling ranch house after receiving a phone tip. One told a television reporter that he stopped tallying the bodies after he had counted 10. District Attorney Paul Pfingst said the count was at least 49, and deputies said all the bodies were male. "This is a Jonestown," Pfingst said. As media helicopters roared over- head, sheriff's deputies congregated the residence on Colina Norte. The home, like most in the posh neighborhood of Rancho Santa Fe, was set in lush, palm- fringed grounds complete with tennis courts and a swimming pool. Property records show that the nine- bedroom, seven-bathroom home on more than three acres of land was sold in May 1994 to a married couple for $1.325 million. The home was considered owner-occupied, though the buyers - Sam Koutchesfahani and his wife Fatt Maghadam Yekta - maintain a post- office box in Rancho Santa Fe. A prominent San Diego criminal defense attorney, Milton Silverman Jr., called a local radio station to say he rep- resented Koutchesfahani. Silverman said his client had rented the two-story home to a religious group several months ago and was trying to sell it for $1.6 million. Neighbor Bill Strong said the new ten- ants moved in last fall and were quiet. "I never heard them speak," he said. Strong, who lives next door to the home where the bodies were discovered, said he saw five or six adults but no children coming in and out of the property. "They were very low key," agreed neighbor Carol Kaplan. And Drummond Doroski, a 16-year old resident of Colina Norte, said the res- idents of the home "weren't really social." A real estate agent, who did not want to be named, said she tried to show the home to buyers but "there was always some sort of religion meeting going on." The deaths jarred neighbors in the tranquil neighborhood of Rancho Santa Fe - known more for its genteel debates over proper landscaping aes- thetics than for its cults or criminals. The last time their neighborhood received such notoriety was back in 1992, when a mysterious English busi- nessman named Ian Spiro apparently shot his wife and three children to death in their home and then committed sui- cide by swallowing cyanide in a remote desert spot. The Spiro case bedeviled local resi- dents because, even though police con- cluded that Spiro killed his family and committed suicide, conspiracy theories about the deaths abounded. Spiro's background as an intelligence operative on the fringes of Middle East espionage offered ample ground for theories about assassins and terrorists targeting the entire family. The neighbors' talk about a religious cult sparked memories of other mass sui- cides. The most notorious in recent years having been the murder-suicides of fol- lowers of the Order of the Solar Temple, a cult based in Switzerland but with branches in Europe and Canada. Just this week, five followers of the cult died after rigged propane tanks caught fire in a house they were occupying about 40 miles southwest of Quebec City. Joe Camel advertising debate revived WASHINGTON -Three years after rejecting claims that the controversii4 Joe Camel cigarette ads are targeted at children, the Federal Trade Commission revealed yesterday that it has new evidence in the case and that its investigators are once again urging a complaint against R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Camel's ma , for unfair advertising. The disclosure revives one of the most bitter controversies in the nation's ciga- rette wars and comes as yet another blow to the beleaguered cigarette industry.Last week, another manufacturer, the Liggett Group, admitted that nicotine is addictive and that the industry markets to underage smokers in an historic legal settlement. The FTC, which enforces truth-in-advertising laws, declined to say what new evidence has become available. "There is new evidence from 1994," said Victoria Streitfeld, the agency's spokesperson. "I cannot talk about what that is." i But experts in tobacco litigation said the Food and Drug Administration's effort to regulate cigarette advertising, as well as state lawsuits against the industry;.have recently yielded confidential documents that could bolster an FTC case against Reynolds, the nation's second-largest cigarette manufacturer. "There are internal documents that have come out that indicate R.J. Reynolds had begun in the early 1970s to become ... envious of Philip Morris because Marlboro had a lock on the kiddie market,' said Dick Daynard, a tobacco litigation expert. It Ain't Over Yet! SCall Us to Plan Your Graduation Catering Parties.' @ 761-6000 Short on Breakfast AtAmer's You probably didn't know that Amer's has a full breakfast menu, too. And it's loaded with both traditional and continental favorites. Eggs over easy, omelets, hash browns, french toast, pancakes (golly, they're yummy), breakfast sandwiches, syrup & jelly, milk, coffee, tea, bagels & croissants. You can even order our humble, fluffy eggs yodeling with porky (see the menu). r , (4 Panel recommends hepatitis C test BETHESDA, Md. -If a person has used injection drugs, even a few times, and has had multiple sex partners, a test for hepatitis C should be considered, the head of an independent panel con- vened by the National Institutes of Health to examine how to manage this emergingthreat said yesterday. Dr. D.W Powell of the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, chair of a 2 1/2-day conference that drew 1,600 doctors and researchers from around the country, said that "a good portion" of the estimated 4 mil- lion Americans who have chronic hepatitis C do not know they are carri- ers of the virus. "But we do know it is transmitted by high-risk practices such as drug use and high-risk sexual activity. Those people should consider being tested," he said. Hepatitis C is primarily transmitted by blood-to-blood contact, such as sharing needles for drugs, although a percentage of cases are believed to be transmitted sexually. Blood trapsfu- sions that occurred before 1990, when a screen for the;virus began to be used for blood donors, also were a mayor source of infection. One of the issues the panel tackled is the fact that there are no sure-fire tests for hepatitis C. N.Y. mayor, groups fight welfare law ; Coalitions of civil rights groups and the mayor of New York yesterday filed separate suits to block a key provL' of the nation's new welfare law, cha - ing that it violates the constitutional rights of legal immigrants who ,will lose federal disability and food stamp benefits because they are not citizens. The suits charge that the law violates the equal protection clause of the Constitution by specifically targeting a particular group and stripping thetn of federal benefits that are provided to every other legal resident who m* the basic criteria of the programsI Breakfast All Day Cash? Try the ATM in the State Street Store! (Yes, we do think of everything, don't we.) On Church Street And you can get it as fresh-squeezed, fat-free or greasy as you want it. We're going to be known as the best breakfast spot in Ann Arbor, too! Master Card &VI5A Arnerican Express Welcorme t~ M e-D r"~jI' Poo, AROUND THE WORL FOUR LOCATIONS to Serve You (In Ann Arbor) 312 South State (313) 761-6000 611 Church 769-1210 Michigan Union 747-6404 I VISA I (In Birmingham) 166 West Maple (810) 644-4000 *. Irish terrorists bomb English town LONDON - Irish terrorists sent fresh signals of frustration and defi- ance to Britain yesterday with two bomb blasts that punctuated a national election campaign and saluted the anniversary of the republican struggle against British rule in Northern Ireland. There were no injuries in the twin attacks, but they brought chaos to the national rail network in the aftermath of an audacious escape plan by hard- core Irish Republican Army prison- ers that was foiled at a jail near Belfast. The bombs, blamed by police and the British and Irish governments on the IRA, exploded a half-hour apart early yesterday morning in the northern English town of Wilmslow, an affluent suburban community and important junction about 160 miles northwest of London. Police think the bombs were placed and timed so that the second would strike emergency personnel responding to the first. It narrowly missed.a The explosions toreup tracksI destroyed signaling equipment,.c- pling service between London and the nearby northern metropolis. of Manchester, whose downtown shop- ping area was savaged by a huge IRA bomb last June. Yeltsin bans some; foreign crpurchases MOSCOW - There aren't o many T-Birds among them, but President Boris Yeltsin is in any case taking the Russian leadership's flashy cars away. Yeltsin proclaimed a ban yesterday on foreign car purchases from state cof- fers as of next Tuesday, and he ordered those already imported at taxpayer expense to go to the auction block, The moves are expected to win cheers from a struggling population and coo mute today's nationwide labor strike. - Compiled fromn.Daily wire reports. Heading Home for Summer? . ... .5 rtq, %0':;gy.. F "', 1*, 14 . " '4 'a Get ahead of the game ifal At Oakland University, you can choose from more than 600 spring or summer courses offered at our beautiful and convenient campus - many during the evening and on Saturday. You can transfer the credits back to your home institution in the fall. For a complete schedule of classes and application, contact the Office of Admissions and Enrollment Management today. by phone: 1-800-433-1995. by fax: 1-810-370-4462, by e-mail: ouinfo@oakland.edu Oak and UNRSITY Think Success. Think Oakland University. 1997 Spring session: April 29-June 20 . 1997 Summer session: June 24-August 15- Early registration: March 3-14 " Regular registration for Spring: April 28, for Summer: June 23- VISA/MasterCard accepted. Oakhami University is an equal oppottunity and aflirmative ilIorIn emplovrr. i~~~~~T ~~~~Name _________________ The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during thefall and winter ternisby 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'su 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 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daiy.etters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daity/. NEWS Jodi S. Cohen, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jeff Eldridge, Laurie Mayk, Anupama Reddy, Will Weissert. STAFF: Janet Adamy, Brian Campbell, Greg Cox, Jeff Enderton, Sam England, Megan Exley, Maria Hackett, Heather Kanlins, Kerry Kus, Amy Klein, Jeffrey Kosseff, Marc Ughtdale, Carrie Luria. Chris Metinko. Tim O'Connell, Katie Plona, Susan T. Port, Alice Robinson, Erfcka M. Smith, Ann Stewart, Ajit K. Thavarjah, Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Jenni Yachnin. EDITORIAL Erin Marsh, E ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Paul Seila, EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Jason Stolfer. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Kristin Arola, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Heather Gordon, Scott Hunter.Yuki Kuntyuki, Jim Lasser, $arah Lockyer, James Miller, Parthe Mukhopadhyay, Zachery M. Raimi, Jack Schillaci, Megan Schimpf, Ron Steiger. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Will McCahill, Danielle Rumors. STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka, Even Braunstein, Chris Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedberg. Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleir m, Andy Knudsen, Chad Kujal, Andy-Latack, Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Brooke McGahey, Afshin Mohamadi, Sharat Raju. Pranay Reddy, Sara $ontal, Jim Rose, Tracy Sandier, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Barry Sollenberger, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Brian A. natt, Jennifer Petinski, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker, Elan A. Stewros.; SUBEDITORS: Use Harwin (Music), Christopher Tkaczyk (Campus Arts), Bryan Lark (Film), ElizabethpLucas;Books),Kelly Xintarfs (TV/New Media), STAFF: Dean Bokopoulos% Colin Bartos, Eugene Bowen, Neal C. Carruth, Anitha Chalam, Karl Jones, Emily Lambert, Kristin Long, Stephanie Love, James Miller, Aaron Rennie. Julie Shin, Anders Smith-Lindall, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar, Michael Zilbermen.t PHOTO Mark Friedman, Sara St|iian, Ed STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Bradley-Swift. Aja Dekleva Cohen, Rob Gilmore, John Kraft, Margaret Myers, Jully Park. Kristen Schaefer, Jeannie Servaas, Addie Smith, Jonathan Summer, Joe Westrate, Warren Zinn. COPY DESK Rebeca Berkumn, EftrW STAFF Lydia Alspach, Elizabeth Lucas, Elizabeth Mills, Emily O'Neill, Matt Spewak, David Ward. JonWoodward. ONUNE Adan PolIock, Editor STAFF: Carlos Castillo, Elizabeth Lucas. Seneca Sutter, Scott Wilcox. GRAPHICS TraCoy Harris, Editor