NATION/WORLD Russia, Belarus move toward reunification The Michigan Daily -- Thursday, April 3, 1997 - 9A MOSCOW (AP) - Russia and Belarus signed a treaty yesterday meant bring their people, economies and ies closer together, in a first step toward reintegration by two former Soviet republics. President Boris Yeltsin, who signed the accord with his Belarusian counter- part Alexander Lukashenko, stressed the two Slavic nations will remain sov- ereign and separate. ."We'll not transform our community into a unified state for now, but a union of two states," Yeltsin said at the signing remony in a gilded Kremlin hall. No other ex-Soviet republics have shown a real desire for reunification since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, creating 15 separate states. Although Russian hard-liners hailed the treaty as a step toward the revival of a mighty state, Belarusian opponents expressed fear their country of 10 mil- lion people would lose its independence to much larger Russia. *Critics also argued that integrating the two struggling countries will only create more problems for both. About 5,000 opponents of the accord tried to march to the Russian Embassy in the Belarusian capital, Minsk. Riot police confronted them, clubbing and hitting the marchers when the protesters threw stones at them. The clash was the worst violence in Belarus in months. Russian news broadcasts showed policemen beating women with truncheons and an officer swinging his boot to hit an injured pro- tester who was lying on the pavement. Opposition and human rights activists said about 200 people were beaten and detained. The government confirmed 70 people were detained and three policemen were injured, but declined to provide more information. In Moscow, small groups of oppo- nents staged protests, warning against any alliance with Lukashenko, an authoritarian leader nostalgic for the old Soviet Union. He has proposed - and Moscow has rejected - a full merger. Under yesterday's treaty, the two countries plan to coordinate economic reforms and military activities, create joint energy and transportation systems and possibly introduce a common cur- rency. A Supreme Council, including top leaders from both countries, is to outline joint policies. Although the treaty calls for consulta- tions on a wide variety of policies, it pro- poses little action. Russia and Belarus have removed customs barriers but other- wise have done little toward integration since forming a "community" a year ago. The Russian news media and liberal politicians say that Belarus, which has yet to reform its Soviet-era economy, could drag cash-strapped Russia down. Lukashenko responded angrily to that yesterday, saying, "It will never be true that our small country will be a heavy burden to Russia." Neither government presented the treaty to the public before the signing ceremony, and critics say its secrecy was also cause for concern. Police officers beat a demonstrator whose head Is covered with a nationalist flag In Minsk, Belarus yesterday. Police officers in full riot gear confronted about 5,000 demonstrators protesting the reintegration treaty signed yesterday. Study links heart disease, swelling BOSTON (AP) - Inflammation that smolders for years inside the arteries, perhaps as a result of an infection, appears to be a powerful trigger of heart attacks and strokes and may even be as bad as too much cholesterol. A new study found that after several years of this low-level inflammation, men are three times as likely to suffer heart attacks and twice as likely to have strokes. The inflammation is so subtle that it shows up only on blood tests, and seemingly normal levels may be haz- ardous. Earlier studies have found signs of this inflammation at the time of a heart attack. The new work is the first to show that it simmers away while men are still outwardly healthy, apparently contributing insidiously to clogged arteries. Why this micro-inflammation, as doctors call it, happens is still a mys- tery. However, a leading theory is that chronic infection with common germs might be the cause. If so, the study raises the possibility that antibiotics and vaccines, along with stronger anti-inflammatory drugs, might someday be added to the medi- cines routinely used to treat heart dis- ease. The new research also helps explain why aspirin is so good for the heart. For years, experts thought aspirin's main benefit was its interference with blood clotting. But the new study suggests it also works by fighting inflammation inside the blood vessels. Heart attacks strike when fatty deposits build up in the arteries. When one of the deposits, called plaque, sud- denly breaks open, blood clots form and choke off the supply of blood to the heart muscle. While too much cholesterol in the bloodstream clearly is a major underly- ing cause of heart trouble, doctors have long suspected that other factors must also be at play. "The ability of doctors to predict who is at risk of cardiovascular disease has come a long way. But about half of those who get heart attacks or strokes have normal cholesterol levels," noted Dr. Paul Ridker of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. The theory is this: An infection attracts disease-fighting white blood cells, called monocytes, to the blood vessel walls. These, in turn, release a host of chemicals that can stimulate the growth of smooth muscle cells and con- tribute to the development of clogging deposits. Ridkler and colleagues studied male doctors who had taken part in a large aspirin study that began in 1982. They looked at levels of C-reactive protein, a sign of inflammation, in 543 who went on to suffer heart attacks, strokes or vein clots after eight years of follow-up and an equal number who stayed healthy. The men were divided into four cate- gories, depending on their levels of this protein. Those in the top quarter had twice the risk of stroke and three times the risk of heart attacks of those in the bottom quarter. Civil War relics deteriorating The New York City Department of Cons on the window of the New York bar Hog bar o' -halt the . Bar known for draw- ing celebrities must get cabaret permit NEW YORK (AP) - Hey, Julia Roberts - get down off that bar! And Drew Barrymore - don't shake your booty like that! City officials have put a halt to hoofing at Hogs & Heifers, a down- town honky-tonk known for its col- lection of celebrity bras donated, by visitors like Roberts, Barrymore and Darryl Hannah. Those stars and other patrons have been known to mount the Hogs & Heifers bar in spontaneous bursts of late-night dancing. But it turns out a Prohibition-era ordinance requires a cabaret license for such footloose activity. Last Thursday night, Hogs & Heifer owner Allen Dell said, a dozen police officers walked in, told him that undercover cops had witnessed dancing in the bar the previous week- end, and shut him down. "It's a sad world when they pad- lock a guy for dancing" Dell said. He went to court the next day and got the bar reopened. And despite signs inside and out reading "No Dancing by Order of New York City Department of Consumer Affairs, Cabaret Division," at least a dozen patrons on a recent weeknight were bop- ping to country music blaring from the jukebox. "Music is about dancing.- Music Sumer Affairs placed a 'No Dancing' sign gs and Helfers on Monday night. rderedto lancing is about therapy," said Helen Glantz of London, gyrating with a friend to D.A. Coe's "Never Even Called My Name." Shonna Keogan, a spokesperson for the Department of Consumer Affairs, said the city is simply enforc- ing the law evenhandedly. The ordinance is normally used against bars whose unlicensed activities annoy people living near- by. Hogs & Heifers is in the city's meat packing district, and Keogan said she doesn't know whether anyone complained, but "it would be unfair of us to be giving pad- locks to bars in residential areas and not to Hogs & Heifers." Dell said that he applied for a cabaret license months ago and spent $70,000 on sprinklers, lighting and other code requirements but that the city lost the paperwork. Besides, Dell said, "The mayor and his son were seen dancing on television along with 50,000 other people at Yankee Stadium, doing the Macarena. Yankee Stadium sells liquor. It doesn't have a cabaret license." With the right to shake one's rear end apparently imperiled, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union said his 'group is on the case. "If Drew Barrymore or Julia Roberts or any woman in the city of New York wants to get up on the bar and wiggle, we don't recom- mend that, but we might defend that," Norman Siegel said. The Baltimore Sun GETTYSBURG, Penn. - Gray- green mildew streaks the leather flap of an Union Army cartridge pouch; "red rot" crumbles another in the steel storage drawer. Rust spots pock muskets and swords, warning of worse to come. Out on Cemetery Ridge, where Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address a few months after the battle, a monument to one of the Union artillery units that pounded the Confederate soldiers of Pickett's Charge is eroded to a mere marble knob, its inscription obliterated by acid rain. As park rangers at the Gettysburg National Military Park brace for the seasonal onset of more than 1.7 million visitors, an important part of Civil War heritage is disintegrating. Some call it the Second Battle of Gettysburg - and this time both sides are losing. Park officials, led by Superintendent John Latschar, say they face overwhelming odds in their struggle to preserve and pro- tect this park, scene of the epic three-day battle in July 1863, in which 51,000 men were killed, wounded or captured. They say current funds are not enough to stop the deterioration of many of the 1,300 monuments and stat- ues, and 400 cannon scattered about the 5,900-acre battlefield park, the largest and most-visited of the nation's 24 Civil War parks. And at a time when the National Park Service faces a maintenance backlog of nearly $6 billion at 374 parks, from Yosemite to independence Hall, there's little hope for significantly more money any time soon. Ann Arbor's newest night of comedy There's no telling what hilarious situations will result when you mix the lively antics of the Uncertainty Principles with spontaneous suggestions fron the audience. Never satisfied performing to the audience, the Uncertainty Principles perform with the audience to create a totally unique comic experience... Thursdays at the Heidelberg 215 N. Main, Downtown A2, 663-7758 Valid for free admission Thursday night SHOW STARTS AT 8:30 000 THROUGN: April 17. 1997 I NEW AT AMERS! 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