mmmiq 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 21, 1998 N ATIONlX ORLD Ecuadorean plane crashes in Colombia BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - A jetliner chartered for Quito, the Ecuadorean capital, civil aviation by Air France with 53 people aboard slammed into a fog-draped mountain just after takeoff from the Colombian capital yesterday. Rescuers found no signs of survivors. At least four bodies were immediately recovered from debris of the plane, which was scattered in the under- brush and eucalyptus trees that cover the side of the 10,000-foot mountain near Bogota's airport, rescuers said. The plane crashed into the peak three minutes after taking off at 4:47 p.m. The aircraft, leased to Air France by the Ecuadorian airline TAME, was bound PAC KIN' U Let Parcel Plus lighten your load. spokesperson Martin Gonzalez said. "I saw the plane crash into the top of the mountain and flip over. A few seconds later it blew up and our windows shook from the explosive wave," Yesid Gonzalez, who witnessed the crash from his office window, told the Radionet network. He said the jet broke into three pieces. The Boeing 727 was carrying 43 passengers and a crew of 10, Air France spokesperson Jose Maria Robayo told The Associated Press. Most of those aboard Flight 422 were French and Ecuadorian citi- zens who had arrived on an earlier flight from Paris, Uf SreM he said. Robayo said there were other Europeans aboard but he did not have their nationalities. Police said they recovered many body parts but just four bodies. Plane debris, burned clothing and seats were also strewn across the mountainside. "There are hands, feet and legs. Most of what we have recovered are very small body parts," said a police officer at the scene, Fernando Molino. Scattered in the rubble were baby clothes, purses with women's makeup, wallets with documents and money, and a child's miniature football. A postcard from Paris picturing the Eiffel Tower and written in Spanish, addressed to Quito. ie Court looks to ARtouND THE NATION, Attempts to close clinics violate laws ClIICAGO --A jury found yesterday that leading anti-abortion groups violat- ed federal racketeering laws initially designed to prosecute mobsters by directing protesters to use extortion and threats of violence in attempts to shut down two abortion clinics. The unanimous decision followed seven weeks of testimony in the class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of two women's health clinics in Wilmington, Del. Milwaukee, and opens the door for similar claims by the nearly 1,000 facilities t t provide abortion services nationwide. Calling the decision "a major victory for women's rights," the National Organization for Women, which originally brought the suit 12 years ago, said in a statement it now would "win a permanent injunction against the defendants' block- ades, extortion and other use of force or violence at clinics" U.S. District Judge David Coar scheduled a hearing for Wednesday to discuss the order. Jurors ordered the defendants to pay nearly $86,000 to the two clinics to cover expenses they incurred in providing additional security precautions. A federal judge can order that award tripled under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). The case marked the first time the civil provisions of the RICO statute had 1> used in a class-action lawsuit against the anti-abortion movement. r 6 new ways to curb gangs 10% OFF! "' Packaging & Shipping with Student ID (Excludes US Mail) Call or e-mail for a free quote i 677-4477 PRE shipping@lamppost.parcelplus.com U of M Student Owned! Global Shinning and Communications Ihe Baltimore Sun WASH INGTON - The Supreme Court, warned by cities that street gang warfare is mounting across the United States, agreed yesterday to weigh local governments' power to use anti-loitering laws to break up gatherings of suspect- ed gang members. Frustrated by difficulty in catching gangs committing crimes, city officials backed by police departments are pressing the notion that curbs on loiter- ing can at least disperse gangs when they take over streets as their "turf." Anti-loitering laws, however, have often been struck down - in the Supreme Court, as well as in lower courts. But the city of Chicago per- suaded the justices yesterday to rethink the constitutionality of such ordinances. Justice Department figures show there are 23,000 youth gangs in the United States, with more than 650,000 members. Chicago alone has 125 street gangs; just four of those gangs are so powerful that they include more than half the city's gang members and have established ties to gangs in 35 other states. Tax funds won't go to needle programs WASHINGTON -- The Clinton administration refused yesterday to use federal tax dollars to buy clean needles for drug addicts, even though it said nee- dle exchanges fight AIDS without encouraging illegal drug use. Health and I luman Services Secretary Donna Shalala said her scien- tific endorsement should encourage more communities to start their own needle exchanges. But Shalala, under orders from the White house, sidestepped a political fight with conservatives and stopped short of providing communities with federal money to let addicts swap dirty needles for clean ones. Half of all people who catch HIV are infected by needles or by sex with injecting drug users, or are children of infected addicts. The decision bitterly disappointed AIDS activists, who said they couldn't recall another medical program the gov- ernment had declared lifesaving but refused to try to pay for. "They've now said we know how to save lives and we don't want to do what's necessary to save the lives," said Scott Hitt, chair of President Clinton's AIDS advisory council. Manuel publisher may be sued WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court yesterday allowed the publisher of a murder manual used to help carry out a grisly triple homicide to be sued for civil damages. "the First Amendment case was brought by the relatives of the vic- tims - a Silver Spring, Md., woman, her quadriplegic son and his nurse - who were murdered five years ago by a tract killer who meticulously followed the manual's instructions on how tc become a professional killer. The case has been watched by lawyers around the country who feared that, if the dispute were allowed to go forward newspapers, book publishers, movie pro- ducers and others could be held respon- sible for crimes said to have beer inspired by their works. ARouND THE WORLD Israelis, Palestinians hope to boost talks JERUSALEM - Israeli and Palestinian leaders have agreed to hold separate meetings with US. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in London in early May to try to break their year- long peace talks impasse. The meetings, to be hosted by Prime Minister Tony Blair, were proposed by the United States and announced on the British leader's visit to the region, his first attempt at Middle East peacemak- ing. Blair, who recently helped broker the historic Northern Ireland accord, said in Gaza City yesterday that he hopes a new round of Israeli-Palestinian talks will yield "actual, practical progress." But the plan for the May 4 meetings, for now, does not include a summit between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat. And with no indications of substantive change in the Israeli and Palestinian positions that have stymied progress since March 1997, it was far from cer- tain that a breakthrough could be achieved. Still, "talks are better than no talks:' an official close to the negotiations saidyes- terday. "We'll see how far we can g4 In Washington, State Departmen spokesperson James Rubin said thi United States was "looking for sub- stantive decisions from the leaders." Mexico mourns loss of poet Octavio Paz MEXICO CITY - From gov ment leaders and billionaire busin# men to jeans-clad students and work ers, this nation yesterday mourned the death of Octavio Paz, its Nobel Prize winning poet and philosopher who diet over the weekend at age 84. "Octavio Paz is a teacher of Mexicc and the world. He will forever forn part of the consciousness of our coun try and our era," a somber Presiden Ernesto Zedillo told scores of black suited mourners, including much ofA country's political and intellectual ee - Compiled from Daily wire reports I 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. 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