19A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 9, 1998 NATION/WORLD~-- Starr continues P t WASH INGTON (AP) From fraudulent land deals in Arkansas to taped al legaions of sex with the pres- ident, Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr is conducting two criminal investigations into possible obstruc- tion of justice. With President Clinton tmder inves- tigation in the Monica fe-winky probe, first lady lillary Rodham Clinton and a forner law partner Webster Iubbell, continue to be the focus of a grand jury in Arkansas that expires May 7. Starr eventually will make deci- sions on whether to refer to the House of Representatives any evidence turned up against the president. le also must determine wx hether to pro- ceed with the Little Rock part of the Whitewater investigation focusing on real estate transactions there. Prosecutors in Starr's office have begun assembling material against Clinton for possible submission to the Animals die at Disney World ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Disney, which produced "Bambi" and "The Lion King," is beinga scrutinized over the deaths of several animals at its newest theme park. The U .S. Department of Agriculture is investigating Walt Disney World in the deaths of four cheetah cubs, two rhinos, two hippos and four other creatures at or en route to the entertainment giant's new Animal Kingdom. "This isn't a movie they're makin , this is real life' said Joe Taksel, a spokesperson for the Animal Rights Foundation of Florida. Taksel's group plans to protest at the April 22 opening of the park, which will feature 1,00) exotic animals. Disney is under pressure to put the final touches on the S800 million, 500- acre theme park. It will fly in 5,000 reporters, analysts and travel planners for the opening. USDA spokesperson Jim Rogers said the investigation was started after the agency received an anonymous tip, but he wouldn't say what inspectors are looking for. The USDA, which has the power to fine an animal exhibitor or take away its license, had previously reviewed most of the deaths and found no violations of federal animal welfare regulations. Disney officials said ycsterdaY they've done nothing wrong. 9 "We know that our animals receive the best care, live in a superior habitaZ and are cared for by a highly qualified and dedicated team of animal care experts," said Disney spokesperson BiiH Warren. Top conservation groups, including Wildlife Conservation Society, are behind the project. State regulators also cleared the park this week in the deaths." "Certainly 12 animals dying is a eo C cern, but then again you need to look the circumstances and none of these circumstances were related," said Cap. Jerry Thompson, statewide inspection, coordinator for the Florida Game and' Fresh Water Fish Commission. "Th< way they died was not unusual for cap.- tive wildlife." Last September, a female black rhi: noceros died from a perforated intes tine caused by a stick the animal h eaten. Disney said the animal ate 1 stick before coming to Animl Kingdom. The four cheetahs died in lae December of kidney failure; ethyl ene, an ingredient used in antifrecee and solvents, was found in their sy$- tems. Disney said the cubs had only been at Animal Kingdom for a few4 days. AP PHOO Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr faces a crush of reporters and photographers as he makes a statement outside his Washington office on Jan. 22. House, lawyers familiar with Starr's investigation said yesterday. But "no decision has been made on the issuance, timing, or contents of such a submission," Starr said in a statement yesterday. The investigation "continues to be impeded by a variety of privilege invocations," Starr's statement added. "We are proceeding expeditiously in all phases of the investigation, including the litigation necessary to gather and assess all relevant facts," Starr concluded. One individual, speaking on grounds of anonymity, said any deci- sion on sending material to the House is delayed indefinitely by court chal- lenges blocking Starr's access to some testimony from key witnesses such as presidential adviser Bruce Lindsey. The Washington Post initially reported the work by Starr's office in the compiliation of material for a pos- sible referral. Under the law, if Starr finds "sub- stantial and credible information ... that may constitute grounds for an impeachment," he must turn that over to the House. German town seeks to regain rights to B Los Angeles 'Times CESKE BUDLIOVICE, Czech Republic Back when men were men, beer was the color of molasses, and mugs were made of stoneware or pewter, someone in the Bohemian town of Pilsen found a way to niake yeast sink harmlessly to the bottom of the fer- mentation vat. Thus was born the world's first pale laget a chic new drink that was to launch a thousand clear- glass schooners. Pilsencer -irst pioduced in the 1840s, should have made its hometown rich, but by the time anyone in Bohemia thought to license the name, the dray horse was out o'the barn. Brewers here in (Ceske Budcjovice, another Bohemian mountain city renowned for its bei, are deteimined not to let that happen to tthen. In the days w hen the kingdom of Bohemia was part of the Austro- Hungarian Empire, people here spoke German and this town's name was Budweis. There was a local b er_' and the output was. sensibly enough, called Dudwciser. "You had cognac made in the *rovince of Cognac and champagne made in Champagne," points out Petr Jansky, financial manager of the ~udejovicky Budvar brewery. For him, logic is logic: Even though the empire is long gone and the city's name has reverted to the original Czech, the beer from here is still udweiser name ...- Budweiser. And only the beer from here. In a David-and-Goliath routine par excel- lence, the small, state-owned Budejovicky Budvar brewery is duking it out with Missouri's Anheuser-Busch Cos., in courts all across Europe, claim- ing the right to reserve the names "Budweiser" and "Bud" for its brew, in much the same way the French have so jealously -- and lucratively - reserved the name "Champagne" for their top- franc sparkling wines. "This is something Americans should understand," Jansky says, "for it is in the tradition of your great country to have a brave and capable little com- pany fighting against a big opponent." Mighty Anheuser-Busch - which controls 45 percent of the U.S. beer market and 8.5 percent of the world market, with sales in more than 80 countries - says the dispute poses no threat to its finances, growth or inter- national marketing strategy. Its adver- tising budget alone is bigger than Budejovicky Budvar's entire annual revenues. But Bud vs. Bud can certainly cause confusion for the beer drinkers of1 Europe. With the matter before trial and appellate courts ii more than 20 coun- tries, it's impossible to belly up to a bar anywhere on this continent and know, with confidence, which Bud's for you. Demand a Bud in Switzerland and you're apt to be handed a frosty glass of the Czech version; a lower court ruled in December that Anheuser-Busch could no longer sell its flagship beer there under that name. In Denmark, by contrast, calling for a Budweiser will get you the lighter American stuff, thanks to a December injunction pro- hibiting the Czechs from including that word on their labels in Denmark. In the Czech Republic, calling for a Bud will get you the domestic brew. But in Britain, a drinker who orders Budweiser has no way of knowing what he'll get, because her majesty's courts have agreed to let the two names coexist. The British tirade Marks Registry office does periiit Anheuser-Busch the exclusive use of the slogan "King of Beers" _ even though Budejovicky Budvar likes to call its Budweiser the "Beer of Kings. in Germany, the jewel in the European beer marketer's crown, use of the word "Bud" is still under adju- dication. But while the judges deliber- ate, Budejovicky Budvar has been free to use "Budweiser." and it has blos- somed into the third-largest import. Anheuser-Busch is meanwhile striving to close the gap with a beer labeled, simply, B. These cortroom battles are but the latest phase in a dispute that goes back more than a century. World wars have been fought, the Iron Curtain has been thrown up and dismantled, breweries have been bombed, occupied and nationalized - and, still, Bud vs. Bud marches on. READ THE DAILY. RECYCLE TH E DAILY.* I p 4- j ?i:v: AP H( Newt Gingrich takes a stop on a nationwide tour to promote his new book titled "Lessons Learned the Hard Way, A Perl History." The autobiographical book is about Gingrich's tenure as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. GniCh sins COples of new book I. 1 u ti Play College JEOPARDY! Online by April 13th for a chance to compete head to head in the Finals in New York City! Win a 1999 Pontiac Grand Am! Play College JEOPARDY! Online at: wW.station.sonv.com/collegege pardy MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP)- Elizabeth Randall plopped the hardcover book on Newt Gingrich's table with a thud, looked the speaker in the eye and declared herself pleased with the new Newt. "You're not as mouthy as you used to be," she said.} Gingrich autographed her book without pause, but a tiny smile creased his face. "I'm learning a little discipline," the speaker mumbled in reply. And so another lesson is shared - perhaps another presi- dential voter impressed - on a nationwide book tour that Gingrich hopes will sell himself as much as his books. "Lessons Learned the Hard Way. A Perl History" pre- sents a lean, not-so-mean Newt Gingrich to the American public. "There's no question I hope reading a 220-page version is better than a nine-second sound bite' Gingrich said at a bookstore in this first-in-the-nation presidential primary state, where 200 people filed by, carrying more than 300 Though the speaker says he's just concerned about book sales, his advisers think the tour could help shed his image as a firebrand. They want to raise Gingrich's basement-level poll rat- ings so he can have the option of running for president in 200 A year ago, such talk would have been nonsense. "There is a certain evolutionary process that goes into this," said Rich Galen, a Gingrich strategist. Gingrich wears the same red sweater and shirt - no tie - that he wore while posing for a homey picture on his book s cover. He's friendly and at ease with the paying customers. "Thanks for stopping by," Gingrich tells one man, shaking his hand while not letting go of a felt-tipped pen. The man. walks away, wiping blue ink from his right hand. The book, too, is an exercise in humility, a breezy, chatfy rendition of his ups and downs as speaker. He even provides a Most Embarrassing Moment: Senae Majority Leader Trent Lott advised the speaker how to sit (luring the 1997 State of the Union address "to minimize for the camera how overweight I had let myself become." n a m ®: ®®r a r w e w vs w s . ...e . .. . -.A! ®a{ books for his signature. n11 'T. 11 ' ' _ ,, , b.'. ,zh I your om. ien everTone youre calling your girl. rI