'? - 7'hn RAirhirfnn flnihi - Grirlnti Cnrttnmhnr 4 Q 4000 L z - Ir e iVcnigan vary - ruuay, oeptmuter 16, isso NAIs en loNORLo 19Y m.&assa%..cd near California resort EL SAUZAL, Mexico (AP) --Gunmen apparently sent by a drug lord yanked three families from their beds before dawn yesterday, lined them up against a wall and killed at least 19 men, women and children near a popular Baja California resort. At least one person was seriously wounded. Police have a witness in protective custody, a 15-year-old girl who hid under a bed during the slaughter, The Associated Press has learned. The attorney general of Baja California estate, Marco Antonio de la Fuente Virrarreal, said the head of one of the households grew marijuana for the Arellano Felix drug-smuggling gang, the government news agency Notimex reported. He said the man, Fermin Castro, oversaw the Arellano Felix's marijuana plantations nearby. Castro wasn't killed in the attack, but was in very serious condition with a bullet wound to the head, health offi- cials said. Police said the attack took place at 4:30 a.m. in El Sauzal, a suburb of the resort town of Ensenada, a popular beach destination for Californians that's only a 1 1/2-hour drive from San Diego. The victims appeared to be asleep when the gun- men showed up; most of the bodies were wearing pajamas - or nothing at all - and the beds in at least one of the houses were unmade, as if sleeping people had been pulled from them. Television images showed the victims lined up in a pool of blood in front of a wall. A television reporter said. one woman was clutching a baby in her arms; "It appears they rounded them all up, lined them up and gunned them down."s - Jose Ramon Espinoza Ensenada Judicial Police officer AROUND THE NATION Jewish leaders mull division of funds NEW YORK - In thousands of synagogues around the world, Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement, will be marked this month with solemnity and prayer as it has for centuries. At the same time, rabbis from Brooklyn to Brisbane will be asked to depart from tradition by reading a letter during the services that is in part a celebration an( plea for patience. The letter is from the committee of lawyers who negotiated the historic agee- ment requiring two Swiss banks to pay $1.25 billion to settle a suit filed by Holocaust survivors and their heirs. The missive is the first public step in what will be an extraordinary and compli- cated process of distributing assets held by the banks for more than half a century - the first such restitution achieved through a U.S. court. It is an unprecedented task, underlined not only by the politics of repentance but by the perception of fairness as people who have undergone historic suffering wait to receive funds long denied. Key participants stress that they want to get the first chunk of funds - $250 mil- lion - distributed within a year. But since thousands of potentially eligi* claimants - both Holocaust survivors and the heirs of those murdered - are scat- tered around the world. both were dead. The director of the Red Cross in Ensenada, Eugenio Carrillo, said the victims were the resi- dents of three neighboring houses. He said the dead included nine adults, two teen-agers, six children and a baby. A 15-year-old girl hid under a bed and escaped notice by the attackers, and police were questioning her about what she saw, a judicial police officer told The AP on condition of anonymity. He did not elabo- rate and the report could not be confirmed indepen- dently. Children's toys littered the yard outside one house, according to the television footage. The yard was filled with broken glass and chairs were overturned on the porch, indicating a struggle. Turkeys cackled in the yard. Dozens of bullet casings surrounded the bodies, and the Televisa television network said most were from a Kalashnikov assault weapon, although some were from smaller-caliber weapons and shotguns. Ensenada Judicial Police officer Jose Ramon Espinoza said the victims were members of three fam- ilies: the Flores family and two families that both had the last name Castro. It was unclear whether the three families were related. "It appears they rounded them all up, lined them up and gunned them down," Espinoza said. lie said he had no information on suspects or a possible motive. The drug gang led by the Arellano Felix brothers is based in Tijuana, 60 miles to the north. The brothers, once known for the violence with which they controlled their territory, had recently been settling into a quieter, more businesslike style after making themselves famous for shootouts in broad daylight. But Mexican authorities suspect the Arellano Felix brothers were behind the slaying of a rival last week in Ciudad Juarez, just across the border from El Paso, Texas. Rafael Munoz Talavera, considered a front-runner to succeed deceased Juarez cartel leader Amado Carrillo Fuentes, was found shot to death in the back seat of an armored Jeep Cherokee. Analysts said the killing might signal a shift back to the violence of the past. Wait /# t Do you find waiting for your copies takes a life time? Come0to Dollar Bill and use our automated self-serve copiers and don't spend your time waiting. West Bank killing raises questions House moves to avert govt. shutdown WASHINGTON - Signaling that Republicans want no part of an elec- tion-season government shutdown, the House voted unanimously yester- day to keep federal agencies open next month despite raging budget fights between Congress and President Clinton. Lawmakers voted 421-0 to let agen- cies function through Oct. 9 to give Congress and the president more time to complete their budget work. Fiscal year 1999 begins Oct. 1, but so far legislators have sent Clinton just one of the 13 annual spending bills needed for the new year. The Senate was expected to whisk the stopgap measure to the presi- dent's desk as early as last night. Democrats said Clinton would sign it. With Election Day seven weeks off, the vote underlined how eager Republicans are to preclude letting Clinton shift the focus from impeachment talk. Democrats went along after concluding that with the exhaustive media coverage of Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky, the former White House intern, a noisy fight on the uncontr versial stopgap bill would ha received little attention. Early settlers may have hunted clams WASHINGTON - Many of America's earliest settlers may have been digging clams and netting fish rather than throwing spears at mammoths. About 12,000 years ago, the re dents of a pair of coastal communitie in what is now southern Peru were exploiting the ocean for a living - feasting on fish, seabirds and shellfish - in the earliest evidence of maritime- based societies in this hemisphere, according to two studies appearing in today's edition of the journal, Science. "It could change the view of what the earliest Americans were really like," said geologist Avid Keefer. 0 BEITUNIA, West Bank (AP) - - Tensions between Israel and the Palestinians soared yesterday with a Palestinian teen-ager's shooting death, apparently by Israelis who opened fire from a car on high school students heading home from class. The attack, coupled with an announcement by Israel to expand a Jewish settlement, came while Israel was on high alert, bracing for possible attacks by militants before the Jewish holiday season. The incident also occurred as President Clinton's peace envoy wrapped up an unsuccessful effort at completing a deal to end months of stalemate between the two sides over a long overdue Israeli troop withdrawal. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat called the shooting "another crime as part of the continued conspiracy by the settlers against our people." The fatal shooting happened in the West Bank village of Beitunia, and police said they were questioning an Israeli suspect. "A 35-year-old male from a Jewish settlement in the area turned himself into the police. ... He is being held for questioning," Israeli police spokesper- son Linda Menuhin said. The shooting took place around noon when about 12 Palestinian high school students were walking along the vil- lage's main road on their way back from school. A car with Israeli license plates pulled up next to them, the passen- gers rolled down their windows and started shooting from a pistol and an assault rifle, said one of the students, Raed Abdel Rahman. "Everybody started to jump and take cover," he said. Two of the teen-agers were wounded in the stomach and taken to nearby Ramallah Hospital, where 17-year-old lyad Ilashem later died. The second boy was in stable condition. Al AROUND THE WORLD Dollar Bill COPYING 611 Church Street (734) 665-9200 - (fax) 9302800 m.m...W t .. Irr. (C" Taliban said to have committed massacre PESHAWAR, Pakistan - Refugees fleeing an Afghan city recently con- quered by the Taliban say troops with the ultra-orthodox religious army slaughtered thousands of civilians when they took the town last month. The refugees, who are arriving here each day on foot from the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif, say Taliban fighters focused exclusively on an ethnic minority known as the Hazaras, picking them for their distinc- tive Mongolian features. Many refugees say they fled a city littered with corpses, some of them machine-gunned, others with their throats cut, others blown to pieces by missiles and grenades. "There were bodies in the streets, in the city and in the markets," said Mohammad Rasool, a Hazara shop- keeper who fled with his family and walked for a week to the Pakistani frontier. "All of them were civilians. The ones with weapons fled long ago."' The refugees' statements are the first concrete evidence of what hap- pened when Taliban forces captured Mazar-e-Sharif on Aug. 8. Taliban, which has been fighting lengthy civil war against the country's other main ethnic groups, has sealed off the city and barred any indepen- dent observers. Albanian dissidents urge demonstrations TIRANA, Albania - Albania@ tered on the brink of chaos yesterday after another day of protests in which former President Sali Berisha called on his supporters to defy a government ban and stage the biggest demonstra- tions in the country's history. In a speech to about 2,000 supporters, Berisha told backers to march peacefully throughout the country today. But Albania is awash in weapons looted from armories last year, and diplomats who are trying to resolve the crisis feaO repeat of last weekend's street battles. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 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