NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily -- Thursday, November 16, 2000 - 9A Beatle attacker acquitted, committed OXFORD, England (AP) - A man who stabbed George Harrison because he believed he was possessed by the for- mer Beatle was ordered confined to a mental hospital yes- terday after being acquitted of attempted murder by reason of insanity. Judge Michael Astill said Michael Abram would be held "without time restriction" and must gain the approval of a mental health tribunal if he seeks release. Abram had been accused of breaking into Harrison's home in Henley-on-Thames, west of London, and stabbing him repeatedly, puncturing a lung. He also was charged ith attacking Harrison's wife, Olivia, when she came to her husband's defense. In a statement read outside Oxford Crown Court by the couple's son, Dhani, the Harrisons criticized the "ancient lunatic law" that allows acquittal on mental grounds. "It is a tragic occurrence that anyone should suffer such a mental breakdown, but we can never forget he was full of hate and violence when he came into our home," the couple said. Abram had been in and out of psychiatric facilities for ears and sought help in the weeks before the Dec. 30, 999, attack. After the verdict, his mother, Lynda, said he is "well on the road to recovery." Lowering cholesterol ould help mild attacks NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Every- one hospitalized with a mild heart attack or bad chest pain should quick- ly get a cholesterol-lowering drug and ndergo testing for possible angio- lasty or bypass surgery, two large studies conclude. The studies, released yesterday, could transform treatment for the I million to 2 million Americans each year who go to the hospital with small heart attacks or severe angina pain. One study found that immediately giving them the cholesterol-lowering drug Lipitor - regardless of their olesterol levels - could reduce the risk of death, new heart attacks and other bad outcomes by 16 percent. The other study found that routine- ly checking these patients' heart arteries with angiograms, then fixing blockages when necessary with bypass surgery or ball'oon angioplas- ty, could reduce these events by 18 percent. Lipitor and other cholesterol-lower- g drugs known as statins are already a mainstay of treating people with bad hearts. However, heart attacks can disrupt cholesterol readings, so doctors often wait a few weeks before starting patients on the medicines. Patients who suffer only mild heart attacks or chest pain are not always evaluated for angioplasty or bypass surgery. Dr. Christopher Cannon of righam and Women's Hospital in oston.. who conducted the angiogram research, said he believes the results of both studies should immediately be put into practice. Other doctors said the results may 'indeed change medical care, but they cautioned that doctors will need time to sort out the findings. They also noted that many small hospitals can- not perform angiograms. The results of both studies were released at a meeting in New Orleans of the American Heart Association. The cholesterol-lowering diug study was sponsored by Pfizer, which makes Lipitor, while the angiogram study was financed by Merck, which makes one of the medicines used in the research. "Patients with a threatened or mild heart attack benefited from immediate and intense treatment" with Lipitor, *aid Dr. Gregory Schwartz of the Denver Veterans Affairs Medical Center, who led the study. The study suggests that fast, across-the-board treatment is impor- tant, because patients do better no matter what their cholesterol level. Indeed, the study found just as much benefit among those with low choles- terol as in patients with high readings. The researchers randomly assigned patients to get either Lipitor or a dummy pill, in addition to all of the usual medicines, within a day or so of entering the hospital. Before treat- ment, their levels of LDL -- the bad cholesterol - averaged 123. After treatment it fell to 72. l ,> AP PHOTO Rachel Yaakov, right, sister of assassinated Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, comforts Dalia Rabin-Pelossof at the grave her mother Leah Rabin during her funeral in Jerusalem yesterday-. Leah Rabin laid to rest near husband JERUSALEM (AP) - Leah Rabin, a passionate campaigner for peace, was buried yesterday beside her husband, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was assassinated in 1995 by an extremist Israeli who objected to his peace offers to the Palestinians. World leaders, including U.S. first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, paid tribute to Rabin, who died Sunday of cancer. More than 1,500 invited guests attended the sim- ple ceremony in a pine grove at Jerusalem's Mount Herzl ceremony. The mourners included German President Johannes Rau and Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Russian Foreign Minister lgor Ivanov and U.S. Mideast peace envoy Dennis Ross. Rabin's daughter, Dalia Rabin-Pelossof, pressed a white handkerchief to her face to hold back tears as the simple wooden coffin was low- ered into the ground. In a sign of the unique status Rabin had acquired, she was the first Israeli who did not hold high office to be buried in a plot normally reserved for the nation's presidonts and prime ministers. Clinton said Rabin was "a wonderful woman, a dear friend, an ambassador of peace, a woman of valor." She said she was wearing a pin Rabin had given her, and pledged that the United States would always stand by Israel, "especially in diffi- cult times like these," a reference to six weeks of Israeli-Palestinian violence that has left more than 200 people dead. Former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres praised Rabin for taking her husband's message of Israeli-Arab peace to the world after he was shot and killed on Nov. 4, 1995. "When Yitzhak was assassinated, Leah knew that she must not turn into a grieving, agonized widow," but must carry the torch ignited by her husband, Peres said. Rau recalled that Rabin was born in Germany but emigrated with her fanly when the Nazis came to power. When she visited Germany after her husband's assassination to spread his legacy of peace, "peo- ple listened to her," Rau said. Several speakers noted her sharp tongue. Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered thanks to Rabin for her steadfast commitment and work for peace and "also for the tough criticism that you gave me in recent days." In a newspaper interview, she said her husband would be spinning in his grave because of con- cessions Barak offered the Palestinians in Jerusalem. m w