/ 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 23, 2001 NATION/WORLD Teen suspect read Nazi material LEBANON, N.H. (AP) - One of two teen- agers charged with killing two Dartmouth Col- lege professors apparently had been reading white supremacy and Holocaust revisionism material, ABC News reported yesterday. Investigators found neo-Nazi literature in the bedroom of suspect Robert Tulloch, 17, "Prime Time Thursday" reported, citing unidentified sources. Holocaust revisionists believe the slaughter of millions of Jews and others by Nazis never hap- pened. The German-born professors, Half and Susanne Zantop, were murdered at their Hanover home on Jan. 27, which is Holocaust Remembrance Day in Germany. Friends have said the Zantops were politically active and believed strongly that Germany should face up to its past. Tulloch and James Parker, 16, both of Chelsea, Vt., both have been charged with first- degree murder. Authorities have refused to discuss a motive or any connection between the boys and the vic- tims, who were stabbed repeatedly. Half Zantop, 62, taught earth sciences at Dartmouth, and his wife, Susanne Zantop, 55, was chairwoman of the German studies department. Tulloch has been returned to New Hampshire. Parker was scheduled to appear Friday in Henry County Superior Court in New Castle, Ind., where he and Tulloch were arrested at a truck f . - Stop and get those little necessities for a big trip: sunglasses, sun block, and motion sickness travel kits. At all 0 DRUGS A look at thi underside of U www.universitysecre -Discount photo processing Largest selection of health and beauty aids in -Largest selection of cosmetics and fragrances 320 S. State Street Ann Arbor at law discount prices -=Z 663-4122 ................ a- 4 stop Monday. Henry County Prosecutor Kit Crane said he expects Parker to waive his right to further extradition proceedings at the hearing and antic- ipates authorities will arrange to return Parker to New Hampshire today or tomorrow. In Chelsea, about 250 people packed into the United Church of Chelsea yesterday night to try to decide what to tell their children about the two hometown suspects. Some of them wept, said Andy Pomerantz, a local psychiatrist who led the private meeting. "None of us understands this, but it happens." "The meeting focused on the children of Chelsea," said Pomerantz. "We need to be a source of support for our children." Of Civilian s of M bannt~ed from sub ~ts.com controls WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld will order a moratorium on allowing civilians at the controls of any mili- tary ship, aircraft or vehicle, offi- cials said yesterday. The move responds to questions about the role of civilians aboard the U.S. submarine that collided last week with a Japanese fishing trawler. Rumsfeld's spokesman, Rear Adm. Craig Quigley, said the order is a "work in progress" and may be issued by the end of the week. "All the services know this is coming," Quigley said. Rumsfeld wants the military ser- vices to review their safety guide- lines on civilian participation in military activities. He supports involving civilians in military exer- cises and maneuvers, Quigley said, but wants to ensure that relevant policies are reviewed considering what happened aboard the USS Greeneville. The Greeneville, a nuclear-pow- ered attack submarine, had 16 civil- ians aboard when it collided with the fishing vessel Ehime Maru on Feb. 9 off the coast of Honolulu. The Japanese boat, on a cruise to teach commercial fishing to high school students, sank, and nine people were lost at sea. Two civilians were at control positions aboard the Greeneville at the time of the accident, although the Navy says they did not cause it. Shortly after the accident, the Navy stopped allowing civilians in the control rooms of submarines. The possibility that the presence of civilians aboard the sub could have contributed to the accident is one of the subjects to be examined in a formal Navy court of inquiry scheduled to convene in Hawaii next month. Scientists push stem cell testing WASHINGTON (AP) - In a high- ly unusual move by some of the nation's premier scientists, 80 Nobel laureates joined forces yesterday to urge President Bush not to block fed- eral financing of promising medical research using certain master cells called stem cells. "It would be tragic to waste this opportunity to pursue the work that could potentially alleviate human suf- fering," the scientists, including DNA co-discoverer James Watson, wrote Bush. Stem cells are building blocks for all human tissue. Scientists say research with them could lead to revo- lutionary therapies for diseases from Alzheimer's to diabetes. They can be derived from aborted fetuses, fertility clinics' discarded embryos or adults. All types are under study, but embry- onic stem cells generate the most excitement because they appear the most flexible. Anti-abortion groups oppose fetal and embryonic stem cell research, and Bush has signaled he may block feder- al money to pay for it. Federally funded scientists can't touch human embryos, but privately funded scientists have multiplied embryonic stem cells in laboratories. NEWS IN BRIEF HEADLINES FROM AROUND THE WVORLD WASHINGTON Clinton denies knowledge of pardons Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, buffeted by controversy, said yesterday she "did not have any involvement" in the pardons her husband granted on his way out of the White House and expressed dismay that her brother was paid lavishly to lobby f the relief of two men. "If I had known about this, we wouldn't have been standing here today" the former first lady said of her brother, lawyer Hugh Rodham, and the $400,000 he received from two pardon-seekers. Had she known, the Democratic senator added at a cro(vded news conference, "I might have been able to prevent this from happening." Mrs. Clinton spoke on a day on which President Bush said he believes Congress has a right to investigate the pardons granted by Bill Clinton, and as the head of one congressional investigating committee said he would insist on "full compliance" with a subpoena for records from the William J. Clinton Presidential Foundation. The group, chartered to establish Clinton's presidential library, received $450,000 in donations from Denise Rich, the ex-wife of fugitive financier Marc Rich, who was one of Clinton's pardon recipients. There was a fresh disclosure during the day on top of Rodham's involvement -'' that Mrs. Clinton's campaign treasurer had been paid $4,000 in legal fees to prepare WASHINGTON President Bush said yesterday he is disturbed that China is Helping Iraq build a more sophisticated and effective defense against American and British air patrols. "It's troubling that they be involved in helping Iraq develop a system that W endanger our pilots," Bush told a White House news conference. He was responding to reports that last week's U.S.-British airstrikes in the Baghdad area were prompted by indications that Chinese civilian and military workers have been helping lay fiber-optic cables to improve the durability of Iraq's air defense network. "We're concerned about the Chinese presence in Iraq," Bush said, and the administration is "sending the appropriate response" to Beijing. Bush expressed satisfaction with the effectiveness of last week's airstrikes, which targeted more than 20 Iraqi air defense radars and command-and-control facilities linked to air defenses. Pentagon officials said yesterday that less than half the targeted radars we Moscow Russia ready to talk with U.S. on defense Setting the tone for Russia's first direct contact with the Bush administra- tion, Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said yesterday the time had come for serious dialogue with the United States on mis- sile defense and other nuclear issues. Ivanov said the world political cli- mate depends on relations between the United States and Russia -a view con- tested by the Bush administration which does not consider Russia its equal. "We are in the mood for the most active dialogue at all levels, starting with the highest level ... on the entire range of issues in Russian-American rela- tions," Ivanov said, ' lvanov refused to comment on the arrest this week of Robert Philip Hanssen, a career FBI agent who was charged with spying for Russia, say- ing he thought the U.S.-Russia agen- da was significantly broader than that THE HAGUE, Netherlands Tribunal convicts Serbs of gang rapes A U.N. tribunal yesterday estab- lished "sexual enslavement" as a war crime, convicting three Bosnian Serbs who took part in the nightly gang- rapes and torture of Muslim women and girls at so-called "rape camps" during the Bosnian war. The tribunal found Dragoljub Kunarac and Radomir Kovac guilty of sexually assaulting and torturing Mus- lim women and girls as young as 12 years old; forcing them to perform domestic chores and selling them into further bondage. They received 28 and 20 year sentences, respectively. A third defendant, Zoran Vukovic, was convicted of raping and tortur- ing a 15-year-old girl - who wz about the same age as his own daughter -- but acquitted him of most other charges for lack of evi- RICHMOND, Va. Snowstorm causes deadly 116-car crash A wet, slushy snowstorm swept the East Coast yesterday, closir schools and highways and causing scores of accidents, including a deadly 116-car pileup outside the nation's capital, One person was killed and more than 100 were injured in the crash on Interstate 95 about 40 miles south of Washington, state police said. The wreckage stretched more than three miles. "The scope of this is so large, we only know what's going on the back end via radio on the front end," said Charlie Robertson, a spokesman for the fire department in nearby Stafford. Roads across the East Coast were coated with icy rain and snow, but forecasters said snow accumulations would be limited to about 6 inches in most cases. Warmer weather was expected today. : ... _ . ,, ... . . .. , . ri w ° JOBS IN ADVERTISING are now available at NOW HIRING FOR SPRING/SUMMER AND AND FALL/WINTER TERMS * SELL ADVERTISING TO LOCAL AND NATIONAL BUSINESSES " MANAGE YOUR OWN ACCOUNT TERRITORY " MEET AND COMMUNICATE WITH BUSINESS OWNERS " CREATE AD COPY AND LAYOUT " WORK FOR AN EXCITING STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER * EARN COMMISSION-BASED PAY " SALES EXPERIENCE HELPFUL, BUT NOT NECESSARY * MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE 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 $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 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