2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 12, 1995 11t1' OON 'OA3i Simpson backs out of his interview with NBC LOS ANGELES (AP) - Just hours before air time, O.J. Simpson backed out of last night's live TV interview after he andhislawyershad second thoughtsabout the no-holds-barred format NBC had de- m'nanded, the network said. "NBC News had a clear understand- ing as of yesterday morning with Mr. Simpson and his lawyers that there would be no conditions attached to this interview," NBC anchorman Tom Brokaw said in a special live report. "But Mr. Simpson's lawyers over- night prevailed upon him not to partici- 'pate, they said, because of the civil suit thathe faces from the families ofNicole Brown (Simpson) and Ron Goldman." The hour-long, commercial-free "Dateline NBC" interview would have been conducted by Brokaw and Katie Couric. It would have been Simpson's first extensive interview since he was acquitted last week. Tensy of millions of viewers were expected to tune in. Anything Simpson said on television could have been used against him in the wrong- ful-death lawsuits brought by the victims' families. Cochran In an interview on CBS radio station WBBM in Chicago, Brokaw was asked if he and Couric would have been barred from talking about the murders. "It came down to that," Brokaw said with a laugh. "They did say, 'Well, are you going to get into timelines?' And we said, 'That's how we're going to begin."' Simpson's lawyers didnot immediately return calls for comment. Thecancellation was seen as a setback for Simpson, eagerto counter widespread public out- rage over his acquittal. "Now, it's a public relations disas- ter," said legal analyst Stan Goldman said, "as if he needed any more public relations disasters." NBC's announcement Monday that it would broadcast the interview had prompted a storm ofprotestfrom groups and individuals inside and outside the network who criticized NBC for giving a forum to Simpson, who did not take the stand in his murder trial. NBC was inundated with thousands of calls, mostly negative, about the inter- view, spokeswoman Lynn Gardner said. Gloria Allred, the lawyer for Ms. Simpson's family, quoted Ms. Simpson's sister Tanya Brown as say- ing after Simpson canceled: "It makes my day." * NAWONAL REPORT *... Investigators comb train wreck for clues HYDER, Ariz. - Under a blistering desert sun, dozens of federal investiga- tors got down on their hands and knees . yesterday in a painstaking search for clues along bent tracks and beneath .. . Amtrak cars toppled in the deadly derail- ment of a passenger train. "We're looking at tracks, at bolts, at cracks, at pry marks... we're looking for evidence," FBI spokesman Jack Callahan Y said during a news conference at the remote crash site, about 60 miles south of Phoenix. It was there that someone pried loose a rail and sent Amtrak's 12-car Sunset Limited plummeting into a rock-strewn gorge early Monday. Investigators yesterday continued the meticulous task of unearthing whatever evidence they could find in and around the crash site. Two of the train's cars that had been left standing on the tracks were towed away on Tuesday. That left two locomotives, two coach cars, a partially derailed baggage/mail car and an overturned employee dorm car at track level. Black & Tan $1.00 Offdints9 tt3 1 # 996-9191 SIMPSON Continued from Page 1A percent of black voters agree with the verdict, as opposed to 29 percent of white voters. But Hawthorne stressed that the is- sue need not be racially divisive. "We shouldn't let different thoughts divide us. There can be unity in the midst of diversity." The forum was directed by questions regarding people's personal reactions to the verdict, as well as to race rela- tions in general. Although much of the discussion related to the specifics ofthe case, the conversation quickly turned to race relations at the University, and in society as a whole. Marcus Hood, an Eastern Michigan University student, said the media por- tray blacks who are accused of commiting crimes differently than whites. "Blacks are made to look savage. They are described in animalistic terms like 'he savagely beat her,"'Hood said. "When whites commit crimes,people are always trying to smooth things out. Like Susan Smith. She killed her kids and they said she did it because she was molested as a child." Many predicted that the Simpson verdict will lead to further discourse on race relations. Tiffany Mitchell, an LSA first-year student who is black, recounted the reluctance of white students on her hall to discuss the case after the verdict came out. "People are wearing masks," said Mitchell. "They try to be good people," pretending that no prejudice exists, "but underneath, everybody's got something." In his closing remarks, Hawthorne said, "I hope something has been said to enlighten you and to in- crease your understanding of each other. Improved race relations be- gins with you as individuals. Let's pray things improve, not just on our campus, but in our city, in our na- tion and in our world." Researchers discover genes that make plnts grow faster Discovery of several obscure genes that can be engineered to put plants on "fast-forward" - making them grow more flowerssandbloom sooner than normal -was announced yesterday by geneticists in California. The discoveries, reported in thejour- nal Nature, mean that it is possible to greatly speed up breeding experiments, creating new varieties of important plants in months and years, rather than decades and centuries. The work may also lead to ways to make food plants ,more productive. "This allows acceleration of breed- ing programs," said geneticist Detlef Weigel, at the Salk Institute in the San Diego community of La Jolla. His ex- periments show that aspen trees, which normally flower after they are 8 years old, can be made to bloom afterthey are 6 months old. Aspen trees "normally flower for the first time when they are about 30 feet tall," Weigel said. The experiments at Salk were done by taking a growth control gene, called Leafy, from a small, weedy plant ofthe mustard family, Arabidopsis thaliana, and putting it into aspen trees. The gene was also altered, hooked up to a genetic "on~'signal that makes it work full time in its new host. FCC urged to adopt children's TV rules WASHINGTON -- Accusing the television industry of evading the in- tent of congressional legislation, a key lawmaker urged the Federal Communi- cations Commission yesterday to r.'e- quire broadcasters to air three hours a week of educational programming,or children. Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), ranking minority member of the House tele- communications subcommittee, saidthe television industry's response to cpn- gressional legislation designed to im- prove children's programming has been "pathetic." Children's television, he said, is "the video equivalent, of Twinkies: Kids like it, but it lacks any intellectual nutritional benefit." .r.,. . CONFLUX IS HERE brought to you by capitol records and ticketmaster win bigtime prizes by logging onto ticketmaster online (http ://www.ticketmaster.com), including: 1. 20,000 CD's featuring leading capital acts such as blind melon, spearhead and cocteau twins 2. an all expenses paid trip for two to see blind melon in concert. 3. and the grand prize: a free concert on your campus by everclear-hosted by the student who submits the most creative entry. AROUND THE WORLD ;' Hamas reconciliation exected with Arafat, Paestan Authority GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Held 105 days in a Palestinianjail, a leader of the Islamic militant group Hamas re- calls beatings with electric wire that fractured bones in his elbow, hand and feet. Despite the brutal treatment he and other militants say they endured at the hands offellow Palestinians, Mahmoud Zahhar says reconciliation with Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority has never been closer. "The imprisonment, beatings, that is all behind us," Zahhar, who was re- leased Sunday, told The Associated Press, caressing his new beard, black and speckled with white hair, and look- ing healthy despite having lost 25 pounds in jail. His captors held him in solitary con- finement for 50 days. They humiliated him by shaving off his hair and beard. Yet he holds no evident bitterness. "Now we are looking forward to a new era in the relationship between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority," Zahhar said. Officials in Arafat's government have confirmed that a draft agreement has been reached with Hamas. A key provi- sion: a pledge by Hamas to stop suicide attacks being launched against Israel from inside areas under Palestinian con- trol in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank and to halt attacks against Israelis in- side autonomy zones. Rebels suspend accord in Chechnya MOSCOW -- In another sign of deepening tension in the breakaway region of Chechnya, rebel leaders yes- terday suspended a 2-month-old mili- tary accord with Russia and demanded that international observers and U.N. troops be brought in before they will return to the bargaining table. Meanwhile, the Organization for Se- curity and Cooperation in Europe re- duced the size of its mission in Grozny, which had been the site of negotiations between Russia and the rebels.,The mission has been the target of recent threats and a grenade attack. The Chechen rebels' announcement came two days after Russia said it-sus- pended participation in the talks, fol- lowing a bomb attack that gravely wounded its military commander inthe region, Lt. Gen. Anatoly Romanov, killed three people and wounded 15 others. 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