- NATaION wtn The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 16, 1995 - 7A vUS hijack essage t om Daily Wire Services MOSCOW - Security forces dis- osed little about the masked gunman ey overpowered and killed early yes- rday during ahostage-taking incident ar the Kremlin, but the latest in a ring of terrorist attacks spoke vol- es about the soaring vulnerability of ussians and foreign visitors. The brazen seizure of a busload of uth Korean tourists only yards from main gate of the Kremlin sent an mistakable message to Russian au- orities andthepublic alikethatno one safe from the spiral of terror and taliation fueledbythepowerstruggles cking Russia. Investigators forthe Russian Federal curity Service- a domestic succes- >r agency to the KGB -told joumal- ts that they had not yet identified the le gunman killed in a commando raid fore dawn. But leaked reports said he had re- ntly entered Moscow from souther ssia,hinting at apossible connection the 10-month-old war in the eakaway republic of Chechnya. Chechen rebels driven to the brink of feat have vowed to spread terror roughout Russia as long as troops ntinue to occupy their republic. The most deadly of the recent hos- ge-taking incidents, in the southern ssian town of Budennovsk in June, stat least 140 lives and exposed fed- I Interior Ministry forces as inept g sends Russians Americans' social health declined in 1993, study finds defenders of public security. Local po- lice officers were later charged with granting access to the terrorists in re- turn for bribes. But the weekend's stunning standoff in the heart of this capital city was a sobering reminder ofthe dangersposed ; by the outrage of aggrieved peoples.4 "When there is no workable crime-r prevention system, people feel they . can take hostages right in the heart of. Russia, in Red Square!" lamented Gennady Khokhryakov, a department head at the Russian Law Academy in Moscow. He warned that the weekend attacks would have a chilling effect on al- ready flagging tourism, but he called the "humiliation" for Russian domes- tic security an even more devastating blow. In the weekend incident, the gunman. forced agroup of27 South Koreans and their Russian driver and guide to posi- tion their bus on a main bridge over the Moscow River near the Kremlin.f A Federal Security Service communi- que said the hijacker demanded $10 mil- lion, a car to take him to Domodedovo 9 Airport and a getaway plane. No documents were found on the body of the slain gunman, who investi- gators described to the Interfax news agency as being in his early 30s and -5 recently arrived from southe nRussia. Flights to the Caucasus regions origi- p yor en A&nes nate from Domodedovo. Drivers prepare for the Texas A&M University solar ear race In Intdianapolis. NEW YORK (AP) - The social poverty, child abuse, health of the United States declined in coverageaverage wee the first year of the Clinton administra- justed for inflation) tion, even as the economy improved, health costs for senior according to an index of government gap between rich and data on social problems. For instance, Mirinj Researchers at Fordham University centofthenation'schi say their index reveals a startling trend below the poverty line over the past 20 years: The nation's 14.9 percent in 1970. quality of life has come unhinged from wages, calculated in P its economic growth. $255, down from $29 "We really have to begin to reassess "Itis the first social this notion thatthe gross domestic prod- the Clinton administr uct - the overall growth of the soci- ety -necessarily is This is not goingto produce im- provements in the g ting better quality of life," said Marc Miringoff, di- under this rector of Fordham's Institute for Innova- paricuar tion in Social Policy an at Tarrytown, N.Y. "Because if we - Marc Miringoff lookatthisdata, par- director, Fordam Institute ticularly overtime. it's kind of likea crocodile's jaw open- federal cuts in social ing - the two lines, one going up and Miringoff said thei aP PASTS one going down." dramatic improvemer. Miringoff's institute has issued an in several are ,such Index of Social Health for the past nine the elderly, infant m years, using data - mainly govern- high school dropout r ment statistics - that go back to 1970. outweighed by the de( The index tracks how well American egories of social healt society is doing in 16 areas, including He criticized goven infantmortality,drugabuse,unemploy- focusing on the nat oli- ment, access to affordable housing and growthtothe exclusioi iof the gap between rich and poor. and said they were in+ t a After a brief upswing in 1992 - an touch with the lives4 san election year, Miringoff points out - zens. ess theindex droppedin 1993,the firstyear "It's almost like fl, of the Clinton presidency and the latest and the airplane is An ake year for which figures are available. looking at one gauge- The drop continues a trend that dates to product -and we're, the mid 1970s. thing looks good. I m an- The index charts social health on a and we're moving a will scale of 0 to 100. For 1993, it dropped where we want to go. aw two points to 41. Its lowest point was 38 plane, there's an incr ing in1991; the high point was77.5 in 1973. something's wrong an bar In six categories, the index hit its know why the passeng lowest point ever in 1993: children in ing all the time." health insurance kly earnings(ad- , out-of-pocket citizens, and the poor. goff said, 22 per ildrenwere living in 1993, up from Average weekly 987 dollars, were 9 in 1970. health reading of ation, and I think we can say with certainty that this is not get- ting better under this particular administra- tion," Miringoff said. He said he wasn't sure whathad caused the drop, but that it might be a reflection of spending. index has plotted nts over the years as poverty among tortality and the ate. But they are cline in other cat- th. nment leaders for ion's economic onofsocial health, ireasingly out of of everyday citi- ying an airplane, nerica, and we're -gross domestic saying,'Gee, this ean, it's growing nd we're going 'And yet, in the easing sense that d the pilots don't ers are complain- unpermits abound in Cali city ISLETON, Calif. - The tiny city of California Attorney General Dan best in civic stewardship, but note etonhas some weighty problems,but Lungren has similar qualms, and re- "Beggars can't be choosers." Mme is definitely not one ofthem. The cently accused Byrd of breaking the Not surprisingly, Longhoferandmo st loathsome lawbreakers here, lo- law by charging anexcessive fee forthe of Isleton's other city fathers ha Is say, are bicycle thieves and adoles- gun permits. Earlierthismonth, Lungren backed their police chief 100 percen nt vandals with mischief on their said the state will stop approving The City Council gave him two meat inds. Isleton's permit applications until the raises - hiking his annual salary fro Yet despite its peaceful streets, chiefexplains why he charges $150 per $24,000 to $36,000 -earlier this yea eton has become notorious in the permit -50 times what Lungren says As for Byrd, he is defiant: "It rld of law enforcement. In less the law appears to allow. going to take more than some sil an a year, the city's police chief has The attorney general's crackdown threat from the attorney general nded out 700 concealed weapons puts Isleton, pop. 833, in a perilous scare me," he fumed in an intervie rmits - enough to arm every man bind. In a curious civic twist, the city "If he's serious, he's going to have d woman in town. makes a good piece of its living off the throw me in jail." In reality, most of the permits have gun permits. At last count, permit fees Under Califormia's penal code, ne to people who live outside of applicant foraconcealedweaponpi eton, asleepy town wedgedbetween mit must be of "good moral chara eatfields andthequiet,green waters I ter" and pass a criminal backgrou the Sacramento River 45 miles south t check. Anyone convicted of a feb thestatecapital. Another7,000crime- is ineligible. Applicants must al ary Califomians are on the police ermit anyone demonstrate ajustifiable need for c artment's waiting list, aiming to rying a gun, such as a proven thre rry agun just as soon as their applica- who asks." from an estranged spouse or eviden ns are approved. of stalking or some other immine To these people, Isleton Police Chief - Ron Scott danger. gene Byrd is a hero, a man who Livermore police chief In addition, many sheriffs and poli cognizes the terrifying realities of chiefs require applicants to complete odem life and believes law-abiding accounted for nearly one-third of the course in firearms training, provide l izens deserve the right to pack a city's meager municipal budget. ters attesting to their good charact stol for protection. Without that income, no one is quite obtain the written endorsement of th Others, however, say Byrd has sure what Isleton will do. Once a thriv- family physician, and undergo a ps ped over the line. Critics-includ- ing village known as the "Asparagus chiatric exam. g-many who wear a lawman's badge Capital of the World," the city is now Byrd's demands areless burdensom say thechiefistoogenerous with the one of the poorest in the state, strug- Insteadofrequiring apsychiatricexa n permits, arming just about anyone gling to supplant its withering farm he relies on a face-to-face, 30-mint o can squeeze a trigger. economy and stay fiscally afloat. interview with an applicant to asse "It seems like this guy is giving a "We are counting on money from the person's mental fitness. No lette rmit to anybody who asks," said Ron those permits-there's no denying it," of recommendation are needed, but t ott, police chief in the San Francisco said Mayor Vein Longhofer, a stout, chief does insist that applicants tak y area city of Livermore. "Would we affable man with a neatly clipped white class in firearms safety. And he ws I be safer if everyone carried a gun on beard. He concedes that relying on such arm no one with a history of domes e street? I don't think so." a funding source may not represent the abuse. i e Da es: ..For the past four days a s tary protester has stood in fron st the Fishbowl for up to five hou ye day with a slight smile and a s nt. reading "Take midterms, oppi ty yourself..." m He also has a sign reading"M ar. love, not grades..." i's ly The fate of the annual Michit to Michigan State football classic' w. be decided today in Washter to County Circuit Court in a heat on a request for an injunction to an the game. er- -Wolverine coach Glenn " ac- Schembechler is not concerned rd "Ihavenotthoughtanythingab ny it," he said last night, "all I'm v so ned about is beating Michi ar- State."." at ce nt ce ea let- er, eir sy- ne. tm, ute ess ers he :e a will tic Bo" 3.. out Nor- gan Rea 11 son #6 es irters - SH ARRY SN AL. 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