IOA - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 9, 1995 Russia, U.S. reach Bosnia agreement on peacekeeping N^LlrlGt4/!-T-loRt.D BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - Af- ter weeks of delicate negotiations, Russia agreed yesterday to join a Bosnia peacekeeping force in a face- saving arrangement that allows Mos- cow to say its troops are not under NATO command. The 2;000 to 3,000 Russian troops would become partofanAmeri- can division, but This p unlike U.S. and other allied preserve forces, would not answer di- unity of c rectly to U.S. "Army Gen. Pu[ oe Ge o r g e Joulwan, the su- require u preme NATO ~uan commander in Europe. u NAB In stead, Joulwan's or- ders would be U.S. Deft transmitted through a Rus- sian general to his own troops, allowing Russia to avoid the appearance of tak- ing orders from NATO, its Cold War foe. The agreement - announced by 'Defense Secretary William Perry and Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev at NATO headquarters -calls for a Russian brigade to join a planned 60,000-memberNATO force that would implement any peace treaty worked out by Bosnia's warring factions in Day- tonrOhio. "What we agreed on today was a solution for the military control of a Russian brigade that will operate in an American division," Perry said yester- 'day. The unusual arrangement allows Russia to put its troops under "NATO -' ;orders but not on NATO letterhead," said a senior U.S. official, who briefed reporters at NATO headquarters on :condition of anonymity. Joulwan would be operating only as NATO commander, the official said, I although he said Russia likely would view him differently. The U.S. official said the United States and Russia still have "major dif- ferences" over political control of the Bosnia peacekeeping force, which is to be made up of both NATO and non- NATO countries. The United States wants political authority to rest with NATO's policy-making North Atlantic Council and not shared with any other organization, including the United Na- tions. Russia wants some non- Ian s the command, not to be -William Perry ense Secretary NATO organiza- tion to exercise political control. Perry said he hoped those dif- ferences could be worked out be- fore he and Grachev meet in Brussels again at the end of the month. Outlining the agreement at a joint news con- ference, Grachev Little voters turnoutA Troy Glickstern (center) and his brother, Wayne, practice aerobic voting at the 1st Ward polling site at Danbury High School in Danbury, Conn., on Tuesday while their mother Yvette casts her ballot in the municipal elections. Experts say higher death rate likely i etquk!nke al Two teens commit suicide i love pact MIAMI (AP) - Two eighth-grade sweethearts, forbidden by the girl's mother to see each other, apparently drowned themselves in a canal, leaving suicide notes that told of their undying love, their desperation and their hope of being together in another world. The bodies of Maryling Flores, 13, and Christian Davila, 14, were found Tues- day in the murky, weed-choked water- way just a few blocks from the school they attended. Neither could swim. "I can't go on living. I've lost Maryling," Christian said in a note his parents found Sunday. "I'm escaping from the realm of reality into the dark- ness of the unknown. Because reality is, I can't be with Maryling." Maryling left more than six suicide notes, police said. "You'll never be able to understand the love between me and Christian," she said in one addressed to "Mom and Dad." "You don't let me see him in this world, so we're going to another place. Please don't cry for me, this is what I want. I want to feel happy, because I'm going to a place where I can be with Christian." Maryling'smother had forbidden her on Saturday to see Christian anymore, in part because they were so young, police said. Maryling had told friends she might be pregnant, and her mother feared the same thing, but an autopsy showed otherwise. The two ran away from home early Sunday, said Officer Ramon Quintero, who knows both families. Maryling's parents called police later that morning after they realized the girl was missing and discovered her suicide notes. "It's a Romeo and Juliet story," Quintero said. Police wouldn't identify the parents, and the principal at the young lovers' school wouldn't talk to reporters. Police listed the drownings as a ho- micide-suicide, which is routine when investigators don't know exactly what happened. It's "a fair assumption" the two jumped 15 feet into the Tamiami Canal together, Quintero said. Their bodies were found a few hun- dred yards apart, but the canal has a swift current when the flood-control gates are open. said Joulwan, the NATO commander, "will have a Rus- sian deputy who will give orders to the Russian forces." He said the agree- ment meets "all the requests" of the Russian side, which included a de- mand that its forces not be under NATO command. The special arrangement an- nounced yesterday would not be applied to forces from seven other non-NATO countries planning to contribute troops, including former Warsaw Pact members, the U.S. official said. It also would allow the entire mis- sion to operate under a unified com- mand, with common rules of en- gagement and a single system of controlling troops in the air and on the ground, with no "dual key" re- quiring two chains of command, the official said. All sides had wanted Russian partici- pation, but Washington had insisted that forces operate under a unified NATO command. "Thisplan preserves theunity of com- mand, but does not require the Russians to be under NATO command," Perry said. Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - Researchers have increased their estimates of losses from a prospective magnitude 7.0 earth- quake on the Newport-Inglewood fault in Los Angeles and Orange counties, substantially raising both the predicted number of deaths and the damages from a preliminary version of their study released last year. Instead of the previously estimated 2,000 to 5,000 deaths, the researchers from Stanford University and the quake mitigation firm of Risk Management Solutions Inc., now see 3,000 to 8,000 fatalities. And instead of economic losses ranging from $125 to $145 billion, they now see the losses as ranging from $175 billion to $220 billion. The researchers now say injuries would range as high as 20,000, up from the 15,000 cited in the earlier version. The numbers were revised in the wake of last January's Kobe earthquake in Japan, as well as the 1994 Northridge earthquake and new estimates provided by the insurance industry of building inventories, said Haresh Shah, Stanford professor of structural engineering. The new uppermost damage figure is more than eight times that for the Northridge earthquake, which atmagnitude 6.7 was less than half as strong as a magnitude 7.0, and was centered under a less thickly populated area. Although the researchers said 82 percent of the economic loss would be in Los Angeles County, and only 15 percent in Orange County (plus 3 percent in other counties) Orange County losses alone could reach $33 billion, or about $6 billion more than Northridge. The Newport- Inglewood fault extends 33 miles from New- port Beach through North Long Beach to Culver City. Because it passes through such a heavily populated area, the researchers believe that a 7.0 earthquake there would be the most damaging conceivable quake that could occur in South- ern California. Quake probabilities assigned by earthquake scientists last year for the next 30 years are about six times greater in the San Bernardino area than along the Newport-Inglewood fault. But Shah said they designed their study to be a worst- case quake scenario, where the damage would be greatest. The researchers estimate recurrence interval for a magni- tude 7.0 earthquake on the fault at approximately 340 years. The last strong quake on the fault was the 1933 Long Beach temblor, seven times smaller at 6.3, which killed 120 persons and did several hundred million dollars in damage, according to current dollar values. The new damage figures point out why both the insurance industry and the U.S. government are increasingly fearful that a monumental disaster could stretch or even exhaust public and private resources. Since 1989, according to figures supplied by the Office of Management and Budget in the White House and the insurance industry, relief expenditures on the major ca- lamities of Hurricanes Hugo, Andrew and Iniki, the Loma Prieta and Northridge earthquakes and the Midwest floods have cost about $66 billion total. The breakdown is $33.7 billion for the federal government and $32.2 billion for the industry. Yet these figures would be dwarfed if the Newport- Inglewood quake foreseen in the new scenario were to occur. Student overdose in N.Y. stuns school NEW YORK (AP) - Jennifer Timbrook's smiling face was on the cover of her medical school's recruit- ment brochure. "Most schools use models," said Steve Villano, administrator ofthe state College of Medicine. "We used a true model student - her." That image collided Monday with a far different one: the dynamic, 32-year- old Timbrook dead in a hospital X-ray darkroom, apparently of a drug over- dose. Police found needle tracks on her arms and legs, indicating the "model .student" from the Midwest was no first- time user. The cause of death remained un- der investigation yesterday, but de- tectives believe the third-year medi- cal student, who worked part-time at gritty Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, was killed by a powerful tranquilizer. The drug apparently was fentanyl, which has a history of abuse within the medical community, said a police source who spoke on condition of anonymity. Three syringes - one used, two still full - were found underneath and around the body, the police source said. (kMl~x MICHIGAN MEN'S BASKETBALL VS. The Russian Select Team 9pm and Midnight on WOLV Channel 70 Police were investigating the possibil- ity that the drugs came from hospital supplies normally accessible only to doctors and nurses, not medical stu- dents. The revelation that Timbrook could have been an abuser stunned her family, colleagues and class- mates. They said that there was nothing unusual about her behavior and that they never suspected she had a drug problem. Dismay and disbelief shrouded the Brooklyn campus and hundreds of students and faculty members turned out for an impromptu memorial ser- vice. "We had no clue," her father, the Rev. Max Timbrook, said from Mitchell, Ind. "She wanted her mother and Ito go to Kenya with her" for a medical seminar, he said, recalling a recent phone con- versation with the youngest of his five children. The road for Timbrook began in rural Indiana, in a family "bent on Indiana University basketball and the Bible," she wrote on her medical school appli- cation. A juniorhigh school field trip to the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry sparked her interest in medi- cine. When Timbrook was 15, the family moved to Southern California. Her par- ents, tired of traffic and smog, retreated in 1985 to Mitchell, where her father became pastor ofthe Tulip Street Chris- tian Church. :"We Cut Hair Your Way' Dascola Barbers . ti r' ![ 6 Barbers--No Waiting * For Men and Women ' M-F 8:30-5:20 Sat Til 4:20 . 615 E.Liberty Off State *...UUUUUmanumuUUE s E F- I