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r guerrilla fighters . But he charged that the retaliatory rocket attacks went b eyond the cease-fire understandings . LOS ANGELES Children who eat more than 12 hot dogs per month have nine times th e normal risk of developing childhood leukemia , a University of Southern Califo rnia epidemiologist reports in a cancer research journal . Two other reports in the same issue of Cancer Causes and Control also suggest that children born to m others who eat at least one hot dog per week during pregnancy have double the no rmal risk of developing brain tumors , as do children whose fathers ate hot dogs before conception . The findings , which already are generating a great deal of controversy and concern , could help explain why the incidence of childhood leu kemia and brain tumors has been increasing over the last two decades , say the r esearchers , led by USC epidemiologist John Peters . The scientists caution , ho wever , that the studies are preliminary and based on relatively small numbers o f cases a total of 621 cancer victims in the three studies and an equal number o f controls . They also note that the statistical association is not necessarily a cause/effect relationship . Critics , as well as the researchers themselves , point out that such studies are difficult to conduct and interpret because peopl e have a hard time recalling what they have eaten in the past . Nonetheless , th e scientists argue that the results are significant and the issue deserves much more intensive scrutiny . In response to the findings , researchers at The Unive rsity of Minnesota have already modified their National Cancer Institute-sponsor ed study on childhood leukemia to explore the possible connection to hot dogs . The researchers suggest that the trigger for the cancers might be the use of nit rites to preserve processed meats such as hot dogs . Nitrites are converted in t he body to highly carcinogenic nitrosamines . Still , none of the investigators argues that people should stop eating hot dogs based on the findings . Because o f the low incidence of these childhood tumors , `` This is not a hazard at the l evel of tobacco smoke or high-fat diets , '' said epidemiologist David Savitz of the University of North Carolina , author of one of the studies on pregnant wom en . `` The rational response would be a small modification of your consumption . '' `` It 's an intriguing idea because hot dogs certainly contain chemicals th at one might wonder about , '' said Dr. Clark Heath , vice president for medical research of the American Cancer Society . `` I don't think they prove the case , '' he said , but the results are feasible because animal studies have establis hed that nitrites cause cancer . `` Obviously , it is an idea that will need to be explored further . '' Researchers from the hot dog and cured meat industries were not available for comment Thursday . A spokeswoman for the National Cancer Institute also could not provide anyone familiar with the findings . ( Optional add end ) Other researchers scoffed at the findings as an example of the `` carc inogen of the week '' syndrome . `` The problem is that there are an enormous nu mber of variables in a study like this , '' said nutrition expert Michael Pariza of the University of Wisconsin . `` You don't know whether they were undernouri shed , for example , or if they had adequate exercise. .. . It would be extremel y premature to draw any conclusion from this type of study . '' Other researcher s also attacked the studies because they were published in a journal that is not peer-reviewed , meaning that experts did not have a chance to critique the resu lts before they appeared in print . Leukemia and brain tumors have been a concer n to pediatric oncologists because they have been increasing more than twice as fast as childhood cancer overall . In the 17 years such data has been collected , Heath said , cancer among children up to ages 14 has increased by an average o f 0.8 percent per year , while acute lymphoblastic leukemia has increased by 1.7 percent per year a 27.4 percent total over that period . Brain tumors have incr eased by 1.8 percent per year over the same period , a 32.8 percent total . The cause of these increases has been a mystery . Even so , the cancers are still co nsidered very rare . Acute lymphoblastic leukemia , for instance , strikes only about three in every 10,000 children , so even a nine-fold increase still amount s to a relatively small risk . WASHINGTON The Clinton administration declared Thursday it would seek U.N. econ omic sanctions against North Korea after the world 's nuclear watchdog agency co ncluded that the Communist regime had blocked efforts to learn the scope of its nuclear weapons program . The U.S. step elevated the long-simmering Korean crisi s to a new level of tension . North Korea has already declared that it would con sider any imposition of sanctions an act of war . The north-south border , manne d by tens of thousands of American troops , has long been on hair-trigger milita ry alert . President Clinton was forced to act to make good on his administratio n 's previous threats . For days , U.S. officials have been saying if North Kore a made it impossible for inspectors to probe the history of its nuclear program , the United States would seek sanctions through the U.N. . Security Council . T hursday , the International Atomic Energy Agency concluded North Korea had done just that . In a statement issued from its headquarters in Vienna , Austria , th e agency said North Korea 's rapid discharge of fuel from its reactor `` has now made it impossible to select fuel rods for later measurements , which would sho w whether there has been any diversion of fuel from the reactor in the past year s . '' State Department spokesman Mike McCurry , traveling with Clinton in Rome , said the United States would ask the Security Council to impose economic sanct ions . A U.S. official predicted Thursday night it would be `` some days '' befo re a sanctions resolution emerges from the Security Council . The prospect is un certain in any case . China , which has veto power , still opposes confronting N orth Korea with sanctions now . Its position remains unchanged despite Clinton ' s decision last week to renew its most-favored-nation trading status . Russia , another Security Council member with veto power , proposed Thursday an internati onal conference on North Korea instead of moving quickly to impose sanctions . C linton said North Korea had only itself to blame if sanctions are imposed . `` T hey have triggered this , not the United States or anyone else , '' he said . U. S. officials plan to meet in Washington Friday with their closest Asian allies , Japan and North Korea . An informal Security Council meeting is set for Friday afternoon , when IAEA Director General Hans Blix is expected to brief its member s . Administration officials have said in the past that sanctions , if agreed on , would be imposed gradually and would not begin with a full-scale blockade . ( Optional add end ) The crisis focuses solely on North Korea 's nuclear-weapons development in the late 1980s . The IAEA wanted to examine selected fuel rods be ing extracted from North Korea 's so-called experimental reactor . By examining these rods , they could ascertain whether the regime had diverted nuclear fuel a fter the reactor had been shut down once before in 1989 . There is no evidence t hat North Korea is trying to add to its nuclear stockpile . In fact , U.N. inspe ctors have told the IAEA that the spent fuel from the reactor is being placed in cooling ponds , where it can be monitored to make sure any diversion doesn't oc cur . U.S. intelligence analysts have long believed that North Korea diverted en ough fuel when the reactor was last shut down to make one or more nuclear bombs . What is now at issue is the ability of world nuclear inspectors to determine w hat weaponry North Korea possesses . This has broad implications for their being able to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons around the globe . The danger , v oiced in the past by Japan and South Korea , is that sanctions would further iso late North Korea and prompt it to sever all contact with international inspector s . This , in turn , would make it impossible for inspectors to monitor what Nor th Korea does with the spent fuel now being discharged from its reactor , once t he fuel cools and could be reprocessed into weapons-grade fuel . In an effort to give corporate sponsors a little more bang for their public bro adcasting bucks , the Public Broadcasting Service is considering proposals to in crease the time allotted in programs for acknowledging underwriters . Current ru les allow only 30 seconds for underwriter credits at the end of a broadcast , wi th a maximum of 15 seconds to a single underwriter which often results in some u nderwriters being undercredited , as it were . One proposal would allow as many 15-second credits as necessary for sponsors who contribute 20 percent or more to the funding of a broadcast . Corporate spokesmen , now banned , may also be con sidered and even ads the underwriters use on commercial TV , if appropriate . Va rious task forces are considering the proposals , but no firm decisions are expe cted until the fall planning meeting , according to Jon Abbott , senior vice pre sident , development and corporate relations at PBS . `` We have a large project underway to look at all the ideas to shore up funding from corporations and fou ndations , '' he said . At a time when corporate funding continues to shrink , A bbott said , too many potential contributors `` find it cumbersome to work with public TV and we have to make it easier for them to be recognized for their fund ing '' . There willn't be a massive relaxation of rules , however , he said . `` Our noncommercial environment and our relationship with our viewers is of param ount importance . '' Still , in the past , significant funders have been allocat ed as little as four seconds in a broadcast . As PBS began a weekend meeting in Orlando , Fla. , Abbott said stations would also be urged to carry major program s at the same time the failure to do so has been a long-standing problem through out the system as another means of giving major contributors the fullest exposur e and maximum promotion time for their efforts on behalf of public television . K mart , the nation 's second-largest discount chain , hasn't been having a goo d time of it lately . Its stock has been sinking and it has posted big losses . Friday , at its annual meeting , management will see just how irritated sharehol ders are . The company is trying to get shareholder approval for a series of com plicated stock issues . But big K mart stockholders have mounted a campaign to d efeat the measure . Moreover , they want to unseat the five company directors wh o are up for re-election . `` Basically we 're concerned that the plan doesn't a ddress the key issues , which are what to do with the core retailing business , '' said Luther Jones , manager of corporate affairs for the Florida State Board of Administration , which manages the state 's $ 37 billion pension fund and own s 3.9 million shares of K mart . His organization is one of seven investors that have publicly announced their opposition . The proposed stock offerings , which would pay a dividend based on the earnings of K mart 's four specialty lines , would allow K mart to raise some much needed cash . But some investors say what the company should really be doing is finding ways to bolster sales at its flags hip discount stores , which have been losing sales to other big discount retaile rs like Wal-Mart . The investor opposition hardly comes out of nowhere . The com pany 's stock , now at about 15 , is down roughly 40 percent in the past six mon ths , and after three years of flat earnings , the company posted a loss of near ly $ 1 billion for the year ended Jan. 31 . Announcement of the offering in Apri l was just the last straw , investors said . `` We don't have to indict manageme nt . The stock is doing that , '' said James Severance , portfolio manager of th e State of Wisconsin Investment Board , which is leading the campaign and owns 3 million K mart shares . The dissidents don't think they have a good chance of w inning . Still , Severance said he hopes the opposition will send a message to m anagement that it needs to rethink its strategy . K mart , based in Troy , Mich. , said it believes it is doing the right thing . It also said it is not neglect ing its K mart stores . ROME On a day of Roman glories that took him from the Sistine Chapel to the Pia zza del Campidoglio , President Clinton Thursday found himself in an irreconcila ble clash with Pope John Paul II over their opposing views on abortion and contr aception . In a private 40-minute meeting , the pontiff pressed his objections t o a draft U.N. document on population control due to be adopted in September . H e noted `` his concern that the world community in general , and the United Stat es in particular , not be insensitive to the value of life , '' Clinton said . B ut the president , acknowledging their `` genuine disagreements '' on abortion , also emphasized their `` common commitment '' to strong families and emerging d emocracies . The first full day of Clinton 's European tour was full of diplomat ic minefields , from the Vatican session to a meeting with the new Italian prime minister , Silvio Berlusconi , whose governing coalition includes neo-fascists . At a news conference , Clinton dismissed concerns about the coalition , saying he would `` judge all people and parties by what they do when they 're in power . '' Still , the official meeting at the prime minister 's office in the Palazz o Chigi offered an odd counterpoint on a trip scheduled to commemorate the 50th anniversary of a war against European fascism in Germany and Italy . Berlusconi is the first prime minister since the war to govern Italy with the support of fa scist leader Benito Mussolini 's political heirs . In Thursday 's emotional high point , Clinton stood at sunset outside the Palazzo Senatorio , or city hall , and delivered an address to `` the citizens of Rome '' that recalled the liberat ion of the city a half-century ago from Germans who occupied it after Italy surr endered in World War II . `` I have come to Europe to recall its cruelest war , and to help secure its lasting peace , '' he said as thousands of people jammed the plaza , many waving small American and Italian flags . `` This week , as the sons and daughters of democracy , we must resolve never to forget such hallowed words as Anzio , Nettuno , Salerno , Normandy . '' Friday morning , Clinton is to fly over Anzio , scene of an Allied landing that became one of the most contr oversial of the Italian campaign , and visit the nearby U.S. cemetery at Nettuno , where 7,862 Americans who died in the fighting were laid to rest . In the day s that follow , the president will make similar appearances at a U.S. cemetery i n Cambridge , England , for those lost in the air campaign against Nazi Germany , and at the U.S. cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach , scene of the bloodiest batt le of the D-Day landing . After his private session with the pope , Clinton trie d to emphasize issues on which they agreed , but the Vatican focused on the core of their differences over abortion underscoring a new strain in relations . Cli nton has reversed anti-abortion policies of his two Republican predecessors . Al though Clinton told reporters they had made `` some progress '' on finding commo n ground , Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro said their differences could be nar rowed only if the president moved toward the pope 's opposition to abortion . `` The Holy Father made an appeal to the responsibility of a great nation such as America , whose origin and historical development has always promoted ethical va lues that are basic to every culture , '' the Vatican said in a communique issue d after the meeting . The communique cited `` grave ethical problems '' with som e population-control measures to be discussed at a U.N. conference in Cairo , Eg ypt , this fall . The conference is expected to endorse expanded contraception a nd abortion rights for Third World women . ( Optional add end ) The pope looked frail at the meeting , his first major public appearance since breaking his hip and then undergoing surgery this spring . After seeing the pontiff , Clinton and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton moved to a reception room to meet with North American seminarians who are studying in Rome . Ray Flynn , the former Boston ma yor who is now the U.S. ambassador to the Vatican , introduced Clinton to the ga thered priests , nuns and others . `` I make this promise to you : Every single one of them are Democrats , '' Flynn told Clinton . That elicited hissing and la ughter from the audience and a comment from Clinton that Flynn would need to go to confession . WASHINGTON Former House Ways and Means Committee chairman Dan Rostenkowski , D- Ill. , parted company with his third criminal defense team Thursday , issuing a terse written statement saying he and Robert S. Bennett `` mutually decided to g o our separate ways . '' `` I soon will retain new counsel and will present a vi gorous defense to the charges recently brought against me , '' Rostenkowski said . Rostenkowski was indicted Tuesday on 17 felony counts , including misappropri ating more than $ 500,000 , tampering with a witness and using taxpayers ' money to enrich himself , his friends and his family . Relations between Bennett and Rostenkowski had become increasingly strained after Rostenkowski rejected a plea bargain with U.S. . Attorney Eric H . Holder Jr. that would have required him t o go to jail . Rostenkowski has maintained that he is innocent of all charges . He balked at a deal in which he would have had to plead guilty to a felony count of concealing material facts in relation to `` ghost employees . '' The propose d deal also would have required him to spend six months in jail and repay the go vernment $ 150,000 . That total included the $ 82,000 that Rostenkowski had alre ady repaid and repossession of vehicles . Some of Rostenkowski 's friends and co lleagues privately questioned the legal wisdom of the talks , which they felt cr eated a media frenzy and left the impression that the lawmaker was guilty of som ething . In addition , Rostenkowski became disenchanted when Bennett agreed to r epresent President Clinton on sexual harassment allegations , sources said . He was concerned that Bennett would not have time to devote sufficient attention to his case , they said . Bennett , meanwhile , became increasingly frustrated abo ut his growing lack of control in the case and at the influence of Rostenkowski 's aides and friends , sources said . Bennett 's departure , prompting Rostenkow ski 's search for his fourth set of attorneys , should not hinder his chance of a successful defense , some observers said , noting that the case can be attacke d on several fronts . `` This is a winnable case because each separate scenario ( in the indictment ) is weak , '' said Nancy Luque , who represents Rostenkowsk i 's campaign committee and his Chicago office manager . `` I 'm always suspicio us of kitchen-sink indictments where the prosecutors throw everything on the wal l and hope some of it will stick , '' said Ronald S. Liebman , a former federal prosecutor . `` Often it 's a hodgepodge of weak allegations. . . . ' ' Henry As bill , a Washington defense lawyer , added that the government 's case appears a `` mile wide and an inch deep . '' Many of the allegations involving the ghost employees are `` so ancient '' that they will be open to attack by the defense , and if pressed at trial , could make it appear prosecutors unfairly `` piled on '' charges , said lawyer Alan Strasser , a former federal prosecutor . The indi ctment charges that the lawmaker misappropriated $ 500,000 in government funds t o pay them . The use of old conduct makes it look `` like the government was una ble to prove sufficiently telling charges about the immediate past , so they rel ied on the distant past to shore up charges that otherwise would be weak , '' St rasser said . According to the indictment , Rostenkowski , beginning in 1971 , d irected the House Finance Office to place 14 ghost employees on the payroll . So me mowed lawns for the congressman , picked up his laundry or took pictures at h is daughters ' weddings , the grand jury charged . But the alleged conduct of ei ght of the 14 ghost employees inolving the payment of nearly $ 235,000 did not o ccur within the five-year statute of limitations on most federal crimes , lawyer s said . Instead , it appears the prosecutors `` have lumped together unrelated conduct in order to allege a 23-year scheme to defraud under the mail fraud stat ute , '' said Luque . `` It is doubtful whether it will survive . '' In addition , some attorneys questioned whether the case should have resulted in a federal indictment at all . Instead , they argued , it was , perhaps , an internal matte r for the House to resolve . `` Prosecutors are trying to make a federal case ab out deficiencies in House of Representatives housekeeping matters , '' Asbill sa id . Defense attorney John Dowd agreed , noting that the Constitution provides f or Congress `` to discipline its own members . '' `` You could have a serious se paration of powers issue , '' he said . A critical prosecution witness , former House postmaster Robert V. Rota , who made contradictory statements at different points in the investigation and pleaded guilty to embezzlement charges , may al so be easily attacked , several lawyers said . Rota may be seen by jurors as som Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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