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ional Aeronautics and Space Administration officials Wednesday called the discov ery Hubble 's `` most significant so far , '' and among NASA 's most important e ver . As big as 2 billion to 3 billion suns packed into a region as wide as our solar system , the huge black hole lurks at the core of the M87 galaxy , one of 1,000 galaxies clustered in the constellation Virgo . `` If it isn't a black hol e , then I don't know what it is , '' said Johns Hopkins University astronomer H olland Ford , a co-investigator on the project . Ford has pursued the discovery since 1979 . When conclusive data arrived May 5 at the Space Telescope Science I nstitute in Baltimore , he said , `` we were all walking about a foot off the gr ound. .. . It 's finally a lot of fun . '' First theorized 30 years ago , black holes are believed to form from the collapsed atomic rubble of stars , dust and gas . Since no light or other signals escapes from their gravitational grip , th ey disclose nothing directly of their nature . And until Hubble was repaired in December , no telescope has been able to see deep enough into any galaxy to disc lose what might lie near its core . The presence of the black hole in M87 was fi nally indicated by the speed of hot gas swirling in toward the galaxy 's center , accelerating like suds into a bathtub drain . Hubble 's instruments clocked th e gas 60 light years from the center at 1 million mph fast enough to cross the U nited States in seven seconds . ( A light year is the distance light travels in one year , or about 5.9 trillion miles . Sixty light years is about four times t he distance from the Earth to the nearest star , Alpha Centauri . ) ( Begin opti onal trim ) Nothing but the gravitational attraction of something at M87 's core with a mass of 2 billion to 3 billion suns could prevent matter at that speed f rom flying off in all directions . The only candidate within the confines of tod ay 's physics that meets that description , the scientists said , is a super-mas sive black hole . `` This is a tremendous breakthrough , '' said Dr. Daniel Weed man , NASA 's director of astrophysics . A longtime black hole skeptic , he is n ow a convert . `` I do believe there is a supermassive black hole at the center of ( M87 ) , '' he said . Weedman called the black hole discovery Hubble 's `` m ost significant so far , ( and ) very close to the top of ( NASA 's ) most signi ficant discoveries . '' Proof of the existence of black holes at the cores of ga laxies was one of the primary goals established for the Hubble telescope at its launch in April 1990 . But its mirror flaw delayed the observations until this y ear . ( End optional trim ) Last February , barely 30 days after the Hubble tele scope resumed gathering scientific data , it took its first picture of the core of M87 . To astronomers ' astonishment , it disclosed a surprisingly well-ordere d , spiraling `` pancake '' of hot gas just what they needed to measure its spee d . On May 5 , they got their first speed measurements from Hubble 's Faint Obje ct Spectrograph . Gas on one side of the spiral was rushing toward Earth at 1 mi llion mph ; gas on the other side was rushing away at the same speed . `` We nai led it . We knew we had it , '' said Richard J . Harms , the spectrograph 's pri ncipal investigator . Hubble scientists will now continue their pursuit . They w ill peer deeper into M87 for more data on the black hole there , and into other galaxies to see whether they , too , have black holes at their centers . ( Begin optional trim ) Astrophysicists don't know how super-massive black holes are cr eated , or whether they are a cause or effect of giant galaxies like M87 . They may form from the merger of smaller black holes . Although the oldest stars in M 87 are nearly as old as the universe itself 12 to 15 billion years Harms said th e age of M87 's black hole is unknown . Its internal structure , if it has any , can never be known because no light or anything else can ever emerge to reveal it . One structure they can see is a giant , braided jet of hot gas that is spew ing from near the center of M87 at right angles to the spiral of infalling gas . The fast-moving jet is believed to be debris from the destruction of stars ente ring the black hole . ( End optional trim ) The black hole 's ultimate fate is u nknown . It could eventually consume the entire M87 galaxy , and even other gala xies that blunder within range . `` Earth is in no immediate danger , '' quipped University of Washington astronomer Bruce Margon , who helped designed the Fain t Object Spectrograph . While M87 's black hole `` has an infinite appetite , '' said Harms , `` it can't hunt . '' UNITED NATIONS U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali Wednesday called th e international response to Rwanda 's ethnic bloodletting a `` failure '' and a `` scandal '' for which the United Nations and leading countries in the West and Africa share responsibility . `` It is genocide which has been committed . More than 200,000 people have been killed , and the world is still discussing what o ught to be done , '' Boutros-Ghali said . `` It is a scandal . I am the first on e to say it , and I am ready to repeat it . '' Boutros-Ghali vented his frustrat ion at a news conference after pleading for weeks to Western and African governm ents for soldiers and equipment to provide a 5,500-troop peacekeeping force for the central African nation that since April 6 has been reduced to bloody chaos b y a civil war and by tribal conflict . The Rwandan crisis , and the unwillingnes s in world capitals to dispatch troops to help resolve it , have highlighted a b road retreat from activism through the United Nations extending well beyond the United States after ambitious , costly and criticized U.N. operations in Somalia and Bosnia . In that vein , Boutros-Ghali 's comments illustrated the differenc e between his view of the United Nations as a political first-aid agency that mu st rush to help ailing nations , and the Clinton administration 's new concept t hat a long list of safety conditions must be in place before the United Nations should intervene . The United Nations has received commitments from just three c ountries Ghana , Ethiopia and Senegal for a total of 2,100 troops for a Rwanda p eacekeeping force . The Security Council voted May 16 to set up the force , but the United States cast some doubt on the mission by insisting that the council r eview the decision before the bulk of the troops are deployed . Boutros-Ghali at tributed the lax response to `` fatigue '' among U.N. member states , which are already supporting 17 peacekeeping operations . Many major donor countries are f acing economic difficulties , he said , and `` public opinion is not helping the different governments . '' The U.N. secretary general turned to the Organizatio n of African Unity for help , but the regional bloc was unable to mobilize a col lective response . Many African governments are plagued by economic hardships an d political strife . Boutros-Ghali said he also hopes to receive troop commitmen ts from Egypt , Zimbabwe and Nigeria . But U.N. officials said these troops do n ot have the minimum weapons and equipment they need , and it remains unclear how they will travel to and within Rwanda . Boutros-Ghali said he met in South Afri ca earlier this month with six heads of state attending President Nelson Mandela 's inauguration . `` I begged them to send troops. . . . Unfortunately-let me s ay with great humility-I failed , '' he said . After talks in South Africa with Vice President Gore , Boutros-Ghali reached a compromise with the United States over the peacekeepers ' purpose . They will be deployed in Kigali , the Rwandan capital , as Boutros-Ghali had insisted , and in border areas outside Rwanda to protect and feed refugees , as the United States proposed . `` The mandate is li mited , '' Boutros-Ghali said , adding that the peacekeepers , when they get to Rwanda , will try to `` contain the deterioration '' and serve and reinforce the position of U.N. negotiators trying to secure a cease-fire . The secretary gene ral pleaded for the world not to be put off by the lack of success in some U.N. missions . The United Nations , he said , `` is like going to the hospital . You can't say , I don't want to take this case . There is a moral responsibility . '' The Clinton administration , in policy guidelines published early this month , insisted that a cease-fire must be in place and that troops and resources must already have been pledged for a peacekeeping mission before the United States w ould support it . At a special session in Geneva Wednesday , the U.N. Commission on Human Rights appointed a law professor from Ivory Coast , Rene Degni Segui , to investigate the `` root causes and responsibilities for the atrocities '' in Rwanda and ordered him to report his findings to Boutros-Ghali within a month . ANNAPOLIS , Md. . As both hands gripped his gleaming U.S. . Naval Academy diplo ma Wednesday , Christopher Paul Slattery leaped off the stadium stage with a yel p of glee and high-fives for fellow graduates . For Slattery and 867 other acade my graduates at the U.S. Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium , it was a day of bo th joy and relief joy at surviving the school 's brutal academic and physical re gimen and relief at the prospect of putting behind them 17 months of scandal and tragedy . `` This is what we 've all looked forward to for about 1,200 days , ' ' said Slattery , a computer science major from Essex Junction , Vt. . `` As a c lass , we 've put it behind us . It 's been dealt with thoroughly , and the thin k the whole school learned a lot from it . '' Since the middle of their junior y ear , Slattery and his classmates have felt the glare of international media att ention in the wake of the worst cheating scandal in the school 's 149-year histo ry . When it ended , 88 classmates had been found guilty of participating in the theft , distribution and sale of an electrical engineering exam in December 199 2 . Twenty-four midshipmen were expelled , and 64 received lesser punishments-in cluding late graduation . Little mention was made of the Class of 1994 's tribul ations at the commencement , held on a sticky-hot day that forced many of the 23 ,500 people in the stadium to use programs and paper hats to shield themselves f rom the sun . At the beginning of his speech , President Clinton forgave graduat es who had broken academy rules , but he stressed that his forgiveness encompass ed only minor offenses and did not include cheating . Later , he briefly mention ed the cheating incident and urged graduates to move beyond it . `` You have my confidence , '' he said . `` You have America 's confidence . '' A smiling Clint on later shook the hand of every graduate as the men and women filed onto the st age for nearly an hour to receive their diplomas . Beyond the cheating scandal , this graduating class has been rocked by tragedy . Last December , an academy g raduate fatally shot his former fiancee and her boyfriend who both also attended the academy before killing himself at the U.S. . Naval Amphibious Base in Coron ado , Calif. . Less than a week later , three midshipmen died when a car in whic h they were passengers slammed into a fallen tree near Annapolis . The weight of those six deaths and the spectre of the scandal couldn't be fully shaken by gra duates , many of whom had friends who were either expelled or faced late graduat ions and other punishments for their roles in the incident . Slattery said he wa s a friend of Max Lane , a football player who was expelled for his part in the scandal . Lane , an offensive lineman , was selected in the National Football Le ague draft last April . `` As much as it hurts not to have some friends here , t he honor code is really important to what this academy is all about , '' Slatter y said . Karen Heine , of Crofton , Md. , said she has gotten used to frequent q uestions from friends and acquaintances about the scandal . Yet Heine , who has dreamed since childhood of graduating from the academy , said the cloud over her class would not taint her memories . Heine , a systems engineering major who is the highest ranking woman in her class , said she too knows people who were inv olved in the incident , but feels `` detached . I don't feel angry at them . Eve ryone makes mistakes , and people pay the consequences of their mistakes . '' WASHINGTON Despite prior claims by Pentagon officials that there were no Iraqi chemical weapons near the Persian Gulf war battlefields , a senior U.S. military -intelligence official testified before Congress Wednesday that U.S. troops cond ucted operations near an Iraqi chemical-weapons storage site . During a Senate B anking Committee hearing on the causes of health problems suffered by veterans o f the war , Undersecretary of Defense Edwin Dorn echoed past statements by other senior Pentagon officials , including Deputy Defense Secretary John Deutch , an d said that `` no chemical or biological weapons were found in the Kuwait theate r of operations .. . among the tons of live and spent munitions recovered follow ing the war . '' But in subsequent testimony Wednesday , Dr. John Kriese , chief officer for ground forces at the Defense Intelligence Agency , said Dorn 's sta tement should have been removed from his prepared statement because a stockpile of Iraqi chemical weapons was indeed discovered near an area where U.S. troops w ere located . Specifically , Kriese said the Iraqi chemical-weapons depot was ne ar the Kuwaiti border , across a desert river , within 17 miles of U.S. position s . The revelation came as the committee 's chairman , Sen. Donald Riegle Jr. , D-Mich. , released a 160-page report concluding that compelling anecdotal eviden ce exists showing that U.S. and allied troops were exposed to harmful levels of chemical and possibly biological contaminants during the Persian Gulf war . The report also said that several years before the war , the U.S. government shipped materials to Iraq that its leader , Saddam Hussein , used to develop chemical w eapons . Chemical weapons appear to have been used on allied troops , many of wh om subsequently developed multiple health problems collectively known as Persian Gulf War syndrome , Riegle said . Riegle Wednesday called for the Pentagon to f ully disclose all it knows about the use of chemical and biological weapons duri ng the war . He estimated that `` tens of thousands '' of the nearly 700,000 gul f war vets are suffering symptoms of the syndrome , including thousands of perso nnel still on active duty . What 's more , there 's a `` strong possibility '' t hat the syndrome has been transferred by the vets to their spouses and children , Riegle said , adding that some of the veterans appear to be sick because of th e aftereffects of nerve-gas vaccines administered by the military . ( Begin opti onal trim ) People who say they are afflicted with the syndrome have experienced a variety of ills including muscle spasms , joint pain , gastrointenstinal prob lems , chronic flu-like symptoms , respiratory difficulties , gynecological infe ctions , bleeding gums , rashes and vomiting . Dorn , Kriese and Dr. Theodore Pr ociv , assistant secretary of defense for chemical/biological matters , testifie d that they have not ruled out the possibility that U.S. troops were harmed by c hemical or biological weapons in Iraq . Dorn also released a joint letter signed by Secretary of Defense William Perry and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman John S halikashvili and dated Wednesday promising that all those affected would receive medical treatment . ( End optional trim ) Still , the officials said they have found no concrete evidence suporting Riegle 's contention that the Iraqis probab ly used chemical or biological weapons in the war or that plumes of contaminated smoke and fallout from chemical production facilities bombed by the allies waft ed over U.S. positions , poisoning U.S. troops . Dorn also said the Pentagon kno ws of only about 2,000 people `` for whom a clear diagnosis continues to elude p hysicians . '' Final count on the fall schedule changes 22 hours of new programs , including l 5 dramas , 13 situation comedies and one newsmagazine . NBC is replacing seven h ours , Fox six , CBS five and ABC four . All but Fox , which airs just 15 hours a week , carry 22 hours of primetime a week . -0- Angela Lansbury is recuperatin g at home after undergoing hip replacement surgery at Century City Hospital last week , just a couple of days after she completed taping of `` Murder , She Wrot e '' for the season . Network spokesman Dennis Brown said the 68-year-old series star `` has had some problem with ( the hip ) but not to the extent that it imp inged on her work . She knew that if she was going to deal with it this was the time to do it , the minute she went on hiatus '' . . . The actress will convales ce at her Los Angeles home for a few weeks before traveling to her summer home i n Ireland . A network spokeswoman said Wednesday she 's `` doing fine '' and is expected back on the set when production on the series resumes in August . . -0- Jay Leno told the NBC affiliate meeting in Los Angeles earlier this week that h e 's getting a new set out in Burbank . He said the `` Tonight Show 's '' recent trip to New York opened his eyes . `` For the last two years , I 've been doing another show . I 've been doing Johnny 's ( Carson 's ) show . There was someth ing missing from the show , but I never knew what it was '' . In New York , he u sed a temporary set built in the `` Saturday Night Live '' studio that packed a smaller audience into a tighter space . `` The audience was half the size , but there was more energy , '' he told the executives . -0- Julie Moran , the host o f ABC 's `` Wide World of Sports , '' has picked up a day job , signing with `` Entertainment Tonight '' as a New York-based correspondent and substitute anchor for Mary Hart , John Tesh , Leeza Gibbons and Bob Goen . She makes her ET hosti ng debut Thursday night as she sits in for Mary for the next three weeknight bro adcasts , concluding Monday night . With the North American Free Trade Agreement now in effect , the annual meeting of U.S. and Mexican border state governors will begin in Phoenix Thursday with a strong undercurrent of competition , unlike the neighborly atmosphere of past gatherings . The Border Governor 's Conference begins as member states on both s ides of the Rio Grande River are competing for billions of dollars in funds to f inance a host of proposed NAFTA-related transportation and environmental project s . Those projects to be funded by the U.S. government and the World Bank transl ate into jobs and economic benefits that politicians everywhere lust after . Alt hough the governors of California , Arizona , New Mexico and Texas and their six Mexican counterparts are accentuating their fraternity , their staff members ad mit the leaders intend to size up the competition for projects that range from a sewage treatment plant in San Diego , telecommunications links in Nogales , Ari z. , and interstate highway funds in Laredo , Texas . `` The battle will be who gets the money and who has the best proposals , '' said Rudy Fernandez , directo r of California-Mexico affairs in the state 's Trade and Commerce Agency . Calif ornia may already have a competitive disadvantage , at least in generating coope ration from Mexican governors . That 's because Gov. Pete Wilson 's use of illeg al immigration as a political issue has offended many Mexicans as well as Mexica n-Americans , observers said . Wilson is scheduled to attend the conference . To fully maximize NAFTA-related business , the states have to build the infrastruc ture roads , bridges , sewers , environmental controls , border checkpoints and communications links to make themselves attractive to business . A big chunk of the federal aid targeted by the states was created by NAFTA itself . To get the trade bill past environmental interests in Congress , the U.S and Mexican govern ments agreed to fund billions of dollars in environmental projects funneled thro ugh a new North American Development Bank , or NADBank , headquartered in San An tonio . Making the decisions on which environmental projects to fund will be the new Border Environmental Cooperation Commission based in El Paso , Texas , also created by a side deal to NAFTA , which will be responsible for evaluating and prioritizing environmental project proposals . ( Optional add end ) Although Tex as got most of the NAFTA bureaucracy and some jobs when it snared the headquarte rs offices of NADBank , BECC and three other NAFTA-related agencies , the projec t dollars are still very much up for grabs . On the Mexican side of the `` front era , '' the six border states are positioning themselves for the competition fo r up to $ 5 billion in loans that the World Bank will make available for border infrastructure and environmental projects over the next several years , Among th e major NAFTA-related projects under discussion in Mexico is a new deep water po rt in Guaymas , located in the Mexican state of Sonora about 250 miles south of the Arizona border city of Nogales . Because the port would stimulate its border traffic , Arizona officials strongly support the project and are cooperating wi th Mexican officials in its planning . WASHINGTON President Clinton made the rounds of Capitol Hill Wednesday to promo te his health care agenda , offering a spoonful of conciliatory honey to Republi can senators whose support he hopes to win , and following it with a dash of com bative vinegar to stiffen the resolve of Democratic House members . Clinton , ac companied by a phalanx of top administration officials , held the series of clos ed meetings as a sendoff for Congress as it prepares to adjourn for its Memorial Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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