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, is broke . The PLO 's best hope for financial relief is rich donor countries a nd they have moved slowly , and cautiously , to translate promises into hard cas h . The Palestinian police force , for example , has received less than half of the promised donations of equipment from the West and will be forced to borrow I sraeli communications equipment just so officers can talk to each other in the f ield . France promised to provide a $ 2 million system the most urgent of the po lice force 's unmet requirements but has only just begun the weeks-long selectio n and purchasing process . At the same time , about 13,000 public employees resp onsible for tax collection , licensing , education , health services and more in Gaza and Jericho aren't sure their next paycheck at the end of June will be cov ered . Palestinian hospitals , to be cut off from Israeli subsidies Wednesday , have no way to pay for patients ' food and for expensive referrals to Israeli in stitutions . Moreover , of the $ 1.2 billion pledged by donor countries for emer gency reconstruction of the infrastructure in Gaza and Jericho , only about $ 60 million has been received by the World Bank , which is trustee for the donation s . `` Thank God we had the vacation ( for a Muslim feast ) and people were cele brating , '' said Riad Khouderi , president of Gaza 's al-Azhar University . `` But after that , what if people are still stepping over garbage in the streets a nd the schools remain in such poor condition ? Even to get rid of all aspects of the occupation to get rid of fences , iron bars and road blocks it takes money , people , and trucks that we don't have . '' According to Western diplomats and PLO officials present at meetings of the donor countries , the urgency of the c ash crisis is well understood . But the bureaucratic machinery in various nation s that should translate those good intentions into money in the bank has proved cumbersome . One problem is that most of the money already promised to the Pales tinians is earmarked for specific reconstruction projects in Gaza and Jericho . An additional $ 14 million has been pledged to help the Palestinian police pay o perating costs , but little of it has actually reached the hands of self-rule of ficials . The United States , for example , promised $ 5 million for the police more than two weeks ago . The money has not yet been delivered . Nor has the $ 5 .7 million promised in April by the European Union . The first six months ' esti mated budget for the police , including salaries and fuel costs , is $ 40 millio n . ( Begin optional trim ) One possible mechanism for alleviating the crisis an d bypassing the legal constraints on donors is just now being worked out . Diplo mats involved in the process said donor countries may be asked to give money to the private Johan Jurgen Holst Fund , set up in memory of the late Norwegian for eign minister who brought the PLO and Israel together for peace talks . It has f ewer restrictions than other World Bank funds , and donors could specify that mo ney contributed to it be used for operating costs in Gaza and Jericho . Still , it could be weeks before the details are worked out . A crucial senior-level mee ting of representatives of the donor countries has been rescheduled several time s since the Israel-to-PLO hand-over in Gaza and Jericho . The tentative date is now sometime around June 9 , according to one diplomat , who said earlier meetin gs were canceled because of the `` technical '' problems of getting the right pe ople together at the right time . ( End optional trim ) Another problem has been continuing friction between the World Bank and the PLO over jurisdiction , plan ning responsibilities and ultimate control over how the donors ' money will be s pent . The World Bank has insisted on strict accounting procedures , on tying mo ney to specific projects and on distancing PLO chairman Yasser Arafat from the l evers of control . `` Donors don't feel comfortable with Arafat , and now he 's in a mess , '' said Salah Abdel Shafi , a leading Gaza economist . `` Authority has been transferred to the PLO by Israel , but the donors remain very conservat ive . '' Complicating matters further , the PLO is only now finalizing appointme nts to the 25-member Palestinian Authority that will govern Gaza and Jericho . P olitical infighting among Palestinians continues to prevent the naming of city c ouncils in the Gaza Strip and Jericho . Without the authority and without munici pal councils , there is no one to solicit bids and sign contracts for redevelopm ent projects . That means there is no one to receive donations if anyone cares t o help subsidize the day-to-day costs of self-rule other than Arafat himself , a situation that in itself could further delay donations . BUDAPEST , Hungary Three slightly sheepish officials of the Hungarian Socialist Party the former Communists sat sipping coffee and discussing the strange turn of events here : their restoration to power by the voters in the midst of a nati onal drive to create a free-enterprise economy . `` It 's a great problem , '' G yula Horvath , a self-employed handyman , said of Sunday 's election . `` Worker s are not members of the party any longer. . . . It seems it is the task of the Socialist Party that we have to create capitalists now . '' Josef Kalapacs , the party 's local campaign chief , is a good example of the curious role reversal in which the party finds itself caught . Formerly a skilled worker at the state- owned Csepel steel plant here , Kalapacs is now a shareholder in a struggling pi pe-making enterprise spun off from the now defunct steel mill . `` We have reach ed the stage where people are forced to become entrepreneurs , '' he said . The third party official , Tamas Huszar , is also a former Csepel employee and anoth er new entrepreneur , having set up his own construction firm . He has also swit ched allegiance from the old Communist Workers Party to the Socialists , who spr ang from the reform wing of the authoritarian regime that was ousted in 1990 aft er a 45-year rule . It is hard to image what Karl Marx might say if he could hea r these three `` socialists '' airing their capitalist aspirations . All three r eadily agreed , for example , that the state `` should get out of the economy , '' although they had differing views on just how quickly this should happen and what residual role government should play . But such views reflect a central par adox of post-Cold War Eastern Europe namely , that a growing number of constitue nts of the former ruling Communist parties are budding entrepreneurs whose inter ests are far removed from those of the once exalted proletariat . In fact , the Hungarian Socialist Party which will form this country 's new government in comi ng weeks is a hodgepodge of conflicting interest groups . There are unreformed o ld-style Communist apparatchiks , labor union leaders , reformed social democrat s , struggling small entrepreneurs and a new capitalist aristocracy of `` Red Ba rons , '' born out of the old party elite . But swelling the flood of roughly 1. 5 million new Socialist voters on Sunday , according to the Hungarian Gallup pol ling organization , were people from all walks of life with fond memories of the security and social welfare benefits of the old Marxist government and a distru st of the hazards of free-market democracy . `` There has been quite a shift in the ( Socialist ) voter profile , '' said Gallup spokesman Robert Manchin . `` I t is much more anti-market , anti-privatization , more for egalitarian values an d social redistribution . They are the traditional , old-time socialist supporte rs . `` This is something that should bother the Socialist Party and everybody e lse , since they didn't run on a traditional socialist program , but its ( suppo rters want ) to go back to egalitarian solutions . '' In the wake of the Sociali st victory , the question being asked by Hungarians and foreigners alike is whic h faction of the highly eclectic party will prevail in the coming struggle to de fine its economic and social policies . Will it be the more orthodox , old-time socialists and labor advocates led by Sandor Nagy , whose name was listed second on the party 's election slate ? Or the faction led by Laszlo Bekesi , the part y 's most prominent economic reformist , who was listed third on the slate and i s likely to become the next finance minister ? The party will meet in convention here Saturday to outline its policies and formally choose its nominee for prime minister . WASHINGTON A defiant Rep. Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , rejected a proposed plea bargain with federal prosecutors Monday night and vowed to fight in court effort s to convict him of an alleged conspiracy to defraud the government out of sever al hundred thousand dollars . `` Federal prosecutors threaten to indict me if I fail to plead guilty to a series of crimes I did not commit , '' Rostenkowski sa id in a written statement . `` I will not make any deals with them . I did not c ommit any crimes . My conscience is clear and my 42-year record as an elected of ficial is one I am pround to once again run on . '' The statement by Rostenkowsk i , chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee , came the day before sources have said United States Attorney Eric H . Holder Jr. would ask a grand jury to indict the Chicago Democrat . Holder 's office declined comment Monday . Barring a last minute overture by Rostenkowski , prosecutors planned to indict him Tues day . `` The government is ready to go , '' one source familiar with the negotia tions said . Other sources said that the government 's case was already set for presentation to a grand jury , regardless of whether they heard from Rostenkowsk i by the deadline . After more than two weeks of discussing the possibility of a plea bargain , Rostenkowski , 66 , last week declined a deal in which he would plead guilty to a felony and spend a limited amount of time in jail . Options fo r Rostenkowski had run out , as had his tenure as chairman of Ways and Means , a committee that puts him in the forefront on President Clinton 's health care le gislation as well as major trade , welfare and tax bills . If the grand jury ret urns an indictment punishable by at least two years in prison , under normal pro cedures of the House Democratic Caucus , Rostenkowski would have to resign from the committee chairmanship . Rostenkowski made clear last night he stood ready t o step aside from his leadership role and battle to salvage his political life . `` If I am indicted I will temporarily give up the chairmanship .... but will c ontinue to serve as an active member of Congress , '' Rostenkowski said . `` ... If I am indicted , I will fight in court . I will present a compelling case to the jury which will , I am confident , find me not guilty ... . Rostenkowski 's action and the anticipated indictment clouds the political horizon for key issue s such as health care and sets the stage for Rep. Sam Gibbons , D-Fla. , to take the reins of Ways and Means . Three key Democrats on Ways and Means said they w ere not surprised by the chairman 's decision and said the committee would rally around Gibbons in the fight for health care . But they conceded that , as repre sentative John Lewis , D-Ga. , put it , `` It will be much more difficult withou t him . '' Lewis , Rep. Jake Pickle , D-Tex. , and Rep. Charles Rangel , D-N.Y. , all said they expected no challenge to Gibbons ' becoming acting chairman unde r House Democratic Caucus rules . Pickle , who is No. 3 in seniority said , `` T here is a remote possibility that 50 members could petition the Democratic Caucu s to change the rules , but I doubt that will happen . '' Rangel , who is next i n seniority behind Pickle , and Lewis , who is close to both the White House and the House Democratic leadership , echoed the view that Gibbons would take over without a serious challenge . Rangel said he thought the committee 's considerat ion of health care would go forward `` ninety percent as normal . '' He said Gib bons `` will probably work very closely with Rostenkowski to find consensus amon g the committee 's Democratic members . '' A senior committee Republican , Rep . Clay Shaw of Florida agreed that there was nothing surprising about the chairma n 's decision . `` You don't check your citizenship at the door when you go to C ongress , '' Shaw said , `` and he is entitled to a fair trial . If he feels he 's not guilty of the charges , he should fight them . '' Shaw said that he thoug ht Rostenkowski would have faced great difficulty in delivering a health bill to the President 's specifications , but said with the `` disruption '' of the cha nge in the chairmanship , `` this probably backs us up a ways . '' A plea bargai n would have given Rostenkowski a slight chance of retaining his chairmanship . Caucus rules do not require a member convicted of criminal charges to resign fro m office or leadership positions , although such members are likely to face an e thics investigation and disciplinary actions . Federal prosecutors have outlined a broad case against Rostenkowski of conspiracy to defraud the government in wh at has been described as `` kitchen sink '' approach alleging abuses of official accounts for postage , leased automobiles , office space , supplies and personn el . Rostenkowski has publicly denied all the allegations . The FBI has investig ated whether several so-called `` ghost employees '' in Rostenkowski 's Chicago office received pay for work never down . The probe also examined whether Rosten kowski purchased personal and gift items through his expense account at the Hous e Stationary Store . In addition , the prosecution 's case also reportedly exami nes whether government leased cars were used primarily for personal use rather t han official business and if Rostenkowski and other lawmakers traded postage vou chers and stamps for thousands of dollars . Rostenkowski , completing his 36th y ear in Congress , entered plea discussions in an effort to reduce or eliminate a ny prison sentence while avoiding a lengthy legal battle . He also wanted to try to retain his chairmanship . Such talks are considered normal and will not affe ct his trial , should he be indicted . WASHINGTON In an alabaster-white amphitheater surrounded by a sea of headstones , President Clinton told a packed audience of veterans and visitors Monday neve r to forget those who had died fighting for freedom . `` Fifty years ago the wor ld learned just what Americans are capable of , '' Clinton noted during a Memori al Day service at Arlington National Cemetery . `` World War II was an era of sa crifice unequal in our history . It was the energies of free people who turned t he tide '' against totalitarianism . The 50th anniversary of the D-Day invasion of Normandy echoed throughout Clinton 's speech . Straining to see and hear him from her wheelchair was retired Army nurse Dorothy Fearn Olsen , who had treated D-Day casualties during her 19 months as a combat nurse . Afterward , she recou nted helping the wounded at the Battle of the Bulge and being among the first me dical units at the liberation of the Buchenwald concentration camp . She was onl y 24 . Olsen recited a list of nurses who had served in U.S. wars , beginning wi th Clara Barton in the Civil War and ending with Frances Slanger , a little-know n nurse who was killed in Belgium before the Battle of the Bulge . `` There had been various letters written by GIs to Stars and Stripes thanking the nurses for being there , '' she said . Slanger `` wrote a very beautiful letter that ended . . . `` It 's an honor and a privilege to be there when you open your eyes and say , `` Hiya , babe. ' ' ' Clinton 's speech in the cemetery 's Memorial Amphi theater came just before noon . Earlier in the morning , before placing a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknowns , he and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton had been the hosts for a breakfast for World War II veterans and leaders of veterans org anizations . During his speech Monday , Clinton said the endless rows of graves along the hillside of Arlington are reminders of `` the high cost of freedom . ' ' The famous are there among them , he said . `` But far more numerous are Ameri cans who are not famous , are not legend , but whose deeds are the backbone '' o f democracy . `` Let us also hold a special place for all our living veterans , '' he urged . `` We owe them a lasting debt of gratitude . '' WASHINGTON As Washington awoke on Memorial Day morning , 11 families sat in fol ding chairs on a grassy hill and , far away from the day 's more elaborate event s , cried in each other 's arms . The Vietnam Veterans Memorial ebbed like a bla ck wave in the distance . The names of their loved ones could not be on that gra nite wall , because unlike the dead whose sacrifice was etched there , their lov ed ones had died after the fighting ended of Agent Orange poisoning , of injurie s that never healed , in suicides . In a war that has seemed exiled from the bro therhood of conflicts , these dead are the lost veterans . The Friends of the Vi etnam Veterans Memorial , which decided they had been forgotten long enough , he ld Monday 's ceremony to honor them . It brought nine members of the Reynolds fa mily , ages 14 months to 74 years , from Palo Alto , Calif. . It brought Jennie LeFevre from Shady Side , Md. , to honor a husband killed by Agent Orange . It b rought Diana Steele from Newport News , Va. , bearing a grief almost unimaginabl e : Her husband and father had both taken their own lives within nine months of each other . `` Merciful God , we ask your tender blessing on all who are gather ed here , '' said writer Joe Galloway , who covered the Vietnam conflict . `` Yo u have brought beside you the souls of some good soldiers who suffered greatly l ong after their war was over and who are loved and missed deeply. '' ' More than 3 million Americans served in Vietnam . Among them were 58,190 who were killed or missing in action , about 450,000 wounded in action and an estimated 117,000 who have since died . `` You know and I know what really cut their lives short , '' Galloway said . `` And who among us dares judge them for the way they lived or the way they died ? '' Twenty-two veterans were honored , among them Pulitzer Prize-winning author Lewis Puller Jr. , of Alexandria , who took his life this month . Their names will be entered in an honor roll displayed near the Vietnam Veterans Memorial . After speeches and prayers , the families walked to the Wall . At the foot of the polished panels , they placed red carnations , a white spi der mum and tributes for their lost loved ones . Diana Steele left her husband ' s Purple Heart . She said Robert William Steele was diagnosed with depression ju st after the war . The Army soldier killed himself in 1983 , she said , because `` the experience of Vietnam was so traumatic for him . He was such a gentle man . He couldn't deal with it . '' He was 37 . Patricia Codd 's husband and Diana Steele 's father , Nicholas Joseph Codd Jr. , served in the Army in 1966 , then again in 1970 and 1971 . He committed suicide at age 51 in 1984 . `` He made nin e suicide attempts , '' said his widow , who lives in Hampton , Va. . He rarely spoke of war , but once he shared a memory . `` They were on an ambush , '' Patr icia Codd said . `` They heard a noise . They opened fire . It turned out to be women and children . He talked about having to pick them up and put them in body bags . '' Codd had five children and 12 grandchildren `` who will never know hi m , '' she said . `` We 're hoping this will put all of this to rest . But I don 't think it 'll ever be over . '' Jennie LeFevre , 62 and gray-haired , wore whi te tennis shoes , white slacks and an orange T-shirt that said `` Widow of Agent Orange Victim . '' Her Air Force husband , Gerald Henry LeFevre , died in 1989 . `` These men need their own wall , '' she said . The Reynolds family mourned T errence Michael Reynolds , dead at 25 . He served in the Army in 1966 . He suffe red wounds that left him a paraplegic and kept him hospitalized for 2 years . In 1970 , he died of a heart attack related to his injuries . `` I miss him terrib ly , '' said one of his sisters , Kathy LeVain . `` After 25 years , I still mis s him . '' Reynolds 's son , mother , a brother , two sisters , three nephews an d a brother-in-law came to honor him . They showed a faded black-and-white photo of a young man in a hospital bed with large expressive eyes , dark eyebrows and a mischievous , yet sad smile . `` He was quite a prankster , '' said another s ister , Melinda Burnham . `` He was always cracking me up . Always making people laugh , '' offered his brother , Jim Glanville . `` That 's how I 'd like him r emembered . '' WASHINGTON House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , said Monday that he has chosen to fight charges of fraud and abuse of his public office , rather than making a deal with federal prosecutors to plead guilty to lesser offenses . `` I have always fought for what I believe in . I strongly bel ieve that I am not guilty of these charges , and will fight to regain my reputat ion in court , '' Rostenkowski said in a statement issued Monday night . His rem arks came on the eve of Tuesday 's deadline by the government to accept or rejec t its plea-bargain arrangement . `` That is a far more attractive arrangement op tion than pleading guilty to crimes that I did not commit , '' Rostenkowski said . The decision appears to make it certain that he will be indicted on a series of felony charges possibly as early as Tuesday , sources familiar with the case said . A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment on Rostenkowski 's ann Download 9.93 Mb. 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