News Digest By the Associated Press Edited by Victoria Ayotte Panama opposition charges election fraud PANAMA CITY, Panama — Panamanians voted for a new presi dent Sunday in an election studded with charges of fraud and U.S. inter ference and seen as a referendum on the dc facto rule of Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega. The election pitted Carlos Duquc, hand-picked by Noriega, against Guillermo Endara, the candidate of an opposition coalition. Polls closed at 5 p.m. (6 p.m. EDT.) Voters had lined up at some polling stations at 5 a m., two hours before the scheduled opening time. At one booth, more than 100 of 348 registered voters were in line by 8 a.m. The government promised offi cial results within 24 hours. “You don’t stand in line for hours unless you hope you’re going to have an honest election,’’ said Rep. Law rence Coughlin, R-Pa., after inspect ing polling places in Colon, 50 miles north of Panama City. Coughlin was among an uninvited Kof 13 U.S. observers sent by lent Bush. They, like other international observers, including former President Jimmy Carter, said they saw no signs of fraud at the booths. “Everything went according to the law,” said Rafael Martinez, an electoral official in the northern town of Margarita where many members of the Panamanian Defense Forces voted. The opposition, which claimed a hefty lead in polls, kept up its drum beat of fraud charges. Even before the polls closed, it was calling for a pro test march Monday. Opposition leaders accused the government of making arrangements tor its supporters to vote “early and often” and said they feared the elec tion would be stolen as votes were tallied at the Election Tribunal. They pointed out that the 15,000 members of Noriega’s Defense Forecs were allowed to jump to the front of voting queues and they could vote at any booth, making multiple voting possible. ‘We will look for a dignified exit for the general.’ —Endara The government contends the opposition has joined forces with the United States in an effort to abrogate the 1977 Panama Canal treaties, which call for the United States to give the canal to Panama on Dee. 31, 1999. As proof, Duquc pointed io dam aging U.S. economic sanctions, U.S. drug charges against Noriega, and reports that the United States pro vided the opposition with $ 10 million in campaign assistance. The opposition denys the govern ment charges, and says Noriega must be cased out as commander of the Panamanian Defense Forces if de mocracy is to progress in Panama. “We will look for a dignified exit for the general,’ ’ Endara told a crowd of chanting supporters after he voted Sunday. Duquc and acting president Man uel Solis Palma received a mixture of boos and cheers when they voted. Endara, 52, and Duquc, 59, are both businessmen. A new president takes office Sept. 1. Opposition vice-presidential can didate Ricardo Arias Calderon issued a statement saying he had “not the slightest doubt that there will be fraud.” He was one of the leaders calling for a protest march Monday' Arias Calderon repeated accusa tions that the electoral register in eluded 100,000 duplicate names and that out of a sampling of 3,000 recent deaths, the names of 27 percent of the dead were still on the register Several voters told reporters they had checked to make sure dead or absent relatives were stricken from the voting list. “That’s two less votes they can steal,” said Lilia Shaw after making sure officials crossed off the names of her brother and father, both out of the country. Her husband Roberto shrugged and said, “It won’t make any differ ence.” Former President Carter visited 20 booths and said, “The only problem I have seen is with the number of people voting,” referring to the long lines. Violence in Beirut leaves 17 dead BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Syrian and Christian gunners blasted residential districts of Beirut on Sunday in sav age artillery duels that killed at least 17 people as the Arab League tried to revive a collapsed truce. A police spokesman said 80 people were wounded in a seven-hour bombardment that left the streets blanketed with debris. The spokesman, who cannot be named under standing regulations, said about 15,000 shells and rockets were unleashed on the divided capital and surrounding areas. Fires burned out of control in both Moslem and Christian sectors. Hun dreds of charred cars smoldered in parking lots and severed power cables dangled from twisted poles or shell-pocked apartment buildings. Blazing pine trees lit up the night sky as Christian artillery positions began the exchange by firing 155mm howitzers at Syrian and Druse posi tions across Beirut and neighboring hills. The Syrians responded with rocket fire at Christian east Beirut, the city’s port, the Christian harbors of Jounich and Byblos, and a cluster of deserted summer resorts in Leba non’s central mountains. The 17 deaths and 80 woundings increased the overall toll to 295 killed and 1,091 wounded since the latest round of fighting in Lebanon’s 14 ycar-old civil war broke out March 8. The fighting pits army com mander Gen. Michel Aoun’s 20,(XX) mainly Christian soldiers against an alliance of Syrian troops and 7,0(X) militiamen of Druse warlord Waljd Jumblatt’s Progressive Socialist Party. The Christians resumed shelling Saturday night after nine days of unanswered Syrian attacks on the Christian sector’s coast. Those at tacks were in defiance of an April 28 cease-fire called by the Arab League. Aoun told the U.S., British and French ambassadors on Saturday night that he would respond to the Syrian fire, a spokesman for his head quarters said, and an hour later the Christian firing began. When the shelling slackened at dawn, tens of thousands of dazed residents emerged from underground bunkers to assess damage, buy food and watcr/and hurry back to the shel ters. Among those inspecting the dam age was acting Prime Minister Salim Hoss, who heads a mostly Moslem Cabinet competing with Aoun's Christian Cabinet. “No words arc enough to describe this horror, ’ ’ Hoss told reporters as he toured the battered Iwo-slory prime ministry. “I repeal my plea for a total cessation of hostilities out of mercy for the innocent population.” The Arab League announced from Damascus that an envoy and the commander of the observer force would be sent to Beirut this week to hasten talks on the crisis and try to implement a stable cease-fire. Companion: Cultist ordered his death MEXICO CITY - The leader of a drug-smuggling cull lhal killed 15 people ordered his own killing when police closed in on him, his arrested campanion said Sunday. Adolfo de Jesus Constanzo was shot to death Saturday in a gunbaltlc with Mexico City police. Sara Aldrcte, 24, a former honors student at Texas Southmost College in Brownsville, told reporters Con stanzo ordered Alvaro de Leon Val dez to kill him and his lop assistant, Martin Quintana Rodriguez, after police appeared outside the Mexico City apartment building where they were staying. Aldrcte, described as the “witch” of the cult, de Leon Valdez and three others arrested after the shootout were presented to reporters on Sun day at the Mexico City Attorney General’s office. They stood behind a 3-by-6-foot table bearing confiscated cult items and black clothing. “He went crazy, crazy” when police came, said the bearded de Leon Valdez, who has collar-length blond hair and was wearing a dirty white shirt. “He grabbed a bundle of money and threw it and began shooting out the window,” he said.44He said eve rything, everything was lost.” De Leon Valdez said Constanzo hit him in the face when he resisted killing Constanzo. “He ordered him to kill him be cause it was the end and he wanted to die with Martin,” Aldrcte said. She referred to Constanzo, 26, as El Pa drino, or the godfather. She said she did not know about the killings of the 15 people whose bodies were found on the Santa Elena Ranch until she saw stories on televi sion. The ranch is outside Matamo ros, along the U.S. border. De Leon Valdez, 22, said he had taken part in the killing of Mark Kil roy, a former Texas college student, and of some of the others on the ranch. But he and Aldrcte indicated Constanzo did most of the killings. Aldrcte said she regretted the deaths carried out by the cult. “If I had known it was like this, I wouldn’t have been in it,” she said. Constanzo and Aldrcte, missing since the lirst 12 bodies were uncov ered on the ranch April 11, were among 11 people indicted in the United States on a four-count drug indictment They arc being held in Mexico on charges of homicide, criminal asso ciation, wounding a police agent in the arrest, and damage to property, Assistant Attorney General Abraham Polo Uscanga said. The bodies of Constanzo and Quintana were found slumped to gether inside a tiny closet in the - Mexico City apartment. Their shirts r were smeared with blood. Palestinians, Israelis continue fighting Sunday JERUSALEM — Soldiers wounded 10 Palestinians on Sunday during clashes in the occupied territo ries, despite widespread curfews aimed at preventing a repeat of the heavy violence a day earlier. Also Sunday, authorities found the body of an Israeli paratrooper in a shallow grave near the Gaza Strip, not far from where he was last seen seven weeks ago. Police claimed he was killed by Palestinian guerrillas. A search also was going on for another Israeli soldier missing and believed kidnapped. Sunday’s violence followed per month-old Palestinian uprising against Israeli rule. Arab reports said three Palestini ans were killed and 135 wounded by Israeli forces on Saturday, most dur ing clashes in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli army said its records showed 77 wounded and two dead. The army imposed curfews in 20 towns or refugee camps in Gaza and the West Bank to kccp450,000 Pales tinians indoors on Sunday and pre vent a recurrence of the bloodshed. But clashes between troops and Palestinians broke out in the Gaza Strip, and Arab hospital officials said seven people were wounded during refugee camps. Three more Palestini ans were shot and wounded by sol diers in the occupied West Bank, they said. In Tel Aviv, Brig. Gen. Ephraim Lapid defended the army’s actions during Saturday’s violence, claiming they were provoked by Arab stone throwers. Palestinians claimed the violence was spurred by the presence of soldiers outside a mosque in the Nussciral refugee camp in the Ga/a Strip. Saturday s clashes broke out when soldiers opened fire to quell protests on Eid a!-Fitr. a major Moslem holi day and the end of the holy month of John Bruce Daily Nebraskan Contacts become disposable ROCHESTER, N.Y. - Soft contact lenses, those floppy pieces of plastic that help people see with out wearing eyeglasses, have reached a popular American cul ture benchmark. They’ve become disposable. That could mean a lot of changes involving the way people view the little lenses that make things clearer for 23 million Americans. Hundreds of thousands of people arc already wearing dispos able lenses, even though up to now they've been available only on a limited basis. Eye doctors arc Hocking to lectures about them, and consumers arc wondering what’s going on. ‘‘They’ve really captured the interest of the American public,” says Dr. Scott MacRac, an oph thalmologist from Portland, Ore., who is also a consultant to the Food and Drug Administration for oph thalmic devices. He speaks from experience. He wears a disposable lens in his right eye. I don t think we’ve ever seen anything, in my experience, that gained this kind of acceptance,” says Hal Johnson, president of professional products at Bausch & Lomb, the nation’s leading seller of contact lenses. "We’re in high gear. And I mean high gear.” It hasn’t been loo long ago that basketball games were stopped while players scoured the floor for a missing contact lens. Most fjcoplc still coddle and clean their lenses, treating them like tiny treasures. They even buy insurance poli cies to protect them from loss or damage. rsow, aiong come some lenses that can be worn for a week or two and tossed in the trash. If they hurt your eye, just take them out and pul in a new pair. No more expen sive cleaning solutions. No more lender-loving care. Is “wear ‘cm and toss ‘cm” the wave of the future? Probably not, say officials at Bausch & Lomb and other eye care experts. The main reason is that most of the lenses available can only be worn by patients who arc near sighted. Another negative factor is the cost - between $300 and $500 per year. Nebraskan Editor Amy Edwards „ _ 472-1766 Managing Editor Jans Hlrt Assoc News Editors Brandon Loomis Rvan Sloovin Editorial Page Editor Lee Rood rnn W,r®fdl,or Victoria Ayotte Copy DesK Editor Deanne Nelson a . . rSpoMs Editor Jeff A pel Arts & Entertainment Editor Lisa Donovan Diversions Editor Joeth Zucco Sower Editor Lee Rood Supplements Editor Chris Carroll Graphics Editor John Bruce hoto Chief Eric Gregory Night News Editors Eric Planner Darcle Wiegert Librarian Victoria Ayotte Art Director Andy Manhart General Manager Dan Shattll Production Manager Katherine Pollcky Advertising Manager Robert Bates Sales Manager David Thiemann Circulation Manager Eric Shanks Publications Board Chairman Tom Macy 475-9068 Professional Adviser Don Walton 473-7301 braska Union'Li !™niH?P? 144 080>13 published by theUNL Publications Board. 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