Mpws Digest s£s.*ap»» x ^ w w lEdited by Jana Pedersen Iraq warns trapped Westerners Iraq lightened the screws on trapped Westerners on Thursday, warning that anyone trying to leave without per mission could face life in prison. The Soviet Union for the first time called for sending a U.N. military force to the Persian Gulf. Washington and Moscow, mean while, scrambled to prepare for the weekend superpower summit they hope will bring a break in the 5-week-old crisis. At the United Nations, diplomats said U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar planned to send an envoy to occupied Kuwait to meet with diplomats whose embassies are surrounded by Iraqi troops, and with trapped foreigners. Baghdad would have to give its consent for the visit. The State Department again blasted Iraq for its treatment of foreign na tionals, including the shooting of an American in Kuwait who was trying to avoid capture. Department spokes man Mark Dillcn called Iraq’s behav ior “outrageous.” As the United States redoubled its efforts to win financial support for the huge military effort, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher pledged more forces to bolster the U.S. con tingent in the gulf. She did not elabo rate on the deployment plans. Egypt, too, said it was beefing up its small gulf contingent. President Bush said the United Slates was determined to force Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to with draw from Kuwait, which Iraqi troops overran Aug. 2 in a dispute over land, money and oil “We will not stand by while one country devours another unthreaten ing country whole,” Bush said at a Kansas fundraiser. “Our cause may not be easy, but it will always be right.” In a a surprise move, Bush he would make a statement for broad cast to the Iraqi people, saying he saw “a real opportunity” to explain the U.S. view. Baghdad had offered to broadcast an interview with Bush, but the White House said the president would tape a statement instead. Statements by the Iraqi president -- which White House wags call “Saddamathons” — have received ample air time in the United States, and the Bush administration was re portedly irritated about this. Word that Moscow favors a U.N. military force in the Persian Gulf came from Soviet Foreign Ministry spokes man Gennady Gerasimov. He indi cated Mikhail S. Gorbachev may discuss the idea with Bush at their summit Sunday in Helsinki, Finland. Previously, the Soviets had said only that they might participate if the United Nations decided to deploy a military force. “We have to go back to the U.N. charier and revive certain clauses of this charter . . . which may have armed forces — international armed forces - at its disposal so as to keep international peace and security,” Gerasimov told reporters. The change in the Soviet stance came a day after Iraq’s foreign minis ter, Tariq Aziz, met with Gorbachev and displayed no softening in Iraq’s refusal to leave Kuwait. Moscow and Baghdad were longtime allies, but Gorbachev has condemned the Ku wait invasion as “treachery.” Expenses are mounting daily for the U.S. military deployment, and Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady arrived Thursday in Seoul, South Korea, the latest stop on a tour to press allies for funds. Secretary of State James A. Baker III was making the same pitch in Saudi Arabia, where the bulk of the U.S. force is deployed. In Iraq, the outlook grew grimmer for trapped foreigners. Baghdad said those caught trying to leave without permission could face life in prison. Justice Minister Akram Abdul Kader said authorities were reviving a 1987 law that “a foreigner violating the entry and exit procedures... will be sentenced to life or temporary imprisonment, and all cash in his possession will be confiscated.” The State Department said Iraqi authorities had informed U.S. offi cials that an American shot by Iraqi police in Kuwait was expected to be discharged from a hospital shortly but will remain in Iraqi custody. The department spokesman, Dillen, said the American was wounded while attempting to evade capture at his apartment in Kuwait City. “We hold the Iraqi government responsible for the health and welfare of all American citizens held against their will in Kuwaitand Iraq,” Dillen said. Student holds six middle schoolers hostage in school CUMMING, Ga. - A high school sophomore held a half-dozen class mates at gunpoint for several hours Thursday, demanding such things as soft drinks, candy and a school bus before Finally surrendering to police. Forsyth County Sheriff Wesley Walraven said the youth surrendered shortly before 2 p.m., about 5 1/2 hours after the incident began. There were no injuries reported. The hostages were middle school pupils attending the combined South Forsyth middle school-high school, said Joyce Shadbum, a spokeswoman for the county’s school superinten dent. The boy who look the other hostage attended the high school, she said. Shadbum said the boy, whose name was not immediately released, fired one shot in the classroom shortly after classes began for the day. Authorities gave nodctails of what kind of gun or guns was involved. Though the boy allowed some girls to go free in exchange for candy and soda, he kept about six bovs in the classroom for several hours more, authorities said. Shadbum said the boy’s only other demand was for a school bus. A bus had been taken to the scene, she said. One of the freed girls, Shelly Dixon, said the boy told “us to stand up and pul our hands on our heads.” “He started cussing at us. He said if we said anything, he’d shoot us,” Dixon said. Capt. Jerry Padgett of the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Department said the situation generally stayed calm as authorities negotiated with the stu dent. The sheriff s department was called in by the school around 8:30 a.m. Other students were evacuated from the school, and streets in the area were blocked, authorities said. fThey have the area barricaded off. It’s not in a residential area.” The school is located about five miles south of Cumming, a town of 2,100 north of Atlanta. St. Paul United Methodist Church College Students: Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship 11:00 a.m. II Other Fellowship, Social & Study Activities for college aged 12th & ’M’ (Just South of Campus) St. [Paul United Tilethodist Gh urc/i —I 1144 M STREET PHONE 477-6951 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 6SSCJB-2173 Sunday, September 9 A Christian Celebration 3:30 p.m. and dedication at the Cornerstone-CJMHE beginning of the aca 640 N. 16th St. demic year 1990-91 Preacher: Dr. Tom W.Boyd, Kingfisher Professor of Religious and Ethics University of Oklahoma. This service is co-sponsored by United Ministries in Higher Edu Free parking behind cation and over 20 local Lincoln Cornerstone building, congregations and other reli off of 17th Street. gious bodies. County attorney suspended Deputy Lancaster County Attorney Jim Elworth was suspended from his job after he allegedly knocked down a private attorney during a confrontation at the County-City Building. Lancaster County Attorney Mike Heavican said Elworth has been suspended until Monday, when there will be a meeting to determine his future with the office. “Obviously one of the actions we have to look at is termination because we certainly can’t condone that kind of conduct,” he said. Heavican said Elworth and private attorney Hal Anderson appar ently got into a dispute Wednesday afternoon after a District Court hearing concerning the forfeiture to the state of S786 involved in a drug case. While standing in front of the county attorney’s office, the two exchanged words and then Elworth apparently pushed Anderson, knocking him down, Heavican said. Heavican said it was his understanding that no punches were thrown. _._. « • a A « m a Disorder linked 10 genes ; BOSTON - Scientists have discovered two defective genes that cause dangerous thickening of the heart, the leading medical cause of sudden death among young athletes. Glitches in these genes result in an inherited disorder known as familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Victims are prone to suffer heart rhythm problems and heart failure or to die suddenly from cardiac arrest. Among the most notable victims of cardiomyopathy was basketball star Hank Gathers of Loyola Marymount, who collapsed during a game in March. Experts arc uncertain, however, whether he had the inherited form of the disease. The latest discovery by researchers at Harvard Medical School is the first time scientists have pinpointed the precise genes responsible for an inherited abnormality of the heart itself. Cardiomyopathy causes thickening of the walls of the heart. While familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is rare -- affecting about three in 1(X),(X)() people -- other forms are common side effects of a variety of diseases, including high blood pressure. Art gallery will stand trial CINCINNATI - A judge ruled Thursday dial an art gallery and its director must stand trial later this month on obscenity charges for displaying five sexually graphic photographs by Robert Mapplethorpe. Dennis Barrie and the Contemporary Arts Center already were using children in material involving nudity. The obscenity case will be heard the same day. In his ruling Thursday, Hamilton County Municipal Judge David Al banese rejected a defense request to dismiss the obscenity charge. De fense lawyers had contended that the pictures were a legitimate art exhibition and immune from Ohio’s obscenity law. “That is contrary to the... law,” Albanese said. “The affirmative defenses and issues of credibility are for the trier of the case to decide.” Albanese on Thursday also granted a prosecution request to limit the obscenity case to the five photographs described in the indictment against Barrie and the center. He rejected defense claims that the jury had to consider all of the photos in the exhibition — including shots of flowers and sculpture -- be cause the show was a survey of Mapplethorpe’s life. “The court finds that each photograph has a separate identity.” He said prosecutors only have to prove that one of the photographs is obscene to win a conviction. I Catholics condemn bigotry PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia - Roman Catholic leaders Thursday condemned anti-Semitism and racism as they closed a Catholic-Jewish conlcrcncc that looked at growing anti-Semitic incidents in Eastern Europe. A statement issued during the four-day meeting said delegates from 16 nations gave special attention to “recent manifestations of anti Semitism’ in former Eastern Bloc nations since the fall of tightly run Communist societies. I he statement came at the end of the first formal meeting in five years of the Pontifical Commission on Religious Relations with the Jews and the International Jewish Committee on Intcrreligious Consul tations. The six-point plan to fight anti-Semitism includes omission of ra cially or religiously divisive material from textbooks, establishment of courses for priests to counter ariti-Jewish sentiment, and monitoring of all outbreaks of so-called hate crimes against Jews. The plan also recommended swift translation and dissemination of recent Vatican statements of Catholic-Jewish relations. Eastern Euro pean churches lacked either permission or resources to publish these documents. 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