By The Associated Press Edited by Todd Cooper NEWS DIGEST NelDraskan Friday, February IS, 1993 Haitian boat sinks, at least 1,000 die PETIT GOA VE, Haiti—A packed ferry carrying up to 1,500people sank in stormy seas off Haiti, and only 285 people were known to have survived, the Red Cross said Thursday. Survivors told how they clung to floating objects, in one case a bag of charcoal, to stay alive. “The sea was full of people,” said one survivor, 29-year-old Madeleine Julien, from her hospital bed in this coastal town. “I kept bumping into drowned people.” The ferry Neptune went down late Tuesday off Petit Goave, 60 miles west of the capital. Communications are so crude outside the capital it took a group of about 60 survivors a day to first report the accident. U.S. aircraft and vesselsdispatched Thursday to help in search-and-res cue efforts reported “lots of debris and lots of bodies,’’saidaCoast Guard spokesman, Cmdr. Larry Mizell. The Coast Guard said it had found more than 100 bodies floating off Petit Goave. Coast Guard Cmdr. Larry Mizell said there was “no correlation be tween this and the boat people,” refer ring to the tens of thousands of Hai tians who have fled their homeland by sea since the army ousted elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1991. Haiti’s military approved flights by U.S. aircraft over the disaster scene and allowed two Coast Guard cutters in the region to help in the rescue effort, said Cmdr. Mizell, the Coast Guard liaison in Port-au-Prince. “We made the offer, and they jumped on it,” Mizell said. U.S. ves sels routinely patrol international waters off Haiti for boat people, and have increased their presence in re cent weeks. As two Haitian navy ships searched for survivors Wednesday, relatives of those aboard traveled to the site of the sinking to await news about their loved ones. Destina Mom rosier, a seamstress from Port-au-Prince, said her brother and a cousin were aboard the Neptune when it pulled out late Tuesday from Jeremie, a port city 180 miles to the west. Momrosier, 42, said she had taken the boat several times, usually with 500 to 600 other passengers, but as many as 1,500 probably could fit aboard. , “It’s generally overloaded,” she said. “It sways from side to side with people standing, sitting, even up on President’s plan unravels 12 years of Reaganomics WASHINGTON — As more details of President Clinton’s poli cies surface, U’s becoming clear l L ^ how fundamental a chaftge he is proposing in the way govern ment does business. The unravel ing of the Reagan legacy is written across scores of Clinton pro gram changes, large and small. “Did I hear right?” opinion piece i nursday s New York Times. ‘Tmafraid so,” the former presi dent said. “Do they really believe that those who have woiked hard and been successful should some how be punished for it?” Reagan From huge cuts in defense spend ing and the scaling back of expen sive but popular projects like the space station, to increases in pro grams for women, infants and chil dren, to widespread tax increases hitting the wealthiest the irartfcst. Clinton ’s spending proposal in cludes dozens of items such as: more funds to help restore dilapi dated public housing, more money for health care for veterans, in creasing the number of federal meat and poultry inspectors. “There is a dramatic difference in philosophy that is reflected in Clinton’s program and his approach to governance. The contrast is stark,” said Thomas Mann, direc tor of governmental studies at Brookings Institution. It may have been just too much for the nation’s 40th president, who wrote from his retirement in Cali fornia: “In less than one month of his presidency, (Clinton’s) prom ise of a tax cut has not only been broken but it has been reversed into a tax increase for middle-income workers.” the roof.” Skipper Benjamin Sinclair said as many as 1,500 people were aboard, but military authorities in Jeremie earlier estimated 2,000 were on the ship. Soldier surrenders after hijacking plane from Haiti to Miami Passengers suffer DC-3 hijacked from no injuries in flight Haiti to U.S. ^ r" ■ r u. I....... MIAMI — A Haitian soldier hi jacked an American missionary group’s plane at an airport in Haiti and diverted it to Miami on Thursday, but surrendered when the plane landed. The hijacker shot a hole in the ceiling of the plane before it took off, but no injuries were reported, said Kathleen Bergen, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration in Atlanta. The hijacker had given his gun to the crew during the flight, a federal law enforcement source said on con dition of anonymity. The plane was carrying nine pas sengers and two crew members plus the hijacker and a woman hostage he had seized on the ground, a Haitian government official said. Everyone but the hijacker was American, other sources said. Moments after the plane landed at Miami International Airport, the man walked out the door of the plane with his hands behind his head as about 10 uniformed officers crouched nearby. The man then laid down on the tarmac and the officers surrounded him. Clinton and staff take to road to win support for economic plan WASHINGTON — President Clinton led his administration on a blitz across the mapof America Thurs day to enlist the nation ’ s support for a pain-then-gam economic plan that he said would keep America’s children from having to settle for a “lesser life.” n new re lease of fine print from the White House indicated the administration’s deficit cutting to be less dra matic than first portrayed. V* I 111 lull brushed off questions about new deficit projec tions and set out for the Midwest to generate grass-roots support that will be vital if his plan is to survive attacks by powerful interests, criticism by Republicans and reluctance by some fellow Democrats. In his maiden appearance before Congress Wednesday night, the presi dent proposed raising taxes for most Americans. His-ideas would also cut spending in 150 programs but increase it elsewhere. And, to reinvigorate a soft economy, he would cut some business taxes and undertake a quick public works spending program. This amounted to “reinventing our government,” Clinton told the law makers. Failure to take painful steps now, he said, would amount to “con demning our children and our children’s children to a lesser life than we enjoyed.” ___ The new figures from the White House showed that when full account is taken of the impact of spending increases and pro-business tax cuts, the four-year reduction in deficits would not add up to the half-biUion dollars bally hooed by the administra tion. Instead, there would be a net reduction of $325 billion. Senate GOP Leader Bob Dole called it “very heavy on the tax side and very weak” on reducing spend ing. Former President Reagan said it resurrected “thefailed liberal policies of the past” In The New York Times, Reagan said Clinton “has begun to sound like an ‘old Democrat,’” not the “new Democrat” he campaigned as. Ross Perot called the program “a good artist’s sketch.” “In the next 90 days, lobbyists are going to collect more money than probably in the history of man, be cause that’s the way the system works,” Perot said. Administration officials fanned across the country, scheduling ap pearances Thursday and Friday in 28 states. House GOPLeader Bob Michel of Illinois called this “thl biggest propaganda campaign in recent po litical history.” Clinton, aboard Air Force One, flew to St. Louis to address a crowd at Union Station. U .JN. votes to punish Yugoslav war criminals UNITED NATIONS — The five permanent members of the Security Council agreed Thursday that an in ternational court should be set up to punish war criminals in former Yugo slavia. Agreement by the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China vir tually assured passage of the resolu tion, which was to betaken up by the full council Friday. British Ambassa dor David Hannay said he believed it would be adopted Monday. One goal of the effort is to deter ■% • e further atrocities in Bosnia and other former Y ugoslav states by raising the possibility that war criminals will be pursued. A commission set up to study the idea of a court blamed Serbs for the bulk of the war’s atrocities. Then-Secretary of State Lawrence S. Eagleburger named Serbian Presi dent Slobodan Milosevic and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic in December as possible war criminals. He also released a list of seven Serb and Croat military leaders accused of atrocities. The move toward a war crimes court could also further complicate efforts to forge peace in Bosnia, where 10 months of war has left 18,000 dead. The resolution would authorize the creation of the court and ask Secre tary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali to study ways to set up its legal ma chinery. The court's jurisdiction would be strictly limited to atrocities arising from the fighting that has ac companied the breakup of Yugosla via. The draft text said war crimes com mitted after Jan. 1, 1991, would be punished by the court. In October, the Security Council authorized a commission to gather evidence of war crimes. The U.N. commission, led by Tadeusz Mazowiecki, Poland’s first post-Communist premier, has said it was overwhelmed by reports of atroci ties. It said crimes were commited by all sides in the Balkan conflict, but blamed Serbs for the bulk of them. ronce departments are letting gays serve , LOS ANGELES—As some in the military fight to keep homosexuals out, police departments in many big cities arc officially opening their doors. Gay activists have taken note, hop ing to use the growing police support as ammunition against those who op pose President Clinton’s moves to lift the military ban on homosexuals. Yet even in such cities as Boston and Los Angeles, which have strict anti-bias rules after years of tradi tional hostility, only a handful of po lice officers have come forward to say they arc gay. In many other law en forcement agencies, especially those in smaller towns, homosexuality re mains taboo. Los Angeles police Officer John Smith is one of six on the 7,688 member force'to go public with his sexual orientation. “It was cumbersome for a while, but it’s not anymore,” said Smith, who made his homosexuality public in 1991, “You’ve still got some juve nile antics — there may be someone making a comment behind my back.” The city Police Department re cently agreed to efforts to recruit ho mosexuals, start a harassment hot line and increase sensitivity training. Nationwide, numbers vary widely. In San Francisco, 138 of the city’s 1,700 officers are opehly gay, but in Boston Just two officers out of 1,950 have said publicly they were homo sexual. Norman Hill, a 10-year Boston veteran who’s gay, said he knew of several other officers who kept their homosexuality private. Cities including Baltimore, At lanta, San Jose, Calif., Detroit, Ann Arbor, Mich., and Phoenix have spe cific policies against gay bias. Activists credit grass-roots efforts for the changes in some police depart ments. “The gay and lesbian community has made great strides in certain local areas” said David Smith, a Los Ange les gay activist. NetSraSkan Editor I Ajfcaiffci-iinn C rlitn r wwnagi ngtCNtor Assoc Nows Editors Assoc News Editors Sports Editor Arts i Entertain ment Editor Diversions Editor Photo Chief Night News Editors Art Director General Manager Production Manager Advertising Manager Senior Aicct. Exec. 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