By The Associated Press Edited by Deb McAdams News Digest Friday, September 9, 1994 Page 2 AIDS hits minorities ATLANTA — Minorities are be ing hit increasingly harder by AIDS, accounting for more than halfof all new cases in the United States in 1993. Of the 106,949 AIDS cases reported last year in the United States, Puerto Rico. Guam and the Virgin Islands, 58.538 - or 55 percent - were among minorities, the Centers for Disease Con trol and Prevention reported Thursday. In 1992, minority cases accounted for 52 percent of new cases, up from 51 percent the year before. As the epidemic develops, its pace has slowed among homosexual white men while quickening among minori ties, particularly among blacks. The AIDS rate lastyearamongwhitcs was 30 cases per 100,000 people. The rate was more than five times higher among blacks (162 cases per 100,000 people) and three times higher among Hispanics(90). Among American Indi ans and Eskimos, it was24 per 100,000, and among Asians and Islanders, 12 per 100,000. Black women, with an AIDS rate of 73 per 100,000, were about 15 times more likely than white women to get the disease. Black males, with a rate of 266 per 100,000, were nearly five limes more likely than while males to get AIDS. Geography also makes a difference in how the virus spreads, said Dr. Teresa Diaz of the CDC’s National Center for Infectious Diseases. AIDS and race in the United States, t993 ' Asjart %% Source: CDC AP “Although wc aggregate minorities together, there are large geographic differences among minority groups,” she said. “For black and Hispanic men in the Northeast, it’s spread by intrave nous drug use.” while homosexual con tact is the greater risk elsewhere for those men. The Northeast has the highest rates of AIDS infection for both blacks and Hispanics, while the South and Mid west are generally lower. In some states, vast differences be tween minorities exist. In Florida, the rate for blacks is almost three times greater than for Hispanics. Jordan to play again CHICAGO — Michael Jordan, who as an NBA player displayed an uncanny abil ity to change h is shots in midair, has changed his mind. He’s going to play one last game in Chica go Stadium. Last week Jordan said he wouldn’t compete in acharity basketball game hosted by his former Chicago Bulls teammate Scottie Pippen. But Thurs day, Pippen announced Jordan would join other NBA stars in Friday night’s exhibition. “It’s going to be a great reunion, a great opportunity for as to go out and have some fun,” said Pippen, who teamed with Jordan to lead the Bulls to three straight NBA titles. Jordan jast completed his first season of minor league baseball with the Doublc-A Birmingham Barons afterrctiring from the Bulls 11 months ago. He will be making his first public basketball appearance since June 1993 when Chicago beat the Phoenix Suns in Game 6 for the Bulls’ third straight title. “Michael is a great athlete, and I’m sure he’s not going to come out there and embarrass himself,” said Pippen, who put together the charity game along with the PUSH Excel Foundation. “This gives me an opportunity to play against him for the first time in my career,” Pippen added. Jordan and Pippen will be on different sides. The stadium has been replaced by the United Center across the street and the exhibition game will be one final sendoff for the “Madhouse on Madison” that opened in 1929. The announcement that Jordan would play made Friday’s game one of the hottest tickets in Chicago. “It will be extra special, not just for me but for the fans, for the players who came out to watch the game. There are so many great memories in the stadium, and we’re going to have one last hurrah,” Pippen said. NBA players B.J. Armstrong, Horace Grant, Toni Kukoc, Charles Oakley and John Starks also arc scheduled to play. + 176-line entertainment system serving 13 cities + Online chat * local and international + Over 60,000 files online ♦ E-mail, including Internet bases on thousands of topics + Interactive online games including Trade Wars 2002 Lincolns (Electronic fnterto Witness names private eye LOS ANGELES—A man jailed for refusing to testify before a grand jury in the O.J. Simpson case told authorities a private eye witnessed the slayings of Simpson’s ex-wife and her friend, the investigator said Thursday. He denied he was there. Anthony Pcllicano, who has rep resented such celebrities as Michael Jackson and Roseanne. said he wasn’t shadowing Nicole Brown Simpson and wasn't outside her condo the night she and Ronald Goldman were slashed to death. “This is untrue,” Pcllicano told The Associated Press, adding he has now been subpoenaed to testify be fore the grand jury investigating Al Cowlings’ role in Simpson’s flight from police June 17. Pcllicano was fingered by John Dunton, a convicted forger who was jailed for contempt Wednesday after he refused to testify before the grand jury. Dunton told police he saw the sleuth in acaroutside Ms. Simpson’s Brentwood home on June 12, the night of the murders, Pellicano said. Dunton’s lawyer, Robert Rentzer, was unavailable for comment Thurs day. According to Pellicano, Dunton gave police several scenarios about what he saw the night of the slayings. “I don’t thinkpolicebclievc him.’’ he said. “I think he made the whole thing up to police and when he was called before a grand jury and was put under oath his attorney told him to shut up.” Simpson, 47, has been charged with two counts of murder and is scheduled to go on trial Sent. 26. Earlier this year, Pellicano testi fied before a Santa Barbara County grand jury investigating child moles lalion allegations against Michael Jackson. Pcllicano said his name would be surfacing again in the Simpson case: He’s working for police Detective Mark Fuhrman, who found a bloody glove, a key piece of evidence in the murder case,atSimpson’scstatc. He has been portrayed by the defense as a racist, rogue cop. Cowlings’ friend, pom actress Jennifer Peace, 23, met with prose cutors Thursday. Her attorney, Elliot Abclson, said they asked her to talk with them after she testified before the grand jury last week. Abclson confirmed investigators executed a search warrant at her home and seized audio tapes and phone records. Hedidn’tknow wheth er any of the tapes were conversa tions between Ms. Peace and Cowl ings or Simpson. Deathtoll 131 inUSAirplanecrash ALIQUIPPA, Pa. (AP)—A USAir jetliner nose-dived into a ravine while trying to 1 and near Pittsburgh on Thurs day, killing all 131 people on board in the deadliest U.S. crash in seven years. Flight 427 originated in Chicago and was to stop in Pittsburgh before continuing to West Palm Beach, Fla. “I looked up and there it was,” said Tom Michel, who was at a gas station near the crash site. “It was just coming straight down. I was screaming for ev erybody to run. It looked like it was under full power and he just went straight in.” Air traffic controllers said they lost contact with the plane when it was about seven miles from the airport, said Pat Boyle, a spokesman for the Allegheny County Department of Aviation. There were no indications of any problems on the flight and a report of an explosion before the crash could not be confirmed. Michel said there was a big boom and the sky lit up. There was black smoke everywhere and that was it.” Witnesses reported a gruesome car nage in a clearing on a heavily-wooded ravine. “All we saw was body parts hanging from the trees,” said Denise Godich, a nurse who was one of the first at the scene. “There were people everywhere. You could just see parts of them.” Another eyewitness said pieces of plane and baggage were scattered throughout the area. “We have done a fairly extensive search of the area and there are no survivors,” said Jim Eichcnlaub, man agcrofHopcwcllTownshipandcoordi natorofcmcrgencyscrviccsat the scene. The plane ’sblack box, which records flight data, was recovered, he said. Emergency crews put out the fire and the search was called off about two “We have done a fairly extensive search of the area and there are no sunhvors. ” ■ JIM EICHENLAUB Emergency Coordinator hours after the crash. The area was sealed ofT for the night, but olT-road vehicles were spotted heading to the crash site. The plane went down shortly after 7 p.m. in a field about seven miles from the airport, which is 20 miles northwest Of Pittsburgh. _ Marine’s remains found HANOI, Vietnam — U.S. search teams apparently have made a signifi cant breakthrough in accounting for Americans missing in action from the V ietnam War,a U .S. ofllc ial said Thurs day. American search teams recovered remains believed to belong to a U.S. Marine who died in captivity in Quang Ngai Province, once part of South Viet nam, 325 miles northeast of Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon. The discovery was seen as a break through by U.S. officials in Hanoi, who arc investigating K4 eases of Americans missing in action from the war. “I’m excited by it. I’m hopeful ” said Army Lt. Col. Melvin E. Richmond Jr., head of the U.S. MLA OfTicc in Hanoi. “It’s an important step.” The United Stales handed over the 84 “special remaias eases” to the Viet namese a year ago, but not one had been solved up to now. The Vietnamese photographed the dead American servicemen or the sites where POWs died in captivity and their remaias were buried. Netim&kan FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board. Nebraska Union 34.1400 R Si, Lincoln. NE 68588-0448, Monday through Fnday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions. Readers are encouraged to submil story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Tim Hedegaard. 436 9258 Subscription price is $50 for one year Postmaster: send address changes 10 the Daily Nebraskan. Nebraska Union 34.1400 R St,Lincoln. NE 68588-0448 Second class postage paid at Lincoln. NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT _'*** DAILY NEBRASKAN Looking For A Good Time? Lie Awake I Sept. ‘)ih. & Satunlax. Sept. I Dili (')pm-lam) I. V.C. 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