Turkey waits on execution ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Turkey’s government put on hold Wednesday the execution of Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan. The move was aimed to enhance Turkey’s prospects for joining the European Union. The decision, which came after coalition leaders met for eight hours, came in response to a request from the European Court of Human Rights to review Ocalan’s appeal. The rebel leader was sentenced to death in June by a Turkish court. Italian Premier Massimo D’Alema expressed “great satisfac tion” with Turkey’s decision, saying “the choice confirms the evolution of Turkish politics towards Europe and its democratic principles.” A Rome city official said the coliseum would be lit up in the coming days to mark the decision. Still, Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit warned that the execution was only delayed, not canceled. “If the rebel organization and its supporters attempt to use this process against the high interests of the state, then the process of delay ing will be halted and the process of execution will be started immedi ately,” Ecevit said. Ecevit’s warning was an appar ent attempt to appease the far-right National Action Party. The party has pressed for Ocalan’s hanging. Some 37,000 people, mostly Kurds, have died in the fighting since 1984. “The leaders made a very wrong decision,” said Mehdi Keskin, a lawyer for Turks who lost family in the fighting. “They have made the martyrs’ families’ con sciences bleed.” But Ecevit said Ocalan’s death sentence cannot be overruled. He also made clear that Turkey would not wait long. Review of the case in the European court could take up to two years. Reno’s order criticized ■ Strong opposition from Gov. Jeb Bush, Gonzalez relatives comes after attor ney general’s office decision. WASHINGTON (AP) - Any chal lenge to the government’s decision to return Elian Gonzalez to his Cuban father must come in federal court, said Attorney General Janet Reno Wednesday. She brushed aside a Florida court ruling. Reno postponed the federal gov ernment’s Friday deadline for turning Gonzalez over for return to Cuba. She wanted to give the 6-year-old boy’s Florida relatives time to challenge the decision. But initial reaction from family lawyers appeared to spurn Reno’s sug gestion that they argue the case in fed eral court. “We have a (Florida) court order that says the boy stays for now,” Jose Garcia-Pedrosa, one of the family’s attorneys, told WTVJ-TV in Miami. “We have a subpoena (from a U.S. House committee) that requires him to appear in February. The boy isn’t going anywhere.” “I think the attorney general should re-think her position very, very, very quickly,” Garcia-Pedrosa said. Reno did not give a new deadline or say what steps the federal govern ment might take next to enforce its decision if the Florida relatives refuse to seek a federal court ruling. Federal officials have said they have no plans to send Immigration and Naturalization Service agents to seize the boy. Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said the boy’s future could best be decided in state court, and he was disappointed by Reno’s decision. “I just think it’s not a cut-and-dried issue, and I think the tie should go to Elian, not Cuba,” Bush said. Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fla., said he was pleased the deadline had been pushed back. He said when Congress returns in two weeks, he would push for quick action on his bill to give Elian immediate U.S. citizenship. Leaders of Cuban-American groups doubted federal agents would try to take the boy but said other steps also could trigger more protests in Miami’s streets. Cuban-American groups have protested against return ing the boy to Fidel Castro’s Cuba. “We trust that they will not do that,” said Ramon Saul Sanchez, head of Democracy Movement. Sanchez called Reno’s decision disappointing and said more protests will occur if the boy’s great-uncle, who is seeking custody, doesn’t get his day in court. Elian’s mother, stepfather and oth ers died when their boat capsized as they fled Cuba. He survived along with two adults. Reno wrote to lawyers for the Florida relatives. She said a Florida court’s Monday ruling that the boy must remain in the United States until a March 6 hearing “has no force or effect” on the Immigration and Naturalization Service’s decision in the case. Meanwhile, a Miami television news crew filmed Elian on Tuesday as he made a comment about his senti ments while playing outside with a friend. But an airplane was passing overhead, and the boy’s words, spoken in Spanish, were in dispute. It was unclear whether he said he wanted to stay in Miami or go home to Cuba. A family spokesman, Armando Gutierrez, said he didn’t know what the boy said. Lawyers for the family visited Reno here last week to press their argument that she overrule the INS decision. Weighing their arguments, Reno wrote, “I am not currently aware of any basis for reversing ... (that) decision..” Bus crash kills 42 in Brazil SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) - A bus carrying Argentine tourists crashed head-on into another bus, tipped over and burst into flames Wednesday in southeastern Brazil. The crash killed at least 42 people and injured another 40, police said. The accident happened in the early morning hours on a fog-shrouded mountain highway near the town of Pouso Redondo, 340 miles southwest of Sao Paulo in the state of Santa Catarina. “The crash was so strong that the Argentine bus exploded into a ball of fire after falling over on one of its sides,” said Federal Highway Police ofc. Ivan Robson Flores. Forty-one people were killed at the scene, including four children, Flores said. One passenger died at the hospital. Flores said earlier reports that another 20 tourists were burned to death proved to be untrue. “It is highly unlikely that we will find other bodies under the wreckage,” he said. The bus carrying the Argentine tourists was apparently speeding down a hill when it smashed into the other bus, which was on a regular inter-city route, he said. He did not know how many pas sengers were on the Argentine bus. The bus from the Argentine province ofTucuman was headed to the beach resort of Camboriu, about 60 miles east of the accident site, Flores said. An Argentine air force plane was being sent to Brazil to carry the bodies back home, Argentina’s ambassador to Brazil, Jorge Hugo Herreras Vegas, told GloboTV Release of Pinochet records ureed LONDON (AP) - Pressure mount ed on Britain’s top law enforcement official Wednesday to release ailing former Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto 1^1 g**" rn # * 3K I** h $■•■ £ & to & !j£*1 ^ ^ > i / > '$■’ |y Uhs&^&&&xs Partly sunny, Fair, high 54, low 19 high 48, low 26 Nebraskan w ^!for: |0S^Fun^ Questions? Comments? Managing Editor: Lindsay Young Ask for annronriate section editor at Associate News Editor: Dane Stickney ASK ,0f me 1 Associate News Editor: Diane Broderick _ H7 .„. aM,, Opinion Editor: J.J. Harder ore-matldn@unl.edu. Sports Editor: Sam McKewon A&E Editor: Sarah Baker General Manager: Daniel Shattil * Copy Desk Co-Chief: Jen Walker Publications Board Jessica Hofmann. Copy Desk Co-Chief: Josh Krauter Chairwoman: (402) 477-0527 Photo Chief: Mike Warren Professional Adviser: Don Walton. Design Co-Chief: Diane Broderick (402)473-7248, Design Co-Chief: Tim Karstens Advertising Manager: Nick Parisch, Art Director: Melanie Falk (402) 472-2589 Web Editor: Gregg Steams Asst. Ad Manager: Jamie Yeager Asst. Web Editor: Jewel Minarik Classified Ad Manager: Nichole Lake Fax number: (402) 472-1761 World Wide Web: www.dailyneb.com The Daily Nebraskan (USPS144-080) is published by tne UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 20,1400 R St, Lincoln, NE 68588-0448, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during the summer sessions.The public has access to the Publications Board. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by callinq (402)472-2588. Subscriptions are $60 for one year. Postmaster; Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 20,1400 R SL, Lincoln NE 68588-0448. Periodical postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1999 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN ---— Pinochet’s medical records. The records could set Pinochet free. Pinochet has been detained for 15 months on charges of human rights abuses. The human rights group Amnesty International demanded that Home Secretary Jack Straw release the records, at least to Spain - as well as to France, Switzerland and Belgium, which also requested Pinochet’s extra dition claiming their citizens suffered abuses during his 1973-90 dictator ship. “Many victims of Pinochet’s crimes and the families of those who have been murdered will feel betrayed if Pinochet is released on the basis of medical evidence which is not going to be disclosed,” said Geoffrey Bindman, an Amnesty attorney. Straw announced Tuesday that an independent medical exam on Jan. 5 by four physicians was “unequivocal and unanimous” in finding the 84-year-old general too ill to stand trial. The exam opened the door for Pinochet to return to Chile within weeks. The panel’s findings were not dis closed. Straw told the House of Commons that criteria considered included whether Pinochet would be able to follow the proceedings, assist in his own defense and give coherent tes timony. Pinochet suffered two minor strokes in September. He also has dia betes and arthritis and wears a pace maker. Straw gave the parties involved seven days to submit arguments before he issues a final ruling on extradition to Spain, but he gave no timetable for his decision. He noted that Pinochet had been asked to allow Spain and the other countries involved to read copies of the medical report, but that the general “declined to do so.” Prime Minister Tony Blair’s Downing Street office issued a state ment Wednesday saying Pinochet was entitled to his privacy. In Washington, White House spokesman Joe Lockhart said: “This is a legal matter between Chile and Spain.” Pinochet’s opponents have a few alternatives, all viewed as long shots - appealing to the High Court; attempt ing to launch a private prosecution; or convincing Britain’s director of public prosecutions to bring action. But even if Pinochet returns to Chile, he faces the prospect of prosecu tion. Chilean law has been amended since the closing days of the Pinochet regime, when the dictator passed a wide-ranging law granting himself immunity from prosecution, said Pablo Cabrera, Chile’s ambassador in London. Pinochet relinquished power in 1990 and became a senator for life. Pinochet has been detained in Britain since his Oct. 16,1998, arrest in a London hospital on the Spanish war rant. He is accused of using torture to intimidate and silence political oppo nents throughout his dictatorship. -WORLD/NATION ■ Washington Supreme Court: Officers can stop people who flee police WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court on Wednesday gave police broad authority to stop and question people who run at the sight of an officer. The 5-4 ruling came short of giv ing police a blanket right to stop any one who runs after seeing the police. But it said such flight may indicate a crime is being committed and there fore can help justify a police stop. The decision was a boost for police but worried some civil libertar ians. The court said police had enough reason to stop a Chicago man who ran after spotting officers in an area known for narcotics trafficking. ■ Israel Funding Israeli-Syrian peace vital for U.S., Barak says JERUSALEM (AP) - Prime Minister Ehud Barak said Wednesday that a framework for a peace treaty with Syria could be reached within two months - and that funding it is a vital U.S. interest. Barak was trying, in part, to per suade a group of visiting U.S. sena tors to approve billions of dollars in U.S. taxpayers’ money for an Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights, the expected price of peace. The senators spent Wednesday afternoon flying over the strategic plateau to try to get a feel for the cost. Barak said that despite little apparent progress in the latest round of U.S.-sponsored peace talks with Syria, he saw “cracks in the typical Syrian rigidity” that made him opti mistic. ■ Washington Clintonplans agenda for working poor WASHINGTON (AP) - Reassuring himself that he’s not a lame duck, President Clinton began laying out the agenda of his final year in office Wednesday. The agenda includes a $21 billion expansion in tax credits for the working poor and more help for the nation’s neediest communities. “The great challenge for us today is to make up our minds: What are we going to do with this magic moment of promise?” Clinton said. Republicans reacted warily to Clinton’s proposal. “I think the Clinton administra tion spends money every day, it seems like,” Republican presidential front runner George W. Bush said. “If you look at the newspapers and look at the programs, there is always another program, another initiative.” The president spoke before the Democratic Leadership Council, the centrist political group he helped found. ■ United States States fail to hire better teachers, survey says (AP) - The states deserve an underachiever’s “C” for failing to deliver on promises to put better teachers in America’s classrooms, said authors of a 50-state survey of efforts to improve public schools. Quality Counts 2000 found states often undermine their own aims. Quality Counts 2000 is Education Week’s fourth annual state-by-state look at public schooling in kinder garten through 12th grade. For instance, the survey released Wednesday said 39 states require basic literacy and math tests for would-be teachers. Yet loopholes in 36 of those states allow some who fail to be hired.