Putin: No quick fix for poverty MOSCOW (AP) - Vladimir Putin, taking the helm of a weak, unwieldy Russia as its second democratically elected president, admitted to voters Monday that he has no swift solutions to the poverty and corruption that bedevil his nation. Putin ordered the government to pay off wage debts to state workers, and said a first order of business after his convincing victory in Sunday’s election would be selecting a prime minister. World leaders cautiously wel comed Putin’s victory. President Clinton called Putin to congratulate him Monday, and used the opportunity to reiterate U.S. dismay over the war in Chechnya. Putin has promised to protect dem ocratic freedoms, but has yet to indicate how he would carry the sprawling nation into the post-Boris Yeltsin era. Putin, 47, was named acting president when Yeltsin resigned Dec. 31. Putin visited Yeltsin at his country house outside Moscow on Monday night. “You have taken the correct course. You are doing your job, fulfilling your duties,” Yeltsin told his successor after People are tired and struggling, and they’re hoping for things to get better, but miracles don’t happen.” Vladimir Putin Russian president-elect congratulating him in footage shown on Russian television. Many Russians hope Putin will dis tance himself from Yeltsin, whose unpredictability and poor health - along with the allegations of corruption within his inner circle - contributed to his political demise. “New people are likely to appear” when Putin names his government, Dmitry Kozak, the government chief of staff, said Monday. After he is inaugurated in early May, Putin will appoint a prime minis ter, who will then form a government, the Interfax news agency cited Kozak as saying. As acting president, Putin retained the position of prime minister, which he has held since Yeltsin appoint ed him in August. Putin’s levelheaded, firm-handed approach impressed voters. Russians like his pledges to restore the country’s military might, fight corruption, and battle poverty and social injustice. They also admire his uncompro mising stance against rebels in Chechnya - although ending the war gracefully could prove a major chal lenge. At a news conference as election returns were coming in, Putin acknowl edged the enormity of the task facing him and said he could promise no quick fixes. “The level of expectations is very high. People are tired and struggling, and they’re hoping for things to get bet ter, but miracles don’t happen,” he said. Later, Putin met with government ministers and ordered wage debts to state workers to be paid in full by April 1, according to Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khristenko. Under Yeltsin, the cash-starved government often let pen sions and wages go unpaid for months. With 95.5 percent of the vote counted, Putin led with 52.6 percent. Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov, who put up a stronger-than-expected election fight, was second with 29.3 percent. Liberal Grigory Yavlinsky was third with 5.8 percent; eight other can didates lagged far behind. Putin said his government would have to take into account the millions who voted against him. He said he would consider bringing opposition groups into the government if they shared his views. “Our policy must be more bal anced, take into account the existing realities and aim at increasing living standards,” he said. International election observers deemed the balloting free and fair. Zyuganov, however, accused the government of falsifying the results, saying the Communist vote was more than 40 percent. Cuban boy’s relatives seek quick hearing ■ Justice Department says boy’s relatives failed to comply with government demands. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department said Monday that the Miami relatives caring for Elian Gonzalez had failed to comply with a government demand that they promise to surrender him for return to his father if they lose a court appeal. Meantime, the relatives filed a court appeal designed to meet a govern ment deadline, and the 6-year-old Cuban boy described in his first TV interview how the boat bringing him and his mother from Cuba sank. He said he doesn’t believe his mother is dead. Although the relatives asked a fed eral appeals court to set an expedited schedule for hearing an appeal, their letter to Attorney General Janet Reno did not meet the other demand she made Friday night “We do not consider them in com pliance with Friday’s letter,” said Justice Department spokeswoman Carole Florman. “They have not agreed to provide written assurances they will comply with Immigration and Naturalization Service instructions if they do not prevail in the appeals court and cannot obtain a stay from the Supreme Court.” Florman said the Justice Department had responded in court to the family’s request for an expedited appeal that was not so swift as the gov emment had hoped and that a new letter would be sent to the family describing how the government proposed to pro ceed from here. Florman would not describe the government’s next steps. But in Friday’s letter, Reno said that if the family did not comply, it should be available for a meeting today to discuss Elian’s future and that the government might change his status in this country by Thursday, which could mean INS would try to move him to different custodians while the appeal is heard. Also Monday, about 100 people gathered outside the Little Havana home where the 6-year-old boy has been staying. The Democracy Movement, a Cuban exile group, has called for people to form a human chain around the home of Elian’s great-uncle in case the government tries to remove him and send him back to his father in Cuba. Elian was kept home Monday and won’t return to school out of fears that Cuba might try to force him back to the island, family spokesman Armando Gutierrez said. Facing a noon deadline, Elian’s Florida relatives filed a motion for an expedited appeals process to sort out the international custody dispute. The motion asks the federal appeals court to set a schedule for arguments in the family’s appeal of a federal judge’s ruling affirming the INS decision to return Elian to Cuba. A judge could set the schedule as early as this week, court officials said. It could be weeks before the case is resolved Some teachers wary over bonuses’ meaning HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Eighth-grade English teacher Brian P. Gallagher does not want the $2,500 bonus his school district is offering if his students improve their standard ized test scores. He says the whole idea is more trouble than it is worth. His students are razzing him, wisecracking about how they hold his financial fate in their hands. And since the Colonial School District’s plan allows only 20 percent of the teachers to get the extra cash, his colleagues are becoming reluctant to share teaching tips, he says. The opposition is so strong that nearly all of Colonial’s 350 teachers have signed a petition saying they will give any bonus money to charity. In recent months, schools in r U We have some very serious concerns about the idea...” Kathleen Lyons NEA spokeswoman Denver, and now Pennsylvania, have approved bonus plans to improve edu cation. But many teachers - and the nation’s two largest teachers unions - are suspicious of the idea. “Unfortunately, this has become the misguided panacea du jour - put teachers in a competitive situation and they’ll work harder,” said Darrell Capwell, a spokesman for the American Federation of Teachers, with more than 1 million members. “What people who talk about bonuses don’t seem to understand is that there are so many forces outside of the teachers’ control that influence test scores. A better thing to do is to use the money to hire another teacher or build more classrooms to support smaller class sizes.” Capwell said the bonus plan takes the familial relationship teachers have with students and threatens to replace it with a harsher, more corporate-like atmosphere. The National Education Association, which represents 2.5 million teachers, has not taken a stand on the issue but plans to discuss bonuses at a meeting July 4 in Questions? Comments? Ask for the appropriate section editor at (402) 472-2588 ore-maildn@unl.edu. -144:080) .is fXibl^ The Daily Nebraskan (US _f ., Nebraska Union 20, T400 fi St., Lincoln,„„v», during the academic year; weekly during the summer sessions.The public I to the Publications Board. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by calling *472-2588, Postmaster I postage pair ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 2000 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 120,1400 . Editor: Managing Editor: Associate News Editor: Associate News Editor: Opinion Editor: Sports Editor: A&E Editor: Copy Desk Co-Chief: Copy Desk Co-Chief: Photo Chief: Design Co-Chief: Design Co-Chief: Art Director: Web Editor: Asst. Web Editor: General Manager: Publications Board Chairwoman: Professional Adviser: Advertising Manager: Asst. Ad Manager: Classifield Ad Manager:, Josh Funk Lindsay Young Diane Broderick Dane Stickney J.J. Harder Sam McKewon Sarah Baker Jen Walker Josh Krauter Mike Warren Tim Karstens Diane Broderick Melanie Falk Gregg Steams Jewel Mlnarik Daniel Shattii Jessica Hofmann, (402) 477-0527 Don Walton, (402)473-7248 Nick Partsch, (402) 472-2589 Jamie Yeager Nichole Lake Chicago. “We have some very serious con cerns about the idea, but we’re not ready to throw water on it complete ly,” said NEA spokeswoman Kathleen Lyons. “We believe there may be some forms of bonuses that we could support.” Some districts around the country have offered merit increases or bonus es, but they base the decision on school-wide achievement or factors such as a teacher’s work outside the classroom. The Denver and Colonial School District programs would reward teachers for how well the children do in their individual classrooms. Denver’s program, approved last fall, is a four-year experiment that involves a small group of teachers. i |» f m m | pr™' HtK TOMORROW Partly cloudy high 56, low 36 ■ Vienna Iranian oil minister supports petroleum output increase VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Iran accepts the need for OPEC to boost petroleum output, the Iranian oil minister said Monday, but the amount of an increase favored by his country might not be enough to ease prices that have soared to nine-year highs. Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zangeneh spoke before a formal gathering of all 11 OPEC oil ministers, who adjourned their first session without reaching a decision on production. Zangeneh told reporters he sup ports some higher level of output during the second quarter of the year. However, he refused to say how much of an increase Iran was willing to support. “I won’t talk on numbers, but we don’t want a market shortage,” he said. ■ Uganda Bodies of 74 people found in hidden mass grave RUGAZI, Uganda (AP) - Prisoners under armed guard Monday uncovered 74 bodies from a mass grave hidden at the edge of a sugarcane field, where authorities suspect more members of a dooms day Christian sect remain buried. Some of the bodies showed signs of stab wounds while some others had pieces of cloth wrapped tightly around their throats. They appeared to have been dead about a month, a local doctor examining them said. The discovery in Rugazi came as authorities continued investigating the deaths of at least 490 other mem bers of the Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God elsewhere in the lush mountains of southwestern Uganda. ■ California Tobacco company to pay i damages to couple SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - k jury ordered the nation’s two largest tobacco companies Monday to pay $20 million in punitive damages to:a dying ex-smoker who took up the habit after the surgeon generalfs warning began appearing on ciga rette packs in the 1960s. The Superior Court jury voted 9 3 to order Philip Morris and R.U. Reynolds to pay $10 million each to Leslie Whiteley and her husband. The same jury awarded the cou ple $1.7 million in compensatory damages last week after finding that the companies deceived the public about the dangers of smoking. That verdict was the first for a smoker who took up the habit after 1969, when tobacco companies, on the government’s orders, began put ting warnings about health risks of smoking on cigarette packs. ■Texas , Mother pleads guilty to strangling her sons DALLAS (AP) - A second-grade teacher pleaded guilty Monday fo strangling her two young sons after they opened their Christmas presents in an act of vengeance against her ej husband. Lisa Marie Smith was sentenced to life in prison after her plea, which averted a trial and possible dealjh penalty. Smith, 31, will not be eligi ble for parole for 40 years. She told police she killed Willft Cody Smith, 5, and Tristen Thom^ Smith, 3, because she was distraug after losing custody of the boys to h^ former husband.