3% Sailg 3ar Mffl California Immigrant Law Contested BY CAM NGUYEN STAFF WRITER Proposition 187 is still on temporary restraining order two weeks after it was overwhelmingly approved by voters in California. Proposition 187 is an anti-immigrant ballot measure that would deny all public services to illegal immigrants The mea sure would bar illegal immigrants from attending public schools and from receiv ing social services and nonemergency medi cal care. It would also mandate that offi cials enforce the law by requiring people to show proof of legal residency before pro viding any services. The measure was initially devised by two former Immigration and Naturaliza tion Services directors, Alan Nelson and Harold Ezell. It was passed by a 59 percent to 41 percent vote on Nov. 8. Just one day later, a federal judge and a state judge, ruling separately, announced that 187 was unconstitutional andput it on legal hold. “Judge William Matthew Byrne of the U.S. District Court issued a temporary restraining order that bars any enforce ment of Proposition 187 until we get a court date and make our arguments,” said Kathy Patient, spokeswoman for the Investigation Inconclusive in 1953 LSD Death THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C.—Pathologists who examined the remains of a germ war fere researcher say they can’t tell whether he was murdered or leaped 13 stories to his death days after the CIA gave him an experimental dose of LSD in 1953. “We didn’t find any smoking gun,” said James E. Starrs, professor of law and fo rensic science at George Washington Uni versity. “The nonscientific aspects, though, are rankly and starkly suggestive of homi cide. There’s no other way I can read them.” A final report of Starrs’ six-month fo rensic probe into the death of Frank R. Olson was released in Washington Mon day, exactly 41 years after Olson plum meted to his death at the Statler Hotel in New York City. Olson’s relatives initially were told that the biochemist employed at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md., committed suicide by crashing through the hotel window. Twenty-two years after his death, how ever, the family learned that Olson had been given LSD as part of mind-control research the CIA financed during the Cold War. Upset and depressed after the experi Experts Wonder What Went Wrong in Yugoslavian Intervention THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Just one month ago, outgunned govern ment troops burst from the isolated Bihac comer of northwest Bosnia and pushed Serb forces backward in their most success fill offensive of the war. Government troops were on the offen sive elsewhere, too, and the United States was preparing to announce it no longer would enforce an arms embargo against the Bosnian government. After 2 years of taking it on the chin, the Bosnian government was taking it to the Serbs. Weeks later, the government’s back is to the wall again. Serbs have retaken most of the territory around Bihac, the U.N. peacekeeping mission is in shambles and the U.S. defense secretary has acknowl edged that the Serbs have in effect won the war. What went wrong? Bosnian army miscalculations played a role. But the story of the Bihac campaign also highlights U.N. failure to meet its basic responsibilities in the former Yugo slavia. Sources in the Muslim-led government’s army say planning for the Bihac campaign began two months ago when the United Nations withdrew a unit of French peace keepers from Bihac and replaced them with poorly trained and underequipped Bangladeshis. That was shortly after the government army had routed renegade Muslims and taken control of the entire Bihac region, which was surrounded by Bosnian Serbs to the south and east and by Croatian Serbs to the north and west. The Bosnian army concluded that the Bosnian Serbs would attack to secure terri tory for a railroad that could link the Serbian capital of Belgrade with the farthest-flung parts of Serb-held land in Croatia and Bosnia. The Bihac region was the only missing piece in the railroad plan. Rather than wait for an attack, the gov ernment army struck first, taking 100 square Get A Job! Laserset Resumes slßl page • One day service •Kept on file for 2 years B • Rushes possible C.O. COPIES Open Until Midnite 7 Days A Week 169 E. Franklin St. • Near the Post Office , 967-6633 „ American Civil Liberties Union, which has filed suit against the proposition. There are currently 12 to 14 lawsuits filed against 187, according to Rosemary Jenks, a senior analyst for the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, D.C. All areas of the measure have been chal lenged except one that makes document fraud a felony, she said. Most of the lawsuits regard the provi sion that bars illegal aliens from attending public schools. They cite a 1982 case, Flyler vs. Doe, in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a Texas law was unconstitutional because it was a “violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to single out illegal immigrants as a distinct class of people who would be denied services of fered to all others," according to a press release from the ACLU. Schools have challenged 187 because they do not want the responsibility of en forcing the law. “It is difficult for an administrator to say, ‘lfyoucan’tproducethe(properdocu ments), I can’t let you in this school.’ It is hard for them to do that,” Jenks said. According to the press release, the judges said public services could not be denied to illegal immigrants until a resolution was reached involving the legality of the issue. ment, Olson was rushed to New York to see a specialist who was working with the then little-known hallucinogen. To resolve suspicions of foul play, Olson’s sons, Eric and Nils, had their father’s body exhumed in June. Members of a forensic team ledby Starrs could see an appendectomy scar on Olson’s well-preserved body, but there was no evi dence of the multiple cuts noted on the original autopsy report. “What explains that he went right out a window that was closed without getting any cuts on his body?” Starrs asked. “It’s not inconceivable that someone could have broken the window after he went through to make it appear as if he had gone through a window as a crazy person would. “I’m skeptical that anyone could clear a radiator, a 31-inch high window sill, pass through a 3-by-5-foot window opening obscured by a drawn shade, all in the darkness of a hotel room at night, ” he said. Stans, who has conducted forensic in vestigations into the deaths of explorer Meriwether Lewis, the ax-murdered par ents of Lizzie Borden and assassinated Louisiana Sen. Huey Long, also said he was puzzled by a hematoma, a swollen miles of Serb-held territory. At the same time, the army and its Bosnian Croat militia allies seized the town of Kupres to the south. The Bosnian army was pressing the Serbs in central and north east Bosnia. The government appeared to be on a roll. The United Nations did not react to the government offensives, and they were greeted with some satisfaction in Wash ington, D.C. That told the Serbs two things: that the United Nations probably would not react to a counterattack, and second, that stron ger U.S. backing for the Bosnian govern ment meant there was no sense in fighting only a defensive war to protect what they had captured. The Bosnian sth Corps in Bihac was a threat, and Bosnian Serbs concluded they had to contain it. Government generals expected a Serb THE SAAB JAS 39 One-way ejectable heated pilot's seat. Anti-lock brakes. Comfortably accommodates 6 intercept missiles. Parachute standard. 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He said the constant flow of illegal im migrants caused problems for legal Cali fornia citizens. “We have only so many tax dollars,” he said. “When you are spending 10 percent or more on illegal aliens, you are taking from the legal ones.” According to the INS, the total number of illegal immigrants in the United States in 1994 is 4 million, with 40 percent living in California. However, despite the logical arguments offered in defense of the measure, 187 cannot be passed, Patient said. “It is unconstitutional —a state can’t set federal law. It’s up to federal ruling and Congress; the whole thing should be thrown out,” she said. According to a press release, recently re-elected Republican California Gov. Pete Wilson wants the state government to en area filled with blood, over Olson’s left eye. Dr. Jack Frost, deputy chief medical examiner of West Virginia who examined the exhumed body, said he did not believe Olson suffered the injury in the fall. “It was smooth,” Frost said. “If you hit concrete, you’re going to see abrasions.” The injury could have come if Olson had rammed his head through the win dow, Frost said. Starrs said it was also possible that someone hit Olson on the head and threw his body out the window. “But we can’t prove it,” he said. Starrs said today he believed the unex plained hematoma raised enough ques tions to reopen the case. Toxicology tests on Olson’s body tis sues showed no evidence of LSD or any other drug, Starrs said. “That doesn’t mean he didn’t have any at the time he died or before he died,” Stans said. “It means that, as of now, we can’t find any.” Starrs is still awaiting toxicology results on Olson’s hair samples. Scientists had hoped the forensic evi dence would provide a definitive explana tion of Olson’s death, but Starrs still cannot counterattack from the South, which be gan in the second week of November. What they did not expect was intervention by Seibs from Croatia to the North. Now, Serb forces are on the outskirts of Bihac, planes based in Croatia have raided Bosnian towns and artillery has shelled Bosnian government territory. According to the rules under which the United Nations entered former Yugosla via, none of that should have been pos sible. In January 1992, following six months of war in Croatia, the United Nations es tablished demilitarized zones in the one third of Croatia controlled by Serbs. Most of that territory borders Bosnia. Heavy weapons in those areas were to be placed under U.N. control. But some weapons never were under control; others were placed in U.N. storage but were bro ken out again at moments of tension. THE SAAB 900 S 4-way adjustable heated driver's seat. Anti-lock brakes. Comfortably accommodates 5 adult passengers. Air bags standard. ($349 PER MONTH**) force 187 and said “the state would fight appeals of the lawsuits all the way to the Supreme Court." Despite the raging battle between sup porters and opponents of 187, both sides could be left with more in their hands than when they first started out. “This is a good thing. It means the court is receptive to our arguments. They think that there’s enough merit that the matter should be put on hold until we give our arguments,” Parrent said. Jenks said 187 was not going to be effective in stopping illegal immigrants from getting into the United States. “There are ways around it,” Jenks said. “There are very little enforcement provi sions in Proposition 187.” However, she said this was the first time a grassroots effort involving anti-immigra tion laws had succeeded in sending a mes sage to Congress. “At least since 1976, every single na tional poll has showed that Americans want better enforcement of our immigra tion laws. Despite all that, Congress has ignored them. Our borders are a joke,” Jenks said. “Sol think the significance of this is that it really sends a message to Washington... This is essentially a cry for help because they have been ignored for so long." say for sure how Olson died. However, he said the fact that CIA researchers continue to withhold information raised doubts about whether Olson committed suicide. For example, Starrs said Sydney Gottlieb, who oversaw the ClA’s mind control research during the Cold War, told him he shredded documents detailing the experiments “so they wouldn’t be misun derstood.” “I can’t see any reason why some of these people will not talk,” Starrs said. “Why lie at this point? The only possibility that I can see from all this is that there is a greater wrong than Dr. Olson out there that they are all trying to cover up.” Olson’s sons, who attended today’s news conference, declined to comment on the results. They said they would issue a state ment after they had studied the report and talked about it with a lawyer. CIA spokesman David Christian said Monday that Olson’s death was exten sively investigated by Congress and the Executive Branch in the 19705. In 1974, then President Gerald Ford formally apolo gized to the Olson family and the federal government gave the family a $750,000 settlement. The Bihac region includes a U.N.-man dated safe area around the town of Bihac, meaning that NATO could launch air strikes if the area were attacked. NATO launched two air strikes last week: once to knock out an airfield in Croatia from which Serb planes attacked the Bihac pocket and once to silence Serb anti-aircraft missile batteries that threat ened its jets. But by the time the United Nations acknowledged that Croatian Serbs actu ally were in Bihac safe area, there was another problem: the United Nations, which decides when NATO planes strike, said the Serbs were so close to the center of Bihac that any air strike would threaten civilians. And the U.N. commander in Bosnia, Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose, said peace keepers had “never promised to defend anything.” Gangster Organizations On the Rise in Japan THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TOKYO Just across the tracks from Tokyo’s towering City Hall, in a red-light district drenched in neon and alcohol, a local gangster boss bids a visitor farewell with an odd lament. “Be careful,” he says as an underling eyes two monitors showing the outside entrance. “Even I don’t feel safe out there alone at night anymore.” Squeezed by three years of recession and intensified police crackdowns, Japan’s “yakuza” underworld—which has opera tions all over the globe has grown more sophisticated, more unpredictable and more violent. In a country where guns are banned and safe streets a point of national pride, head lines over the past month have been alarm ing: —A waitress is shot in the head during a robbery. The robbers escaped, but police believe they probably got their guns from gangsters. —Drive-by shootings are reported at the homes of a mayor and deputy mayor and construction company executive in a town in southern Japan. Police suspect the gangland-style warn ing was tied to a dispute over a public works project. —A gangster shoots a real estate devel oper to death after an argument at a crowded bar just east of Tokyo. “We are seeing a daily occurrence of gun crime,” said Takaji Kunimatsu, head of the National Police Agency. “It’s abnor mal, and very disturbing.” To law enforcement experts, the trend is COUNCIL FROM PAGE 3 ing of the road would do to their property. UNC journalism Professor Raleigh Mann, who lives on Stateside Drive just offN.C. 86, said he was concerned about the loss of his land and about traffic noise as the road moved closer to his house. Gordon Mitchell, who owns the prop erty across the road from Stateside Drive, said the widening would encroach on his land, destroying the six rental units he owns that occupy the area. “The DOT right of way will come to the foundation of the buildings,” he said. “I went to Raleigh to talk to the DOT, and these plans will destroy these units. Your job will be to weigh the social costs of destroying these units against the costs of building the road.” Council member Joyce Brown agreed that the current plan needed alterations. “When this came before us before, I Some People Would Work Anywhere For Money All you have to do is relax! New donors can earn up to sso* this week donating V i . | (*based on two visits) BBt J Must Present This Ad When Donating SERA-TEC BIOLOGICALS 109Vz E, FRANKLIN ST. 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Police acknowledge that no major gangs have gone out of business, no leading fig ures put behind bars. The “big three” syndicates the Yamaguchi-gumi, Inagawa-kai and Sumiyoshi-kai—appear as stable as ever, although membership is down. The sudden end three years ago to an economic boom fueled by easy credit and heavy speculation in stock and land prices has shrunken their incomes, but gangs con tinue to take in billions of dollars each year. “When I was with the police, gangsters weren’t generally that rich,” said Raisuke Miyawaki, a former head of the National Police Agency’s organized crime division. “But in order to understand Japan’s economy now, you must take the yakuza into account,” he said. “They are a potent economic force, and the impact of their money is immense.” The yakuza the term is derived from slang used in a gambling game and roughly translated means “good for nothing” derive much of their money from tradi tional sources illegal drugs, gambling, extortion, and the trades in sex and un documented workers from China, Thai land, the Philippines and Middle East coun tries. voted for it reluctantly even though I thought the medians even at 16 feet were too wide,” Brown said. “One of the concerns I have is that we in Chapel Hill do have traffic problems, but a lot of the problems result from cars going too fast. I think that we’re opening up the way for a lot of fast traffic coming into our town.” Brown proposed installing a traffic sig nal light at the inteisection of Stateside Drive. “I think that we need to have four lanes, but I don’t think that this kind of fast moving traffic is what we need,” she said. Although the road may eventually be expanded further, Chapel Hill Mayor Ken Broun said the resolution was the appro priate option for the town to pursue. “I’m uncomfortable with the depth of the median north ofWeaver Dairy," Broun said. “I’m uncomfortable with the amount of lanes that ultimately may go there, but I think this is a reasonable way to proceed right now.” 5