commit 9f04692132fdd27aada1625cb1d2e96734505627 Author: Jakub Date: Mon Jun 6 22:44:05 2022 +0200 v0.1 diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2f836aa --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitignore @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +*~ +*.pyc diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..810f707 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +CoNLL-2003 English Named Entity Recognition. +====================================================== + +NER challenge for CoNLL-2003 English. +Annotations were taken from [University of Antwerp](https://www.clips.uantwerpen.be/conll2003/ner/). +The English data is a collection of news wire articles from the [Reuters Corpus](https://trec.nist.gov/data/reuters/reuters.html), RCV1. + +Format of the train set +----------------------- + +The train set has just two columns separated by TABs: + +* the expected BIO labels, +* the docuemnt. + +Each line is a separate training item. Note that this is TSV format, +not CSV, double quotes are not interpreted in a special way! + +Preprocessing snippet located [here](https://git.applica.pl/snippets/18) + +End-of-lines inside documents were replaced with the '' tag. + +The train is compressed with the xz compressor, in order to see a +random sample of 10 training items, run: + + xzcat train/train.tsv.xz | shuf -n 10 | less -S + +(The `-S` disables line wrapping, press "q" to exit `less` browser.) + +Format of the test sets +----------------------- + +For the test sets, the input data is given in two files: the text in +`in.tsv` and the expected labels in `expected.tsv`. (The files have +`.tsv` extensions for consistency but actually they do not contain TABs.) + +To see the first 5 test items run: + + cat dev-0/in.tsv | paste dev-0/expected.tsv - | head -n 5 + +The `expected.tsv` file for the `test-A` test set is hidden and is not +available in the master branch. + +Format of the output files +-------------------------- + +For each input line, a probability for each label must be given: + + label1:prob1 label2:prob2 ... labelN:probN + +(The separator is space, *not* TAB here.) + +You are expected to suply `dev-0/out.tsv` and `test-A/out.tsv` in this +format (the file has `.tsv` extension for consistency, but actually +there should be no TAB there). + +Evaluation metrics +------------------ + +One evaluation metric is used: + +* BIO-F1, F1 metric on NER tags + +Directory structure +------------------- + +* `README.md` — this file +* `config.txt` — GEval configuration file +* `train/` — directory with training data +* `train/train.tsv.xz` — train set +* `dev-0/` — directory with dev (test) data (split preserved from CoNLL-2003) +* `dev-0/in.tsv` — input data for the dev set +* `dev-0/expected.tsv` — expected (reference) data for the dev set +* `test-A` — directory with test data +* `test-A/in.tsv` — input data for the test set +* `test-A/expected.tsv` — expected (reference) data for the test set (hidden from the developers, + not available in the `master` branch) + +Usually, there is no reason to change these files. + diff --git a/config.txt b/config.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..668f247 --- /dev/null +++ b/config.txt @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +--metric BIO-F1 --precision 5 --gonito-host http://dgx-app.applica.pl:23800 diff --git a/dev-0/expected.tsv b/dev-0/expected.tsv new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2f78b2c --- /dev/null +++ b/dev-0/expected.tsv @@ -0,0 +1,215 @@ +O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-ORG O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O +O O O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-LOC O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O O O +O O B-PER O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O +O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-ORG O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O +O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC B-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O +O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O +O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O +O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC I-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O 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O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC I-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC I-LOC O +O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O +O O B-PER O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-ORG B-MISC I-MISC B-PER O O O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O +O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC I-LOC I-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O +O O B-PER O O O B-LOC O B-PER O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O B-PER O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O B-MISC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O 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O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-MISC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O B-PER O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-PER O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O B-PER O O O 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B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-ORG I-ORG O O O +B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O +B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O +B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC I-LOC O 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O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-MISC O 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O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-PER O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 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O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O +B-LOC O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O +O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O B-ORG O O O O O O O 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O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O +O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O +O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O 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B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O O O +O O O O O O B-LOC B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-PER O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O +B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC I-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O +O O B-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O B-PER O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O O O O O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC I-LOC I-LOC I-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-MISC O B-PER O B-PER O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O +O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC I-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O 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O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC I-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O B-LOC I-LOC O +O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O +O O B-PER I-PER O B-MISC O B-ORG O B-ORG O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-MISC O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-PER O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-LOC O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-MISC O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O 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O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O +O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O +O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O B-ORG O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER 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O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O +O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-MISC O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-MISC O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O +O O O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O +O O B-PER O B-ORG O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O +O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O B-PER O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O +O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O +O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O +O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O B-PER O B-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-ORG O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O O B-ORG O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O B-PER O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-PER O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-MISC O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O +O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O +B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-ORG O O O O B-MISC O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O +O B-MISC O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O 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O O O O B-MISC B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O +B-MISC O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O 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O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O +O B-MISC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-MISC O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC I-LOC O B-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-ORG O O B-MISC I-MISC O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-ORG O B-PER O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O B-LOC O O O B-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O B-MISC O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O B-PER O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O +B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG 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O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O +B-ORG I-ORG O B-LOC O O O O B-LOC O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O B-ORG O B-ORG O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-LOC I-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-PER O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O +B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O B-LOC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O +B-MISC I-MISC O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O O O B-MISC O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O B-ORG O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O B-LOC O O B-ORG O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-ORG O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-ORG O O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O 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O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-LOC O O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O +B-LOC O B-PER O B-LOC O B-PER O O B-LOC O O B-MISC O O B-PER I-PER O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O B-PER O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O B-MISC B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O B-LOC I-LOC O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-MISC O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O 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O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O +O B-ORG O O O B-LOC O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-LOC O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-ORG O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O B-ORG I-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC B-LOC I-LOC O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC O O B-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O B-ORG I-ORG O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-ORG O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O B-PER I-PER O B-LOC O O B-PER O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O B-PER I-PER O B-PER I-PER O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O B-PER I-PER O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-MISC I-MISC O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-PER O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O B-LOC O O O O O O O diff --git a/dev-0/in.tsv b/dev-0/in.tsv new file mode 100644 index 0000000..60cb285 --- /dev/null +++ b/dev-0/in.tsv @@ -0,0 +1,215 @@ +CRICKET - LEICESTERSHIRE TAKE OVER AT TOP AFTER INNINGS VICTORY . LONDON 1996-08-30 West Indian all-rounder Phil Simmons took four for 38 on Friday as Leicestershire beat Somerset by an innings and 39 runs in two days to take over at the head of the county championship . Their stay on top , though , may be short-lived as title rivals Essex , Derbyshire and Surrey all closed in on victory while Kent made up for lost time in their rain-affected match against Nottinghamshire . After bowling Somerset out for 83 on the opening morning at Grace Road , Leicestershire extended their first innings by 94 runs before being bowled out for 296 with England discard Andy Caddick taking three for 83 . Trailing by 213 , Somerset got a solid start to their second innings before Simmons stepped in to bundle them out for 174 . Essex , however , look certain to regain their top spot after Nasser Hussain and Peter Such gave them a firm grip on their match against Yorkshire at Headingley . Hussain , considered surplus to England 's one-day requirements , struck 158 , his first championship century of the season , as Essex reached 372 and took a first innings lead of 82 . By the close Yorkshire had turned that into a 37-run advantage but off-spinner Such had scuttled their hopes , taking four for 24 in 48 balls and leaving them hanging on 119 for five and praying for rain . At the Oval , Surrey captain Chris Lewis , another man dumped by England , continued to silence his critics as he followed his four for 45 on Thursday with 80 not out on Friday in the match against Warwickshire . He was well backed by England hopeful Mark Butcher who made 70 as Surrey closed on 429 for seven , a lead of 234 . Derbyshire kept up the hunt for their first championship title since 1936 by reducing Worcestershire to 133 for five in their second innings , still 100 runs away from avoiding an innings defeat . Australian Tom Moody took six for 82 but Chris Adams , 123 , and Tim O'Gorman , 109 , took Derbyshire to 471 and a first innings lead of 233 . After the frustration of seeing the opening day of their match badly affected by the weather , Kent stepped up a gear to dismiss Nottinghamshire for 214 . They were held up by a gritty 84 from Paul Johnson but ex-England fast bowler Martin McCague took four for 55 . By stumps Kent had reached 108 for three . +CRICKET - ENGLISH COUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP SCORES . LONDON 1996-08-30 Result and close of play scores in English county championship matches on Friday : Leicester : Leicestershire beat Somerset by an innings and 39 runs . Somerset 83 and 174 ( P. Simmons 4-38 ) , Leicestershire 296 . Leicestershire 22 points , Somerset 4 . Chester-le-Street : Glamorgan 259 and 207 ( A. Dale 69 , H. Morris 69 ; D. Blenkiron 4-43 ) , Durham 114 ( S. Watkin 4-28 ) and 81-3 . Tunbridge Wells : Nottinghamshire 214 ( P. Johnson 84 ; M. McCague 4-55 ) , Kent 108-3 . London ( The Oval ) : Warwickshire 195 , Surrey 429-7 ( C. Lewis 80 not out , M. Butcher 70 , G. Kersey 63 , J. Ratcliffe 63 , D. Bicknell 55 ) . Hove : Sussex 363 ( W. Athey 111 , V. Drakes 52 ; I. Austin 4-37 ) , Lancashire 197-8 ( W. Hegg 54 ) Portsmouth : Middlesex 199 and 426 ( J. Pooley 111 , M. Ramprakash 108 , M. Gatting 83 ) , Hampshire 232 and 109-5 . Chesterfield : Worcestershire 238 and 133-5 , Derbyshire 471 ( J. Adams 123 , T.O'Gorman 109 not out , K. Barnett 87 ; T. Moody 6-82 ) Bristol : Gloucestershire 183 and 185-6 ( J. Russell 56 not out ) , Northamptonshire 190 ( K. Curran 52 ; A. Smith 5-68 ) . +CRICKET - 1997 ASHES INTINERARY . LONDON 1996-08-30 Australia will defend the Ashes in a six-test series against England during a four-month tour starting on May 13 next year , the Test and County Cricket Board said on Friday . Australia will also play three one-day internationals and four one-day warm-up matches at the start of the tour . The tourists will play nine first-class matches against English county sides and another against British Universities , as well as one-day matches against the Minor Counties and Scotland . Tour itinerary : May May 13 Arrive in London May 14 Practice at Lord 's May 15 v Duke of Norfolk 's XI ( at Arundel ) May 17 v Northampton May 18 v Worcestershire May 20 v Durham May 22 First one-day international ( at Headingley , Leeds ) May 24 Second one-day international ( at The Oval , London ) May 25 Third one-day international ( at Lord 's , London ) May 27-29 v Gloucestershire or Sussex or Surrey ( three days ) May 31 - June 2 v Derbyshire ( three days ) June June 5-9 First test match ( at Edgbaston , Birmingham ) June 11-13 v a first class county ( to be confirmed ) June 14-16 v Leicestershire ( three days ) June 19-23 Second test ( at Lord 's ) June 25-27 v British Universities ( at Oxford , three days ) June 28-30 v Hampshire ( three days ) July July 3-7 Third test ( at Old Trafford , Manchester ) July 9 v Minor Counties XI July 12 v Scotland July 16-18 v Glamorgan ( three days ) July 19-21 v Middlesex ( three days ) July 24-28 Fourth test ( at Headingley ) August August 1-4 v Somerset ( four days ) August 7-11 Fifth test ( at Trent Bridge , Nottingham ) August 16-18 v Kent ( three days ) August 21-25 Sixth test ( at The Oval , London ) . +SOCCER - SHEARER NAMED AS ENGLAND CAPTAIN . LONDON 1996-08-30 The world 's costliest footballer Alan Shearer was named as the new England captain on Friday . The 26-year-old , who joined Newcastle for 15 million pounds sterling ( $ 23.4 million ) , takes over from Tony Adams , who led the side during the European championship in June , and former captain David Platt . Adams and Platt are both injured and will miss England 's opening World Cup qualifier against Moldova on Sunday . Shearer takes the captaincy on a trial basis , but new coach Glenn Hoddle said he saw no reason why the former Blackburn and Southampton skipper should not make the post his own . " I 'm sure there wo n't be a problem , I 'm sure Alan is the man for the job , " Hoddle said . " There were three or four people who could have done it but when I spoke to Alan he was up for it and really wanted it . " In four days it 's very difficult to come to a 100 percent conclusion about something like this ... but he knows how to conduct himself , his team mates respect him and he knows about the team situation even though he plays up front . " Shearer 's Euro 96 striking partner Teddy Sheringham withdrew from the squad with an injury on Friday . He will probably be replaced by Shearer 's Newcastle team mate Les Ferdinand . +BASKETBALL - INTERNATIONAL TOURNAMENT RESULT . BELGRADE 1996-08-30 Result in an international basketball tournament on Friday : Red Star ( Yugoslavia ) beat Dinamo ( Russia ) 92-90 ( halftime 47-47 ) +SOCCER - ROMANIA BEAT LITHUANIA IN UNDER-21 MATCH . BUCHAREST 1996-08-30 Romania beat Lithuania 2-1 ( halftime 1-1 ) in their European under-21 soccer match on Friday . Scorers : Romania - Cosmin Contra ( 31st ) , Mihai Tararache ( 75th ) Lithuania - Danius Gleveckas ( 13rd ) Attendance : 200 +SOCCER - ROTOR FANS LOCKED OUT AFTER VOLGOGRAD VIOLENCE . MOSCOW 1996-08-30 Rotor Volgograd must play their next home game behind closed doors after fans hurled bottles and stones at Dynamo Moscow players during a 1-0 home defeat on Saturday that ended Rotor 's brief spell as league leaders . The head of the Russian league 's disciplinary committee , Anatoly Gorokhovsky , said on Friday that Rotor would play Lada Togliatti to empty stands on September 3 . The club , who put Manchester United out of last year 's UEFA Cup , were fined $ 1,000 . Despite the defeat , Rotor are well placed with 11 games to play in the championship . Lying three points behind Alania and two behind Dynamo Moscow , the Volgograd side have a game in hand over the leaders and two over the Moscow club . +BOXING - PANAMA 'S ROBERTO DURAN FIGHTS THE SANDS OF TIME . PANAMA CITY 1996-08-30 Panamanian boxing legend Roberto " Hands of Stone " Duran climbs into the ring on Saturday in another age-defying attempt to sustain his long career . Duran , 45 , takes on little-known Mexican Ariel Cruz , 30 , in a super middleweight non-title bout in Panama City . The fight , Duran 's first on home soil for 10 years , is being billed here as the " Return of the Legend " and Duran still talks as if he was in his prime . " I want a fifth title . This match is to prepare me . I feel good . I 'm not retiring , " Duran told Reuters . But those close to the boxer acknowledge that the man who has won championships in four different weight classes -- lightweight , welterweight , junior middleweight and middleweight -- is drawing close to the end of his career . " Each time he fights , he 's on the last frontier of his career . If he loses Saturday , it could devalue his position as one of the world 's great boxers , " Panamanian Boxing Association President Ramon Manzanares said . Duran , whose 97-12 record spans three decades , hopes a win in the 10-round bout will earn him a rematch against Puerto Rico 's Hector " Macho " Camacho . Camacho took a controversial points decision against the Panamanian in Atlantic City in June in a title fight . +SQUASH - HONG KONG OPEN QUARTER-FINAL RESULTS . HONG KONG 1996-08-30 Quarter-final results in the Hong Kong Open on Friday ( prefix number denotes seeding ) : 1 - Jansher Khan ( Pakistan ) beat Mark Cairns ( England ) 15-10 15-6 15-7 Anthony Hill ( Australia ) beat Dan Jenson ( Australia ) 15-9 15-8 15-17 17-15 4 - Peter Nicol ( Scotland ) beat 7 - Chris Walker ( England ) 15-8 15-13 13-15 15-9 2 - Rodney Eyles ( Australia ) beat Derek Ryan ( Ireland ) 15-6 15-9 11-15 15-10 . +SOCCER - RESULTS OF SOUTH KOREAN PRO-SOCCER GAMES . SEOUL 1996-08-30 Results of South Korean pro-soccer games played on Thursday . Pohang 3 Ulsan 2 ( halftime 1-0 ) Puchon 2 Chonbuk 1 ( halftime 1-1 ) Standings after games played on Thursday ( tabulate under - won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : W D L G / F G / A P Puchon 3 1 0 6 1 10 Chonan 3 0 1 13 10 9 Pohang 2 1 1 11 10 7 Suwan 1 3 0 7 3 6 Ulsan 1 0 2 8 9 3 Anyang 0 3 1 6 9 3 Chonnam 0 2 1 4 5 2 Pusan 0 2 1 3 7 2 Chonbuk 0 0 3 3 7 0 +BASEBALL - RESULTS OF S. KOREAN PROFESSIONAL GAMES . SEOUL 1996-08-30 Results of South Korean professional baseball games played on Thursday . LG 2 OB 0 Lotte 6 Hyundai 2 Hyundai 6 Lotte 5 Haitai 2 Samsung 0 Samsung 10 Haitai 3 Hanwha 6 Ssangbangwool 5 Note - Lotte and Hyundai , Haitai and Samsung played two games . Standings after games played on Thursday ( tabulate under won , drawn , lost , winning percentage , games behind first place ) W D L PCT GB Haitai 64 2 43 .596 - Ssangbangwool 59 2 49 .545 5 1/2 Hanwha 58 1 49 .542 6 Hyundai 57 5 49 .536 6 1/2 Samsung 49 5 56 .468 14 Lotte 46 6 54 .462 14 1/2 LG 46 5 59 .441 17 OB 42 6 62 .409 20 1/2 +TENNIS - FRIDAY 'S RESULTS FROM THE U.S. OPEN . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 Results from the U.S. Open Tennis Championships at the National Tennis Centre on Friday ( prefix number denotes seeding ) : Women 's singles , third round Sandrine Testud ( France ) beat Ines Gorrochategui ( Argentina ) 4-6 6-2 6-1 Men 's singles , second round 4 - Goran Ivanisevic ( Croatia ) beat Scott Draper ( Australia ) 6-7 ( 1-7 ) 6-3 6-4 6-4 Tim Henman ( Britain ) beat Doug Flach ( U.S. ) 6-3 6-4 6-2 Mark Philippoussis ( Australia ) beat Andrei Olhovskiy ( Russia ) 6 - 3 6-4 6-2 Sjeng Schalken ( Netherlands ) beat David Rikl ( Czech Republic ) 6 - 2 6-4 6-4 Guy Forget ( France ) beat 17 - Felix Mantilla ( Spain ) 6-4 7-5 6-3 Men 's singles , second round Alexander Volkov ( Russia ) beat Mikael Tillstrom ( Sweden ) 1-6 6- 4 6-1 4-6 7-6 ( 10-8 ) Jonas Bjorkman ( Sweden ) beat David Nainkin ( South Africa ) ) 6-4 6-1 6-1 Women 's singles , third round 8 - Lindsay Davenport ( U.S. ) beat Anne-Gaelle Sidot ( France ) 6-0 6-3 4 - Conchita Martinez ( Spain ) beat Helena Sukova ( Czech Republic ) 6-4 6-3 Amanda Coetzer ( South Africa ) beat Irina Spirlea ( Romania ) 7-6 ( 7-5 ) 7-5 Add Men 's singles , second round 16 - Cedric Pioline ( France ) beat Roberto Carretero ( Spain ) 4-6 6 - 2 6-2 6-1 Alex Corretja ( Spain ) beat Filippo Veglio ( Switzerland ) 6-7 ( 4- 7 ) 6-4 6-4 6-0 Add Women 's singles , third round Linda Wild ( U.S. ) beat Barbara Rittner ( Germany ) 6-4 4-6 7-5 Asa Carlsson ( Sweden ) beat 15 - Gabriela Sabatini ( Argentina ) 7-5 3-6 6-2 Add Men 's singles , second round 1 - Pete Sampras ( U.S. ) beat Jiri Novak ( Czech Republic ) 6-3 1-6 6-3 4-6 6-4 Paul Haarhuis ( Netherlands ) beat Michael Tebbutt ( Australia ) 1- 6 6-2 6-2 6-3 Add Women 's singles , third round Lisa Raymond ( U.S. ) beat Kimberly Po ( U.S. ) 6-3 6-2 : Add men 's singles , second round Hendrik Dreekmann ( Germany ) beat Thomas Johansson ( Sweden ) 7-6 ( 7-1 ) 6-2 4-6 6-1 Andrei Medvedev ( Ukraine ) beat Jan Kroslak ( Slovakia ) 6-4 6-3 6-2 Petr Korda ( Czech Republic ) bat Bohdan Ulihrach ( Czech Republic ) 6-0 7-6 ( 7-5 ) 6-2 Add women 's singles , third round 2 - Monica Seles ( U.S. ) beat Dally Randriantefy ( Madagascar ) 6-0 6-2 : Add men 's singles , second round 12 - Todd Martin ( U.S. ) beat Andrea Gaudenzi ( Italy ) 6-3 6-2 6-2 Stefan Edberg ( Sweden ) beat Bernd Karbacher ( Germany ) 3-6 6-3 6-3 1-0 retired ( leg injury ) +BASEBALL - MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AFTER THURSDAY 'S GAMES . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 Major League Baseball standings after games played on Thursday ( tabulate under won , lost , winning percentage and games behind ) : AMERICAN LEAGUE EASTERN DIVISION W L PCT GB NEW YORK 74 59 .556 - BALTIMORE 70 63 .526 4 BOSTON 69 65 .515 5 1/2 TORONTO 63 71 .470 11 1/2 DETROIT 48 86 .358 26 1/2 CENTRAL DIVISION CLEVELAND 80 53 .602 - CHICAGO 71 64 .526 10 MINNESOTA 67 67 .500 13 1/2 MILWAUKEE 64 71 .474 17 KANSAS CITY 61 74 .452 20 WESTERN DIVISION TEXAS 75 58 .564 - SEATTLE 70 63 .526 5 OAKLAND 64 72 .471 12 1/2 CALIFORNIA 62 72 .463 13 1/2 FRIDAY , AUGUST 30 SCHEDULE KANSAS CITY AT DETROIT CHICAGO AT TORONTO MINNESOTA AT MILWAUKEE CLEVELAND AT TEXAS NEW YORK AT CALIFORNIA BOSTON AT OAKLAND BALTIMORE AT SEATTLE NATIONAL LEAGUE EASTERN DIVISION W L PCT GB ATLANTA 83 49 .629 - MONTREAL 71 61 .538 12 FLORIDA 64 70 .478 20 NEW YORK 59 75 .440 25 PHILADELPHIA 54 80 .403 30 CENTRAL DIVISION HOUSTON 72 63 .533 - ST LOUIS 69 65 .515 2 1/2 CINCINNATI 66 67 .496 5 CHICAGO 65 66 .496 5 PITTSBURGH 56 77 .421 15 WESTERN DIVISION SAN DIEGO 75 60 .556 - LOS ANGELES 72 61 .541 2 COLORADO 70 65 .519 5 SAN FRANCISCO 57 74 .435 16 FRIDAY , AUGUST 30 SCHEDULE ATLANTA AT CHICAGO FLORIDA AT CINCINNATI SAN DIEGO AT MONTREAL LOS ANGELES AT PHILADELPHIA HOUSTON AT PITTSBURGH SAN FRANCISCO AT NEW YORK COLORADO AT ST LOUIS +BASEBALL - MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS THURSDAY . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 Results of Major League Baseball games played on Thursday ( home team in CAPS ) : American League DETROIT 4 Kansas City 1 Minnesota 6 MILWAUKEE 1 CALIFORNIA 14 New York 3 SEATTLE 9 Baltimore 6 National League San Diego 3 NEW YORK 2 Chicago 4 HOUSTON 3 Cincinnati 18 COLORADO 7 Atlanta 5 PITTSBURGH 1 Los Angeles 2 MONTREAL 1 Florida 10 ST LOUIS 9 +TENNIS - TARANGO , O'BRIEN SPRING TWIN UPSETS UNDER THE LIGHTS . Larry Fine NEW YORK 1996-08-30 Andre Agassi escaped disaster on Thursday but Wimbledon finalist MaliVai Washington and Marcelo Rios were not so fortunate on a night of upsets at the U.S. Open . The 11th-seeded Washington fell short of reprising his Wimbledon miracle comeback as he lost to red-hot wildcard Alex O'Brien 6-3 6-4 5-7 3-6 6-3 in a two hour 51 minute struggle on the Stadium court . Next door on the grandstand , 10th seed Rios lost to another player with a Wimbledon connection -- bad boy Jeff Tarango . The temperamental left-hander defeated the Chilean 6-4 4-6 7-6 6-2 . The day programme went smoothly although sixth-seeded former champion Agassi had to wriggle out of a dangerous 3-6 0-4 hole , winning 18 of the last 19 games against India 's Leander Paes . But the night belonged to the upstarts . Washington , who climbed back from a 1-5 deficit , two sets down in the third set against Todd Martin in the Wimbledon semifinals , looked poised for another sensational comeback . O'Brien , a winner two weeks ago in New Haven for his first pro title , served for the match at 5-4 in the third set before Washington came charging back . " I just kept saying to myself , ' keep giving yourself the best chance to win , keep battling , maybe something will happen , ' " said the 26-year-old O'Brien , ranked 65th . " I kept my composure and I was proud of myself for that -- usually I would have folded up the tent and gone home . " The hard-serving O'Brien , a former U.S. collegiate national champion , fired up 17 aces to ultimately subdue the never-say-die Washington . The fifth set stayed on serve until the sixth game , when Washington , after saving one break point with a forehand winner down the line , netted a backhand to give O'Brien a 4-2 lead . The Texan blasted in two aces to hold serve at 5-2 and then converted his eighth match point for victory when Washington found the net with another backhand from 40-0 . " You just kind of keep fighting and you keep trying to make him play a little bit . I think he got a little tight at a couple of moments , " said Washington . " But I think he served pretty well when he had to . " Tarango , whose Wimbledon tantrum two years ago brought him a $ 28,000 fine and suspension from this year 's tournament at the All-England Club , argued calls and taunted fans in his lively two hour , 24 minute tango with Rios on the grandstand . A boisterous cheering section backed the distracted Chilean and booed the lanky American , who ate up all the attention . " I 'm an emotional player , " said the 104th-ranked Tarango . " I think I played very well tonight , very focused . " The match turned on the third-set tiebreaker , which the American won 7-5 much to the dismay of the spectators . " I love the crowd if they boo me every day . It fires me up , makes me play my best tennis , " Tarango said . " I played some of my best tennis in college when fraternities were throwing beer on me . If tennis was like that every day , I think everybody wold be having a lot more fun . " Rios did not appreciate Tarango 's antics . " He 's always complaining too much , " said Rios . " But I think it 's not that . I think I played really bad . It was tough to play at night . Balls were going really fast . I lost too many points that I never lose . I did n't play my tennis . " " I do n't see the ball like I see during the day . I play an American so that 's why I play at night . I did n't feel good on the court . " At the end of the match , Tarango blew sarcastic kisses to the crowd , then jiggled his body to a Rios rooting section in a jeering salute . " I support their enthusiasm , " Tarango said about the fans . " At the same time , they 're cheering blatantly against me . After I won I figured I could give them a little razzle-dazzle . " +NFL AMERICAN FOOTBALL-RANDALL CUNNINGHAM RETIRES . PHILADELPHIA 1996-08-29 Randall Cunningham , the National Football League 's all-time leading rusher as a quarterback and one of the most athletic players ever to line up over centre , retired Thursday . Cunningham played his entire 11-year career with the Philadelphia Eagles . A three-time Pro Bowl selection , Cunningham rushed for 4,482 yards on 677 carries . " I would like to thank the Eagles organisation and the wonderful fans of Philadelphia for supporting me throughout my career , " Cunningham said . " Although it saddens me to leave , I am looking forward to spending more time with my family and pursuing other interests that have been on the back burner for sometime . " " Randall was one of the most exciting quarterbacks in NFL history , " said Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie . " During his 11 years in Philadelphia , Randall was the cornerstone of the Eagles ' franchise and brought many great moments to fans in Philadelphia as well as across the NFL . " A second-round choice in 1985 , Cunningham completed 1,874-of-3,362 passes ( 55.7 percent ) for 22,877 yards and 150 touchdowns . Cunningham has already been signed as a broadcaster . +GOLF - LEADING SCORES AT GREATER MILWAUKEE OPEN . MILWAUKEE , Wisconsin 1996-08-29 Leading scores in the $ 1.2 million Greater Milwaukee Open at the par-71 , 6,739-yard Brown Deer Park Golf Course after the first round on Thursday ( players U.S. unless stated ) : 62 Nolan Henke 64 Bob Estes 65 Billy Andrade , Duffy Waldorf , Jesper Parnevik ( Sweden ) 66 Neal Lancaster , Dave Barr ( Canada ) , Mike Sullivan , Willie Wood , Loren Roberts , Steve Stricker , Brian Claar , Russ Cochran 67 Mark Calcavecchia , Payne Stewart , Billy Mayfair , Ken Green , Jerry Kelly , Tim Simpson , Olin Browne , Shane Bortsch , Mike Hulbert , Brian Henninger , Tiger Woods , Steve Jurgenson , Bryan Gorman +GOLF - HENKE TAKES LEAD IN MILWAUKEE , WOODS MAKES PRO DEBUT . MILWAUKEE , Wisconsin 1996-08-29 Nolan Henke fired a nine-under-par 62 to grab a two-shot lead after the opening round of the $ 1.2 million Greater Milwaukee Open Thursday as 20-year-old Tiger Woods shot 67 in his professional debut . Henke stood two strokes ahead of Bob Estes and three up on Billy Andrade , Duffy Waldorf and Jesper Parnevik . Woods , who turned pro Tuesday after winning an unprecedented third successive U.S. Amateur Championship , almost eagled the 18th hole . He settled for a birdie and a four-under opening round that left him five shots off the pace . " Yesterday was the toughest day I 've had for a long time , " Woods said . " Today , I got to play golf . " He added : " I thought I got off off to a great start . It was a perfect start . I 'm in a good position . " Henke , who called his round a " pleasant surprise , " finished with six birdies on the final eight holes . " We finally got things going in the right direction , " he said . " It was my best round in a very long time . My short game has improved since I 've had to use it so often . That 's always been the worst part of my game . All in all , playing bad 's been a good experience . " Henke , who came within one shot of the course record set by Andrew Magee during Wednesday 's pro-am , has three career PGA Tour victories , but none since the 1993 BellSouth Classic . Estes , whose only win came at the 1994 Texas Open and whose best finish this year was a third-place tie at the Nortel Open in January , eagled the par-five fourth hole and added five birdies to grab sole possession of second place . " No bogeys on the card , " he noted . " Sometimes I take more pride in that . " Woods was among a group of 13 players at four under , including 1993 champion Billy Mayfair , who tied for second at last week 's World Series of Golf , and former U.S. Open champ Payne Stewart . Defending champion Scott Hoch shot a three-under 68 and was six strokes back . Phil Mickelson , the only four-time winner on the PGA Tour , skipped the tournament after winning the World Series of Golf last week . Mark Brooks , Tom Lehman and Mark O'Meara , who make up the rest of the top four on the money list , also took the week off . +SOCCER - SILVA 'S `LOST PASSPORT ' EXCUSE NOT ENOUGH FOR FIFA . MADRID 1996-08-30 Spanish first division team Deportivo Coruna will be without key midfielder Mauro Silva for Saturday 's game with Real Madrid after FIFA , soccer 's world governing body , suspended the Brazilian for one game for missing his national side 's European tour . Silva excused his absence from Brazil 's game against Russia , on Wednesday , and Saturday 's match with the Netherlands by saying he had lost his passport . But that did not prevent him from collecting the one-match suspension . +ATHLETICS - MITCHELL DEFEATS BAILEY IN FRONT OF FORMER CHAMPIONS . Adrian Warner BERLIN 1996-08-30 American Dennis Mitchell outclassed Olympic 100 metres champion Donovan Bailey for the third time at a major post-Games meeting in front of the most experienced sprinting crowd in the world on Friday . Watched by an array of former Olympic sprint champions at the Berlin grand prix meeting , Mitchell made a brilliant start in the 100 metres and held off Bailey 's strong finish to win in 10.08 seconds despite cool conditions . Bailey , who set a world record of 9.84 on his way to victory in Atlanta , could not catch his American rival and had to settle for third in a tight finish . Jamaica 's Michael Green was second with 10.09 with Bailey finishing in 10.13 . Last Friday Mitchell , who finished fourth at the Atlanta Games , upstaged a trio of Olympic champions including Bailey to win the 100 in Brussels . Earlier this month he also beat world champion Bailey in Zurich . Berlin , Brussels and Zurich all belong to the most lucrative series in the sport , the Golden Four . Among the crowd on Friday were Olympic 100 metres champions going back to 1948 . They had been invited to the meeting to watch a special relay to mark the 60th anniversary of Jesse Owens 's four gold medals at the 1936 Olympics in the same Berlin stadium . " Today the concentration was the most important thing for me , " Mitchell said . Despite the coolish conditions American Olympic champion Gail Devers looked in commanding form in the women 's 100 , clocking 10.89 to defeat Jamaican rival Merlene Ottey , who was second in 10.94 . +ATHLETICS - BERLIN GRAND PRIX RESULTS . BERLIN 1996-08-30 Leading results at the Berlin Grand Prix athletics meeting on Friday : Women 's 100 metres hurdles 1. Michelle Freeman ( Jamaica ) 12.71 seconds 2. Ludmila Engquist ( Sweden ) 12.74 3. Aliuska Lopez ( Cuba ) 12.92 4. Brigita Bokovec ( Slovenia ) 12.92 5. Dionne Rose ( Jamaica ) 12.92 6. Julie Baumann ( Switzerland ) 13.11 7. Gillian Russell ( Jamaica ) 13.17 Women 's 1,500 metres 1. Svetlana Masterkova ( Russia ) four minutes 6.87 seconds 2. Patricia Djate-Taillard ( France ) 4:08.22 3. Carla Sacramento ( Portugal ) 4:08.96 4. Yekaterina Podkopayeva ( Russia ) 4:09.25 5. Leah Pells ( Canada ) 4:09.95 6. Carmen Wuestenhagen ( Germany ) 4:10.38 7. Margarita Maruseva ( Russia ) 4:10.87 8. Sara Thorsett ( U.S. ) 4:11.06 Men 's 110 metres hurdles 1. Mark Crear ( U.S. ) 13.26 seconds 2. Tony Jarrett ( Britain ) 13.35 3. Florian Schwarthoff ( Germany ) 13.36 4. Emilio Valle ( Cuba ) 13.52 5. Falk Balzer ( Germany ) 13.52 6. Steve Brown ( U.S. ) 13.53 7. Frank Busemann ( Germany ) 13.58 8. Jack Pierce ( U.S. ) 13.60 Men 's 200 metres 1. Frankie Fredericks ( Namibia ) 19.97 seconds 2. Michael Johnson ( U.S. ) 20.02 3. Ato Boldon ( Trinidad ) 20.37 4. Geir Moen ( Norway ) 20.41 5. Patrick Stevens ( Belgium ) 20.54 6. Jon Drummond ( U.S. ) 20.78 7. Claus Hirsbro ( Denmark ) 20.90 8. Ivan Garcia ( Cuba ) 20.96 Women 's shot put 1. Astrid Kumbernuss ( Germany ) 19.89 metres 2. Claudia Mues ( Germany ) 18.80 3. Irina Korzhanenko ( Russia ) 18.63 4. Valentina Fedyushina ( Russia ) 18.55 5. Stephanie Storp ( Germany ) 18.41 Men 's mile 1. Noureddine Morceli ( Algeria ) 3 minutes 49.09 seconds 2. Venuste Niyongabo ( Burundi ) 3:51.01 3. William Tanui ( Kenya ) 3:51.40 4. Laban Rotich ( Kenya ) 3:53.42 5. Marko Koers ( Netherlands ) 3:53.47 6. Isaac Viciosa ( Spain ) 3:53.85 7. John Mayock ( Britain ) 3:54.67 8. Marcus O'Sullivan ( Ireland ) 3:54.87 Men 's discus 1. Lars Riedel ( Germany ) 70.60 metres 2. Anthony Washington ( U.S. ) 68.44 3. Vasily Kaptyukh ( Belarus ) 66.24 4. Vladimir Dubrovshchik ( Belarus ) 65.30 5. Virgilijus Alekna ( Lithuania ) 65.00 6. Juergen Schult ( Germany ) 64.46 7. Andreas Seelig ( Germany ) 62.00 8. Michael Moellenbeck ( Germany ) 58.56 Women 's 100 metres 1. Gail Devers ( U.S. ) 10.89 seconds 2. Merlene Ottey ( Jamaica ) 10.94 3. Gwen Torrence ( U.S. ) 11.07 4. Mary Onyali ( Nigeria ) 11.14 5. Chryste Gaines ( U.S. ) 11.20 6. Chandra Sturrup ( Bahamas ) 11.26 7. Irina Privalova ( Russia ) 11.27 8. Inger Miller ( U.S. ) 11.37 Women 's 5,000 metres 1. Gabriela Szabo ( Romania ) 15 minutes 04.95 seconds 2. Gete Wami ( Ethiopia ) 15:05.21 3. Rose Cheruiyot ( Kenya ) 15:05.41 4. Annemari Sandell ( Finland ) 15:06.33 5. Tegla Loroupe ( Kenya ) 15:08.79 6. Gunhild Halle ( Norway ) 15:09.00 7. Pauline Konga ( Kenya ) 15:09.74 8. Sally Barsosio ( Kenya ) 15:14.34 Men 's 400 metres hurdles 1. Torrance Zellner ( U.S. ) 48.23 seconds 2. Samuel Matete ( Zambia ) 48.34 3. Derrick Adkins ( U.S. ) 48.62 4. Fabrizio Mori ( Italy ) 49.21 5. Sven Nylander ( Sweden ) 49.22 6. Eric Thomas ( U.S. ) 49.35 7. Rohan Robinson ( Australia ) 49.36 8. Dusan Kovacs ( Hungary ) 49.58 Women 's 400 metres 1. Falilat Ogunkoya ( Nigeria ) 50.31 seconds 2. Jearl Miles ( U.S. ) 50.42 3. Fatima Yusuf ( Nigeria ) 51.43 4. Anja Ruecker ( Germany ) 51.61 5. Olabisi Afolabi ( Nigeria ) 51.98 6. Phylis Smith ( Britain ) 52.05 7. Linda Kisabaka ( Germany ) 52.41 8. Karin Janke ( Germany ) 53.13 Men 's 100 metres 1. Dennis Mitchell ( U.S. ) 10.08 2. Michael Green ( Jamaica ) 10.09 3. Donovan Bailey ( Canada ) 10.13 4. Jon Drummond ( U.S. ) 10.22 5. Davidson Ezinwa ( Nigeria ) 10.24 6. Geir Moen ( Norway ) 10.33 7. Marc Blume ( Germany ) 10.48 Men 's 800 metres 1. Wilson Kipketer ( Denmark ) 1:43.34 2. Norberto Tellez ( Cuba ) 1:44.58 3. Sammy Langat ( Kenya ) 1:44.96 4. Nico Motchebon ( Germany ) 1:45.03 5. David Kiptoo ( Kenya ) 1:45.27 6. Adem Hacini ( Algeria ) 1:45.64 7. Vebjoen Rodal ( Norway ) 1:46.45 8. Craig Winrow ( Britain ) 1:46.66 Men 's pole vault 1= Andrei Tiwontschik ( Germany ) 5.86 1= Igor Trandenkov ( Russia ) 5.86 3. Maksim Tarasov ( Russia ) 5.86 4. Tim Lobinger ( Germany ) 5.80 5. Igor Potapovich ( Kazakstan ) 5.80 6. Jean Galfione ( France ) 5.65 7. Pyotr Bochkary ( Russia ) 5.65 8. Dmitri Markov ( Belarus ) 5.65 Women 's high jump 1. Stefka Kostadinova ( Bulgaria ) 2.03 2. Inga Babakova ( Ukraine ) 2.00 metres 3. Alina Astafei ( Germany ) 1.97 4. Tatyana Motkova ( Russia ) 1.97 5. Hanne Haugland ( Norway ) 1.91 6= Nele Zilinskiene ( Lithuania ) 1.91 6= Yelena Gulyayeva ( Russia ) 1.91 8. Natalya Golodnova ( Russia ) 1.85 Men 's 5,000 metres 1. Daniel Komen ( Kenya ) 13 minutes 2.62 seconds 2. Bob Kennedy ( U.S. ) 13:06.12 3. Paul Koech ( Kenya ) 13:06.45 4. El Hassane Lahssini ( Morocco ) 13:06.57 5. Shem Kororia ( Kenya ) 13:06.65 6. Brahim Lahlafi ( Morocco ) 13:08.05 7. Tom Nyariki ( Kenya ) 13:20.12 8. Fita Bayissa ( Ethiopia ) 13:21.35 Men 's triple jump 1. Jonathan Edwards ( Britain ) 17.69 metres 2. Yoelvis Quesada ( Cuba ) 17.44 3. Kenny Harrison ( U.S. ) 17.16 4. Mike Conley ( U.S. ) 16.79 5. Armen Martirosyan ( Armenia ) 16.57 6. Sigurd Njerve ( Norway ) 16.41 7. Carlos Calado ( Portugal ) 16.31 8. Charles-Michael Friedek ( Germany ) 16.12 Women 's javelin 1. Tanja Damaske ( Germany ) 66.60 metres 2. Trine Hattesta ( Norway ) 65.12 3. Isel Lopez ( Cuba ) 65.10 4. Heli Rantanen ( Finland ) 62.78 5. Louise McPaul ( Australia ) 62.06 6. Xiomara Rivero ( Cuba ) 61.94 7. Natalya Shikolen ( Belarus ) 60.74 8. Rita Ramaunaskaite ( Lithuania ) 60.74 Men 's 4x100 relay Jesse Owens memorial race 1. Donovan Bailey ( Canada ) , Michael Johnson ( U.S. ) , Frankie Fredericks ( Namibia ) , Linford Christie ( Britain ) 38.87 seconds 2. Michael Green ( Jamaica ) , Osmond Ezinwa ( Nigeria ) , Oeji Aliu ( Nigeria ) , Davidson Ezinwa ( Nigeria ) 38.87 3. Peter Karlsson ( Sweden ) , Falk Balzer ( Germany ) , George Panayiotopoulos ( Greece ) , Florian Schwarthoff ( Germany ) 39.93 +SOCCER - THREE STANDARD LIEGE PLAYERS BANNED , CLUB FINED . GENEVA 1996-08-30 UEFA came down heavily on Belgian club Standard Liege on Friday for " disgraceful behaviour " in an Intertoto final match against Karlsruhe of Germany . The Belgian club were fined 25,000 Swiss francs ( $ 20,850 ) for unsporting conduct and captain Guy Hellers banned for seven games . He was sent off for insulting the referee and then urged his team mates to protest . Roberto Bisconti will be sidelined for six Euro ties after pushing the referee in the back as he protested about a Karlsruhe goal , while Didier Ernst was banned for four matches for a verbal attack soon after Bisconti was also dismissed . Karlsruhe won the August 20 match 3-1 thanks to two late goals . They took the tie 3-2 on aggregate and qualified for the UEFA Cup . +ATHLETICS - HARRISON , EDWARDS TO MEET IN SARAJEVO . MONTE CARLO 1996-08-30 Olympic champion Kenny Harrison and world record holder Jonathan Edwards will both take part in a triple jump competition at the Solidarity Meeting for Sarajevo on September 9 . The International Amateur Athletic Federation said on Friday that a schedule reshuffle had allowed organisers to hold a men 's triple jump as well as the women 's long jump on the " one usable runway at the war-devastated " Kosevo stadium . Atlanta Games silver medal winner Edwards has called on other leading athletes to take part in the Sarajevo meeting -- a goodwill gesture towards Bosnia as it recovers from the war in the Balkans -- two days after the grand prix final in Milan . Edwards was quoted as saying : " What type of character do we show by going to the IAAF Grand Prix Final in Milan where there is a lot of money to make but refusing to make the trip to Sarajevo as a humanitarian gesture ? " +SOCCER - BARATELLI TO COACH NICE . NICE , France 1996-08-30 Former international goalkeeper Dominique Baratelli is to coach struggling French first division side Nice , the club said on Friday . Baratelli , who played for Nice and Paris St Germain , takes over from Albert Emon who was fired on Thursday after Nice 's home defeat to Guingamp 2-1 in the league . Nice have been unable to win any of their four league matches played this season and are lying a lowly 18th in the table . +SOCCER - MILAN 'S LENTINI MOVES TO ATALANTA . MILAN 1996-08-30 Former Italian international winger Gianluigi Lentini , transferred to Milan in 1992 for what was believed to be a world record sum , has been loaned to serie A club Atalanta for a year , newspapers reported on Friday . The Gazzetta dello Sport said the deal would cost Atalanta around $ 600,000 . Lentini , 27 , joined Milan from Torino in a $ 12 million deal that many have speculated involved far more money changing hands and which has subsequently been investigated by magistrates for alleged financial irregularities . The player suffered severe head injuries in a near-fatal car crash the following year and has since struggled to regain the form that made him a hero in Turin . The move to Bergamo-based Atalanta reunites Lentini , who fell out with ex-Milan coach Fabio Capello last season , with his former coach at Torino , Emiliano Mondonico . +CRICKET - SRI LANKA BEAT AUSTRALIA BY FOUR WICKETS . COLOMBO 1996-08-30 Sri Lanka beat Australia by four wickets in the third match of the Singer World Series one-day ( 50 overs ) cricket tournament on Friday . Scores : Australia 228-9 in 50 overs , Sri Lanka 232-6 in 45.5 overs . +CRICKET - AUSTRALIA V SRI LANKA SCOREBOARD . COLOMBO 1996-08-30 Scoreboard of the third Singer World Series cricket match between Australia and Sri Lanka on Friday : Australia M. Waugh c and b Jayasuriya 50 M. Slater run out 9 S. Law c Tillekeratne b Dharmasena 13 M. Bevan c Vaas b Chandana 56 S. Waugh b Muralitharan 22 R. Ponting not out 46 D. Lehmann st Kaluwitharana b Chandana 2 I. Healy c Ranatunga b Muralitharan 8 J. Gillespie st Kaluwitharana b Chandana 6 D. Fleming c Chandana b Jayasuriya 3 G. McGrath not out 8 Extras ( lb-3 nb-2 ) 5 Total ( nine wickets , 50 overs ) 228 Fall of wickets : 1-21 2-52 3-97 4-149 5-157 6-163 7-178 8-198 9-203 . Bowling : Vass 7-0-29-0 , de Silva 4-0-25-0 , Dharmasena 9-0-49-1 , Muralitharan 10-0-41-2 , Jayasuriya 10-0-43-2 , Chandana 10-0-38-3 . Sri Lanka S. Jayasuriya c Healy b Fleming 44 R. Kaluwitharana b S. Waugh 8 A. Gurusinha run out 16 A.de Silva not out 83 A. Ranatunga lbw b Fleming 0 H. Tillekeratne lbw b Fleming 1 R. Mahanama b McGrath 50 U. Chandana not out 14 Extras ( lb-3 nb-6 w-7 ) 16 Total ( six wickets , 45.5 overs ) 232 Fall of wickets : 1-22 2-78 3-78 4-78 5-81 6-196 . Did not bat : Dharmasena , Vaas , Muralitharan . Bowling : S. Waugh 5-1-36-1 , Law 2-0-23-0 , McGrath 9.5-0-44-1 , Fleming 8-1-26-3 , Gillespie 6-0-27-0 , M. Waugh 5-0-29-0 , Lehmann 6-0-26-0 , Bevan 4-0-18-0 . Man of the Match : Aravinda de Silva Next Series match : India v Zimbabwe , September 1 . +CRICKET - AUSTRALIA 228-9 IN 50 OVERS V SRI LANKA . COLOMBO 1996-08-30 Australia scored 228 for nine wickets in their 50 overs against Sri Lanka in the third day-night limited overs match of the Singer World Series tournament on Friday . +CRICKET - AUSTRALIA WIN TOSS AND CHOOSE TO BAT . COLOMBO 1996-08-30 Australia won the toss and elected to bat against Sri Lanka in the third day-night limited overs cricket match in the Singer world series tournament on Friday . Teams : Australia - Ian Healy ( captain ) , Michael Bevan , Damien Flemming , Jason Gillespie , Stuart Law , Glenn McGrath , Ricky Ponting , Michael Slater , Darren Lehmann , Mark Waugh , Steve Waugh . Sri Lanka - Arjuna Ranatunga ( captain ) , Sanath Jayasuriya , Romesh Kaluwitharana , Asanka Gurusinha , Aravinda de Silva , Hashan Tillekeratne , Roshan Mahanama , Kumara Dharmasena , Chaminda Vaas , Muthiah Muralitharan , Upul Chandana . +ROMANIA COMELF H1 PROFIT RISE BELOW TARGET . BUCHAREST 1996-08-30 Romanian listed state engineer Comelf said it almost doubled six-month output , with net profit rising by 33 percent to 1.069 billion lei . But the company complained inflation and the artificially high rate of the leu cut profit margins on exports , keeping profits well below its forecast of 1.4 billion lei . Comelf 's six-month output rose to 4,378 tonnes of equipment from 2,684 tonnes in the equivalent period in 1995 , the company report to the Bucharest stock exchange showed . Comelf , based in the central Transylvanian town of Bistrita , manufactures water purification equipment , machinery for the thermal power sector and other equipment . " In the first six months of 1996 we concentrated on increasing the volume of our output and exports in particular and improving the quality of our products , " the report said . From January to June Comelf exported 59 percent of its output , up from 37.3 percent in the same period last year . The company said higher than anticipated inflation and rising raw materials and wage costs also hit profits . Year-on-year inflation , initially estimated at 20 percent in December , was 33.8 percent in June , higher than a revised end-year forecast of 30 percent . The 12 month figure quickened to 40.3 percent in July . The leu currency has slipped only gradually this year , and is currently quoted at an official rate of 3,162 to the dollar , well below the 3,550 retail price that exporters say is more realistic . -- Luli Popescu , Bucharest Newsroom 40-1 3120264 +POLISH NBP REFRAINS FROM REVERSE REPO OPERATION . WARSAW 1996-08-30 The National Bank of Poland refrained from staging a reverse repo operation on Friday , the bank said . -- Warsaw Newsroom +48 22 653 9700 +Canada government cash balances fall in week . OTTAWA 1996-08-30 The government of Canada 's cash balances fell in the week that ended August 28 , the Bank of Canada said on Friday . Wk to Aug 28 Chg on wk Chg on yr Notes in circulation 27.35 +0.435 +0.237 Government cash balances 3.54 - 0.629 +0.089 Govt securities outstanding 463.73 +1.660 +10.436 Treasury bills 152.80 +0.300 - 11.900 Canada savings bonds 30.12 - 0.004 +0.578 All figures in billions of dollars . Chartered bank assets July June Net foreign currency - 12.63 - 12.08 Canadian dollar 639.55 639.38 Total Canadian liquid assets 107.83 107.24 July 96 June 96 July 95 M1 63.02 62.83 57.50 M2 389.79 391.32 381.65 M3 482.13 480.72 461.42 Note - Figures are unadjusted , in billions of dollars . -- Reuters Ottawa Bureau ( 613 ) 235-6745 +Jones Medical completes acquisition . ST. LOUIS 1996-08-30 Jones Medical Industries Inc said Friday it completed the acquisition of Daniels Pharmaceuticals Inc of St. Petersburg , Fla. , for about 2,960,000 shares of Jones common stock . Jones stock closed down 1/8 at 40 Friday . Daniels Pharmaceuticals manufactures prescription pharmaceutical products , the largest of which is Levoxyl , a synthetic thyroid hormone for treating hypothyroidism . -- Chicago newsdesk , 312 408-8787 +NYMEX heating oil near session lows in pre-close . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 NYMEX refined product prices lingered at session lows amid slim volume before the close while crude experienced lackluster buying ahead of the U.S. Labor Day weekend , traders said . " There was some profit-taking early on , and it 's just sitting there , " a Texas trader said of heating oil 's and gasoline 's losses . September heating oil stood 1.02 cents lower at 62.65 cents a gallon . Heat hit a session low of 62.45 shortly before the close . September gasoline stood 0.87 cent lower at 62.85 cents a gallon . Friday 's low in September gasoline was 62.75 . Traders also said players were selling refined products in favor of crude ahead of the front month 's Friday expiry in the refined products . The October heating oil-to-crude crack spread narrowed to $ 4.22 a barrel from Thursday 's $ 4.58 while the October gasoline-to-crude spread narrowed to $ 3.60 from Thursday 's $ 3.86 a barrel . October crude stood eight cents higher at $ 22.23 barrel . Buying interest in crude did not have enough conviction to send it much higher since many players had left early to start the Labor Day holiday weekend , traders said . NYMEX will be closed Monday due to Labor Day . -- Harry Milling , New York Energy Desk , +1 212-859-1761 +U.S. debt futures end lower , shaken by Chicago NAPM . CHICAGO 1996-08-30 U.S. debt futures finished a shortened pre-holiday session sharply lower , as the markets were shaken by a stronger than expected rise in the August National Association of Purchasing Management ( NAPM ) index for the Chicago area , traders and analysts said . The August Chicago NAPM rose 8.8 points to 60.0 , its highest level since 62.6 in February 1995 and the largest monthly rise since December 1993 . Primary dealers immediately sold Eurodollar and bond futures , after the market on average was expecting the index to rise marginally to 51.9 from July 's 51.2 . Traders also said Japanese investors were unwinding long Eurodollar futures / short swaps , and that heavy put buying helped pressure Eurodollars to lower levels before the close . One U.S. firm bought 35,000 September 97 mid-curve put options at a strike price of 93.25 to 93.30 in the last two sessions , while a French firm bought 4,000 September 93.30 to 93.32 put spreads . " Even before the data came out , we were seeing put buying , " one floor trader said . Meanwhile , funds were reportedly good sellers of five-year notes . Rumors circulated that the Federal Reserve was buying five-year notes , and that a renowned hedge fund manager was buying 10-year notes in the cash markets . However , December T-bonds ended below a major trendline level at 106-26/32 , as the yield in the cash bond market set its highest monthly close since April 1995 at 7.12 percent , one analyst said . December bonds blew through the July 30 low of 107-06/32 , even though conditions were slightly oversold , traders said . The December calendar spread continued to widen , also reflecting the market 's fear of rising inflation . While the market continues to price-in higher U.S. interest rates , there was little conviction to the theory that the Federal Reserve would tighten rates before the next Federal Open Market Committee meeting on September 24 . Federal Reserve governor Lawrence Lindsey , speaking on U.S. cable television network CNBC , said the U.S. economy appears on balance to be a bit strong , adding the central bank would not curb growth provided inflation remains in check . Earlier in the day , Fed chairman Alan Greenspan said at the annual Jackson Hole symposium that the goal of price stability is within reach for major nations . Traders said the Fed 's decision to adopt a tightening bias at the July FOMC meeting has cast more focus on every piece of U.S. economic news . " The Fed 's stance has really sensitized us to all this data , " one analyst said . " The revisions to GDP , for example , may not have attracted a lot of attention . " At the end of pit trade , December bonds were off 27/32 at 106-25/32 , 10-year notes down 21/32 at 105-17/32 , munibonds off 17/32 at 111-20/32 , December Eurodollars were down 11 bps at 93.94 , March Eurodollars were off 13 bps at 93.72 and March T-bills were down 12 bps at 94.33 . +Douglas & Lomason shares rise on merger . FARMINGTON HILLS , Mich . 1996-08-30 Shares of Douglas & Lomason Co were up 4-1/2 at 30-5/8 Friday afternoon after Thursday 's announcement that the vehicle seat maker had agreed to be acquired by Magna International Inc for $ 31 a share , or $ 135 million . Magna was up 1/8 to 48-1/4 on the New York Stock Exchange . Douglas & Lomason has 4.45 million common shares outstanding , some of which are option shares to be purchased at exercise prices less than the $ 31 offered price . The acquisition will beef up Markham , Ontario-based Magna 's North American car and truck seating business , allowing it to better compete with Johnson Controls Inc and Lear Corp . Family-controlled Douglas & Lomason , which had 1995 revenue of $ 561 million , was finding it more difficult to compete for new seating contracts from vehicle makers , said James Hoey , chief financial officer . " Unfortunately , in the auto industry these days , a $ 500 million company is not a big company anymore , " Hoey said . " This merger makes us much more competitive . " He added that Douglas & Lomason 's top executives have been asked to stay on with Magna after the merger , though their future roles have not yet been defined . Douglas & Lomason 's profits were hurt in the past year by model changeovers , which had reduced production at some important customers , but are now recovering , analysts said . The company earned $ 11.2 million on sales of $ 299 million in the first six months of 1996 , up from year-earlier earnings of $ 4.7 million on sales of $ 285.7 million . Ford plans to cut its roster of 2,300 tier-one suppliers -- those it deals with directly -- in half over the next five years . " The deal really levels the seating field somewhat , " said John Casesa of Schroder Wertheim & Co . " It should give Magna the critical mass to be a bigger player in that market . " Magna 's traditional strength has been instrument panels , door panels and other interior components . Magna , Johnson Controls and Lear have been working to build up their capabilties to supply complete interiors to automakers , including seats , instrument panels , door panels carpeting and headliners . +UK meals / feeds follow Chicago higher , trade slow . LONDON 1996-08-30 UK meals and feeds sellers marked up high protein soymeal by around 1.50 stg a tonne on Friday following gains in Chicago at Thursday 's close . Trade was very quiet with only one deal reported when spot high protein soymeal fetched 215 stg a tonne ex-store on the south coast . " I would n't get too excited about this one becuase I think it 's for all of five tonnes , which when you think about just about sums up the state of the market at the moment , " said a trader . -- Jim Ballantyne , London Newsroom +44 171 542 8062 +Iraqi captors of Sudanese jet charged with hijack . LONDON 1996-08-30 Seven Iraqis who seized a Sudanese airliner with 199 people aboard and forced it to fly to London were on Friday charged with hijack , ending speculation that they might be offered immediate asylum in Britain . Police said the seven men , who freed all their hostages after the plane landed at Stansted airport on Tuesday and then appealed for asylum , would appear in court on Saturday . The Iraqis claimed they were " ordinary people persecuted by the regime of Saddam ( Hussein ) " but interior ministry officials had consistently said it was likely the seven would be charged with hijack before any plea for asylum was considered . Under English law the maximum sentence for hijack is life imprisonment , but there has been widespread speculation that the seven will receive lesser sentences and then be allowed to stay rather than being sent back to Iraq . The hijack began on Monday when an Amman-bound plane was taken over shortly after it took off from Khartoum . The hijackers threatened to blow it up during a refuelling stop in Cyprus unless they were taken to London . After a search of the aircraft following the hijackers ' surrender , police found only knives and fake explosives . +Late bond market prices . LONDON 1996-08-30 This is how major world bond markets were trading in late European business on Friday . GERMANY - Bunds extended losses , flirting with session lows after falling victim to sharply higher U.S. economic data which revived fears that interest rates may soon turn higher . The September Bund future on the London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange ( LIFFE ) was trading at 97.18 , down 0.20 from Thursday 's settlement price . BRITAIN - Gilts struggled off the day 's lows but ended 10/32 down on the day . A sharp plunge in U.S. Treasuries after a shock rise in the Chicago PMI pulled gilts lower , but traders said the market was nervous anyway ahead of August MO data and the PMI survey due on Monday . The September long gilt future on LIFFE was trading at 107-2/32 , down 8/32 from Thursday 's settlement price . FRANCE - Bond and PIBOR futures ended the day higher despite much stronger than expected U.S. data . The September notional bond future on the MATIF in Paris settled at 123.14 , up 0.04 from Thursday 's settlement price . ITALY - Bond futures held to easier levels in late afternoon after the sharp drop in Treasuries , but a resilient lira helped limit BTP losses . The September bond future on LIFFE was trading at 115.45 , down 0.13 from Thursday 's settlement price . UNITED STATES - Prices of U.S. Treasury securities were trading sharply lower near midday after a surprisingly strong Chicago Purchasing Managers ' report shook the markets ahead of the long Labour Day weekend . The September Treasury bond future on the Chicago Board of Trade was trading at 107-11/32 , down 26/32 from Thursday 's settlement price . The long bond was quoted to yield 7.12 percent . JAPAN - Yield for benchmark 182nd cash bond fell on buy-backs following weaker-than-expected industrial output data , which convinced traders the BOJ would not raise interest rates soon . Japanese Goverment Bonds futures which closed before the output data , lost much of day 's gains as Tokyo stock prices recovered from the day 's low.In after hours trading the September future on LIFFE was trading at 122.53 , up 0.26 from Thursday 's settlement price on the Tokyo Stock Exchange . EUROBONDS - Primary market activity was sharply lower , as players wound down ahead of Monday 's U.S. Labour Day holiday and next week 's U.S. employment data . NSW Treasury launched a A$ 100 million three-year discount bond aimed at Japanese investors . DNIB issued a 275 million Norwegian crown bond , which was pre-placed with a European institution . DNIB also set a 110 million guilder step-up bond . Next week Kansai Electric Power and Kansai International Airport are likely to launch 10-year dollar deals . +Boxing-Bruno quits on doctor 's advice . LONDON 1996-08-30 Former world heavyweight champion Frank Bruno has quit the ring on medical advice , Britain 's Sun newspaper reported on Friday . An eye specialist told the 35-year-old Bruno that he could be blinded in one eye if he boxed again , the newspaper said . The Briton , who lost his World Boxing Council ( WBC ) title to Mike Tyson in March , said : " I was in shock as soon as he told me and it still has n't really sunk in . " I never wanted to end like this but at the end of the day I 'm glad I had a good innings . " Bruno , for years one of Britain 's most popular sportsmen , had hoped to have another shot at the world title and had been in training until a routine eye test on Monday highlighted a problem with his right eye . Professor David McLeod , who examined Bruno , told the Sun : " There is a risk he could be blinded in the eye if he steps into the ring again . He is in danger of getting a retinal detachment and there is no point in exposing himself to that . " Bruno lost three world title fights before finally landing the crown by beating American Oliver McCall in a unanimous points decision at Wembley in September 1995 . He was only the third Briton ever to hold a world heavyweight title . But Bruno lost the title on his first defence when he fought American Tyson in Las Vegas . Bruno suffered a cut eye in the opening round and the referee stopped the fight in the third as the Briton crumbled under a flurry of punches . +Soccer - McCarthy names team to play Liechtenstein . DUBLIN 1996-08-30 Irish soccer manager Mick McCarthy on Friday announced the team to play Liechtenstein in Saturday 's World Cup qualifying match . Birmingham 's Gary Breen was selected ahead of Phil Babb in defence , while 18-year-old Ian Harte makes his international competitive debut . Keith O'Neill of Norwich City joins Niall Quinn up front . The team is as follows : Given , Breen , Staunton , Irwin , McAteer , Harte , McLoughlin , Houghton , Townsend , Quinn , O'Neill . -- Dublin Newsroom +353 1 676 9779 +Nigerian thieves hire police truck to carry loot . LAGOS 1996-08-30 A gang of thieves in eastern Nigeria paid a police corporal to carry off eight air conditioners they had just stolen , the national news agency reported on Friday . " Little did I know I was dealing with robbers , " the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the unnamed corporal as saying . He admitted to having been paid 3,000 naira ( $ 37.50 ) for his services in transporting the loot valued at 300,000 naira ( $ 3,750 ) . Police in the town of Uyo said the corporal had been arrested , while the air conditioners had been returned to their rightful owner . They did not comment on the whereabouts of the thieves . ( $ 1=80 naira ) +East Dries miners fail to report for work . JOHANNESBURG 1996-08-30 Workers at Driefontein Consolidated Ltd 's east gold mine have failed to report for work since Wednesday night , mine managers Gold Fields of South Africa Ltd said on Friday . " Discussions with employee and union representatives are continuing , " the company said in a statement . It gave no further details . At least 17 miners have been killed in labour unrest -- sparked by ethnic differences -- at Driefontein Consolidated and Gold Fields ' Kloof Gold Mining Co this month . -- Johannesburg newsroom , +27-11 482 1003 +Chad government closes university after protests . N'DJAMENA 1996-08-30 The government of Chad has closed N'Djamena University after two days of protests over grant arrears in which Education Minister Nagoum Yamassoum was held hostage for four hours , state radio said on Friday . " The minister and his colleagues who were held in the rector 's office were freed thanks an intervention by gendarmes , " one university official said . " Angry students cut the telephone , water and electricity of the university offices before smashing the windows and breaking down the doors . " Paramilitary police detained more than 120 students in the protest . The students ' union said second and third-year students were demanding four months of unpaid grants . End-of-year examinations would go ahead on September 2 despite the closure , university officials said . +Yeltsin endorses Lebed Chechnya peace plan - agency . MOSCOW 1996-08-30 Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin said on Friday that President Boris Yeltsin , who is vacationing outside Moscow , had backed security chief Alexander Lebed 's peace plan for Chechnya , Interfax news agency said . " Lebed is now in Chechnya solving some problems , " Interfax quoted Chernomyrdin as saying . " The main thing is his programme . It was agreed with Boris Nikolayevich ( Yeltsin ) yesterday . " Lebed , whom Yeltsin ordered to restore peace in Chechnya , struck a military deal with separatist rebels last week ending the worst fighting in the region in more than a year . He later discussed with rebel chief-of-staff Aslan Maskhadov a framework political agreement to tackle the most painful issue of the 20-month war -- the future political status of Chechnya . Lebed said on Friday he hoped to sign a document with the rebels later in the day which would deal with the political settlement of the conflict . Moscow , which wants to keep Chechnya as a part of the Russian Federation , sent troops to the region in December 1994 to quell its independence bid . Yeltsin has said any deal should preserve Russia 's territorial integrity . Itar-Tass news agency quoted Lebed as saying that he would suggest to the rebels that the decision on Chechnya 's future political status be deferred by up to 10 years . Lebed said he had a telephone conversation with Yeltsin late on Thursday but gave no details . Yeltsin 's press office could not confirm the call . Chernomyrdin said on Thursday after a meeting with Lebed and top officials , who discussed Lebed 's plans to restore peace in Chechnya , that it needed more work . +Lebed , Chechens sign framework political deal . KHASAVYURT , Russia 1996-08-31 Russian peacemaker Alexander Lebed said he and rebel military leader Aslan Maskhadov agreed after overnight talks to defer the decision on whether Chechnya should be independent until December 31 , 2001 . " We just now signed a statement and attached the basic principles of relations between the Russian Federation and the Chechen Republic , " Lebed told reporters after he and Maskhadov signed a package of documents . He gave no further details . " That 's it , the war is over , " Lebed told reporters who witnessed the signing . Lebed said he and Maskhadov agreed to defer by more than five years the painful issue of Chechnya 's political status . " Then , with cool heads , calmly and soberly we will sort out our relations , " Lebed said after the late-night signing ceremony in this settlement outside Chechnya 's eastern border . Tens of thousands of people have died in the war , begun in late 1994 after Moscow sent troops to quell Chechnya 's independence bid . But Russia failed to win control over the whole of Chechnya and its troops suffered several humiliating defeats . President Boris Yeltsin ordered Lebed to restore peace in Chechnya and gave him unspecified sweeping powers to carry out the mission . Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin said on Friday that Yeltsin backed a package of proposals Lebed took to the talks . +Ruling Moslem party ends vote boycott . SARAJEVO 1996-08-30 Bosnia 's ruling Moslem nationalist party on Friday called on its refugee voters to end a boycott of absentee balloting in national elections , citing assurances provided by a U.S. envoy , government radio said . The Bosnian government radio broadcast said U.S. Assistant Secretary of State John Kornblum had reassured SDA officials , including presumably its leader , Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic , whom he met during a Friday visit . But the radio report did not specify what guarantees , if any , the U.S. envoy had provided . Absentee voting in the elections began on Wednesday , August 28 and runs for a week . Election day for those living inside Bosnia is September 14 . The Party of Democratic Action ( SDA ) had called on Wednesday for its followers abroad to boycott the absentee balloting because of voter registration irregularities , especially among Serb refugees . The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe ( OSCE ) postponed municipal elections as a result of the irregularities but decided to proceed with voting for higher offices . The SDA , joined by two other parties , has been demanding that OSCE prohibit refugees voting from any place other than their pre-war place of residence as a means to prevent the elections from ratifying the results of ethnic cleansing . +Belgrade airport runway repairs Sept 21-26-agency . BELGRADE 1996-08-30 Belgrade 's main airport Aerodrom Beograd will be closed to traffic for runway maintenance and modernization from September 21 to 26 , the Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported late on Friday . " During the works , all flights will be re-routed to the nearby airport in Batajnica , with no change in schedules , " Tanjug quotes Belgrade airport General Director Ljubomir Acimovic as saying . The airport in Surcin will continue to carry out all other activities and has secured enough buses to transport passengers to Batajnica , Acimovic said . The value of maintenance works , which will last 120 hours straight , is 20 million dinars and the funds have been secured by Belgrade airport , Tanjug said . The Batajnica airport will take over complete air traffic control during this period , Federal Air Traffic Control Administration Director Branko Bilbija said . -- Amra Kevic , Belgrade newsroom +381 11 2224305 +Top Belarus politician blasts president . Larisa Sayenko MINSK 1996-08-30 A senior Belarus politician accused President Alexander Lukashenko on Friday of attempting to set up a dictatorship in the former Soviet republic . The speaker of the Belarus parliament , Semyon Sharetsky , told Reuters that a draft constitution , due to be put to a national referendum on November 7 , would dangerously increase the powers of the ruler . " The world community should not be indifferent to the fact that President Lukashenko , who leads this European state of 10 million people , is trying to establish a dictatorship with his new constitution , " Sharetsky said . The new constitution calls for a two-chamber parliament with a 110-seat majority-elected house of representatives and a regionally-represented senate with a third of its members named by the president . Lukashenko 's aides shrugged off Sharetsky 's charge . " If there was a dictatorship they would n't have the right to say things like this , " Sergei Posukhov , Lukashenko 's political adviser , told Reuters . " The people have asked us to establish order and that 's our main aim . " Lukashenko , 41 , won presidential polls in 1994 on promises to restore order , fight corruption and repair the strong links with Russia that were disrupted by the collapse of the Soviet Union . But during his period in office he has battled against nationalist opponents , trade unions and parliament and Sharetsky said the current parliament was ready to try to impeach him . " This constitution , which has been prepared in secret , aims to gather all power in one man 's hands , " he said . " We should not be fooled by his quasi-democratic rhetoric and his methods , like this referendum . " Lukashenko signed a pact with Moscow in April to create a strong economic and political union which he believes could grow into a federation . But nationalist groups , scared by the prospect of renewed Moscow domination and Russia 's backing for Lukashenko , protested against the deal . Lukashenko responded by cracking down on the nationalist opposition and jailing nearly 200 people for taking part in demonstrations against the pact . The United States last week granted political asylum to two opposition leaders , Zenon Poznyak and Sergei Naumchik . +Tajik troops now control devastated town . Yuri Kushko TAVILDARA , Tajikistan 1996-08-30 Tajik government troops now control of the strategically vital town of Tavildara after driving out Islamic rebels , but sporadic gunfire still echoed in the nearby Pamir mountains on Friday . The commander-in-chief of Tajikistan 's armed forces , Major-General Nikolai Sherbatov , took a group of journalists by helicopter to the remote , and now devastated , town to show that his forces held it . He said his troops took Tavildara without casualties on August 23 , but the crack of sniper and machinegun fire revealed the presence of opposition fighters in the surrounding mountains . Sherbatov said the rebels were located about three km ( two miles ) east of Tavildara around the village of Layron . Tavildara , 200 km ( 120 miles ) east of the capital Dushanbe , was in ruins . Shells had smashed roofs and windows and empty shell cases littered the streets . The town straddles a strategically important road linking government and rebel-held territory and has fallen succesively to both sides in a bloody tug-of-war which began last February . Tajikistan , which borders Afghanistan and China , has been split by a dragging four-year conflict after a civil war between communists and a frail coalition of Islamic and liberal groups . Tens of thousands of people have been killed and many more have been displaced in the fighting , which breached a shaky United Nations-sponsored ceasefire . Tavildara is now apparently inhabited only by a few old men , women and their grubby , barefoot children . Fruit remained on the trees as there was no one to pick it . " Help me , help me , " said a chorus of women begging soldiers for food . The town 's school and a shop doubling as a warehouse for humanitarian aid were destroyed in the fighting . " We had to build our own earth shelters to survive the fighting , " said Rajab Adinayev , a bearded elderly Tajik in a long white shirt . Although shy in front of the government soldiers , several inhabitants accused government forces of widespread looting of homes and livestock . They also said rebel fighters had looted medicines from the local hospital . One elderly man , who declined to give his name , said two of his sons were now refugees in Moscow and the other two had left to fight for the opposition . He also said government soldiers had raped the wife of one of his sons . " It 's not important who holds this town , we just need to stop the war , " he said . +Polish Foreign Minister to visit Yugoslavia . WARSAW 1996-08-30 Poland 's Foreign Minister Dariusz Rosati will visit Yugoslavia on September 3 and 4 to revive a dialogue between the two governments which was effectively frozen in 1992 , PAP news agency reported on Friday . During Rosati 's trip the two countries will sign an agreement on mutual protection of investments and a note easing conditions on the granting of visas , the agency quoted Foreign Ministry officials as saying . The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia is the only country of the former Yugoslavia where Poles currently require visas . They are also to clinch protocols on culture and understanding between the two foreign ministries . Rosati will meet Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and Yugoslav politicians in Belgrade , before visiting Montenegro . Poland revived diplomatic ties at ambassadorial level with Yugoslavia in April but economic links are almost moribund , despite the end of a three-year U.N. trade embargo imposed to punish Belgrade for its support of Bosnian Serbs . Poland is seeking pacts on avoiding double taxation and wants cooperation in fighting crime . +Yeltsin visits wife Naina in hospital - Interfax . MOSCOW 1996-08-30 Russian President Boris Yeltsin visited his wife Naina in hospital on Friday evening , Interfax news agency quoted spokesman Sergei Yastrzhembsky as saying . Naina Yeltsin had a kidney operation last Saturday . Earlier Russian news reports had said Yeltsin 's children and grandchildren had visited the Russian first lady but they said only that Yeltsin , on vacation outside Moscow , had spoken to her by telephone . " Naina Yeltsin looks well , she is active , she is clearly getting better , " Yastrzhembsky quoted Yeltsin as saying . Naina Yeltsin is recovering in Moscow 's Central Clinical Hospital , where the president himself was treated twice last year for heart attacks . Yeltsin , 65 , has been seen only rarely since he was elected for a second term in office on July 3 , although his aides have denied a string of rumours that he has been taken ill again . Yastrzhembsky said Yeltsin had travelled from the hospital to spend the night at the Barvikha sanatorium outside Moscow . He was likely to return on Saturday to his holiday resort , a hunting lodge some 100 km ( 60 miles ) from Moscow . +Lebed , Chechens start peace talks . KHASAVYURT , Russia 1996-08-30 Russian peacemaker Alexander Lebed and Chechen separatist military leader Aslan Maskhadov started a new round of peace talks on Friday in this settlement just outside the rebel region . Lebed , who flew into Chechnya earlier in the day , said he hoped to sign a framework agreement on a political settlement of the 20-month conflict in which tens of thousands of people have died . Neither Lebed nor Maskhadov made any statement before the talks . +Russian judge stabbed to death over $ 7 fine . MOSCOW 1996-08-30 A Moscow street vendor stabbed to death a woman judge in a city court on Friday after she fined him the equivalent of seven dollars for trading illegally , Interfax news agency said . Interfax said Judge Olga Lavrentyeva , 28 , on Thursday ordered the confiscation of several overcoats , suits and shirts which vendor Valery Ivankov , 41 , was illegally trading on Moscow streets and fined him 38,000 roubles ( seven dollars ) . The next morning , Ivankov appeared in the courtroom and stabbed Lavrentyeva . The judge died later in hospital . Interfax quoted Levrentyeva 's colleagues as saying that judges were generally unprotected against criminal attacks . +Cofinec plunges on H1 results . Emese Bartha BUDAPEST 1996-08-30 Shares of France-registered printed packaging company Cofinec S.A. plunged sharply on the Budapest Stock Exchange ( BSE ) on Friday , despite a mostly reassuring forecast by the group . Cofinec 's Global Depositary Receipts ( GDRs ) opened at 5,200 forints on the BSE , down 600 from Thursday 's close , following the release of its first half results this morning . Cofinec CEO Stephen Frater told reporters in a conference call from Vienna on Friday before the opening of the bourse that he expects a stronger second half , although the group will not be able to achieve its annual profit goal . " We will not achieve the full 37 million French franc ( net ) profit forecast , " Frater said . " Obviously , we cannot make up the unexpected decrease that has been experienced in the first half of the year . " Frater declined to give a forecast for the full year , ahead of a supervisory board meeting next week . Cofinec , the first foreign company to list on the Budapest bourse , released its consolidated first half figures ( IAS ) this morning . In the conference call , Frater said he regarded Cofinec GDRs -- which are trading below their issue price of 6,425 forints -- as a buying opportunity . " Obviously , at some point it represents a buying opportunity , " Frater said . " I think the reality is that we operate in emerging markets , emerging markets tend to be more volatile . " " My message is that the fundamental strategy of the company , its fundamental market position has not changed . " The group , which operates in Hungary , Poland and the Czech Republic , reported an operating profit before interest of 21.8 million French francs compared to 34.1 million in the same six months of 1995 . Net profit for the January-June 1996 period was 2.1 million French francs , down from 10.3 million in the first six months of 1995 , with the bulk of this decline attributable to the performance of Petofi , one of its Hungarian units . Cofinec said Petofi general manager Laszlo Sebesvari had submitted his resignation and will be leaving Petofi but will remain on Petofi 's board of directors . " Until a new general manager of Petofi is appointed ... I will in fact move to Kecskemet ( site of Petofi printing house ) for the interim and will serve as acting chief executive officer of Petofi , " Frater said . -- Budapest newsroom ( 36 1 ) 327 4040 +Romania cen bank one-week rate rises to 50.19 pct . BUCHAREST 1996-08-30 The National Bank of Romania ( BNR ) said its one-week refinancing rate has been lifted this week to 50.19 percent from 49 percent after two banks bids ' exceeded its offer at Thursday 's auction . The two banks entered bids totalling 497.5 billion lei at rates ranging from 49 to 51 percent , against the BNR 's offer of 420 billion lei . Traders said that over the past few days the two major banks , keen to meet minimum reserve targets , also chased funds on the money market , being ready to gulp short-term money at rates up to 49 percent . Other banks traded one-week rates near 48 percent . -- Bucharest Newsroom 40-1 3120264 +Potent landmines found near Colombian presidency . BOGOTA , Colombia 1996-08-30 Eight claymore mines fitted with powerful C-4 plastic explosives were found stashed in a real estate office on Friday located about two blocks from Colombia 's presidential palace , police said . " These are powerful weapons , " a spokesman with the Municipal Police told Reuters by telephone , adding that police had not ruled out a possible terrorist attack on the ornate Casa de Narino presidential palace in Bogota 's historic downtown area . " They could cause serious damage as much as 500 meters ( yards ) away from wherever they were detonated , " the spokesman added . He said police backed by explosive experts were combing the area in search of other possible weapons or explosive devices . The police spokeman said plastic explosive like C-4 is not a normal component in claymore mines . But he said the eight mines seized by police had been " specially adapted . " The spokesman declined further comment , except to say that two women and a man identified as a lawyer had been arrested in connection with the landmines . +Assault charges dropped against Surinam ex-rebel . PARAMARIBO , Surinam 1996-08-30 Flamboyant former Surinamese guerrilla leader Ronny Brunswijk walked free on Friday after charges of attempted murder were dropped , police said . Brunswijk had been in police custody for 10 days after Freddy Pinas , a Surinamese-born visitor from the Netherlands , accused Brunswijk of trying to kill him in a bar-room brawl in the mining town of Moengo 56 miles ( 90 km ) east of Paramaribo . Brunswijk , 35 , denied the charge and reached an agreement with Pinas after replacing a golden necklace lost in the scuffle . It was the second time Brunswijk had been charged with attempted murder in less than two years . In 1994 he served two months for shooting a thief in the backside . Brunswijk , who led a rebel group against the military regime of Desi Bouterse in the late 1980s , is now a successful businessman with mining and logging interests . +Cambodian opposition newspaper editor pardoned . PHNOM PENH 1996-08-30 Cambodia 's King Norodom Sihanouk on Friday gave a royal pardon to an opposition newspaper editor who had alleged top-level corruption . Hen Vipheak , former editor of the Sereipheap Thmei ( New Liberty ) newspaper , stepped through the gates of the run-down French colonial-era T3 prison late Friday afternoon , following intervention on his behalf by King Sihanouk . The Supreme Court had on August 23 sent the opposition Khmer Nation Party steering committee member to jail after upholding rulings by the municipal and appeal courts that handed down a five million riels ( $ 2,000 ) fine and one year 's imprisonment . The judge overturned a decision to shut down Hen Vipheak 's newspaper . The editor was prosecuted following a May 1995 article alleging top-level corruption . Sihanouk promised an amnesty to Hen Vipheak , along with fellow KNP member and journalist Chan Rattana , who was released after serving a week of a year-long jail term in June . Co-Premiers Prince Norodom Ranariddh and Hun Sen agreed earlier this week to the king 's request for an amnesty . +Far East Gold - Moribund market seen continuing . Mishi Saran HONG KONG 1996-08-30 Far East gold traders thumped foreheads in frustration at the market 's foot-dragging this week and forecast on Friday that next week would not be much better . The Southeast Asian gold market was more or less a photo-fit picture of the previous week 's position with activity slow and bullion prices trapped in a well-worn range awaiting a seasonal upturn in demand and prices into the fourth quarter . Singapore premiums for Australian kilo bars were quoted unchanged at between 25-45 cents an ounce over spot loco London prices , with South Korean and Indonesian-origin premiums also steady at 10-20 cents an ounce . Singapore dealers said they were concerned that there had been a marked revival in offers to sell gold by South Korean traders , following the distress sales of recent months after the Seoul government 's crackdown on bullion arbitrage trade . " I was shocked to see these offers coming in again , though there 's been no indication of price or volume . I dread to think what will happen to the premiums if the Koreans start selling in force , " one dealer said . Continued dishoarding of kilo-bars by Indonesian sources ahead of next year 's presidential election has also kept a lid on premiums . Gold closed down at $ 387.00 / $ 387.50 an ounce in Hong Kong on Friday , versus New York 's $ 387.60 / $ 388 finish on Thursday . Dealers said the precious metal eased on a report that the International Monetary Fund might sell some of its gold to reduce the debts of the poorest developing countries . Easier silver prices mid-week helped keep spot gold locked in a $ 386 - $ 389 an ounce range , dealers said , but they remained optimistic that the usual seasonal pick-up in jewellery fabrication demand would see gold at $ 395 by end-October . " I still think we 'll see gold at $ 395 by the end of October , in a retracement of the $ 418 - $ 380 move we saw at the start of the year , " one said . Silver , basis the September contract on New York 's Comex market , was expected to find support at between $ 5.12 - $ 5.15 an ounce and meet resistance from $ 5.25 - $ 5.30 , they added . September silver closed up $ 0.004 in New York on Thursday at $ 5.255 an ounce . +Tripoli decks out for coup celebrations . Mona Eltahawy TRIPOLI 1996-08-30 Libyans are dressing up their capital Tripoli for celebrations on Sunday of the 27th anniversary of the coup which brought Muammar Gaddafi to power . Green flags and banners praise the " great revolution " and promise defiance against United Nations sanctions imposed for Libya 's refusal to hand over for trial two suspects wanted in connection with the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am flight over Lockerbie , Scotland . " We have chosen the challenge because it is our only option , " proclaimed one banner on the road to Tripoli airport which serves only internal flights because of the sanctions . Huge stadium lights are directed at the city 's Green Square where makeshift stages await Sunday 's festivities . Three African leaders -- from Niger , Guinea and Ghana -- are expected to attend the celebrations marking September 1 , 1969 when a group of young army officers , led by a 27-year-old Gaddafi , deposed King Mohammed Idris . " The revolution has brought us great achievements ... We are comfortable the revolution has taken care of us , improved our lives and given us capabilites , " Samer Ammar Soliman , 42 , told Reuters as he came out of Friday prayers . But some Libyans have begun to show their discontent in the country 's east , which has become a hotbed of militant violence . Tripoli-based diplomats and exiled opponents said Gaddafi 's airforce blasted in July rebel strongholds in the mountainous Jebel al-Akhdar region . Travellers arriving in Egypt say militants and police officers clash regularly in Benghazi . At least 20 people were killed in the capital in early July after bodyguards loyal to Gaddafi 's sons fired at spectators of a football match who were chanting subversive slogans . Gaddafi has dismissed any unrest as the work of foreigners , and last year deported thousands of Sudanese and Egyptian workers . +Twilight zone for Wall Street as political race heats up . Pierre Belec NEW YORK 1996-08-30 For Wall Street , this is the season to be cautious as the presidential contest puts the stock market in the twilight zone . President Clinton , Bob Dole and Ross Perot are hitting the road now that the partying is over , and people who have billions of dollars invested in stocks were bracing for political promises that could have an impact on their wealth . Analysts believe that the candidates will add to the market 's list of uncertainties , which already includes the question of whether the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates to cool economic growth . They say the politicians will need to promote legislation that helps the economy without scaring the socks off financial markets . " The worst thing that could happen for financial markets is that if Clinton and Dole start to trade shots in the middle of the ring with one-upmanship , " said Hugh Johnson , chief investment officer at First Albany Corp. " That 's when Wall Street will need to worry . " He said that the bond market would be the first to react if the " bidding " intensifies and stocks would quickly drop as interest rates rise . " I do n't think it would imply the collapse of the stock market , unless the rise in rates touches off a dynamic within the market , which would include selling by portfolio managers , redemptions by individuals of mutual funds that would , in turn , pressure the portfolio managers to sell even more stock . " This week , the market weighed Dole 's proposal to lower federal income taxes by 15 percent across the board , a package that carries a price tag of $ 548 billion . Clinton proposes an $ 8.4 billion re-election agenda that would spare most home-sellers from capital gains taxes and give employers tax incentives to hire people off the welfare rolls . Clinton claims Dole 's plan would increase the deficit , while the White House said some corporate taxes would be raised to offset the cost of the president 's plan . The experts said there are some unusual risks for the market from this year 's political season because the rush to promise tax cuts to win votes could upset Wall Street 's expectations that Washington will balance the budget . " The stock market will have to edit the promises and then do a probability study on those edited promises , " said John Geraghty at the consulting firm North American Equity Services . During the past four presidential elections , the candidate that has favoured tax cuts has won . Ronald Reagan 's tax cut won him a second four-year term in the White House in 1984 , while Democrat Walter Mondale , who promised higher taxes , lost . George Bush became president in 1988 on his no-new-tax campaign and Clinton won in 1992 with a promise to fatten workers ' paychecks . The trick , they said , will be for the candidates to continue to convince Wall Street that the Treasury 's 30-year bond -- the most closely-watched interest rate -- will fall to between 4 percent and 5 percent by the end of the decade . Johnson said that long-term interest rates have already been spooked by the election . The long-term bond jumped this week to 7.13 percent after starting the year at 5.95 percent . The surge of buying in stocks during the last two years has come amid an environment of low interest rates , which has boosted corporate profits . But the market stalled this summer after the Dow Jones industrial average set a record high of 5,778.00 points on May 22 . " The market does n't seem to be able to make new highs and it has been back and forth in a fairly horizontal mode which looks like a holding pattern , " said Geraghty . He said the market reflects the political uncertainty , now that Dole has sharply narrowed the gap with Clinton in the polls . Geraghty said that the one thing that could completely turn the election around are new findings in the Whitewater scandal that would damage the Clintons . " Stocks are on a delicate edge because if something happens that looks like it could upset the presidency , it could throw the political and , to some extent the economic , process into chaos , " Geraghty said . Right now , Wall Street is pondering the candidates . " We have an election where there are so many unknown variables that most people will probably want to hold fire , and even take the chance that they will have to pay higher prices for stocks after the November election , than take the risk that a shock to the system will hurt the stock market , " Geraghty said . On Friday , the Dow Jones index closed down 31.44 points at 5,616.21 . For the week , it was down 106.53 points . The Nasdaq composite index closed 3.53 points lower Friday at 1,141.50 . For the week , it was down 1.55 points . The Standard & Poor 's index of 500 stocks was off 5.41 points at 651.99 , down 15.03 points for the week . The American Stock Exchange index was down 1.66 points at 559.68 , and was off 1.26 for the week . +Brisk economic reports rattle markets anew . Glenn Somerville WASHINGTON 1996-08-30 Factory orders rose in July and manufacturing surged in the Midwest in August , reports said Friday , sparking worries about inflation that battered financial markets for a second straight day . The Commerce Department said orders for manufactured goods climbed 1.8 percent in July to a seasonally adjusted $ 317.6 billion -- nearly twice the increase that had been expected . Shipments of everything from new cars to food items rose , as did order backlogs , in a sign that the strength in the industrial sector would continue in coming months . A separate report from Chicago area purchasing managers underlined the strength in manufacturing as the group 's barometer of manufacturing in the region jumped to 60 in August from 51.2 in July . A reading above 50 indicates growth in manufacturing . While production and orders rose at Midwest area businesses , the prices they paid for goods used in manufacturing remained well in check . Analysts said the reports implied the economy was not slowing down in the third quarter after a burst of growth in the spring , and that the lull in late June and July was more temporary than Federal Reserve policy-makers had wanted . " It appears that August is showing an economy again reversing course and is not moving onto a significantly slower track at this point , " said economist Lynn Reaser of Barnett Banks Inc. in Jacksonville , Fla . The reports fanned worries on Wall Street that the Fed , the nation 's central bank , would raise rates next month in a bid to ward off inflation , driving stock and bond prices sharply lower for a second day running . The 30-year Treasury fell almost a point , raising its yield , which moves in the opposite direction from the price , to 7.12 percent from 7.04 percent late Thursday . The Dow Jones industrial average fell 31.44 points to 5,616.21 after a 64.73-point decline Thursday . A third report from the Commerce Department , on July personal income and spending , pointed to a potential slowdown in consumer spending that some analysts said may help moderate growth in the second half . It showed spending rose only 0.2 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $ 5.15 trillion after dropping a revised 0.4 percent in June . Incomes from wages , salaries and all other sources gained 0.1 percent to a rate of $ 6.47 trillion after a 0.9 percent jump in June . July 's slight gain in incomes was the weakest in six months , since January when they were flat . Economist Joel Naroff of First Union bank in Philadelphia said consumer spending , which fuels two-thirds of the nation 's economy , may be much slower in the third quarter than in the first half , which should slow economic growth . " The FOMC ( Federal Open Market Committee ) has been forecasting a slowing in economic activity and moderating household demand will have a large impact on overall economic growth , " Naroff said in a written comment . The policy-making FOMC is to meet on Sept . 24 to plot interest-rate strategy . It already has adopted a bias toward raising rates to keep a lid on wage and price rises and help sustain the 5-1 / 2-year-old economic expansion . In an interview on the cable television network CNBC Friday , Federal Reserve Governor Lawrence Lindsey said there still were " mixed signals " about the economy 's direction . " I think that , on balance , it is looking a little bit on the strong side , " Lindsey said . He added that with expansion as solid as it is and with unemployment so low " the greater risks are clearly that we might see some overheating . " While July consumer spending rose only slightly , there were ample indications that consumers remained confident . The University of Michigan 's August index of consumer sentiment , made available on Friday to paying subscribers , rose to 95.3 from 94.7 in July . Reaser said strong consumer confidence coupled with relatively lean inventories were providing manufacturers with a reason to gear up production . " The economy is not going to be expanding at the 4.8 percent ( annual ) rate that we had in the second quarter but it is likely to keep expanding in the 3 percent range , " she said , above the 2 percent to 2-1/4 percent that the Fed considers to be non-inflationary . New orders to factories were strong for durable goods like new cars and for nondurables like paper and food products . Orders for durable goods , meant to last three years or more , rose a revised 1.7 percent in July after falling 0.2 percent in June . Orders for nondurables jumped 1.8 percent following a 1.2 percent decrease in June . +Mexican avocados not expected in U.S . Maggie McNeil WASHINGTON 1996-08-30 U.S. Agriculture Department officials said Friday that Mexican avocados -- which are restricted from entering the continental United States -- will not likely be entering U.S. markets any time soon , even if the controversial ban were lifted today . " The opportunity to import ( Mexican avocados ) probably wo n't become possible for another year , " said Paul Drazek , senior trade advisor to Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman . " We could lift the ban tomorrow , but that would not mean anything immediately , " said Drazek . " We probably would not see avacados come in until next season , next November . " The Agriculture Department proposed more than a year ago to significantly ease an 82-year ban on Mexican avocados . Under the administration 's proposal , the borders to the Mexican produce would be opened into 19 Northern and Northeastern states from November through February . The plan has raised a storm of protest from U.S. avocado growers , who are largely concentrated in California . California growers have charged that removing the restrictions , even on a limited basis , would endanger the $ 1 billion U.S. industry if potentially harmful Mexican insects were brought into the country along with the avocados . Mexican officials contend that there is no scientific basis for the ban , and that it is illegal under international trading rules of the World Trade Organisation . Proponents of the plan discount the worries of the U.S. growers and say the plan has enough safeguards built into it to eliminate any significant threat to American producers . Under the proposal , only imports of export-quality avocados growing in approved orchards in Michoacan , Mexico , the country 's main avocado area , would be allowed . Mexican growers and distributors would have to abide by strict rules established by the Mexican and U.S. agriculture agencies . The California Avocado Commission -- which has spearheaded the opposition to lifting the ban -- said new data the group submitted to the Agriculture Department last spring shows the department underestimated the pest problem in Mexico and have urged that the agency reopen its study of the issue . The administration is still studying the new data , and officials have said that if experts think the information is significant , the agency could reopen its investigation . But U.S. avocado industry sources said that while they may have delayed the plan for a while , they ultimately do not expect the administration to change its position . " From a common-sense view , the department should reconsider this plan , but due to politics they will probably go ahead with this , " said Tom Bellamore of the California avocado group . Administration officials said they want to get the issue resolved as quickly as possible , but said there is no timetable they are working under . " It 's a very complicated issue , " said the Agriculture Department 's Drazek . " We 'll get it resolved as quickly as we can , based on the best available science . " +U.S. Cardinal Bernardin says has terminal cancer . CHICAGO 1996-08-30 Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin , head of the second-largest U.S. Roman Catholic archdiocese , said on Friday his doctors had diagnosed him as having liver cancer and he had a year or less to live . Bernardin , 68 , underwent extensive surgery for pancreatic cancer in June 1995 followed by months of chemotherapy , which he said made him more aware of his own vulnerabilities and the need to minister to the sick . " On Wednesday , examinations indicated that the cancer has returned , this time in the liver . I am told that it is terminal and that my life expectancy is one year or less , " a composed Bernardin told a news conference . In 14 years as Chicago 's archbishop , he built a prayerful , saintly image and was deeply involved in world church issues and publicly committed to rooting out abuses by clergy . " I have been assured that I still have some quality time left , " he said , saying he would undergo a new form of chemotherapy but his doctors have told him there was only a slim chance of a cure and the liver cancer was inoperable . " It 's not going to be easy to say goodbye to everybody . Death does have some sad dimensions to it but I am a man of faith , " he said . " Death is a natural phenomenom . " He said he would " serve until the end " as cardinal . Pancreatic cancer is among the most deadly forms of the disease , although Bernardin 's case was caught early . Surgeons removed a cancerous kidney , parts of his pancreas and stomach , small intestine , bile duct and surrounding tissues . He made a rapid recovery and resumed most of his duties , but then developed a deteriorating condition in his spine that caused him great pain and shortened his height by several inches . He was scheduled to undergo back surgery next month , but that was cancelled when the cancer was discovered in his liver in order to avoid delaying the start of chemotherapy . The spare , soft-spoken son of an Italian stonecutter took over the Chicago archdiocese , the nation 's second-largest after Los Angeles , with 2.3 million parishioners , in 1982 . Ironically , Bernardin , who developed a progressive , much-praised programme to deal with pedophilia involving priests , became the highest-ranking church official ever accused of sexual improprieties when a former seminary student leveled charges in 1993 that he had been sexually abused by Bernardin during the 1970s . Bernardin steadfastly denied the charges and the former student later recanted his tale of abuse . Bernardin prayed with him before he died from AIDS last year . Bernardin , who became archbishop of Cincinnati in 1972 , played an increasingly prominent role in the U.S. church as a moderate voice of compromise among liberals and conservatives in the ranks of the bishops . This month , he announced that he would oversee a series of conferences to find " common ground " among American Catholics . Previously , he was instrumental in drafting church policy on war , peace and nuclear arms , and for seven years he headed the bishops ' anti-abortion policy committee , espousing a policy describing human life as a " seamless garment . " +Boatmen 's deal could spark more mergers . Brad Dorfman CHICAGO 1996-08-30 The $ 9.5 billion proposed acquisition of Boatmen 's Bancshares Inc. by NationsBank Corp. could spark a flurry of other mergers involving Missouri banks , which until last year were protected from outside buyers by state regulations . " NationsBank just strolled into the Midwest and bagged the biggest banking trophy in the landscape , " said Michael Ancell , banking industry analyst at Edward D. Jones & Co . " Whoever wants a big market position in the Midwest has to come in and grab Mercantile or Commerce . " St. Louis-based Mercantile Bancorp Inc. , a bank holding company with $ 18.04 billion in assets , was seen by many analysts as the most attractive Missouri franchise in size after Boatmen 's . Kansas City , Mo.-based Commerce Bancshares Inc. , with $ 9.32 billion in assets , also could help a regional bank establish a strong presence in the lower Midwest , analysts added . " It focuses more attention on Mercantile , Commerce and Roosevelt , " said James Weber , analyst at A.G. Edwards & Sons . Roosevelt Financial Group Inc is a $ 9.33 billion asset-St . Louis based thrift . " Now ... the most coveted bank out there is Mercantile , " Weber said . Mercantile and Commerce did not return phone calls seeking comment . Among those seen as having an interest in buying in Missouri are Minneapolis-based First Bank System Inc. and Norwest Corp. , Ohio-based KeyCorp and Banc One Corp. , and First Chicago NBD Corp. in Illinois . Representatives of First Bank , Norwest , Banc One and First Chicago said the banks do not comment on rumors of possible mergers or acquisitions . KeyCorp , contacted by phone , would not comment . With a presence in nine states and $ 41 billion in assets , Boatmen 's was the prize in Missouri , where barriers to outside acquirers were brought down last year by a federal banking statute . " Boatmen 's was the plum of Missouri and was the plum of the central Midwest , " Weber said . Talk that the Missouri banks were seeking inflated prices from buyers was seen as a reason a deal has not occurred sooner . But NationsBank 's bid , representing a premium of 40 percent for Boatmen 's stock , was large enough to get the deal done . " I think Boatmen 's was shopping itself , and everybody knew if you wanted to be the winning buyer here , you had to make the bid nobody would beat , " Ancell said . But some analysts cautioned that other targets should not expect as large a premium . They also questioned whether NationsBank can recoup shareholder value with such a large bid for Boatmen 's . " I think initially some stocks will trade up on sympathy , but the wild premium NationsBank put on this deal here , I do n't see a lot of other deals being done at this premium , " said Michael Durante , analyst at McDonald & Co . +U.S. tight-lipped on Libya 's award to Farrakhan . WASHINGTON 1996-08-30 The State Department refused to speculate on Friday on what might happen in the case of Louis Farrakhan , the U.S. black leader who was awarded a $ 250,000 human rights prize by Libya . " I 'm not going to speculate about what may or may not happen in that case , " State Department spokesman Glyn Davies said . " ... The view of the U.S. government on ( Farrakhan 's ) not accepting any gifts from Libya is well-known . " Davies also noted : " We 've talked about the passport restriction for travel to Libya " but he did not elaborate . The U.S. Treasury Department on Wednesday denied Farrakhan 's application to receive the $ 250,000 award or a $ 1 billion donation Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had pledged to Farrakhan 's Nation of Islam group after they met last January . Farrakhan organised last October 's Million Man March that brought thousands of black men to Washington for a peaceful rally . The Treasury Department said Libya was on the U.S. list of states that sponsor international terrorism and noted that Tripoli has refused to hand over two Libyan suspects in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie , Scotland . That refusal led to the imposition of U.N. sanctions on Libya . +U.S. Gulf rig down by one to 162 in week . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 There were 162 rigs under contract in the U.S. Gulf as of August 30 , down one from the prior week , Offshore Data Services said . The utilization rate for rigs working in the Gulf , based on a total fleet of 181 , was 89.5 percent . The number of working rigs in European / Mediterranean remained unchanged this week , with 105 rigs under contract out of a total fleet of 105 , a utilization rate of 100 percent . The worldwide rig count fell by one to 554 out of a total fleet of 608 , making the utilization rate 91.1 percent . -- New York Energy Desk 212-859-1620 +Dole team seeking to pin down debate details . IRVINE , Calif 1996-08-30 Now that the party conventions are over , Republicans have signalled they are ready to move into the next phase of the campaign and meet with President Clinton 's aides to hammer out details of presidential debates . The Dole campaign released a letter Friday inviting their Clinton counterparts to meet with Dole campaign manager Scott Reed to discuss particulars of the televised debates . " Next week , a small group of representatives from each of our campaigns should meet to address participants , format , timing and logistical issues surrounding the debates , " Dole campaign manager Scott Reed wrote to Clinton campaign manager Peter Knight . Tentative dates for the debates are Sept . 25 , Oct. 9 and Oct. 16 . The vice presidential debate is scheduled for Oct. 2 . Former South Carolina Gov . Carroll Campbell , who was on Dole 's vice presidential short list before Dole decided on Jack Kemp , will head Dole 's team . A decision is expected by mid-September on whether Texas billionaire Ross Perot , the Reform Party candidate , will be allowed to participate in the debates , which are sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates , a non-profit , non-partisan organisation that took over the forums in 1988 from the League of Women Voters . +Titanic recovery mission is scrapped . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 Equipment problems and mechanical failure forced a recovery expedition to give up efforts to retrieve a giant slab of the RMS Titanic from the ocean floor , a spokeswoman said on Friday . A 20-ton piece of the Titanic 's steel hull , which had been attached by cables to a recovery ship off the coast of Newfoundland , Canada , fell back to the bottom of the sea , said Erin Purcell of Boston-based Reagan Communications that represents two of the ships used in the expedition . The piece of hull , lifted from the ocean floor by means of several diesel-filled bags , had been stuck about 200 feet ( about 70 metres ) below the water 's surface before it fell , she said . It fell as recovery crews were trying to haul the piece into more shallow water and several of the bags burst and cables snapped , she said . The steel-hulled Titanic , thought to be unsinkable , struck an iceberg on April 14 , 1912 , and sank , killing 1,523 of the 2,200 passengers and crew on board . The wreck was located in 1985 . Passengers who had paid $ 1,500 and up to accompany the recovery expedition on two cruise ships had returned back to port on Thursday , Purcell said . +Bonn appeals for Middle East peace . BONN 1996-08-30 The German government urged Israelis and Palestinians on Friday to avoid any course of action that might jeopardise the peace process in the Middle East . Israel announced this week the expansion of Jewish West Bank settlements surrounding Jerusalem and the demolition of an Arab community centre in East Jerusalem . City officials there said the centre was being erected illegally . But Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said the moves by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 's government were tantamount to war . Tension has been rising in the region since . " We believe that the Israeli settlement policy in the occupied areas is an obstacle to the establishment of peace , " German Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Erdmann said . " All concerned must avoid taking any course of action that could pose an obstacle to the peace process and which could make a peaceful solution difficult , " he said , as news came of a renewed breakdown in Arab-Israeli peace talks in Jerusalem . Erdmann told reporters Bonn supported European Union efforts to persuade Israel to stop further Jewish settlement on the West Bank . The foreign ministry later announced Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy would visit Bonn for talks with his German counterpart Klaus Kinkel next month . The ministry said Levy and Kinkel would discuss the Middle East process and German-Israeli relations at their meeting on September 9 . Levy 's visit would be the first by an Israeli cabinet minister since Netanyahu 's conservative government took power in une this year , the ministry said . Before Levy 's arrival in Bonn , German Defence Minister Volker Ruehe will visit Israel from September 2 to 4 , the defence ministry said . Ruehe planned to meet his Israeli counterpart Yitzhak Mordechai and Israeli President Ezer Weizman , the ministry said . He was also expected to meet Prime Minister Netanyahu and opposition leader Shimon Peres for talks . +France expels African , Air France unions protest . PARIS 1996-08-30 France on Friday expelled another African man seized in a police raid on a Paris church as about 100 Air France workers denounced " charters of shame " used to fly illegal immigrants home . A Guinean man , detained in a round-up in the Saint-Bernard church a week ago , was deported on a scheduled Air France flight to Conakry after his appeals failed , a spokesman for Air France 's pro-Socialist CFDT union said . He was apparently the eighth African deported from among 210 people evicted from the church after a 50-day occupation aimed at securing residence permits , unions said . Most of the others have been released after a brief stay in detention . About 100 people from the CFDT and the Communist-led CGT unions marched outside Air France headquarters at Charles de Gaulle airport north of Paris against the use of civilian jets and staff in deporting illegal immigrants . " We must obtain a formal commitment from ( Air France chairman ) Christian Blanc that no plane , no personnel be used to transform our air companies into charters of shame , " CFDT spokesman Francois Cabrera said . He said civilians should not be police accomplices . Twenty-three out of 25 charters flying illegal immigrants home since Prime Minister Alain Juppe 's government took office in May 1995 have been civilian jets . The other two were military jets . Separately , Juppe confirmed the conservative government was preparing to submit a draft bill to parliament to tighten laws on illegal workers as part of a crackdown on immigration . " Legislation is insufficient in several areas , notably in those concerning illegal work , " Juppe told reporters . +German police probe sex link in child kidnap case . BERLIN 1996-08-30 German police searching for a missing 10-year-old schoolgirl said on Friday the prime suspects in the case may have been involved in running a child prostitution ring . Police suspect Nicole Nichterwitz 's aunt and a male companion abducted the girl and took her to the Netherlands . She was last seen being collected by the pair from school in Velten near Berlin on Monday . Public prosecutors said they had found a list of children 's names and ages at the couple 's flat . The list was being studied for possible links to previous child kidnappings and prostitution , a prosecutors ' spokesman told Reuters . +Missing German girl found alive at Dutch campsite . GRONINGEN , Netherlands 1996-08-30 Dutch police said on Friday they had found missing German girl Nicole Nichterwitz alive on a campsite in the northern city of Groningen and had arrested her aunt and companion on charges of kidnapping . " We have found Nicole on a campsite in Groningen thanks to tipoffs from the Dutch public . We have also found and arrested her aunt and companion , " said a spokeswoman of the Dutch criminal investigation service . Police could not yet tell whether the 10-year-old showed any signs of sexual abuse . " We do n't know yet . It 's too early to tell , " she said . The girl was abducted from her school in Velten near Berlin on Monday . German police suspected her aunt , 47 , and companion , 28 , were involved in running a child prostitution ring . Public prosecutors said they had found a list of children 's names and ages at the couple 's flat . The list was being studied for possible links to previous child kidnappings and prostitution , a prosecutors ' spokesman said . The couple would probably be extradited to Germany which has requested their deportation , the Dutch police spokeswoman said . Descriptions of the couple 's car released to Dutch media led to their arrest , she added . +Indian copper falls , state firm may cut rates . BOMBAY 1996-08-30 Indian copper prices fell on Friday as dealers awaited an announcement relating to price cuts by state-owned producer , Hindustan Copper Ltd , traders said . Nickel extended gains while other base metals were unchanged in narrow trade , they said . Ready copper fell by 150 rupees at 12,350 rupees per quintal on fresh offerings by the stockists who expect Hindustan Copper to cut prices . Nickel rose by 500 to 39,200 rupees on thin supply and fresh buying by stainless steel makers . Tin was unchanged at 36,000 rupees , so did zinc at 6,300 rupees and lead at 4,900 rupees . Aluminium was quiet at 7,450 rupees . -- Bombay Commodities +91-22-265 9000 +MARTELA H1 PROFIT FIM 6.3 MLN VS 21.0 MLN . HELSINKI 1996-08-30 Six months to June 30 , ( million markka unless stated ) Profit before extraordinaries , appropriations , taxes 6.3 vs 21.0 Earnings per share ( markka ) 2.2 vs 7.2 Net sales 289.1 vs 256.9 +Canadian bonds open softer , spreads to U.S. shrink . TORONTO 1996-08-30 Canadian bonds opened softer on Friday , pulled lower by a sinking U.S. market , but outperformed U.S. bonds on positive Canadian economic data , analysts said . " I think this morning 's Canadian numbers were very supportive of narrower spreads , particularly the current account number , " said Jim Webber , director of fixed-income research with TD Securities Inc . Canada 's 8.0 percent bond due 2023 fell C$ 0.45 to C$ 101.15 to yield 7.894 percent . The U.S. 30-year benchmark fell 30/32 to yield 7.12 percent . The spread between benchmark bonds narrowed 77 basis points from 81 basis points at the close of trading on Wednesday . Statistics Canada on Friday reported Canada 's current account moved to a higher-than-expected C$ 1.15 billion second quarter surplus from a C$ 1.62 billion deficit in the first quarter . It was the first surplus since the fourth quarter of 1984 . The agency also reported Canada 's real gross domestic product rose a weaker-than-expected 0.3 percent in the second quarter or 1.3 percent at an annualized rate . While the data provided support for Canadian bonds , both Canadian and U.S. markets weakened after the release of strong U.S. economic data , including a report showing the Chicago Purchasing Managers August index rose to 60 from 51.2 in July . " The purchasing managers ' number is extremely , extremely strong , " said Webber . In other news , the Toronto Bond Traders ' Association said it is recommending that dealings in the Canadian bond market end early at 1400 EDT / 1800 GMT on Friday . The Canadian market typically closes early on holiday weekends and Canadian financial markets will be closed on Monday for Labour Day . In other prices , the 7.0 percent of 2006 fell C$ 0.28 to C$ 96.89 to yield 7.437 percent . The U.S. 10-year benchmark fell 21/32 to yield 6.95 percent . The spread between the two bonds narrowed to 49 basis points from 54 basis points at the close of trading on Thursday . The three-month cash bill traded at 4.04 percent against the U.S. three-month bill at 5.26 percent . -- Jeffrey Hodgson ( 416 ) 941-8105 , e-mail : jeffrey.hodgson@reuters.com +Aw Computer Systems Inc Q2 loss widens . NEW YORK 1996-08-30 1996 1995 Shr loss $ 0.22 loss $ 0.07 Net loss 1,071 loss 277 Revs 130 1,279 Avg shrs 4,841 3,990 First Half Shr loss $ 0.42 loss $ 0.21 Net loss 1,967 loss 841 Revs 476 2,253 Avg shrs 4,666 3,944 ( All Data Above 000s Except Per Share Numbers ) -- New York Newsdesk 212-859-1610 . +IPO FILING -- Homegate Hospitality Inc . WASHINGTON 1996-08-30 Company Name Homegate Hospitality Inc Nasdaq Stock symbol HMGT Estimated price range N / A Total shares to be offered N / A Shrs offered by company N / A Shrs outstanding after ipo N / A Lead Underwriter Bear Stearns & Co Inc Underwriters over-allotment N / A Business : Company 's goal is to become a national provider of high quality extended-stay hotels in strategically selected markets located throughout the United States . Use of Proceeds : To finance the development of additional extended-stay hotels and other general corporate purposes . Financial Data in 000s : 1995 1994 - Revenue N / A N / A - Net Income N / A N / A +Syria slams Israel on settlements . DAMASCUS 1996-08-30 Syria on Friday condemned Israel 's settlement policy and said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was preparing for war with Arabs . " Practices of the Israeli government , especially its settlement activities , came to confirm that dealing with this government inflicts the biggest harm on the Arab cause , " state-run Damascus Radio said in a commentary . " When this government insists on stabbing the peace process and tearing it apart , this means that it is preparing for war , " the radio said . Palestinian President Yasser Arafat described this week the decision to expand settlements in the West Bank as a declaration of war . Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza observed a strike on Thursday to protest against the Israeli move . The radio urged Arabs to unify their ranks to thwart the policies of the right-wing Israeli government . " Israel could not confront a united Arab stand or usurp their rights because the Arab rights could be regained when they achieve unity and solidarity , " Damascus radio said . It welcomed the international criticism of Israel 's settlement policies but called for practical steps to force the Israeli government to abandon this policy . " It is important to translate the criticism into pressuring action to prevent Israel from undermining the big international efforts aimed at making the peace process achieve success , " the radio said . Syria and Arabs have been dismayed by Netanyahu 's refusal to trade the occupied Arab lands for peace , his support for the expansion of settlements and his insistance on Jerusalem as a unifed capital for Israel . Syria has held sporadic peace talks with Israel since 1991 without achieving a breakthrough . +Egypt police detain 26 suspected Moslem militants . CAIRO 1996-08-30 Police have detained 26 suspected members of Egypt 's largest militant group al-Gama'a al-Islamiya ( Islamic Group ) , government newspapers reported on Friday . They said police arrested the militants in the eastern Sharqiyah province after capturing their leader Rami al-Saadani in a satellite city outside Cairo . Al-Akhbar newspapers said the men had been plotting against " strategic institutions and prominent individuals " but gave no other details . The newspapers said the men were being interrogated . State security officials were not immediately available for comment . More than 960 people have been killed in the armed struggle the Gama'a launched in 1992 to topple President Hosni Mubarak 's government and establish a purist Islamic state in its place +Israel blocks Palestinian pilgrims ' progress . Sami Aboudi AL-RAM , West Bank 1996-08-30 Kamil Jamil did n't have a prayer . An Israeli roadblock stopped the 38-year-old Palestinian from answering Yasser Arafat 's call to worship at Jerusalem 's al-Aqsa mosque on Friday . " Go home . There are no prayers today , " an Israeli soldier yelled at Jamil in Hebrew . Palestinian President Arafat , attacking Israel 's decision to expand Jewish settlements and its policy on Jerusalem , went before the Palestinian legislature on Wednesday to urge the two million Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza to go to the holy city . Pilgrims stood little chance of making progress . Palestinians have been banned by Israel from travelling from the West Bank to Jerusalem since suicide bombings by Moslem militants killed 59 people in the Jewish state in February and March . And Israeli checkpoints have circled Jerusalem since 1993 , a concrete and constant reminder of Israel 's hold on a city it considers its eternal capital . The PLO wants Arab East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state . Only a few Palestinians trickled to the roadblocks . They were immediately turned back . " I am heeding Abu Ammar 's ( Arafat 's ) call to pray at al-Aqsa and I came . It is our duty towards al-Aqsa to come and pray , " Jamil said . A tourist from Jordan was also told by Israeli soldiers at the al-Ram checkpoint that he could not enter Jerusalem . " We have a peace treaty with them and we let them go wherever they want when they come to Jordan , " said the tourist , Khaled Hijazi , 37 . " I feel terrible . I am entitled to see Jerusalem , " he said . Some Palestinians took to back roads , only to run into waiting Israeli security forces . " The Israelis have no right to prevent us from going to pray . What kind of peace is this that prevents us from reaching our holy places ? " asked Mustafa Hoshiyeh , a 27-year-old West Bank labourer turned around by a police patrol on a back road . " Abu Ammar ( Arafat ) is right . We have signed a peace treaty with the Israelis but on the ground , we see that nothing has changed , " said 20-year-old Ali Ahmed from Qalandia refugee camp . +PRESALE - Bay Co Bldg Auth , Mich .. AMT : 1,200,000 DATE : 09/05/96 NYC Time : 1600 CUSIP : 072261 ISSUER : Bay Co Building Authority ST : MI ISSUE : Bldg auth ( law enforcement ctr ) Series 1996-A TAX STAT : Exempt-REV M / SP / F : NA / NA / NA BOOK ENTRY : N ENHANCEMENTS : None BANK QUAL : Y DTD : 09/01/96 SURE BID : Y DUE : 11/1/96-11 SR MGR : 1ST CPN : 11/01/96 CALL : 11/1/05 @ 101 , dtp 11/1/07 NIC DELIVERY : 45 days approx ORDERS : PAYING AGENT : Michigan National Bank , Detroit L.O. : Bodman , Longely & Dahling , Detroit F.A. : First of Michigan Corp. , Detroit LAST SALE : None Year Amount Coupon Yield Price Conc . 1996 45,000 1997 50,000 1998 55,000 1999 55,000 2000 60,000 2001 65,000 2002 70,000 2003 70,000 2004 75,000 2005 80,000 2006 85,000 2007 90,000 2008 90,000 2009 95,000 2010 105,000 2011 110,000 COMPETITIVE PRE-SALE CONTRIBUTED BY J.J. KENNY K-SHEETS : +Consumer spending , incomes edge up in July . Glenn Somerville WASHINGTON 1996-08-30 Consumer spending barely edged up in July , the Commerce Department said Friday , as income growth slowed abruptly to the weakest pace in six months . Spending rose 0.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $ 5.15 trillion after dropping a revised 0.4 percent in June . Incomes from wages , salaries and all other sources gained 0.1 percent to a rate of $ 6.47 trillion after a 0.9 percent jump in June . Department officials said July 's slight gain in incomes was the weakest for any month since January , when they were flat . Wages and salaries came under pressure in July as a shorter average workweek and lower hourly earnings cut into paychecks . The department said wages and salaries decreased by $ 6.9 billion in July after climbing $ 45 billion in June . " In July , average weekly hours and average hourly earnings declined , more than offsetting the effect of an increase in employment , " Commerce said . But more money went into savings accounts , as savings held at 5.3 cents out of each dollar earned in both June and July . That was the highest savings rate since October last year , when 5.5 cents out of each dollar earned was being saved . The generally lackluster report on spending and incomes in July had been expected . At the same time , the department said in a separate report that new orders received by U.S. factories climbed strongly in July , with widespread gains across most major categories . Orders increased 1.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted $ 317.6 billion , significantly stronger than the 1 percent rise forecast by Wall Street economists . That followed a revised 0.7 percent decline in June orders . Commerce said previously that spending at retail stores was up only 0.1 percent in July , partly because of softer sales of new cars and light trucks . In addition , the Labour Department 's July employment report had foreshadowed the muted income growth . It showed average hourly earnings fell in July by 0.2 percent to $ 11.00 and the average workweek shortened to 34.3 hours from 34.7 in June . Gains in personal income , which includes wages and salaries as well as income from sources such as dividends , interest and businesses , are essential for funding consumer purchases , which fuel two-thirds of national economic activity . Spending on all types of durable goods , which includes cars , fell to an annual rate of $ 626.3 billion in July from $ 633.6 billion in June . But spending on nondurable products increased moderately to a rate of $ 1.55 trillion from $ 1.54 trillion in June , while spending for services was up to $ 2.97 trillion in July from $ 2.96 trillion . Payrolls of manufacturing companies rose in July by $ 2.3 billion to an annual rate of $ 678 billion . +World Markets Overnight Summary - Aug 30 . NEW YORK 1996-08-29 WORLD MARKETS ROUND-UP STOCKS GOLD METALS NY Dow close London opening LME close 5647.65 ( - 64.73 ) $ 387.70 copper per tonne Nikkei latest CRUDE OIL $ 1987.0 20202.87 ( - 350.29 ) Sept Brent zinc per tonne FTSE close $ 21.25 $ 1000.0 3885.0 ( - 33.7 ) ----- oOo----- STOCKS SINK AS BOND RATES JUMP ON STRONG DATA Blue-chip stocks sank to their biggest loss since mid-July Thursday as fresh signs of a surprisingly strong economy boosted long-term bond interest rates above 7 percent . The dollar rose slightly against the German mark , but edged lower against the Japanese yen . The Dow Jones industrial average ended down 64.73 points at 5,647.65 , its largest drop since July 15 , when it closed with a loss of 161 points . In the broader market , declining issues beat advances 1,627 to 743 on moderate volume of 321 million shares on the New York Stock Exchange . In the bond market , the 30-year Treasury bond fell 23/32 of a point , or $ 7.1875 on a $ 1,000 bond , raising its yield to 7.04 percent -- the highest since July 31 -- from 6.98 percent at Wednesday 's close . " Seven percent creates psychological problems and a legitimate competitor for money from equities , " said Ralph Bloch , chief technical analyst at Raymond James . " We could carry another 100 points lower in the Dow , " he said . " I 'm telling clients things are dicey going into next Friday ( Sept . 6 ) so let 's be careful . " Wall Street on Sept . 6 faces the key monthly employment report , which has been known to cause dramatic swings in stock prices . " We had two very strong economic reports , " said David Shulman , Salomon Bros . ' chief equity strategist . " There are more worries in bond land . Fears of a Fed tightening next month have resurfaced for the first time since the end of July . " The Commerce Department reported that the nation 's gross domestic product expanded at a 4.8 percent annual rate in the three months from April through June instead of the 4.2 percent estimated a month ago . In another report , sales of new homes jumped unexpectedly in July to the briskest rate in five months , driving prices up in a strong housing market . Sales shot up 7.9 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 783,000 units -- the strongest since February , when new homes were selling at a rate of 784,000 a year . Analysts said the stock market was also worried about the impact on President Clinton 's re-election bid of his top political strategist resigning . Dick Morris , who is credited with resurrecting Clinton 's political fortunes over the past 18 months by masterminding his turn to the political centre , quit after a supermarket tabloid reported he engaged in a yearlong affair with a prostitute , with whom he allegedly shared confidential campaign documents . Analysts said Wall Street had grown accustomed to a moderate Republican in the form of Democratic President Clinton . Morris ' departure raised fears that Clinton would veer more to the left in a second term . The dollar closed at 1.4772 marks , up from 1.4767 late Wednesday . The dollar slipped to 108.40 yen from 108.45 . Oil markets rose sharply on a combination of low stocks , two hurricanes and allegations of illicit trading by Iraq . September heating oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange closed 1.63 cents higher at 63.67 cents a gallon , September unleaded gasoline finished 1.39 cents up at 63.72 cents a gallon and October crude rose 44 cents to $ 22.15 a barrel . December cotton closed 0.95 cent higher at 77.06 cents per pound on the New York Cotton Exchange despite some easing of concern about the twin hurricane threat to key U.S. growing areas with forecasts indicating both storms may remain offshore . Overseas , London 's FTSE 100 index had earlier climbed to 3,8921.1 just below its record of 3,922.1 , before edging down through the afternoon session to finish the day at 3,885.0 , a fall of 33.7 points . In Tokyo , the key 225-share Nikkei average shed 156.65 points , or 0.76 percent , to end at 20,553.16 . +Pirelli cables look to tap Chinese growth . David Jones MILAN 1996-08-30 Italian tyre and cables giant Pirelli on Friday announced its long-awaited move into China with a cables joint venture set to capitalise on the rapidly-growing Chinese telecommunications market . Pirelli is linking with Hong Kong-based group CITIC Pacific in a venture to be called the Wuxi Tong Ling Company Ltd , which will operate in partnership with a local industrial company at its existing factory in Wuxi , Jiangsu province , Shanghai . The partners will invest around $ 30 million in the existing copper cable plant at Wuxi to update technology and include optic fibre production , with annual turnover expected to reach $ 60 million within the next few years . The move marks a further move by Pirelli 's cables division to expand in the fast-growing Far Eastern developing markets with the group already present in Indonesia , India and Malaysia . " This is really positive news for Pirelli , and I expect that it will produce one of the best half-year results in late September compared to other industrial Italian companies , " said analyst Paula Buratti at Indosuez . She emphasised that the move was positive because Pirelli will have management control of the Chinese venture , and it also showed another example of Pirelli exporting its technical know-how to developing markets . Pirelli shares reacted favourable even though talks had been underway for some time and news about a venture had been widely expected . The shares rose 0.2 percent to 2,555 lire by 1350 GMT in an easier Milan stock market . This will be Pirelli 's first industrial involvement in a Chinese market where demand for telecommunication networks is expected to grow to 80-100 million new lines between 1996 and 2000 , doubling demand for optical cables . China 's second largest telecoms operator Unicom already has a mandate from the central government to establish 15 million new phone lines by the year 2000 , which will necessitate new trunk line systems and local distribution networks . " The starting of this production base in China has for our group an undoubted strategic value , representing an important enhancement of our presence in Asia , " said Pirelli SpA chairman and chief executive officer Marco Tonchetti Provera . Pirelli Cables has global sales of over $ 3.5 billion , and has become a large supplier of optic cables and systems to major telecoms carriers in the U.S. , Europe and the Far East . CITIC Pacific is a major Hong Kong-listed company focusing on infrastruture , trading , distribution and property , with 28 percent of its 1995 profits coming from telecoms . It has investments in several industrial joint ventures in China . +Dutch bond futures revival delayed - EOE . AMSTERDAM 1996-08-30 A broad attempt to spur activity in Dutch bond futures has been delayed to give participants a chance to become familiar with the trading system , the European Options Exchange ( EOE ) said on Friday . Market-making in the rarely-traded FTO contract was expected to begin today , but an EOE spokesman said the 10 banks and brokers involved in the initiative needed time to get accustomed to changes in the electronic trading system . " It 's not ready yet . We found it wise to take some time between the commitment to start and the actual start , " EOE spokesman Lex van Drooge told Reuters . He said no date had been fixed yet for the start of price making in the 10-year contract , but the EOE had agreed to speak again to the participants in one to two weeks . Investors in Dutch bonds currently use German bond futures to hedge their portfolios because the FTO contract is so illiquid . A limited attempt to reinvigorate the contract two years ago failed . -- Amsterdam newsroom +31 20 504 5000 , Fax +31 20 504 5040 +OSCE defends record over Chechnya peace mission . BONN 1996-08-30 The head of an international mediating mission defended its record on Friday in the face of criticism by pro-Moscow leaders in breakway Chechnya and insisted it was doing its best to bring peace to the region . Flavio Cotti , the chairman of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe ( OSCE ) , told German radio the Vienna-based body viewed the conflict in Chechnya as an internal Russian problem . " The OSCE is completely involved . But one must not forget that the OSCE only has limited powers there , " said Cotti , who is also the Swiss foreign minister . " Our mission in Chechnya has done all it can within the given limitations . " Pro-Moscow leaders in Chechnya have criticised Tim Guldimann , the Swiss diplomat who heads the OSCE Chechnya mission , saying he was biased toward Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev , president of the self-declared separatist government . Russian peacemaker Alexander Lebed and Chechen separatist military leader Aslan Maskhadov started a new round of peace talks on Friday just outside the rebel region . Cotti said Chechnya must remain part of Russia , but the solution to the conflict would be to accord the region maximum autonomy within Russia 's borders . " There is no doubt that Chechnya , according to OSCE principles , belongs to a state called Russia , " he said , pointing out that Russia was an OSCE member and it was not the organisation 's policy to challenge members ' sovereignty . He added that the OSCE was the only international body which has been allowed into the Chechnya to monitor the human rights situation there , but that its means were restricted by the fact that the conflict was a " internal issue " . " We have a small concept , the details of which have yet to be worked out . Chechnya must be accorded the maximum autonomy possible within the framework of Russian integrity , " said Cotti . +Dutch say no reason to reopen El Al carqo enquiry . THE HAGUE 1996-08-30 The Dutch transport minister Annemarie Jorritsma told the country ' second chamber that there is no further need to investigate the 1992 crash of an El Al freighter which left 43 dead in an Amsterdam suburb . She said that a request from her ministry for the aircraft 's waybill documentation and further information about the contents of its hold had been complied with by El Al 's head office in Tel Aviv . The Dutch transport ministry had come in for pressure from a cross-section of Dutch members of parliaments in May this year , some of whom believed the aircraft had been carrying unlisted , dangerous goods . Others said they thought the aircraft was loaded with too much airfreight . Jorritsma said the latest evidence from El Al in no way supported the allegations , and added there is no justification for a further investigation into the incident . -- Air Cargo Newsroom Tel+44 171 542 8982 Fax +44 171 542 5017 +Armenians , Azeris hold peace talks in Germany . BONN 1996-08-30 Representatives from Armenia and Azerbaijan held talks earlier this week in Germany on bringing a lasting peace to the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region , a diplomatic source close to the talks said on Friday . The source , who spoke on condition of anonymity , said Azerbaijani presidential adviser Vafa Gulizade and his Armenian counterpart Zhirayr Liparityan met to discuss the disputed enclave on Wednesday and had now flown home . An uneasy ceasefire has prevailed in Nagorno-Karabakh , which represents around 20 percent of Azeri territory , since May 1994 after ethnic Armenians drove Azeris out of the region . The conflict , which began in 1988 , claimed over 10,000 lives . " The main subject ( of the talks ) was the search for a peaceful solution for Nagorno-Karabakh , " the source said . He declined to reveal any more details about the content of the talks or their exact location in Germany . Azerbaijan has said it is prepared to grant autonomy to Nagorno-Karabakh if Armenian forces pull out , but will not accept Armenia 's demands for the independence of the enclave . Russia 's Interfax news agency reported on Tuesday the officials had departed for negotiations in Germany , adding that face-to-face talks between the two sides first took place last December in Amsterdam . Interfax said the discussions were being held in parallel with peace talks mediated by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe ( OSCE ) and the broad-based Minsk Group of countries led by Russia and Finland . +Sombre mood on Arctic island after plane crash . Rolf Soderlind LONGYEAR , Norway 1996-08-30 The windblown , chilly streets of this tiny Arctic town are all but deserted and flags are flying at half-mast beneath a brooding , clouded sky . Longyear is a town in mourning , a close-knit community that has been shattered . Disaster struck on Thursday when a Russian airliner bringing coal miners to work crashed as it came in to land at the airport , killing all 141 people on board . " It 's a sight I will never forget . I will remember it for the rest of my life , " said Stig Onarheim . He was one of a handful of rescuers who raced to the scene of the crash in a helicopter on Thursday , hoping in vain to find survivors . The plane smashed into a snow-capped mountain on the Arctic island of Spitzbergen on Thursday , just east of Longyear . " Imagine a big plane with a lot of luggage and people on board . Think of all that mixed together , with twisted , wrecked parts on the slope , " Onarheim , 29 , told Reuters . Police and local officials have sealed off the crash site , protecting it from intrusive reporters and from the polar bears that roam freely across the icy expanses . The dead were all Russians and Ukrainians , coming to work in the mining towns of Barentsburg and Pyramiden . Longyear is a Norwegian settlement of just over 1,000 people , but it also feels the loss keenly . " I have trouble finding the words to express my grief . It 's a tragedy for everyone . We know many of the people who live in Barentsburg , some of them could have been on the plane , " said Johan Sletten , 52 . Sletten , a caretaker who has lived on the island for 30 years , said the Norwegian and Russian communities visit frequently , competing at soccer in the summer and with snow-scooter races in the winter . Teenage shop assistant Heidi Groenstein was blunter . " I 'm glad it was not a Norwegian plane , " she said . " Just think of it -- a mining village where so many workers die . They must be having a tough time of it now . " Barentsburg , just a few hours ride by snow-scooter or 15 minutes by helicopter from Longyear , has asked to be left alone with its grief and told reporters to stay away . Around 100 Russian and Ukrainian miners were waiting in Longyear to fly home on the plane that crashed . They were given shelter in the town 's church overnight and ate a sombre breakfast before getting on a bus for the airport . Another plane had been sent from Moscow to pick them up . At this time of year , the only colour in Longyear comes from the brightly-painted wooden houses . Everything else is muddy , the waters of the fjord leaden . Winter is in the air . Barentsburg is an even grimmer place , a run-down testament to the hardships of the new Russia . Spitzbergen lies some 500 miles ( 800 km ) off the northern tip of Norway and endures one of the most extreme climates on the planet . Inhabited by fewer than 3,000 people in total , it sees the sun for 24 hours a day during summer and is plunged into round-the-clock darkness in the winter months . The terrain is mountainous , the only roads are dirt tracks . Norway rules the island group under the terms of a 1920s international treaty which gave many other nations the right to establish setttlements and exploit the coal that is still mined there . Only Russia has chosen to do so . +Ericsson says wins 1.2 bln SKR China order . STOCKHOLM 1996-08-30 Swedish telecoms group LM Ericsson AB said on Friday it won an order worth 1.2 billion crowns for a fixed public telecoms network in the Guangdong province of China . Ericsson said in a statement the order was from the Guangdong Post and Telecommunications Administration ( GPTA ) . The order included AXE switching equipment , ISDN equipment , Intelligent Network ( IN ) products , broad-band multi-media communication network products , services and training , Ericsson spokesman Per Zetterquist told Reuters . Deliveries are due to be completed by 1999 , the company said . -- Stockholm newsroom +46-8-700 1017 +HK has infrastructure in place for post-97 - Tsang . AUCKLAND 1996-08-30 Hong Kong Financial Secretary Donald Tsang said on Friday that the territory had the " infrastructural hardware " to make a success of its future under Chinese sovereignty from mid-1997 . " We have the largest and most efficient port on the South China coast ; we have the best transport and telecommunications infrastructure in the world ; and we are investing in this hardware on an enormous scale , " Tsang said in a speech to Auckland during a visit to New Zealand . Hong Kong also had the necessary " constitutional infrastructure " in place , with the promise of autonomy in running its affairs after the handover from Britain to China . " What this means in practice is that Hong Kong will go on raising its own taxes , issuing its own currency , setting its own expenditure priorities and managing its own enormous financial reserves , " Tsang said . He acknowledged that many Hong Kong people had decided to seek their future elsewhere and others were sure to follow in the next nine months . " But for the great majority of us , Hong Kong is our home and Hong Kong 's future is our future . " -- Wellington newsroom 64 4 473-4746 +PRESS DIGEST - Indonesian newspapers - August 30 . Following is a summary of major Indonesian political and business stories in leading newspapers , prepared by Reuters in Jakarta . Reuters has not checked the stories and does not guarantee their accuracy . Telephone : ( 6221 ) 384-6364 . Fax : ( 6221 ) 344-8404 . - - - - KOMPAS Indonesian President Suharto has asked businessmen to share their experiences with each other in an effort to boost the country 's exports . - - - - JAKARTA POST Speaker of the House of Representatives Wahono has called on those serving in high state institutions to direct their efforts in the coming years towards dismantling all barriers to social justice . An agreement to bring peace to the southern Philippines is set to be initialed on Friday after delegates from the Philippine government and the Moro National Liberation Front ( MNLF ) concluded negotiations on the treaty which is set to end almost 25 years of conflict in the region . - - - - MEDIA INDONESIA Around 2,000 of Indonesia 's controversial Timor national car made by Kia Motor Corp of South Korea arrived at Jakarta 's Tanjung Priok port on Thursday . The cars will be jointly marketed by Kia and PT Timor Putra Nasional , controlled by a son of President Suharto , which plans next year to start assembling the vehicles in Indonesia . - - - - REPUBLIKA The Central Jakarta District Court has started to hear the suit filed by ousted Indonesian Democratic Party ( PDI ) leader Megawati Sukarnoputri against the government and party rivals after the parties failed to reach an out-of-court settlement . Megawati has sued the defendants over a government-backed rebel congress which ousted her last June . +Jeans Mate Corp - 6mth parent forecast . TOKYO 1996-08-30 Six months to August 20 , 1996 ( in billions of yen unless specified ) LATEST PREVIOUS ACTUAL ( Parent ) FORECAST FORECAST YEAR-AGO Sales 9.06 9.31 8.42 Current 818 million 979 million 882 million Net 415 million 490 million 412 million NOTE - Jeans Mate Corp is the full company name . +Apic Yamada - 6mth parent forecast . TOKYO 1996-08-30 Six months to September 30 , 1996 ( in billions of yen unless specified ) LATEST PREVIOUS ACTUAL ( Parent ) FORECAST FORECAST YEAR-AGO Sales 12.50 13.00 11.27 Current 1.30 1.35 1.09 Net 650 million 680 million 600 million NOTE - Apic Yamada Corp is a leading manufacturer of semiconductor leadframes . +Bootleg brew kills 35 in China , police nab suspects . BEIJING 1996-08-30 Police in southwest China have arrested 30 people suspected of making and selling homemade alcohol that killed 35 people and poisoned 157 , the Xinhua news agency said on Friday . A group of farmers in Huize county in the southwestern province of Yunnan were arrested for blending alcohol with methanol and selling the toxic liquor to local residents , the agency said . Between late June and July , a total of 192 people were poisoned by the toxic liquor , and 35 of them died and six were left severely handicapped , it said . Local authorities launched an investigation after they received reports of several similar deaths in the area , it said . Post-mortem examinations showed they were all caused by methanol poisoning . Police had confiscated the remainder of the poisonous liquor , Xinhua said . It gave no further details . +Singapore hangs Thai drug trafficker . SINGAPORE 1996-08-30 Singapore hanged a Thai farmer at Changi Prison on Friday for drug trafficking , the Central Narcotics Bureau ( CNB ) said . Jeerasak Densakul , 24 , was arrested in 1995 when he was found with 11 slabs of cannabis weighing 2.2 kg ( 4.8 pounds ) , the CNB said . Singapore has a mandatory death sentence for anyone over 18 years of age found guilty of trafficking in more than 15 grams ( half an ounce ) of heroin , 30 grams ( an ounce ) of morphine or 500 grams ( 18 oz ) of cannabis or marijuana . Of the nearly 270 people hanged for various crimes in Singapore since 1975 , almost half have been for drug-related charges . +Arafat goes to Nablus ahead of cabinet meeting . NABLUS , West Bank 1996-08-30 Palestinian President Yasser Arafat arrived in the West Bank self-rule enclave of Nablus from Ramallah on Friday , witnesses said . His aides said Arafat would hold the weekly meeting of the Palestinian self-rule Authority 's cabinet in Nablus on Saturday . In Jerusalem , Israeli security forces were bracing for thousands of Palestinians expected to answer Arafat 's call earlier this week to come to the city holy to Moslems , Arabs and Jews to pray in protest against Israel 's settlement policy in the West Bank and delay in peace negotiations . Palestinians want Arab East Jerusalem as the capital of a future independent state . Israel , which captured and annexed East Jerusalem in 1967 , says it will never cede any part of the city . Arafat , who made an interim peace deal with Israel in 1993 that set up self-rule , says he will only visit Jerusalem once Israeli occupation has ended . +U.N. Council concerned about Israeli bulldozers . UNITED NATIONS 1996-08-29 Security Council members expressed concern on Thursday that Israel 's bulldozing of a Palestinian day-care centre for the disabled might further injure the Middle East peace process . Responding to a letter from the the Palestinian U.N. observer mission , Security Council President Tono Eitel of Germany said that members asked him to convey their views to Israel 's charge d'affaires , David Peleg . " The members expressed their concern about the maintenance of the peace process and they urged that no action be taken that would have a negative impact on the negotiations , " Eitel said after an informal council session . " They asked me to call in the Israeli charge d'affaires and discuss the matter with him , " he added . The Palestinian letter from Marwan Jilani said the destruction of the Jerusalem centre was an effort by Israel to " alter the character , demographic composition and status of the Holy City of Jerusalem " and violated agreements between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organisation . " This most recent measure represents a revival of old , malicious plans to confiscate the land and build units for Israeli settlers within the walls of the Old City . " " We expect the international community to take a clear and firm position , based on international law and in accordance with U.N. resolutions , against all such Israeli violations and illegal practices , " he said . On Tuesday , Israeli crews hoisted a bulldozer over the walls of Jerusalem 's old city and demolished the centre , saying it was being restored without a building permit . Canada had recently donated $ 30 million to the centre , called the Burj al-Laqlaq Society . +SOCCER - REAL SCRAPE 1-1 DRAW IN SCRAPPY OPENING MATCH . LA CORUNA , Spain 1996-08-31 A late goal by newly-signed defender Roberto Carlos saved the blushes of Real Madrid coach Fabio Capello and his multi-billion peseta line-up in the opening game of the Spanish championship on Saturday . The Brazilian 's 79th-minute effort was enough to earn Real a point from a scrappy 1-1 draw at fellow title contenders Deportivo Coruna . Deportivo started strongly , taking the lead midway through the first half when former Auxerre playmaker Corentine Martins headed home a corner after a flick-on by Brazilian-born Spanish international midfielder Donato . Real looked to be in deep trouble shortly after the break when Luis Milla was sent off for committing two bookable offences in as many minutes . But Deportivo were unable to capitalise on their numerical advantage , and were themselves reduced to ten men when Armando Alvarez was sent off 15 minutes from time . Shortly afterwards Roberto Carlos found space in the home defence and equalised for Real with a shot that was deflected past despairing Deportivo ' keeper Jacques Songo'o . In a frantic final five minutes there were chances at both ends , and Donato , who had earlier been booked , was sent off for protesting about the incursion of Real players at a free kick . Before the match Deportivo chairman Augusto Lendoiro said he would ignore a FIFA decision banning Brazilian midfielder Mauro Silva from playing in the match for failing to join his national side 's tour of Europe . In the event , coach John Toshack decided not to use Silva , who had claimed he did not join the Brazil squad because he had lost his passport . +RUGBY LEAGUE - WIGAN BEAT BRADFORD 42-36 IN SEMIFINAL . WIGAN , England 1996-08-31 Result of English rugby league premiership semifinal played on Saturday : Wigan 42 Bradford Bulls 36 +SOCCER - ISRAEL BEAT BULGARIA IN EUROPEAN UNDER-21 QUALIFIER . HERZLIYA , Israel 1996-08-31 Result of European under-21 championship group 5 qualifier on Saturday : Israel 2 , Bulgaria 0 ( halftime 0-0 ) Scorers : Haim Hajaj ( 47th ) , Nir Sivilia ( 57th ) . Attendance : 2,000 . +SOCCER - IRISH ERASE PAINFUL MEMORIES WITH 5-0 WIN . ESCHEN , Liechtenstein 1996-08-31 The Republic of Ireland 's new-look side dispelled painful memories of their last visit to Liechtenstein by beating the Alpine part-timers 5-0 in a World Cup qualifier on Saturday . The Irish , under new manager Mick McCarthy , took a 4-0 lead within 20 minutes through captain Andy Townsend , 20-year-old Norwich striker Keith O'Neill , Sunderland forward Niall Quinn and teenager Ian Harte . Quinn added his second and Ireland 's fifth just after the hour to complete the rout and give the Irish their biggest-ever away win . The result helped erase memories of Ireland 's visit to the Eschen stadium 14 months ago , when Jack Charlton 's side were held to a frustrating 0-0 draw which ultimately cost them a place in the European championship finals . +SOCCER - IRELAND BEAT LIECHTENSTEIN 5-0 IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . ESCHEN 1996-08-31 The Republic of Ireland beat Liechtenstein 5-0 ( halftime 4-0 ) in a World Cup soccer European group 8 qualifier on Saturday . Scorers : Andy Townsend ( 5th ) , Keith O'Neill ( 7th ) , Niall Quinn ( 11th , 61st ) , Ian Harte ( 19th ) . Attendance : 3,900 +GOLF - BRITISH MASTERS FINAL SCORES . NORTHAMPTON , England 1996-08-31 Leading scores after the final round of the British Masters golf tournament on Saturday ( British unless stated ) : 284 Robert Allenby ( Australia ) 69 71 71 73 , Miguel Angel Martin ( Spain ) 75 70 71 68 ( Allenby won at first play-off hole ) 285 Costantino Rocca ( Italy ) 71 73 72 69 286 Miguel Angel Jimenez ( Spain ) 74 72 73 67 287 Ian Woosnam 70 76 71 70 288 Jose Coceres ( Argentina ) 69 78 71 70 289 Joakim Haeggman ( Sweden ) 71 77 70 71 , Antoine Lebouc ( France ) 74 73 70 72 290 Colin Montgomerie 68 76 77 69 , Robert Coles 74 76 71 69 , Philip Walton ( Ireland ) 71 74 74 71 , Peter Mitchell 74 71 74 71 , Klas Eriksson ( Sweden ) 71 75 72 72 , Pedro Linhart ( Spain ) 72 73 67 78 291 Phillip Price 72 76 74 69 , Adam Hunter 70 79 73 69 , Peter O'Malley ( Australia ) 71 73 75 72 , Mark Roe 69 71 78 73 , Mike Clayton ( Australia ) 69 76 73 73 292 Iain Pyman 71 75 75 71 , David Gilford 69 74 77 72 , Peter Hedblom ( Sweden ) 70 75 75 72 , Stephen McAllister 73 76 69 74 . +SOCCER - SLOVAKIA BEAT FAROES IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . TOFTIR , Faroe Islands 1996-08-31 Slovakia beat the Faroe Islands 2-1 ( halftime 1-0 ) in their World Cup soccer European group six qualifying match on Saturday . Scorers : Faroe Islands - Jan Allan Mueller ( 60th minute ) Slovakia - Lubomir Moravcik ( 13th ) , Peter Dubovsky ( 88th ) Attendance : 1,445 . +CRICKET - ENGLAND BEAT PAKISTAN BY 107 RUNS IN SECOND ONE-DAYER . BIRMINGHAM , England 1996-08-31 England beat Pakistan by 107 runs in the second one-day international at Edgbaston on Saturday to take the series 2-0 . Scores : England 292-8 innings closed ( N. Knight 113 ) , Pakistan 185 ( Ijaz Ahmed 79 ; A. Hollioake 4-23 ) +CYCLING - TOUR OF NETHERLANDS FINAL RESULTS / STANDINGS . LANDGRAAF , Netherlands 1996-08-31 Leading results of the 205-km sixth and final stage of the Tour of the Netherlands between Roermond and Landgraaf on Saturday : 1. Olaf Ludwig ( Germany ) Telekom 4 hours 48 mins 2 seconds 2. Giovanni Lombardi ( Italy ) Polti 5 seconds behind 3. Tristan Hoffman ( Netherlands ) TVM same time 4. Erik Breukink ( Netherlands ) Rabobank 8 seconds 5. Jesper Skibby ( Denmark ) TVM 9 6. Vyacheslav Ekimov ( Russia ) Rabobank same time 7. Luca Pavanello ( Italy ) Aki 11 8. Eleuterio Anguita ( Spain ) MX Onda 9. Michael Andersson ( Sweden ) Telekom 10. Johan Capiot ( Belgium ) Collstrop all same time Final overall placings ( after six stages ) : 1. Rolf Sorensen ( Denmark ) Rabobank 20:36:54 2. Lance Armstrong ( U.S. ) Motorola 2 seconds behind 3. Ekimov 1:7 4. Marco Lietti ( Italy ) MG-Technogym 1:16 5. Erik Dekker ( Netherlands ) Rabobank 1:23 6. Ludwig 1:25 6. Breukink same time 8. Maarten den Bakker ( Netherlands ) TVM 1:33 9. Andersson 1:34 10. Skibby 1:45 +CRICKET - ENGLAND V PAKISTAN ONE-DAY SCOREBOARD . BIRMINGHAM , England 1996-08-31 Scoreboard of the second one-day cricket match between England and Pakistan on Saturday : England N. Knight st Moin Khan b Saqlain Mushtaq 113 A. Stewart b Mushtaq Ahmed 46 M. Atherton lbw b Mushtaq Ahmed 1 G. Thorpe lbw b Ata-ur-Rehman 21 M. Maynard run out 1 R. Irani not out 45 A. Hollioake run out 15 D. Gough run out 0 R. Croft b Waqar Younis 15 D. Headley not out 3 Extras ( lb-25 w-4 nb-3 ) 32 Total ( for 8 wickets , innings closed ) 292 Fall : 1-103 2-105 3-163 4-168 5-221 6-257 7-257 8-286 . Did Not Bat : A. Mullally . Bowling : Wasim Akram 10-0-50-0 , Waqar Younis 9-0-54-1 , Ata-ur-Rehman 6-0-40-1 , Saqlain Mushtaq 10-0-59-1 , Mushtaq Ahmed 10-0-33-2 , Aamir Sohail 5-0-31-0 . pakistan Saeed Anwar c Stewart b Gough 33 Aamir Sohail c Croft b Gough 0 Moin Khan lbw b Mullally 0 Ijaz Ahmed b Croft 79 Inzamam-ul-Haq c Thorpe b Croft 6 Salim Malik c Stewart b Hollioake 23 Wasim Akram c Knight b Hollioake 21 Mushtaq Ahmed not out 14 Saqlain Mushtaq b Hollioake 0 Waqar Younis lbw b Gough 4 Ata-ur-Rehman c Knight b Hollioake 2 Extras ( lb-2 nb-1 ) 3 Total ( 37.5 overs ) 185 Fall of wickets : 1-1 2-6 3-54 4-104 5-137 6-164 7-164 8-168 9-177 . Bowling : Gough 8-0-39-3 , Mullally 6-0-30-1 , Headley 7-0-32-0 , Irani 2-0-22-0 , Croft 8-0-37-2 , Hollioake 6.5-1-23-4 . +CYCLING - WORLD TRACK CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS . MANCHESTER , England 1996-08-31 Results at the world track cycling championships on Saturday : Women 's 3,000 metres individual pursuit qualifying round ( fastest eight to quarter finals ) : 1. Antonella Bellutti ( Italy ) 3:31.526 ( world record ) 2. Marion Clignet ( France ) 3:31.674 3. Lucy Tyler-Sharman ( Australia ) 3:31.830 4. Yvonne McGregor ( Britain ) 3:41.823 5. Natalia Karimova ( Russia ) 3:45.061 6. Svetlana Samokhalova ( Russia ) 3:46.216 7 Jane Quigley ( U.S. ) 3:46.493 8. Rasa Mazeikyte ( Lithuania ) 3:46.834 9. Tatian Stiajkina ( Ukraine ) 3:52.204 World 4,000 metres team pursuit semifinals : Italy ( Adler Capelli , Cristiano Citto , Andrea Collinelli , Mauro Trentino ) 4:00.958 ( world record ) beat Russia ( Anton Chantyr , Edouard Gritsoun , Nikolai Kouznetsov ) 4:06.534 . France ( Cyril Bos , Philippe Ermenault , Jean-Michel Monin , Francis Moreau ) 4:05.104 beat Germany ( Guido Fulst , Danilo Hondo , Thorsten Rund , Heiko Szonn ) 4:05.463 Germany take the bronze medal as fastest losing semifinalist . Women 's world 500 metres time trial final : 1. Felicia Ballanger ( France ) 34.829 2. Annett Neumann ( Germany ) 35.202 3. Michelle Ferris ( Australia ) 35.694 4. Magali Faure ( France ) 35.888 5. Olga Slioussareva ( Russia ) 36.170 6. Oksana Grichina ( Russia ) 36.242 7. Tanya Dubnicoff ( Canada ) 36.307 8. Kathrin Freitag ( Germany ) 36.491 9. Donna Wynd ( New Zealand ) 36.831 10. Mira Kasslin ( Finland ) 37.273 11. Wendy Everson ( Britain ) 37.624 12. Giovanna Troldi ( Italy ) 38.285 13. Rita Razmaite ( Lithuania ) 38.546 World 4,000 metres team pursuit championship final : Italy ( Adler Capelli , Cristiano Citto , Andrea Collinelli , Mauro Trentino ) 4:02.752 beat France ( Cyril Bos , Philippe Ermenault , Jean-Michel Monin , Francis Moreau ) 4:04.539 World sprint championship quarter finals ( best of three matches ) Florian Rousseau ( France ) beat Ainars Kiksis ( Latvia ) 2-0 Darryn Hill ( Australia ) beat Christian Arrue ( U.S. ) 2-0 Roberto Chiappa ( Italy ) beat Frederic Magne ( France ) 2-0 Marty Nothstein ( U.S. ) beat Pavel Buran ( Czech Republic ) 2-0 Women 's world 3,000 metres individual pursuit championship quarter-finals : Marion Clignet ( France ) 3:30.974 ( World Record ) beat Jane Quigley ( USA ) 3:42.852 Natalia Karimova ( Russia ) 3:40.036 beat Yvonne McGregor ( Britain ) 3:43.078 Lucy Tyler-Sharman ( Australia ) 3:35.087 beat Svetlana Samokhvalova ( Russia ) 3:45.011 Antonella Bellutti ( Italy ) 3:32.174 caught and eliminated Rasa Mazeikyte ( Lithuania ) +CRICKET - PAKISTAN WIN TOSS , PUT ENGLAND IN TO BAT . BIRMINGHAM , England 1996-08-31 Pakistan won the toss and put England in to bat in the second limited overs cricket international at Edgbaston on Saturday . Surrey all-rounder Adam Hollioake was making his England debut , replacing Lancashire batsman Graham Lloyd , with seamer Peter Martin again being omitted from the 13 . Pakistan kept the side who lost to England by five wickets at Old Trafford on Thursday in the first of the three one-day matches . Teams : England : Mike Atherton ( captain ) , Nick Knight , Alec Stewart , Graham Thorpe , Matthew Maynard , Adam Hollioake , Ronnie Irani , Robert Croft , Darren Gough , Dean Headley , Alan Mullally . Pakistan : Aamir Sohail , Saeed Anwar , Ijaz Ahmed , Salim Malik , Inzamam-ul-Haq , Wasim Akram ( captain ) , Moin Khan , Saqlain Mushtaq , Mushtaq Ahmed , Waqar Younis , Ata-ur-Rehman . +BASEBALL - GONZALEZ HOMERS TWICE AS RANGERS BEAT INDIANS . ARLINGTON , Texas 1996-08-31 Juan Gonzalez homered twice and Ivan Rodriguez added a two-run shot as the Texas Rangers defeated the Cleveland Indians 5-3 in a matchup of division leaders Friday . Rodriguez 's 18th homer , off Chad Ogea ( 7-5 ) in the first , gave Texas a 2-0 lead . One out later , Gonzalez smacked his 40th homer , extending his hitting streak to 20 games . Gonzalez , who hit in 21 straight games earlier this season , joined Mickey Rivers as the only players in Texas history with two 20-game streaks in the same year . Gonzalez hit his second homer in the third for his fifth multi-homer game of the season . Gonzalez has three 40-homer seasons and his 121 RBI broke Ruben Sierra 's team record of 119 set in 1989 . The Indians had their four-game winning streak stopped . " It 's not something I 'm going to try to explain , " said Texas manager Johnny Oates about his team winning seven of the 10 meetings from Cleveland this season . " We 've got two more regular season games against them and we might get lucky enough or unlucky enough to play them in the post-season . " Roger Pavlik ( 15-7 ) gave up three runs and seven hits in 6 1/3 innings and became the fourth 15-game winner in the American League . Jeff Russell pitched two perfect innings for his third save . Brian Giles and Jim Thome homered for Cleveland . Cleveland 's lead over the White Sox in the American League Central dropped to nine games . Texas 's lead over Seattle in the West increased to six . At California , Tino Martinez 's two-run homer keyed a three-run first and Andy Pettitte became the league 's first 19-game winner as the New York Yankees beat the Angels 6-2 . New York snapped a season-high five-game losing streak and also got homers from Mariano Duncan , Darryl Strawberry and Jim Leyritz . Pettite ( 19-7 ) allowed two runs and eight hits over eight innings with a walk and seven strikeouts . He improved to 12-2 following Yankees ' losses . Mariano Rivera pitched a scoreless ninth , striking out two . Ex-Yankee Randy Velarde hit his 11th homer , his most at any professional level . In Seattle , Pete Incaviglia 's grand slam with one out in the sixth snapped a tie and lifted the Baltimore Orioles past the Seattle Mariners , 5-2 . It was Incaviglia 's sixth grand slam and 200th homer of his career . Baltimore 's Eddie Murray cracked his 20th homer of the season and 499th of his career . Jay Buhner hit his 38th homer and Edgar Martinez his 23rd for Seattle . The Orioles remained tied with the White Sox for the American League wild card with the Mariners a game back . In Toronto , Kevin Tapani ( 12-8 ) allowed two runs and six hits over 7 1/3 innings and Frank Thomas hit his 29th homer and drove in three runs as the Chicago White Sox cruised to an 11-2 victory over the Blue Jays . Thomas , Harold Baines and Robin Ventura each collected three hits . Baines homered and scored three runs . Danny Tartabull added two hits and three RBI as all Chicago starters got at least one hit . In Oakland , Dave Telgheder scattered seven hits over eight innings and Mark McGwire hit his major-league leading 45th homer and drove in three runs as the Athetlics blanked the Boston Red Sox 7-0 . Telgheder ( 2-5 ) snapped a personal three-game losing streak . Buddy Groom pitched a perfect ninth inning . McGwire singled home a run to spark a three-run sixth and capped the scoring with a two-run homer in the seventh . The loss was Boston 's seventh in its last 29 games . In Detroit , Todd Van Poppel pitched a five-hitter for his first career shutout and Tony Clark homered to cap a four-run first inning as the Tigers blanked the Kansas City Royals 4-0 . Van Poppel ( 3-6 ) walked two and struck out two in defeating the Royals for the second time this week . He threw 108 pitches as he lowered his ERA from 8.08 to 7.24 . Kansas City has scored only one run in two games . In Milwaukee , Marc Newfield homered off Jose Parra ( 5-4 ) leading off the bottom of the 12th as the Brewers rallied for a 5-4 victory over the Minnesota Twins . Milwaukee has won 10 of its last 15 . Bob Wickman ( 6-1 ) pitched 2 2/3 hitless innings for the win , his second for the Brewers . Matt Lawton hit a three-run homer off closer Mike Fetters with one out in the ninth to give Minnesota a 4-2 lead . But Milwaukee tied it up in the bottom of the ninth on pinch-hitter Dave Nilsson 's two-run double . +CRICKET - ESSEX AND KENT MADE TO SWEAT IN TITLE RACE . LONDON 1996-08-31 Essex and Kent both face tense finishes on Monday as they attempt to keep pace with title hopefuls Derbyshire and Surrey , convincing three-day victors on Saturday , in the English county championship run-in . Essex need another 148 with five wickets in hand to beat Yorkshire after a maiden first-class century from Richard Kettleborough transformed a match which his side had seemed certain to lose . Kent will also need to keep their nerve against struggling Nottinghamshire who will enter the final day 137 ahead with four wickets left in a relatively low-scoring match at Tunbridge Wells . Derbyshire , nine-wicket winners over Worcestershire , and Surrey , who thrashed Warwickshire by an innings and 164 runs , can instead take the day off along with rivals Leicestershire , who beat Somerset inside two days . Warwickshire captain Tim Munton is tipping Surrey to emerge on top , impressed by the positive influence of Australian coach Dave Gilbert , but Derbyshire 's Australian captain Dean Jones is conceding nothing as his side chase their first title for 60 years . " We took three absolutely brilliant catches in this match and our catching all season has been pretty impressive . Our catching will win or lose us the championship , " he said . +GOLF - LEADING MONEY WINNERS ON EUROPEAN TOUR . LONDON 1996-08-31 Leading money winners on the European Tour after the British Masters won by Robert Allenby on Saturday ( British unless stated ) : 1. Ian Woosnam 510,258 pounds sterling 2. Colin Montgomerie 442,201 3. Robert Allenby ( Australia ) 407,748 4. Lee Westwood 301,972 5. Costantino Rocca ( Italy ) 297,157 6. Mark McNulty ( Zimbabwe ) 254,247 7. Andrew Coltart 248,142 8. Wayne Riley ( Australia ) 239,733 9. Raymond Russell 234,330 10. Paul Lawrie 211,420 11. Stephen Ames ( Trinidad ) 211,175 12. Frank Nobilo ( New Zealand ) 209,412 13. Paul McGinley ( Ireland ) 208,978 14. Padraig Harrington ( Ireland ) 202,593 15. Retief Goosen ( South Africa ) 195,283 16. Miguel Angel Jimenez ( Spain ) 184,180 17. Peter Mitchell 183,704 18. Miguel Angel Martin ( Spain ) 182,533 19. Jonathan Lomas 181,005 20. Paul Broadhurst 176,780 +RUGBY UNION - ENGLISH , SCOTTISH AND WELSH RESULTS . LONDON 1996-08-31 Results of English , Scottish and Welsh rugby union matches on Saturday : English National League one Harlequins 75 Gloucester 19 London Irish 27 Bristol 28 Northampton 46 West Hartlepool 20 Orrell 13 Bath 56 Sale 31 Wasps 33 Saracens 25 Leicester 23 Welsh division one Bridgend 13 Llanelli 9 Dunvant 21 Ebbw Vale 10 Treorchy 17 Newbridge 23 Newport 29 Caerphilly 10 Swansea 49 Cardiff 23 Scottish premier league division one Boroughmuir 20 Hawick 23 Currie 45 Heriot 's F.P. 5 Jed-Forest 17 Watsonians 54 Melrose 107 Stirling County 10 +SOCCER - WALES BEAT SAN MARINO IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . CARDIFF 1996-08-31 Wales beat San Marino 6-0 ( halftime 4-0 ) in a World Cup soccer European group 7 qualifier on Saturday . Scorers : Dean Saunders ( 2nd minute , 75th ) , Mark Hughes ( 25th , 54th ) , Andy Melville ( 33rd ) , John Robinson ( 45th ) . Attendance : 15,150 +SOCCER - UKRAINE BEAT NORTHERN IRELAND IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . BELFAST 1996-08-31 Ukraine beat Northern Ireland 1-0 ( halftime 0-0 ) in a World Cup soccer European group nine qualifier on Saturday . Scorer : Sergei Rebrov ( 79th minute ) Attendance : 9,358 +RUGBY UNION - LYNAGH SEALS VICTORY OVER DWYER AND LEICESTER . LONDON 1996-08-31 Former Wallaby captain Michael Lynagh began his career in English club rugby in impeccable fashion on Saturday to frustrate his old coach Bob Dwyer on his league coaching debut with Leicester . Lynagh kicked five penalties and a conversion from his six attempts at goal to steer his multi-national Saracens side to a 25-23 home win and offer millionaire backer Nigel Wray an early return on his big investment in the north London club . French centre Philippe Sella also enjoyed a good game alongside Lynagh , although the home team scored only one try through England scrum-half Kyran Bracken . The new French connection at Harlequins also made a good start , Laurent Cabannes and Laurent Benezech scoring a try apiece in their side 's 75-19 victory over Gloucester . Former England captain Will Carling , handed the kicking duties , finished with 20 points . With the first day of the league season briefly shifting the spotlight away from the discord between the clubs and the Rugby Football Union , there were also emphatic victories for champions Bath , 56-13 winners over Orrell , and Northampton and narrow successes for Wasps and Bristol . +SOCCER - SCOTTISH LEAGUE STANDINGS . LONDON 1996-08-31 Scottish league standings after Saturday 's matches ( tabulated - played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Division one Greenock Morton 3 2 0 1 5 2 6 Dundee 3 1 2 0 3 2 5 St Johnstone 2 1 1 0 3 0 4 St Mirren 3 1 1 1 5 4 4 Airdrieonians 2 1 1 0 1 0 4 Falkirk 3 1 1 1 1 1 4 Clydebank 2 1 0 1 1 3 3 Partick 3 0 2 1 1 2 2 Stirling 3 0 1 2 1 3 1 East Fife 2 0 1 1 0 4 1 Division two Livingston 3 3 0 0 6 2 9 Queen of South 3 2 0 1 5 4 6 Ayr 3 1 2 0 8 2 5 Stenhousemuir 3 1 1 1 6 1 4 Hamilton 3 1 1 1 3 2 4 Stranraer 3 1 1 1 3 3 4 Brechin 3 0 3 0 2 2 3 Clyde 3 1 0 2 2 5 3 Dumbarton 3 0 2 1 3 4 2 Berwick 3 0 0 3 1 14 0 Division three Albion 3 3 0 0 5 0 9 Forfar 3 2 0 1 7 4 6 Cowdenbeath 3 2 0 1 4 3 6 Arbroath 3 1 2 0 4 2 5 Alloa 3 1 1 1 3 3 4 Queen 's Park 3 1 1 1 6 8 4 Montrose 3 1 0 2 3 4 3 Inverness Thistle 3 1 0 2 3 6 3 East Stirling 3 0 2 1 3 4 2 Ross County 3 0 0 3 3 7 0 +SOCCER - ENGLISH LEAGUE STANDINGS . LONDON 1996-08-31 English soccer league standings after Saturday 's matches ( tabulated - played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Division one Stoke 4 3 1 0 7 4 10 Barnsley 3 3 0 0 8 2 9 Norwich 4 3 0 1 5 3 9 Tranmere 4 2 1 1 6 4 7 Bolton 3 2 1 0 5 2 7 Queens Park Rangers 3 2 1 0 5 3 7 Wolverhampton 4 2 1 1 5 3 7 Swindon 4 2 1 1 5 4 7 Bradford 4 2 0 2 4 3 6 Portsmouth 4 2 0 2 4 5 6 Ipswich 4 1 2 1 9 7 5 Crystal Palace 4 1 2 1 4 3 5 Port Vale 4 1 2 1 4 4 5 Birmingham 2 1 1 0 5 4 4 Reading 4 1 1 2 5 10 4 Huddersfield 3 1 1 1 4 4 4 Oxford 4 1 0 3 6 5 3 Manchester City 3 1 0 2 2 3 3 West Bromwich 3 0 2 1 2 3 2 Oldham 4 0 1 3 5 9 1 Sheffield United 2 0 1 1 4 5 1 Grimsby 4 0 1 3 4 8 1 Southend 4 0 1 3 2 10 1 Charlton 2 0 1 1 1 3 1 Division two Plymouth 4 3 1 0 10 6 10 Brentford 4 3 1 0 9 3 10 Bury 4 3 1 0 8 2 10 Chesterfield 4 3 0 1 4 2 9 Millwall 4 2 1 1 7 5 7 Shrewsbury 4 2 1 1 6 6 7 Blackpool 4 2 1 1 3 2 7 York 4 2 0 2 6 6 6 Burnley 4 2 0 2 6 7 6 Bournemouth 4 2 0 2 5 5 6 Watford 4 2 0 2 4 5 6 Bristol Rovers 3 1 2 0 2 1 5 Peterborough 3 1 1 1 4 4 4 Preston 4 1 1 2 4 5 4 Crewe 4 1 1 2 4 6 4 Gillingham 4 1 1 2 4 6 4 Notts County 3 1 1 1 2 2 4 Bristol City 4 1 0 3 7 8 3 Luton 4 1 0 3 4 10 3 Wycombe 4 0 3 1 2 3 3 Wrexham 2 0 2 0 5 5 2 Stockport 4 0 2 2 1 3 2 Rotherham 4 0 1 3 3 6 1 Walsall 3 0 1 2 2 4 1 Division three Wigan 4 3 1 0 9 4 10 Fulham 4 3 0 1 5 3 9 Hull 4 2 2 0 4 2 8 Hartlepool 4 2 1 1 6 5 7 Torquay 4 2 1 1 5 3 7 Cardiff 4 2 1 1 3 2 7 Scunthorpe 4 2 1 1 3 3 7 Carlisle 4 2 1 1 2 1 7 Scarborough 4 1 3 0 5 3 6 Northampton 4 1 2 1 6 4 5 Lincoln 4 1 2 1 5 5 5 Barnet 4 1 2 1 4 2 5 Exeter 4 1 2 1 4 5 5 Cambridge United 4 1 2 1 3 4 5 Darlington 4 1 1 2 9 8 4 Chester 4 1 1 2 6 7 4 Doncaster 4 1 1 2 4 5 4 Leyton Orient 4 1 1 2 3 3 4 Brighton 4 1 1 2 3 6 4 Hereford 4 1 1 2 2 3 4 Swansea 4 1 0 3 4 9 3 Colchester 4 0 3 1 2 4 3 Rochdale 4 0 2 2 2 4 2 Mansfield 4 0 2 2 2 6 2 +SOCCER - SCOTTISH LEAGUE RESULTS . GLASGOW 1996-08-31 Results of Scottish league matches on Saturday : Division one Greenock Morton 1 Falkirk 0 Partick 1 St Mirren 1 Stirling 1 Dundee 1 Postponed : East Fife v Clydebank , St Johnstone v Airdrieonians . Division two Ayr 6 Berwick 0 Clyde 0 Queen of South 2 Dumbarton 1 Brechin 1 Livingston 1 Hamilton 0 Stenhousemuir 0 Stranraer 1 Division three Albion 2 Cowdenbeath 0 Arbroath 0 East Stirling 0 Inverness Thistle 1 Alloa 0 Montrose 2 Ross County 1 Queen 's Park 1 Forfar 4 +SOCCER - ENGLISH LEAGUE RESULTS . LONDON 1996-08-31 Results of English soccer matches on Saturday : Division one Bradford 1 Tranmere 0 Grimsby 0 Portsmouth 1 Huddersfield 1 Crystal Palace 1 Norwich 1 Wolverhampton 0 Oldham 3 Ipswich 3 Port Vale 2 Oxford 0 Reading 2 Stoke 2 Southend 1 Swindon 3 Postponed : Birmingham v Barnsley , Manchester City v Charlton Playing Sunday : Queens Park Rangers v Bolton Division two Blackpool 0 Wycombe 0 Bournemouth 1 Peterborough 2 Bristol Rovers 1 Stockport 1 Bury 4 Bristol City 0 Crewe 0 Watford 2 Gillingham 0 Chesterfield 1 Luton 1 Rotherham 0 Millwall 2 Burnley 1 Notts County 0 York 1 Shrewsbury 0 Brentford3 Postponed : Walsall v Wrexham Division three Brighton 1 Scunthorpe 1 Cambridge United 0 Cardiff 2 Colchester 1 Hereford 1 Doncaster 3 Darlington 2 Fulham 1 Carlisle 0 Hull 0 Barnet 0 Leyton Orient 2 Hartlepool 0 Mansfield 0 Rochdale 0 Scarborough 1 Northampton 1 Torquay 2 Exeter 0 Wigan 4 Chester 2 +CRICKET - ENGLISH COUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP SCORES . LONDON 1996-08-31 Results and close scores of four-day English county championship matches on Saturday : At Portsmouth : Middlesex beat Hampshire by 188 runs . Middlesex 199 and 426 , Hampshire 232 and 205 ( A. Fraser 5-79 , P. Tufnell 4-39 ) . Middlesex 20 points , Hampshire 5 . At Chester-le-Street : Glamorgan beat Durham by 141 runs . Glamorgan 259 and 207 , Durham 114 and 211 . Glamorgan 22 points , Durham 4 . At Chesterfield : Derbyshire beat Worcestershire by nine wickets . Worcestershire 238 and 303 ( K. Spiring 130 not out , S. Rhodes 57 ; P. DeFreitas 4-70 ) , Derbyshire 471 and 71-1 . Derbyshire 24 points , Worcestershire 5 . At The Oval ( London ) : Surrey beat Warwickshire by an innings and 164 runs . Warwickshire 195 and 109 ( J. Benjamin 4-17 , M. Bicknell 4-38 ) , Surrey 468 ( C. Lewis 94 , M. Butcher 70 , G. Kersey 63 , J. Ratcliffe 63 , D. Bicknell 55 ) . Surrey 24 points , Warwickshire 2 . At Headingley ( Leeds ) : Yorkshire 290 and 329 ( R. Kettleborough 108 , G. Hamilton 61 ; P. Such 8-118 ) , Essex 372 and 100-5 . At Hove : Sussex 363 and 144 , Lancashire 218 and 53-0 . At Tunbridge Wells : Nottinghamshire 214 and 167-6 ( C. Tolley 64 not out ) , Kent 244 ( C. Hooper 58 ; C. Tolley 4-68 , K. Evans 4-71 ) At Bristol : Gloucestershire 183 and 249 ( J. Russell 75 ) , Northamptonshire 190 and 218-9 . +MOTOR RACING - LEADING QUALIFIERS FOR VANCOUVER INDYCAR RACE . VANCOUVER 1996-08-31 Top ten drivers in grid for Sunday 's Vancouver IndyCar race after final qualifying on Saturday ( tabulate by driver , country , chassis , motor and lap times in seconds ) : 1. Alex Zanardi ( Italy ) , Reynard Honda , 53.980 ( 113.576 mph / 182.778 kph ) 2. Michael Andretti ( U.S. ) , Lola Ford Cosworth , 54.483 3. Bobby Rahal ( U.S. ) , Reynard Mercedes-Benz , 54.507 4. Bryan Herta ( U.S. ) , Reynard Mercedes-Benz , 54.578 5. Jimmy Vasser ( U.S. ) , Reynard Honda , 54.617 6. Paul Tracy ( Canada ) , Penske Mercedes-Benz , 54.620 7. Al Unser Jr ( U.S. ) , Penske Mercedes-Benz , 54.683 8. Andre Ribeiro ( Brazil ) , Lola Honda , 54.750 9. Mauricio Gugelmin ( Brazil ) , Reynard Ford Cosworth , 54.762 10. Gil de Ferran ( Brazil ) , Reynard Honda , 54.774 +SOCCER - CANADA BEAT PANAMA 3-1 IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . EDMONTON 1996-08-31 Canada beat Panama 3-1 ( halftime 2-0 ) in their CONCACAF semifinal phase qualifying match for the 1998 World Cup on Friday . Scorers : Canada - Aunger ( 41st min , pen ) , Paul Peschisolido ( 42nd ) , Carlo Corrazin ( 87th ) Panama - Jorge Luis Dely Valdes ( 50th ) Attendance : 9,402 +RUGBY UNION - SPRINGBOKS FINALLY BREAK ALL BLACK SPELL . Andy Colquhoun JOHANNESBURG 1996-08-31 South Africa managed to avoid a fifth successive defeat in 1996 at the hands of the All Blacks with an emphatic 32-22 victory in front of an ecstatic Ellis Park crowd on Saturday . They scored three tries in recording their highest total against New Zealand , salvaging some pride in a season in which the world champions have lost five out of eight tests . It also ended a run of nine successive victories this year for New Zealand but arrived too late to prevent a 2-1 series defeat and an historic first All Black series triumph on South African soil . Springbok scrum-half Joost van der Westhuizen was his side 's inspiration , scoring their opening try and making the third for flanker Andre Venter from a quickly taken penalty to give his side a 29-8 lead after 54 minutes . Fullback Andre Joubert scored the other , scorching in from 40 metres at the start of the second half to add to his three long-range penalties . The All Blacks salvaged some pride by scoring two tries from centre Walter Little and scrum-half Justin Marshall in the final five minutes to close a gap which at one point stood at 24 points . But they generally endured an off-day , highlighted by recalled fly-half Andrew Mehrtens who missed five out of eight kicks at goal . Recalled fly-half Henry Honiball kicked the Springboks into a 6-0 lead after 10 minutes only to see Andrew Mehrtens launch a penalty from eight metres inside his own half to narrow the gap . Mehrtens missed three further penalties and a conversion in the first 40 minutes which could have put his side ahead , but it was the Springboks who looked the more dangerous . Their promise was realised when Joubert made a 40-metre break in the 25th minute and , although winger Pieter Hendriks appeared to knock on Joubert 's reverse pass , Welsh referee Derek Bevan allowed Van der Westhuizen to pick up and score under the posts . Honiball converted and Joubert kicked a penalty before All Black hooker Sean Fitzpatrick scored a try from close range on the stroke of half-time to narrow the lead to 16-8 and hint at a comeback . Instead Joubert kicked another long penalty and then raced around the outside of the defence to score the Springboks ' second try . A quick penalty from Van der Westhuizen five metres from the All Black line set up the third try for Venter five minutes later and when Joubert kicked his third penalty the Springboks held an unassailable 32-8 lead going into the last quarter . When the All Blacks did break through , it was too late . Centre Walter Little followed up Mehrtens ' kick to score under the posts and scrum-half Justin Marshall forced himself over from a ruck close to the line in injury-time to give them some consolation . South Africa - 15 - Andre Joubert , 14 - Justin Swart , 13 - Japie Mulder ( Joel Stransky , 48 mins ) 12 - Danie van Schalkwyk , 11 - Pieter Hendriks ; 10 - Henry Honiball , 9 - Joost van der Westhuizen ; 8 - Gary Teichmann ( captain ) , 7 - Andre Venter ( Wayne Fyvie , 75 ) , 6 - Ruben Kruge , 5 - Mark Andrews ( Fritz van Heerden , 39 ) , 4 - Kobus Wiese , 3 - Marius Hurter , 2 - James Dalton , 1 - Dawie Theron ( Garry Pagel , 66 ) . New Zealand - 15 - Christian Cullen ( Alama Ieremia , 70 ) , 14 - Jeff Wilson , 13 - Walter Little , 12 - Frank Bunce , 11 - Glen Osborne ; 10 - Andrew Mehrtens , 9 - Justin Marshall ; 8 - Zinzan Brooke , 7 - Josh Kronfeld , 6 - Michael Jones ( Glenn Taylor , 53 ) , 5 - Robin Brooke , 4 - Ian Jones , 3 - Olo Brown , 2 - Sean Fitzpatrick ( captain ) , 1 - Craig Dowd . +RUGBY UNION - SOUTH AFRICA BEAT ALL BLACKS 32-22 . JOHANNESBURG 1996-08-31 South Africa beat New Zealand 32-22 ( haltime 16-8 ) in the final test match of their three-test series at Ellis Park on Saturday . Scorers : South Africa - Tries : Joost van der Westhuizen ( 2 ) , Andre Joubert . Conversion : Henry Honiball . Penalties : Honiball ( 2 ) , Joubert ( 3 ) . New Zealand - Tries : Sean Fitzpatrick , Walter Little , Justin Marshall . Conversions : Andrew Mehrtens ( 2 ) . Penalties : Mehrtens . New Zealand win test series 2-1 . +SOCCER - MAURITANIA DISSOLVES NATIONAL TEAM AFTER CUP EXIT . NOUAKCHOTT 1996-08-31 Mauritania 's soccer federation dissolved the national team and suspended this season 's domestic championship on Saturday in the wake of the country 's failure to qualify for the African Nations ' Cup . " Since Mauritania has been eliminated on all fronts and the next commitments are not for another two years , we have reason to take a break , " federation president Mohamed Lemine Cheiguer said . The North Africans were held to a goalless draw by Benin on Friday after losing the first leg of their qualifying tie 4-1 . +SOCCER - MAURITANIA DRAW WITH BENIN IN AFRICAN NATIONS CUP . NOUAKCHOTT 1996-08-31 Mauritania drew 0-0 with Benin in their African Nations Cup preliminary round , second leg soccer match on Friday . Benin won 4-1 on aggregate . +SOCCER - YUGOSLAV LEAGUE RESULTS / STANDINGS . BELGRADE 1996-08-31 Results of Yugoslav league soccer matches played on Saturday : Division A Hajduk 2 Proleter ( Z ) 0 Zemun 1 Rad ( B ) 0 Borac 1 Mladost ( L ) 2 Cukaricki 1 Vojvodina 0 Buducnost 1 Red Star 3 Partizan 6 Becej 0 Standings ( tabulate under won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Red Star 4 4 0 0 9 3 12 Partizan 4 3 1 0 13 3 10 Mladost ( L ) 4 2 1 1 8 5 7 Vojvodina 4 2 1 1 5 3 7 Becej 4 2 1 1 5 7 7 Hajduk 4 2 0 2 5 3 6 Cukaricki 4 2 0 2 6 6 6 Zemun 4 1 2 1 3 3 5 Rad ( B ) 4 1 1 2 2 3 4 Buducnost 4 1 0 3 4 8 3 Proleter ( Z ) 4 0 1 3 2 9 1 Borac 4 0 0 4 1 10 0 Division B Sloboda 4 Mladost ( BJ ) 0 Buducnost ( V ) 0 OFK Beograd 1 Rudar 0 OFK Kikinda 1 Obilic 2 Zeleznik ( B ) 0 Sutjeska 1 Loznica 0 Radnicki ( N ) - Spartak ( to be played on Sunday ) Standings : Obilic 4 4 0 0 10 1 12 OFK Kikinda 4 3 0 1 8 3 9 Sutjeska 4 3 0 1 7 5 9 Loznica 4 2 0 2 7 4 6 OFK Beograd 4 1 3 0 5 4 6 Buducnost ( V ) 4 2 0 2 4 5 6 Sloboda 4 1 1 2 8 8 4 Spartak 3 1 1 1 3 3 4 Radnicki ( N ) 3 1 0 2 5 6 3 Zeleznik ( B ) 4 1 0 3 4 7 3 Rudar 4 1 0 3 1 7 3 Mladost ( BJ ) 4 0 1 3 2 10 1 +SOCCER - INCE EXPOSED BY GASCOIGNE 'S LATEST PRANK . CHISINAU , Moldova 1996-08-31 England 's irrepressible midfielder Paul Gascoigne was up to his old tricks on Saturday , pulling down his team mate Paul Ince 's trousers in front of an astonished crowd in Moldova . Ince was clambering over a wall at the Republican stadium in Chisinau as Glenn Hoddle 's England players tried to escape heavy rain during an under-21 clash . Gascoigne , whose compulsive practical joking has landed him in trouble in the past , tugged down the Inter Milan player 's trousers in front of a group of press photographers . Hoddle , coaching the side for the first time , declined to comment on the incident . England face Moldova in a World Cup qualifier in the same stadium on Sunday . +BASKETBALL - TROFEJ BEOGRAD TOURNAMENT RESULTS . BELGRADE 1996-08-31 Results in the Trofej Beograd 96 international basketball tournament on Saturday : Fifth place : Benetton ( Italy ) 92 Dinamo ( Russia ) 81 ( halftime 50-28 ) Third place : Alba ( Germany ) 75 Red Star ( Yugoslavia ) 70 ( 42-41 ) +BASKETBALLSOCCER - TROFEJ BEOGRAD TOURNAMENT RESULTS . BELGRADE 1996-08-31 Results in the Trofej Beograd 96 international basketball tournament on Saturday : Fifth place : Benetton ( Italy ) 92 Dinamo ( Russia ) 81 ( halftime 50-28 ) Third place : Alba ( Germany ) 75 Red Star ( Yugoslavia ) 70 ( 42-41 ) +SOCCER - ROMANIA BEAT LITHUANIA IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . BUCHAREST 1996-08-31 Romania beat Lithuania 3-0 ( halftime 1-0 ) in a World Cup soccer European group 8 qualifier on Saturday . Scorers : Romania - Viorel Moldovan ( 21st minute ) , Dan Petrescu ( 65th ) , Constantin Galca ( 77th ) Attendence : 9,000 +SOCCER - ARMENIA AND PORTUGAL DRAW 0-0 IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . YEREVAN 1996-08-31 Armenia and Portugal drew 0-0 in a World Cup soccer European group 9 qualifier on Saturday . Attendance : 5,000 +SOCCER - AZERBAIJAN BEAT SWITZERLAND IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . BAKU 1996-08-31 Azerbaijan beat Switzerland 1-0 ( halftime 1-0 ) in their World Cup soccer European group three qualifying match on Saturday . Scorer : Vidadi Rzayev ( 28th ) Attendance : 20,000 +BASKETBALL - BENETTON BEAT DINAMO 92-81 . BELGRADE 1996-08-31 Benetton of Italy beat Dinamo of Russia 92-81 ( halftime 50-28 ) in a fifth place play-off in the Trofej Beograd 96 international basketball tournament on Saturday . +SOCCER - SWEDEN BEAT LATVIA IN EUROPEAN UNDER-21 QUALIFIER . RIGA 1996-08-31 Sweden beat Latvia 2-0 ( halftime 0-0 ) in a European under-21 soccer championship qualifier on Saturday . Scorers : Joakim Persson 81st minute , Daniel Andersson ( 89th ) Attendance : 300 +SOCCER - BELARUS BEAT ESTONIA IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . MINSK 1996-08-31 Belarus beat Estonia 1-0 ( halftime 1-0 ) in a World Cup soccer European group 4 qualifier on Saturday . Scorer : Vladimir Makovsky ( 35th ) Attendance : 6,000 +SOCCER - ENGLAND BEAT MOLDOVA IN UNDER-21 QUALIFIER . CHISINAU 1996-08-31 England beat Moldova 2-0 ( halftime 1-0 ) in a European Under-21 soccer championship group 2 qualifier on Saturday . Scorers : Bruce Dyer ( 39th minute ) , Darren Eadie ( 53rd ) Attendance : 850 +SQUASH - HILL BRANDS WORLD CHAMPION JANSHER A CHEAT . HONG KONG 1996-08-31 Controversial Australian Anthony Hill called Jansher Khan a cheat during his acrimonious defeat by the world number one in the Hong Kong Open semifinals on Saturday . The match boiled over when Hill made to walk off court after what he claimed was a game-winning point in the third . When the referee called Jansher 's return good and the decision was accepted by the player , Hill shrieked at the Pakistani : " You cheat . " " He was standing right there and knew the shot was down so I called him a cheat , " said Hill , whose squash career has been blighted by fines and suspensions for unacceptable behaviour . " He knew it was down and accepted what I called him because of that . " Hill won the game on the next point and said later that Jansher was generally honest on court but played by the referee 's decision . The Australian had upset Jansher 's rhythm with his mixture of gamesmanship and fluent stroke-making but eventually succumbed 15-7 17-15 14-15 15-8 . " I changed my strategy against him today and had him rattled , " he added . He is not as fit as he used to be be but was too good for me in the end . I shook him a bit but he will come out next time and be a better player for it -- that 's Jansher . " Jansher said that he was disturbed to be called a cheat . " What he did was bad for squash , bad for the crowd and bad for the sponsors . " We are trying to build up squash like tennis and players should not say things like that . " I think the Professional Squash Association should look into this matter and deal with it properly . I am not calling for him to be banned but they have to take some action . " Jansher , bidding for an eighth Hong Kong Open title , plays second-seeded Australian Rodney Eyles in the final . Eyles played his best squash of the tournament to beat fourth-seeded Peter Nicol of Scotland 15-10 8-15 15-10 15-4 . Eyles , who defeated Jansher in the semifinals of the Portuguese Open in 1993 , said that he would like to win for the good of the game . " I have nothing against Jansher but it will be great if I could beat him , " said Eyles . " My biggest problem against Jansher is concentration . I want to beat him so badly that I just cannot get it together . " +SQUASH - HONG KONG OPEN SEMIFINAL RESULTS . HONG KONG 1996-08-31 Semifinal results in the Hong Kong Open on Saturday ( prefix number denotes seeding ) : 1 - Jansher Khan ( Pakistan ) beat Anthony Hill ( Australia ) 15-7 17-15 14-15 15-8 2 - Rodney Eyles ( Australia ) beat 4 - Peter Nicol ( Scotland ) 15-10 8-15 15-10 15-4 +GOLF - PARNEVIK TAKES ONE-SHOT LEAD AT GREATER MILWAUKEE OPEN . MILWAUKEE , Wisconsin 1996-08-31 Jesper Parnevik of Sweden fired a course record-tying eight-under-par 63 Saturday to take a one-shot lead into the final round of the $ 1.2 million Greater Milwaukee Open . Parnevik , who is seeking his first PGA Tour victory , moved to 19-under 194 for the tournament . Parnevik tied the 18-hole record set by Loren Roberts in 1994 at the Brown Deer Park Golf Course and also equalled Saturday by Greg Kraft . Nolan Henke , who led by two strokes entering the third round , carded a four-under 67 and was one stroke back at 18-under 195 . He is striving for his fourth career PGA Tour victory and first since the 1993 BellSouth Classic . Tiger Woods , who made the cut in his first tournament as a professional , shot a two-over-par 73 and was four under for the tournament . The 20-year-old Woods , who turned professional Tuesday after winning an unprecedented third successive U.S. Amateur Championship , struggled on the front nine , bogeying the first and seventh holes and double-bogeying the par-four , 359-yard ninth hole . After bogeying the 10th hole to move to four-over for the round , he rallied for birdies on 15 and 18 . After Parnevik started off his round by parring the first hole and bogeying the second , the Swede birdied six of the next seven holes . Parnevik continued to storm through the course , birdying three holes on the back nine , including two from 12 feet out on the 15th and 17th holes . " I ca n't remember when I 've putted this well , " said Parnevik . " I was disappointed when a 12-footer did n't go in . " My game feels very good . I 've been fading my driver but today whenever I set up for a fade it went straight . Whenever everyone 's making birdies , you never want to be even par . " Henke had a bogey-free round and birdied four holes , including a 45-footer on the par-three 215-yard seventh hole and one from 12 feet out on the 12th hole . " I did n't hit it very well today , " said Henke . " Jasper blew right by me . Once he did , I knew I had to make birdies just to keep up . I made some really good pars . I basically picked up where I left off yesterday afternoon . " Right now , I ca n't put my finger on what 's wrong . " Bob Estes shot a 67 for sole possession of third place at 15-under . Steve Stricker , who tied for second at last week 's World Series of Golf , and Stuart Appleby were both five shots off the lead at 14 under . Duffy Waldorf , who also tied for second at the World Series of Golf , carded a 70 to lead a group of six golfers at 13 under , including Kraft . The top four on the PGA Tour money list all skipped the tournament . +TENNIS - SPAIN , U.S. TEAMS OPEN ON ROAD FOR 1997 FED CUP . Richard Finn NEW YORK 1996-08-31 This year 's Fed Cup finalists -- defending champion Spain and the United States -- will hit the road to open the 1997 women 's international team competition , based on the draw conducted Saturday at the U.S. Open . Spain travels to Belgium , while the U.S. team heads to the Netherlands for first-round matches March 1-2 . The other two first-round ties will pit hosts Germany against the Czech Republic and visiting France against Japan . The semifinals are July 19-20 , and the final September 27- 28 . Life on the road this year did not slow the Americans , who will try to avenge their 3-2 defeat in the final last year when they host Spain on September 28-29 in Atlantic City . " Last year we stood on the court after we had lost and we put out hands together and made it our committment to bring back the Cup , " U.S. captain Billie Jean King said at the draw . " That is our sole goal . " The United States edged Austria in Salzburg 3-2 in the opening round in April , and then blanked Japan 5-0 in Nagoya last month in the semifinals . The victory against Japan marked the Fed Cup debut of Monica Seles , who became a naturalised U.S. citizen in 1994 . Seles easily won both her singles matches and King is counting on the co-world number one to lead the team again . " I told Monica we need her if we want to win , " King said . Seles 's sore left shoulder and a wrist injury to Fed Cup veteran Mary Joe Fernandez have forced King to take a wait and see attitude regarding her squad for the best-of-five match . Fernandez was forced to withdraw from the U.S. Open . " We will wait until the last minute so we check with everybody and their injuries , " said King . " What we like would be Seles , ( Olympic champion Lindsay ) Davenport and Mary Joe Fernandez . " If she can get that threesome together , King will feel good about her chances against the Spain 's formidable duo of Arantxa Sanchez Vicario and Conchita Martinez . " To be a great coach you have to have the right horses and I got the right horses , " said King . +TENNIS - SATURDAY 'S RESULTS FROM THE U.S. OPEN . NEW YORK 1996-08-31 Results from the U.S. Open Tennis Championships at the National Tennis Centre on Saturday ( prefix number denotes seeding ) : Women 's singles , third round 1 - Steffi Graf ( Germany ) beat Natasha Zvereva ( Belarus ) 6-4 6-2 16 - Martina Hingis ( Switzerland ) beat Naoko Kijimuta ( Japan ) 6-2 6-2 Judith Wiesner ( Austria ) beat Petra Langrova ( Czech Republic ) 6 - 2 6-0 Men 's singles , third round 13 - Thomas Enqvist ( Sweden ) beat Pablo Campana ( Ecuador ) 6-4 6-4 6-2 +TENNIS - DRAW FOR 1997 FED CUP WOMEN 'S TEAM TOURNAMENT . NEW YORK 1996-08-31 Draw for the women 's 1997 Fed Cup team tennis championships , as conducted at the U.S. Open on Saturday : World Group I , first round ( March 1-2 ) United States at Netherlands Czech Republic at Germany France at Japan Spain at Belgium ( semifinals July 19-20 , and finals September 27-28 ) World Group II , first round ( March 1-2 ) Austria at Croatia Switzerland at Slovak Republic Argentina at South Korea Australia at South Africa +SOCCER - U.S. BEAT EL SALVADOR 3-1 . LOS ANGELES 1996-08-30 The United States beat El Salvador 3-1 ( halftime 1-0 ) in an international soccer friendly on Friday . Scorers : U.S. - Joe-Max Moore ( 3rd minute , 88th on penalty kick ) , Eric Wynalda ( 61st ) El Salvador - Luis Lazo ( 61st ) Attendance - 18,661 +BASEBALL - MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AFTER FRIDAY 'S GAMES . NEW YORK 1996-08-31 Major League Baseball standings after games played on Friday ( tabulate under won , lost , winning percentage and games behind ) : AMERICAN LEAGUE EASTERN DIVISION W L PCT GB NEW YORK 75 59 .560 - BALTIMORE 71 63 .530 4 BOSTON 69 66 .511 6 1/2 TORONTO 63 72 .467 12 1/2 DETROIT 49 86 .363 26 1/2 CENTRAL DIVISION CLEVELAND 80 54 .597 - CHICAGO 72 64 .529 9 MINNESOTA 67 68 .496 13 1/2 MILWAUKEE 65 71 .478 16 KANSAS CITY 61 75 .449 20 WESTERN DIVISION TEXAS 76 58 .567 - SEATTLE 70 64 .522 6 OAKLAND 65 72 .474 12 1/2 CALIFORNIA 62 73 .459 14 1/2 SATURDAY , AUGUST 31 SCHEDULE KANSAS CITY AT DETROIT BALTIMORE AT SEATTLE CHICAGO AT TORONTO MINNESOTA AT MILWAUKEE CLEVELAND AT TEXAS BOSTON AT OAKLAND NEW YORK AT CALIFORNIA NATIONAL LEAGUE EASTERN DIVISION W L PCT GB ATLANTA 84 50 .627 - MONTREAL 71 62 .534 12 1/2 FLORIDA 65 70 .481 19 1/2 NEW YORK 59 76 .437 25 1/2 PHILADELPHIA 54 81 .400 30 1/2 CENTRAL DIVISION HOUSTON 73 63 .537 - ST LOUIS 70 65 .519 2 1/2 CHICAGO 66 67 .496 5 1/2 CINCINNATI 66 68 .493 6 PITTSBURGH 56 78 .418 16 WESTERN DIVISION SAN DIEGO 76 60 .559 - LOS ANGELES 73 61 .545 2 COLORADO 70 66 .515 6 SAN FRANCISCO 58 74 .439 16 SATURDAY , AUGUST 31 SCHEDULE ATLANTA AT CHICAGO HOUSTON AT PITTSBURGH SAN FRANCISCO AT NEW YORK FLORIDA AT CINCINNATI LOS ANGELES AT PHILADELPHIA SAN DIEGO AT MONTREAL COLORADO AT ST LOUIS +BASEBALL - MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS FRIDAY . NEW YORK 1996-08-31 Results of Major League Baseball games played on Friday ( home team in CAPS ) : American League DETROIT 4 Kansas City 0 Chicago 11 TORONTO 2 MILWAUKEE 5 Minnesota 4 ( in 12 ) TEXAS 5 Cleveland 3 New York 6 CALIFORNIA 2 OAKLAND 7 Boston 0 Baltimore 5 SEATTLE 2 National League CHICAGO 3 Atlanta 2 ( 1st game ) Atlanta 6 CHICAGO 5 ( 2nd game ) Florida 3 CINCINNATI 1 San Diego 6 MONTREAL 0 Los Angeles 7 PHILADELPHIA 6 ( in 12 ) Houston 10 PITTSBURGH 0 San Francisco 6 NEW YORK 4 ST LOUIS 7 Colorado 4 +BASEBALL - KEVIN BROWN LOWERS ERA AS MARLINS BEAT REDS . CINCINNATI 1996-08-31 Major league ERA leader Kevin Brown threw an eight-hitter and Devon White 's RBI double snapped a fifth-inning tie as the Florida Marlins beat the Cincinnati Reds 3-1 for their seventh straight win Friday . Brown ( 14-10 ) tied Todd Stottlemyre of the Cardinals for the National League lead with his fifth complete game and lowered his major league-leading earned run average from 1.96 to 1.92 . He struck out eight and did not walk a batter . Brown threw 119 pitches and won for the third time in as many starts against the Reds this season . " Bolesy ( Florida manager John Boles ) told me yesterday , ' You have to go nine tomorrow , ' " Brown said . " In the early innings , I was struggling , I was just trying to make it from pitch to pitch . I gave up a lot of hits in the early innings and I was n't thinking about the seventh , eighth or ninth . I was n't satisfied with any of my pitches and I did a better job of moving the ball around in the later innings . " " He has a devastating sinker , " observed Reds manager Ray Knight . " The guys say it moved more than everyone in the league . I remember Nolan Ryan saying in ' 91 or ' 92 that he was the best young pitcher coming around in a long time and he saw ( Tom ) Seaver and ( Jerry ) Koosman when they were starting . " In Philadelphia , Delino DeShields 's triple in the top of the 12th off Jeff Parrett ( 2-3 ) scored Chad Curtis and lifted the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 7-6 victory over the Phillies . Los Angeles won for the seventh time in eight games . Darren Dreifort ( 1-1 ) picked up the win after allowing a hit and a walk over 2 1/3 scoreless innings . Todd Worrell worked the 12th to earn his league-leading 37th save . The Phillies have dropped five of their last six overall , and nine of 11 at home . Billy Ashley belted a three-run homer for Los Angeles . In Chicago , the Braves and Cubs split a doubleheader . In the first game , Ryne Sandberg snapped an eighth-inning tie with an infield single and Kevin Foster ( 6-2 ) outdueled Atlanta 's Tom Glavine ( 13-8 ) for his third straight win , 3-2 . Foster , a .333 hitter , helped his own cause in the second with a two-run single . The Braves took the second game when Chipper Jones singled home the tying run in the top of the ninth and Andruw Jones took advantage of a poor throw to score the go-ahead run on a sacrifice fly for a 6-5 victory . Cubs shortstop Jose Hernandez committed three of Chicago 's four errors . Mike Mordecai singled , doubled and homered for Atlanta , which has won 14 of its last 19 games and has the best record in the majors , 84-50 . In Montreal , Scott Sanders allowed one hit over eight innings and Wally Joyner hit a two-run single in a four-run third as the San Diego Padres blanked the Expos 6-0 for their sixth straight win . Sanders ( 8-4 ) struck out 10 and walked three to win his fourth straight . He allowed a leadoff double to David Segui in the second , and won for the seventh time in eight decisions . The right-hander retired 14 batters in a row from the second inning through the seventh . Mike Oquist allowed one Montreal hit in the ninth . Montreal lost for the ninth time in 14 games . In New York , Marvin Benard 's two-run homer snapped a tie and Shawn Estes came one out away from his first complete game as the San Francisco Giants beat the Mets 6-4 . Benard , hitting .467 ( 14-for-30 ) against the Mets this season , hit his first pitch from Pete Harnisch ( 8-10 ) in the seventh over the right-field fence to put the Giants up 4-2 . Estes ( 3-4 ) was lifted for closer Rod Beck after yielding a single with two out in the ninth . Beck allowed a two-run double to Alvaro Espinoza , who collected a career-high four RBI , but struck out Brent Mayne for his 31st save . The loss was the Mets ' eighth straight , their longest slide since September 1993 , and dropped them to 0-4 under new manager Bobby Valentine . In St Louis , Tom Pagnozzi had three hits and three RBI and Alan Benes scattered six hits over six-plus innings as the Cardinals beat the Colorado Rockies 7-4 . Benes ( 12-8 ) allowed three runs , walked three and struck out three for the win . St Louis defeated Colorado for just the second time in 12 meetings dating back to last season . Ray Lankford went 4-for-5 with a pair of doubles for the Cardinals , who won for just the third time in 11 games . Eric Anthony hit a pair of solo homers for the Rockies . In Pittsburgh , Sean Berry tied a career high with six RBI and Donne Wall fired a seven-hitter for his first major-league shutout as the Houston Astros routed the Pirates 10-0 . It was the third time Berry had six RBI in one game . Wall ( 9-4 ) struck out four and walked none to post his second complete game of the season and third straight win . +TENNIS - EDBERG REFUSES TO QO QUIETLY . Richard Finn NEW YORK 1996-08-30 Refusing to go quietly in the night , Stefan Edberg extended his stay at his 14th and last U.S. Open when Bernd Karbacher , trailing and hurting , quit in the fourth set of their second-round match Friday . The 30-year-old Edberg , a former two-time Open champion , had wrestled control of the match away from Karbacher when the German , hampered by a left hamstring injury , decided he could n't continue under the stadium lights at the National Tennis Centre . " A win is a win . I 'll take it , " Edberg , who has announced that this will be his last Grand Slam event , said of the 3-6 6-3 6-3 1-0 victory . Ironically , Karbacher two years ago ended Ivan Lendl 's Grand Slam career here when the former champion had to retire in the middle of their first-round match . After seeing the trainer come out early in the third set , Edberg was not surprised by Karbacher 's decision not to go on . " I knew he had problems with something , " Edberg said . " I really was n't surprised . " Edberg had his own problems early in the match as the Swede battled to acclimate himself to the nighttime conditions while Karbacher was ripping passing shots and blasting serves past him . " I did n't really feel good to begin with , I had problems finding the timing on the ball , seeing the ball , " said Edberg , who upset Wimbledon champion and fifth-seeded Richard Krajicek in the first round . " This was one of these matches where I did n't play up to my standard . I had to fight hard . " Edberg 's tenacity paid off in the second set . Edberg lost his own serve twice , but he rallied for three breaks of his own , the last to wrap up the set . " That 's where the match sort of changed , " said Edberg . " I think once I got that second set , I felt a lot better about my game . " Edberg is starting to feel pretty good about postponing his swan song a lot longer . " It does n't look all that bad , " Edberg said of his path through the draw starting next with a match against Krajicek 's Dutch countryman Paul Haarhuis . However , the 1991 and 1992 champion is not ready to start making plans to be in next week 's final . " I 'm always being realistic , " said Edberg . " Like I said many times , I think it 's a very little chance , but nothing is impossible . If I play great tennis , that could take me a long way . " A lot of things can happen , like tonight . " +BOXING - PRINCE NASEEM RETAINS WBO FEATHERWEIGHT TITLE . DUBLIN 1996-08-31 Britain 's Naseem Hamed retained his WBO featherweight title on Saturday when Mexico 's Manuel Medina was retired by his corner at the end of the 11th round . +SOCCER - AUSTRIA DOMINATE SCOTLAND IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . Steve Pagani VIENNA 1996-08-31 Austria dominated their World Cup group four qualifier against Scotland on Saturday with wave after wave of attacks but were unable to penetrate the visitors ' defence and had to settle for a goalless draw . Scotland , who thrashed Belarus 5-1 in their opening group four match , were unable to repeat their performance . Austria 's best chance came in the 63rd minute with Stephan Marasek of SC Freiburg taking advantage of a scramble in the Scottish penalty area but his shot narrowly passing the left-hand post . They also went close a minute before the interval when a promising attack saw the ball fall to Markus Schopp but he hit his shot wide . Everton 's Duncan Ferguson went close for Scotland in the 65th minute when he forced Austrian goalkeeper Michael Konsel to a diving save . Two Scotland players were shown yellow cards , captain Gary McAllister for bringing down Andreas Heraf and Ferguson for arguing against the referee 's decision . " The result is acceptable , " Scottish coach Craig Brown told reporters . " We 'd hoped not to lose and we tried not to play for a draw but the Austrian defence was simply too good . " SK Rapid 's Dietmar Kuehbauer , who gave an impressive performance , said the team started off well but let the game slip after the first 30 minutes . " Somehow it seemed there were less than 11 players on the pitch . We have lost two points . The Scots are not really a great team and we should have won , " he said . Austrian coach Herbert Prohaska said his team had displayed great fighting spirit but sometimes lacked ideas . Teams : Austria : Michael Konsel , Markus Schopp , Peter Schoettel , Anton Pfeffer , Wolfgang Feiersinger , Stephan Marasek , Dieter Ramusch ( Andreas Ogris 77th ) , Dietmar Kuehbauer , Anton Polster ( ( Herfried Sabitzer 68th ) , Andreas Herzog , Andreas Heraf . Scotland : Andrew Goram , Craig Burley , Thomas Boyd , Colin Calderwood , Colin Hendry , Thomas McKinley , Duncan Ferguson , Stuart McCall , Alistair McCoist ( Gordon Durie 75th ) , Gary McAllister , John Collins . +BOXING - JOHNSON WINS UNANIMOUS POIUNTS VERDICT . DUBLIN 1996-08-31 American Tom Johnson successfully defended his IBF featherweight title when he earned a unanimous points decision over Venezuela 's Ramon Guzman on Saturday . +SOCCER - FRANCE LAUNCH 1998 WORLD CUP BUILD-UP WITH 2-0 WIN . PARIS 1996-08-31 Euro 96 absentee Nicolas Ouedec and Youri Djorkaeff scored the goals as 1998 World Cup hosts France beat Mexico 2-0 in a friendly international on Saturday . The victory extended to 29 matches France 's unbeaten run under coach Aime Jacquet , their Euro 96 semifinal elimination having come in a penalty shoot-out , but was marred by the sending-off of Chelsea central defender Franck Leboeuf . Leboeuf was dismissed two minutes from time for a second bookable offence , fouling Mexican substitute Ricardo Pelaez who minutes earlier had also been shown the yellow card for pushing the Chelsea defender in the back . Both goals came early in the second half after France had surprised the Mexicans with three half-time substitutions . After a sterile first half , France injected more sting in midfield with the introduction of Juventus 's Zinedine Zidane . This allowed Djorkaeff to play further up and his cross from the right fell for Ouedec , who has joined Espanyol of Barcelona from Nantes since missing the European championship finals through injury , to score after a mistake by midfielder Joaquin del Olmo . Within four minutes Ouedec was returning the compliment for Djorkaeff , playing a one-two with the Internazionale Milan forward down the middle to set him up for a cross shot past diving goalkeeper Osvaldo Sanchez . Jacquet , beginning the 22-month countdown to France 's hosting of the World Cup finals , said : " We have an identity ( as a team ) which we are going to work on . " Teams : France - 1 - Bernard Lama ; 2 - Lilian Thuram ( 14 - Sabri Lamouchi 87th ) , 5 - Laurent Blanc , 8 - Marcel Desailly ( 12 - Franck Leboeuf 46th ) , 3 - Bixente Lizarazu ; 4 - Christian Karembeu , 7 - Didier Deschamps , 10 - Youri Djorkaeff , 6 - Reynald Pedros ( 13 - Robert Pires 46th ) ; 9 - Nicolas Ouedec ( 17 - Florian Maurice 64th ) , 11 - Patrice Loko ( 15 - Zinedine Zidane 46th ) Mexico - 1 - Osvaldo Sanchez ( 12 - Alfonso Rios 78th ) ; 13 - Pavel Pardo , 2 - Claudio Suarez , 5 - Duilio Davino ( Becerril 46th ) , 4 - German Villa ( 16 - Gomez 86th ) ; 14 - Joaquin del Olmo , 6 - Raul Rodrigo Lara ( 11 - Cuauhtemoc Blanco 65th ) , 8 - Alberto Garcia Aspe , 7 - Ramon Ramirez ( 15 - Jesus Arellano 71st ) ; 18 - Enrique Alfaro ( 17 - Francisco Palencia 78th ) , 10 - Luis Garcia ( 19 - Ricardo Pelaez 69th ) . +SOCCER - FRANCE BEAT MEXICO 2-0 IN FRIENDLY . PARIS 1996-08-31 France beat Mexico 2-0 ( halftime 0-0 ) in a friendly soccer international on Saturday . Scorers : Nicolas Ouedec ( 49th minute ) , Youri Djorkaeff ( 53rd ) Attendance : 18,000 +SOCCER - BELGIUM SCRAPE PAST TURKEY DESPITE CROWD TROUBLE . Bert Lauwers BRUSSELS 1996-08-31 Belgium kicked off their 1998 World Cup campaign with a hard-fought 2-1 victory over 10-man Turkey in a tense match marred by Turkish crowd trouble shortly after the break . Turkish fans , upset at their team 's 2-0 first-half deficit , ripped apart dozens of plastic seats and threw them over the fence . Riot police took 10 minutes to restore order . The police were given an unexpected hand by second-half substitute Sergen Yalcin who rekindled Turkish hopes in the 61st with a splendid half-volley which stunned Belgian goalkeeper Filip De Wilde . But Yalcin , who had come on just four minutes earlier , turned from hero to villain barely two minutes after his strike when he was sent off after spitting at an opponent and arguing with English referee David Elleray . Marc Degryse had opened the scoring for Belgium after 13 minutes , whacking a low 10-metre drive into the net after an incisive pass by defender Dirk Medved from the edge of the penalty area . Brazilian-born Luis Oliveira then gleefully slipped the ball past goalkeeper Rustu Recber from the right of the area to make it 2-0 seven minutes before the interval , Turkey 's best first-half effort proving to be a vicious 30-metre shot by Ogun Temizkanoglu which De Wilde tipped over . The visitors , seeking to restore some pride after failing to score a single goal in Euro 96 in June , repeatedly ripped through the left side of the home defence but De Wilde was able to block several sharply-angled efforts . With only the group seven winners qualifying automatically for the 1998 finals in France , Belgium could not afford a slip-up at home and they frantically chased a decisive third goal . But they were almost upset 12 minutes from time when De Wilde fumbled a hard Arif Erdem shot and Orhan Cikirikci almost pounced on the loose ball . Belgium 's best second-half effort came three minutes later when Degryse put the ball over the bar from close range with Recber beaten . Teams : Belgium - 1 - Filip De Wilde , 2 - Bertrand Crasson , 3 - Dirk Medved , 4 - Pascal Renier , 16 - Geoffrey Claeys , 6 - Gunther Schepens ( 15 - Nico Van Kerckhoven , 81st ) , 10 - Enzo Scifo , 7 - Gert Verheyen ( 14 - Frederic Peiremans , 62nd ) , 9 - Marc Degryse , 8 - Luc Nilis , 11- Luis Oliveira ( 18 - Gilles De Bilde , 88th ) . Turkey - 1 - Rustu Recber , 4 - Hakan Unsal ( 14 - Sergen Yalcin , 57th ) , 2 - Recep Cetin , 3 - Ogun Temizkanoglu , 5 - Alpay Ozalan , 7- Abdullah Ercan , 6 - Tolunay Kafkas , 10 - Oguz Cetin ( 13 - Arif Erdem , 57th ) , 11 - Tayfun Korkut , 9 - Hakan Sukur , 8 - Saffet Sancakli ( 17- Orhan Cikirikci , 76th ) . Belgian coach Wilfried Van Moer said he had not expected Turkey to be so strong and fast . " We started panicking a bit after the Turkish goal ... we suffered , " said Van Moer , who succeeded Paul Van Himst as coach in April . It was Belgium 's first victory under Van Moer after two draws in friendlies against Russia and Italy . +SOCCER - SUMMARY IN THE SPANISH FIRST DIVISION . MADRID 1996-08-30 Summary of game played in the Spanish first division on Saturday : Deportivo Coruna 1 ( Corentine Martins , 22nd minute ) Real Madrid 1 ( Roberto Carlos 79th ) . Halftime 1-0 . Attendancce 35,000 . +SOCCER - RESULT IN SPANISH FIRST DIVISION . MADRID 1996-08-31 Result of game played in the Spanish first division on Saturday : Deportivo Coruna 1 Real Madrid 1 +SOCCER - BELGIUM BEAT TURKEY 2-1 IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . BRUSSELS 1996-08-31 Belgium beat Turkey 2-1 ( halftime 2-0 ) in a World Cup group seven soccer qualifier on Saturday : Scorers : Belgium - Marc Degryse ( 13th ) , Luis Oliveira ( 38th ) Turkey - Sergen Yalcin ( 61st ) Attendance : 30,000 +SOCCER - AUSTRIA DRAW 0-0 WITH SCOTLAND IN WORLD CUP QUALIFIER . VIENNA 1996-08-31 Austria and Scotland drew 0-0 in a World Cup soccer European group four qualifier on Saturday . Attendance : 29,500 +BOXING - KNOCK-OUT SPECIALIST MILLER DEFENDS TITLE . DUBLIN 1996-08-31 A powerful right hook followed by a straight left gave defending champion Nate Miller a seventh round knock-out win over fellow American James Heath in their WBA cruiserweight title bout on Saturday . Miller , who went into the contest with a record of 24 knock-out wins in 32 fights , took charge from the opening bell and had his opponent on the canvas inside 90 seconds when he landed a deft left-hook to the head . Heath did score with two brusing lefts to Miller 's head in the third round but failed to put his opponent under any real pressure . Miller raised the pace of the contest at the start of the fifth round and , once he started to get his right-left combinations working for him , the fight was never likely to go the distance . +SOCCER - DUTCH DRAW 2-2 WITH BRAZIL IN FRIENDLY INTERNATIONAL . AMSTERDAM 1996-08-31 The Netherlands drew 2-2 with Brazil ( half-time 0-1 ) in a soccer friendly on Saturday . Scorers : Netherlands - Ronald de Boer ( 52nd minute ) , Van Gastel ( 90th , pen ) Brazil - Giovanni ( 14th ) , Marcello Goncalves ( 55th ) +BOXING - MILLER DEFENDS WBA CRUISERWEIGHT TITLE . DUBLIN 1996-08-31 American Nate Miller successfully defended his WBA cruiserweight title when he knocked out compatriot James Heath in the seventh round of their bout on Saturday . +HORSE RACING - TATTERSALLS BREEDERS STAKES RESULT . DUBLIN 1996-08-31 Result of the Tattersalls Breeders Stakes , a race for two-year-olds run over six furlongs ( 1,200 metres ) at The Curragh on Saturday : 1. Miss Stamper 3-1 joint-favourite ( ridden by David Harrison ) 2. Paddy Lad 16-1 ( Peter Bloomfield ) 3. Pelham 10-1 ( Warren O'Connor ) Distances : Three lengths , two-and-a-half lengths . Winner owned by John and Beryll Remblance and trained in Britain by Richard Hannon . Value to the winning owner : $ 233,600 +SOCCER - KLINSMANN TO RETIRE AFTER 1998 WORLD CUP . BONN 1996-08-31 German international striker Juergen Klinsmann has said he will retire after the 1998 World Cup in France . " For myself , personally , I 've planned things so that that will be the end of me , " the 32-year-old national team captain was quoted as saying by the daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung on Saturday . Klinsmann said he believed Germany could win in France with the same nucleus of players which won the European championship in England this summer . " I think it can be done , " he said , " especially as experience is becoming more and more valuable in sport . I think we can do it with the same body of players . That 's what we 're all aiming for . " Coach Berti Vogts has called up a virtually identical squad for next week 's friendly against Poland -- Germany 's first match since Euro 96 . +SOCCER - GERMAN CUP SECOND ROUND RESULTS . BONN 1996-08-31 Results of German Cup second round matches on Saturday : Karlsruhe 2 Hansa Rostock 0 Borussia Neunkirchen 1 St Pauli 3 Duisburg 1 Luebeck 0 ( after extra time ) +SOCCER - ROMANIA BEAT LITHUANIA IN U-21 QUALIFIER . BUCHAREST 1996-08-30 Romania beat 2-1 ( halftime 1-1 ) Lithuania in their European Under-21 soccer match on Friday . Scorers : Romania - Cosmin Contra ( 31st ) , Mihai Tararache ( 75th ) Lithuania - Danius Gleveckas ( 13rd ) Attendence : 200 +Paper says Thatcher 's office consulted astrologer . LONDON 1996-09-01 A British newspaper said Margaret Thatcher was so shaken by an IRA attempt on her life when she was prime minister in 1984 that an astrologer was asked to warn her against future threats . The Sunday Telegraph quoted Majorie Orr as saying she did a horoscope chart for Thatcher , a Libran , after she narrowly escaped death in the Irish guerrilla bombing of a hotel during the Conservative Party conference more than a decade ago . Orr said Thatcher 's press secretary Bernard Ingram asked her to telephone if she saw any threatening indications in the future . " Bernard Ingham told me that if I ever heard anything that indicated danger I was to let him know , " Orr said . Orr said she never had to telephone . She added that the horoscope was purely for security purposes and she was never consulted about political moves . Ingram was quoted as telling the newspaper he thought astrology was " a load of rubbish " and that he could not recall asking Orr to keep a watch on Thatcher 's stars . Thatcher , dubbed the " Iron Lady " for her driven , forceful personality , was never known to have an interest in the occult and in fact has a university degree in chemistry . Former U.S. president Ronald Reagan 's wife , Nancy , admitted in her biography My Turn that she regularly consulted an astrologer to help her plan her husband 's schedule . +Reuters historical calendar - September 7 . LONDON 1996-08-31 Following are some of the major events to have occurred on September 7 in history . 1533 - Queen Elizabeth I born . Daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife Anne Boleyn , she was queen of England 1558-1603 . One of the great monarchs who presided over a period of English assertion in Europe in politics and the arts . 1706 - French troops under Duke of Orleans besieging Turin were defeated by the Austrians under Prince Eugene , the French army was destroyed and they ceased trying to capture northern Italy . 1714 - The Treaty of Baden was signed between the Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI and France , ending War of Spanish Succession . Charles ceded Alsace and Strasbourg to France and got back Breisach , Kehl and Freiburg . 1812 - Russian army under General Kutuzov was defeated at heavy cost by Napoleon at the battle of Borodino 70 miles west of Moscow . Napoleon entered Moscow a week later . 1822 - Brazil proclaimed independence from Portugal and Pedro I became first Emperor of Brazil in December 1822 . 1836 - Scottish politician Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman born . As Liberal prime minister 1905-1908 he granted self-government to the Transvaal . He also got the House of Lords to pass his Trades Disputes Act which gave labour unions more freedom to strike . 1860 - Giuseppe Garibaldi leading his " Red Shirts " seized Naples in the Italian war of liberation against the Austrians . 1901 - In China , the Boxer Rising which attempted to drive out all foreigners officially ended with the signing of the Peking Protocol . This imposed an indemnity to be paid to the great powers for Boxer crimes . 1909 - Elia Kazan born as Elia Kazanjoglus . A U.S. stage and screen director , he is best known for " Viva Zapata " and " On the Waterfront " . 1913 - Sir Anthony Quayle born . British actor of stage and screen in films from 1948 . Best known for appearances in " Ice Cold in Alex " , " Lawrence of Arabia " and , as Cardinal Wolsey , in " Anne of a Thousand Days " . 1914 - James Alfred Van Allen born . U.S. physicist who discovered the two zones of radiation encircling the earth to which he gave his name . 1930 - Belgian King Baudouin I born . He succeeded to the throne in 1951 on the abdication of his father Leopold III . 1940 - In World War Two the German airforce under Hermann Goering began its " Blitz " bombing campaign on London . Over 300 people were killed on this day alone . 1969 - Scottish motor racing driver Jackie Stewart won the Italian Grand Prix to secure his first world championship . Four years later , after winning his third world crown , he announced his retirement . 1986 - Bishop Desmond Tutu was enthroned as Archbishop of Cape Town , South Africa . He was the first black head of South Africa 's Anglicans . 1990 - The United States won Saudi and Kuwaiti pledges to help pay for forces in the Gulf . Iraq ordered many restaurants to close indefinitely to save food in face of a blockade . 1990 - British historian Alan John Percivale ( A.J.P. ) Taylor died . He won acclaim for the insights that he gave into the events which shaped modern Europe and was one of Europe 's leading authorities on the great conflicts of the 20th century . 1993 - Six former Soviet republics , Russia , Belarus , Kazakhstan , Uzbekistan , Armenia and Tajikistan , signed framework agreement to keep the Russian rouble as their common currency . 1994 - The Stars and Stripes flag was lowered for the last time over U.S. army headquarters in Berlin , formally ending the American presence in the once-divided city after nearly half a century . +Escaped British paedophile recaptured . LONDON 1996-08-31 A convicted British paedophile was arrested on Saturday , two days after escaping from custody during a supervised day trip to a zoo , police said . Trevor Holland , a 52 year-old with who has been convicted twice of gross indecency with children , was captured after being spotted in Worthing , a town on England 's southern coast . " A member of the public recognised Holland in a newsagent shop as he was reading the headlines about himself , " a police spokesman said . Police launched a nationwide search on Thursday after he disappeared during an unsupervised trip to the toilet while visiting a popular zoo and theme park south of London . Holland was moved to a more secure centre earlier this year after a similar incident . His escape at the zoo caused outrage in Britain . A child sex scandal in Belgium in which two eight-year-old girls were murdered and two other sexually abused girls were rescued has focused new attention on the problem . +Scottish Labour Party narrowly backs referendum . STIRLING , Scotland 1996-08-31 British Labour Party leader Tony Blair won a narrow victory on Saturday when the party 's Scottish executive voted 21-18 in favour of his plans for a referendum on a separate parliament for Scotland . Blair once pledged to set up a Scottish parliament if the Labour won the next general election , which must be held by May 1997 . But many activists were dismayed when he abruptly decided earlier this year to hold a two-question referendum on the issue , asking Scots if they wanted a separate parliament and if it should have tax-raising powers . Many party members argued that a general election win would demonstrate popular support for a separate parliament and others said a single question referendum would suffice . Prime Minister John Major says the 300-year-old union of the Scottish and English parliaments will be a main plank in his Conservative Party 's election platform . Conservatives have only 10 of the 72 Scottish seats in parliament and consistently run third in opinion polls in Scotland behind Labour and the independence-seeking Scottish National Party . +Britain condemns Iraq involvement in Arbil attack . LONDON 1996-08-31 Britain on Saturday condemned Iraqi involvement in an attack on the Kurdish city of Arbil and said it was in close touch with its allies . " We condemn Iraqi involvement . In no way can Iraqi involvement be seen as helpful , " said a Foreign Office spokesman . U.N. officials said that a Kurdish rebel faction backed up by Iraqi tanks , heavy artillery and helicopters had taken control of half of the city after heavy fighting . Arbil lies within the so-called safe haven set up at the end of the 1991 Gulf War on the suggestion of British Prime Minister John Major to protect Iraqi Kurds from attack by the Iraqi military . The area is patrolled by U.S. , French and British planes . " We are in close touch with all our allies , " said the Foreign Office spokesman . He declined to give any further information . +Seven Iraqis charged with hijack . LONDON 1996-08-31 Seven Iraqi men appeared in court on Saturday charged with air piracy following the hijacking to Britain of a Sudanese airliner with 199 people aboard . The seven , including a carpenter and a businessmen and whose ages ranged from 25 to 38 years old , were ordered to be held in jail until another hearing next week . No pleas were entered at the preliminary hearing . They were accused of taking over Flight 150 which was flying from Khartoum , Sudan , to Amman , Jordan . All the hostages were freed on Tuesday after the plane landed at Stansted airport , north of London . The men have claimed political asylum in Britain saying they were persecuted while in Iraq . Their court appearance means they will face trial and possible imprisonment in Britain before their applications for asylum are considered . Under English law the maximum sentence for hijack is life imprisonment but there has been widespread speculation that the seven will receive lesser sentences . After a search of the aircraft following the hijack , police found only knives and fake explosives . +Opposition group says Iraqis advance in north Iraq . LONDON 1996-08-31 An Iraqi opposition group in exile said on Saturday it had received reports that Iraqi forces were shelling and advancing on the Kurdish town of Arbil in northern Iraq . A London-based spokesman of the Iraqi National Congress said Iraqi artillery was shelling the city and Iraqi tanks had advanced to within 10 km ( six miles ) of Arbil , the administrative centre of the Kurdish rebel-controlled region of northern Iraq . " At 4.50 a.m. Iraq time ( 0050 GMT ) Iraqi forces began an artillery attack on the outskirts of Arbil , " the spokesman , who asked not to be identified , told Reuters in a telephone call . There was no independent confirmation of the report which the spokesman said came from the organisation 's members in Arbil . He said damage and casualties in the city were heavy and Kurdish forces were defending the city . President Bill Clinton on Friday ordered the U.S. military to ready itself for any possible action as Washington turned up the heat in an escalating crisis over Iraqi troop movements in northern Iraq . On Thursday , Iraq accused Iran of aggression and said it reserved the right to retaliate for Tehran 's alleged deployment of troops into northern Iraq , where fighting broke out between the two main Iraqi Kurdish rebel groups two weeks ago . +Two die in Algeria restaurant blast - radio . LONDON 1996-08-31 Two people were killed when a hand grenade exploded in a restaurant near Algiers late on Friday , Algerian radio reported on Saturday . The report , monitored by the British Broadcasting Corporation ( BBC ) , quoted security services as saying six other people were injured in the blast in the town of Staouelli . An estimated 50,000 people had been killed in political violence in Algeria since 1992 , when army-backed authorities cancelled a general election that Islamic fundamentalists had been expected to win . +Baseball-Results of S. Korean pro-baseball games . SEOUL 1996-08-31 Results of South Korean pro-baseball games played on Friday . OB 5 Samsung 0 Ssangbangwool 2 Hyundai 1 Standings after games played on Friday ( tabulate under won , drawn , lost , winning percentage , games behind first place ) W D L PCT GB Haitai 64 2 43 .596 - Ssangbangwool 60 2 49 .550 5 Hanwha 58 1 49 .542 6 Hyundai 57 5 50 .531 7 Samsung 49 5 57 .464 14 1/2 Lotte 46 6 54 .462 14 1/2 LG 46 5 59 .441 17 OB 43 6 62 .414 20 +S. African Afrikaners still seek own territory . CAPE TOWN 1996-08-31 South African right-wing Afrikaners on Saturday revived their campaign for a form of self-rule , identifying a sparsely-populated area in Northern Cape province as the best place for a home of their own . Constand Viljoen , leader of the Freedom Front party , told a news conference in Pretoria self-determination for Afrikaners could begin at local government level . " Certain powers can be delegated from the provincial level , towards the sub-regions , " he said . " We think that the Afrikaner model within this new , multi- ethnic society of South Africa will have to develop experimentally with world thinking in this regard . " Viljoen broke with other right-wing whites in 1994 by taking part in the country 's first all-race elections in April of that year , saying the only way to attain self-determination was by cooperating with President Nelson Mandela 's majority African National Congress . Some right-wingers demanded sovereignty in their own territory in the run-up to the elections , saying the alternative was war . Their threats came to nothing . Viljoen has hailed clauses in South Africa 's new constitution as making possible a form of self-rule for the Afrikaners , descendants of the country 's Dutch , German and French settlers . According to state television , Viljoen told the news conference the self-rule model should be introduced in parts of the Northern Cape provinces where a majority of people -- whites and mixed-race Coloureds -- speak Afrikaans . +Rwandan refugee group calls for calm over census . NAIROBI 1996-08-31 A Rwandan refugee lobby group called on Saturday for calm in refugee camps in eastern Zaire during a census from Sunday to be conducted by aid workers . The Rally for the Return of Refugees and Democracy in Rwanda ( RDR ) urged the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to avoid any " policing approach " and to calm refugees by explaining the aims of the operation . " The RDR appeals to all refugees to prepare themselves calmly for the demands of the census agents because it will be in their ultimate interest , " the group said in a statement . It said refugees feared census takers would use indelible ink to mark them so they could be detected by Rwandan government troops and mistreated if they were forced back into Rwanda . U.N. officials said more than 1,000 aid workers will take part in the census from Sunday until Tuesday of the estimated 727,000 refugees in camps around the eastern Zairean border town of Goma . Only about 100 refugees a week are returning voluntarily to Rwanda in contrast to the 600 babies born in the camps weekly . Zairean Prime Minister Kengo wa Dondo said at the end of a visit to Rwanda last week that the Zairean and Rwandan governments agreed on an " organised , massive and unconditional repatriation " of the 1.1 million Rwandan refugees in Zaire . He said the repatriation would be carried out swiftly and would be enormous , starting with the closure of refugee camps . RDR said it feared forced expulsions would start in days . Zairean troops expelled 15,000 refugees in August last year . Many of the 1.1 million Rwandan Hutu refugees in Zaire and nearly 600,000 in Tanzania refuse to go home , saying they fear reprisals for the 1994 genocide in Rwanda of up to a million people by Hutus . +NATO monitors Moslem move towards tense village . MAHALA , Bosnia 1996-08-31 NATO said it was closely monitoring the movement of about 75 Moslem men towards the village of Mahala in Bosnia 's Serb republic on Saturday , two days after a violent confrontation with Serbs . " I have to report this morning that we have in fact received reports ... that up to 75 Moslem men are believed to be approaching Mahala , " NATO spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Max Marriner said in Sarajevo . Marriner said that NATO troops had set up a checkpoint on the road between Tuzla and Mahala to establish the identities and intentions of the men headed towards the village . Mahala is a Moslem village on Bosnian Serb republic territory . Moslems were driven from the village during the 43- month Bosnian war and most of their houses were destroyed . Some Moslems began returning to rebuild their properties earlier in the week . Fights and shooting broke out between the Moslems and Serb police on Thursday and NATO troops finally brought restored order . A Reuters reporter who entered Mahala on Saturday morning found it tranquil but NATO troops and U.N. police were seen on the ground and NATO helicopters flew overhead . +Chechens exuberant but cautious on peace deal . Liutauras Stremaitis URUS-MARTAN , Russia 1996-08-31 Crowds of pro-independence Chechens greeted a newly-signed peace deal by singing , dancing and firing guns in the air on Saturday , but the celebrations held a trace of uncertainty . More than a thousand women , children and men gathered in a field to the north of the town of Urus-Martan on Saturday to wait for a column of rebels to withdraw from the capital Grozny about 25 km ( 12 miles ) away . The men fired weapons into the air as groups of women danced . Adults in the crowd carried posters of former Chechen leader Dzhokhar Dudayev -- who declared independence in 1991 -- and children , carrying photographs of him , called " Troops out ! " . Russian military officials have expressed fears that the rebels and their supporters will see the deal signed by Russian peace envoy Alexander Lebed in the early hours of Saturday as a military victory for the separatists . It involves the withdrawal of Russian troops sent to Chechnya in December 1994 to crush the separatists and a postponement of the issue at the heart of the conflict -- the status of the mainly-Moslem North Caucasus region . But the people in the crowd on Saturday , who had turned out in support of the rebels , did not seem sure that the war was over . " We hope for the best , that it really has ended so we can live in peace . It 's our only dream , " said a 30-year-old woman , Mubatik Dagayeva . Aiza Dudayeva , with her 10-year-old son beside her , shared the guarded optimism . " We really want the war to end , we hope and believe that our sons and brothers will win , " said Dudayeva , adding that she was from Urus-Martan . Urus-Martan is a traditionally anti-separatist pocket in Chechnya and Moscow-backed leader Doku Zavgayev , who has been sidelined in the peace deal , has warned that it and places like it could become centres of civil war if Russian troops leave . But on Saturday the people gathered just outside the town seemed to be united in favour of the separatists . Two columns of rebels appeared in jeeps and cars , firing their guns in the air , as the crowd rushed towards them . Mouldi Mamatuyev , in his late 20 's , dressed in black and carrying a machine gun , was welcomed by his mother and sister . " Two sons have come back , " said his mother Nurbika Mamatuyeva . " It 's the end . We believe in God . " Mamatuyev joked that his sister Lisa was a rebel too , and she responded by grabbing hold of his gun and shouting the Chechen war cry " Allahu Akhbar " ( God is Greatest ) and " Freedom for Chechnya ! " . The fighter , sitting next to a man dressed in green and carrying a grenade-launcher , said that the strict Islamic law adopted by the rebels during the conflict was now needed to impose peace . " The war has ended if everything works out , if there is law there will be power . Only Sheriat ( Islamic law ) can end the war . " +Polish group to bid for Ruch newsstand chain - paper . WARSAW 1996-08-31 A Polish consortium including the Bank Rozwoju Exportu SA ( BRE ) plans to rival France 's Hachette in bidding for Polish state-owned press distribution chain Ruch SA , Zycie Warszawy daily said on Saturday . Zycie Warszawy said its own publisher , mineral water firm Multico , and a group headed by Polish businessman Zygmunt Solorz were forming a consortium which would offer about $ 120 million , with finance provided by BRE . The consortium wanted 40 percent of Ruch 's shares , the state would get 20 percent of Ruch and 40 percent would be offered on the Warsaw stock exchange . " This division would guarantee a dispersal of capital , preventing anyone from taking total control over Ruch and dictating market conditions , " the paper quoted one of the initiators of the move as saying , without giving a name . A consortium of press distributor Hachette and Polish publishers group UWP are seeking more than than 50 percent of Ruch and French President Jacques Chirac is likely to support its case when he visits Poland in September , the daily said . News-stand chain Ruch , which controls about 65 percent of Poland 's press distribution market , had a net profit of 16.2 million zlotys on sales of 2.7 billion zlotys in 1995 . It has about 17,000 news-stands and was the country 's sole press distributor before the 1989 fall of communism . Zycie Warszawy said the new , open consortium , which also included several listed Polish firms , would on Monday inform Privatisation Minister Wieslaw Kaczmarek of its plans . It aims to invest $ 200 million in Ruch over five years -- more than the sum Ruch says it needs to upgrade its outlets . Initially Poland offered up to 75 percent of Ruch but in March Kaczmarek cancelled the tender and offered a minority stake with an option to increase the equity . Two consortia -- UWP-Hachette and a consortium of a Polish SPC group and Swiss firms -- placed initial bids . But after the change of tender conditions Swiss investors pulled out and SPC decided to bid jointly with UWP-Hachette . Kaczmarek said in May he was unhappy that only one investor ended up bidding for Ruch , in which the government was initially offering up to 35 percent of shares with an option to extend the holding after investment promises are fulfilled . -- Anthony Barker +48 22 653 9700 +Three Russian soldiers killed in gun attack . MOSCOW 1996-08-31 Three Russian servicemen were killed on Saturday when unidentified gunmen attacked guards at an anti-aircraft installation outside Moscow , Interfax news agency said . It quoted military officials as saying the attack took place in Sergiyev Posad 70 km ( 45 miles ) from the capital . The officials said the attackers had seized two Kalashnikov assault rifles and disappeared . Attacks on servicemen aimed at seizing their guns have become frequent in Russia where the number of violent crimes committed with the use of fire arms is growing . +Cuban novelist Jose Soler Puig dies at 79 . HAVANA 1996-08-31 One of Cuba 's most acclaimed authors , Jose Soler Puig , died at the age of 79 , the official newspaper Granma reported on Saturday . Puig 's first novel , " Bertillon 166 , " was published in 1960 , a year after the Cuban revolution brought President Fidel Castro to power . The book , which has been translated into 40 languages , deals with a day in the life of Santiago de Cuba , Puig 's native city , under the pre-Castro government of Fulgencio Batista . The titles of his other novels translate as " In the Year of January " ( 1963 ) , " The Collapse " ( 1964 ) , " Sleeping Bread " ( 1975 ) , " The Decaying Mansion " ( 1977 ) and " A World of Things " ( 1982 ) , followed by " The Knot , " " Soul Alone " and , most recently , " A Woman . " Granma called " Sleeping Bread " Puig 's " greatest gift to the modern novel in our America . " The author said in an interview shortly before his death that his own experiences had lent his books their strong sense of realism . " I 'm a thief of ideas , " he said . " The stories have been given to me by people . " In the same interview , published by Prensa Latina on Saturday , Puig was asked if he feared death . " Death is not a punishment -- death is the end of life 's punishment , " he said . +U.N. Ambassador Albright arrives in Chile . SANTIAGO 1996-08-31 The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations , Madeleine Albright , arrived in Chile late Friday for talks on various Security Council issues with Chilean officials as part of a five-nation Latin American tour . Albright will meet Foreign Minister Jose Miguel Insulza Monday for talks on issues currently up for debate on the council , of which Chile is a non-permanent member , a U.S. embassy statement said . The two will also discuss various issues affecting relations between the United States and Chile , local officials said . Albright , who arrived from Uruguay , will rest most of the weekend in Chile , officials said . Her official programme will begin on Monday , and she will leave that day for Bolivia to attend a Latin American summit meeting in the city of Cochabamba . Her tour will also include Honduras and Guatemala . +Mexican army attacked in Michoacan state - report . MEXICO CITY 1996-08-30 A group of heavily-armed men attacked a military convoy in the western Mexican state of Michoacan on Friday , killing one soldier and wounding two , radio reports said . Radio Red quoted local police in the town of Tacambaro , Michoacan , 80 km ( 50 miles ) south of the state capital Morelia , as saying 40 to 50 armed men attacked the convoy . Gonzalo Montoya , a police commander in Tacambaro , told Radio Red the group was armed with AK-47s and other high-powered assault rifles and wore military-style fatigues . Montoya said he thought the attackers were criminals linked to drug trafficking or kidnapping in the area . " We often see people dressed in military-style clothing here , " he said . The attack comes a day after rebels of the self-styled Popular Revolutionary Army ( EPR ) launched coordinated attacks in at least three Mexican states , killing up to 14 people and wounding about 20 . +China said to fear dissidents more than criminals . MANILA 1996-08-31 The detention of veteran dissident Wang Donghai showed China 's determination to crush any vestige of dissent during the current profound transitions in the nation 's leadership , a human rights activist said on Saturday . Xiao Qiang , executive director of the New York-based group Human Rights in China , said Wang 's arrest on Friday appeared to be part of the national " Strike Hard " campaign that has imprisoned thousands and sent hundreds to their death . Although supposedly aimed at criminals , dozens of human rights activists have been detained in the campaign , which is meant to strengthen the Communist Party 's grip on power as senior leader Deng Xiaoping nears death , Xiao said in an interview . " China is going through this power transition period . The authorities are apparently extremely afraid of any political and social discontent , " said Xiao , in Manila to attend an Amnesty International conference on human rights in China . He said one of Wang 's apparent offences was to write a public letter in May suggesting that a free press and an independent judicial system were vital if the government really meant to stamp out rampant corruption . Xiao said crushing legitimate dissent was only making the problem worse and one day China would pay a high price . " Those issues are not going to go away by repression . You only make things more hidden but potentially more explosive , " he said . Wang was arrested in the east China city of Hangzhou by security officers who told the dissident 's family he would be sent to a study class -- a euphemism for coercive ideological reform . Wang , 45 , was sentenced last month to one year 's " re-education by labour " but was released because of ill-health . Xiao said conditions in the labour camp were so brutal they drove another activist sentenced with Wang to attempt suicide . Police beat Wang and his colleague , Chen Longde , and encouraged other camp inmates to attack them as well , Xiao said . +Manila hails Indonesia , OIC for peace deal support . MANILA 1996-08-31 Philippine president Fidel Ramos expressed gratitude to Indonesian president Suharto and the Organisation of Islamic Conference ( OIC ) on Saturday for supporting talks that ended a conflict with local Moslem rebels . " I extend the deepest gratitude ... to your excellency for your untiring and invaluable friendship and support , " Ramos told Suharto in a letter . The full text of the letter was released to reporters on Saturday . Jakarta served as the host to the series of negotiations which culminated in the initialling of the agreement last Friday . The formal signing of the peace agreement is scheduled on Monday in Manila . Ramos said the peace agreement " shall bring down the curtain on a long and storied era of strife in Philippine history . " The war claimed more than 125,000 lives in the southern Mindanao island over a quarter of a century . +Burma 's Suu Kyi says military rulers abuse law . Deborah Charles RANGOON 1996-08-31 Burma 's democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi hit out at the government on Saturday for recent arrests and jailing of activists , saying the military abused the law to try to crush the democracy movement . " The main purpose of this press conference is to make it known to the world that the authorities are misusing the law all the time in order to try to crush the democracy movement , " Suu Kyi told reporters at her Rangoon home . Suu Kyi said at least 61 democracy supporters had been arrested since May , and about 30 of them had been sentenced , most to long prison terms . In May the government launched a sweeping crackdown on the democracy movement , detaining over 260 members of Suu Kyi 's National League for Democracy ( NLD ) ahead of a party congress . Most were released but several dozen remain in custody . The Burmese government last week confirmed the recent sentencing of nine democracy activists who were arrested in the May crackdown , including Suu Kyi 's assistant Win Htein . The military government , which in May said it had detained the politicians to prevent anarchy , said the activists were charged with attempting to destroy the peace and stability of the state . But Suu Kyi disagreed with the methods , saying officials often arrested NLD supporters in the middle of the night , then did not give them the opportunity to defend themselves in trials . " When our people are tried , they are tried in a very secretive way . Their families are not told , " she said . Suu Kyi , who spearheads a campaign for sanctions on Burma 's government , was under house arrest for six years without being tried before being released in July 1995 . Several other leading members of the NLD have served prison terms . The NLD party won a landslide victory in a 1990 election but the State Law and Order Restoration Council ( SLORC ) , which assumed power in 1988 after crushing pro-democracy demonstrations , never recognised the poll . " This lack of rule of law is an indication that the authorities are not interested in fair play , " she said . " They are using a travesty of the law to try and crush our movements and to sentence our people to long terms in prison without proper trial . " Suu Kyi said once the activists were sentenced , they suffered inhuman conditions and lack of rights in prison . " Almost all of the prisoners start suffering from various health problems after a couple of years in jail , " she said . " Some of our people have been in prison for five to six years . " Most political prisoners are held in Rangoon 's Insein Prison . Some who have been released have recounted torture methods like sleep and food deprivation and physical abuse . " If there are any more instances of death in custody it will be further proof that a prison sentence for political prisoners is sometimes almost the same as a death sentence , " Suu Kyi said . Hla Than , an elected member of parliament for the NLD , died in early August after being at Insein for six years . His death came five weeks after James Leander ( Leo ) Nichols , a close friend of Suu Kyi and Danish honorary consul , died while serving a prison term at Insein . Suu Kyi said the government had increased its repression tactics on the democracy movement because it feared the growing popularity of the movement . But she said she and the NLD would not stop their efforts to bring democracy to Burma even if it meant more arrests of party members or even herself . " We will carry on . Nobody is free from arrest in Burma . " +Dow Chemical in China ethylene venture . BEIJING 1996-08-31 The Dow Chemical Co of the United States will invest $ 4 billion to build an ethylene plant in Tianjin city in northern China , the China Daily said on Saturday . The plant will have annual production of 400,000 tonnes , the newspaper said . It gave no further details of the venture . Tianjin boasts a range of infrastructure facilities , attracting several multinational oil companies to invest in recent years . Caltex Petroleum Corp plans to build a lubricants blender in a bonded zone in Tianjin , the newspaper said . Multinational firms including Mobil , Shell and Caltex , were also attracted to Tianjin due to China 's rising demand for lube and oil-based products , the newspaper said . It gave no further details . +N. Korea urges S. Korea to return war veteran . SEOUL 1996-08-31 North Korea demanded on Saturday that South Korea return a northern war veteran who has been in the South since the 1950-53 war , Seoul 's unification ministry said . " ...I request the immediate repatriation of Kim In-so to North Korea where his family is waiting , " North Korean Red Cross president Li Song-ho said in a telephone message to his southern couterpart , Kang Young-hoon . Li said Kim had been critically ill with a cerebral haemorrhage . The message was distributed to the press by the South Korean unification ministry . Kim , an unrepentant communist , was captured during the Korean War and released after spending more than 30 years in a southern jail . He submitted a petition to the International Red Cross in 1993 asking for his repatriation . The domestic Yonhap news agency said the South Korean government would consider the northern demand only if the North accepted Seoul 's requests , which include regular reunions of families split by the Korean War . Government officials were not available to comment . South Korea in 1993 unconditionally repatriated Li In-mo , a nothern partisan seized by the South during the war and jailed for more than three decades . +Chinese police hold veteran dissident . BEIJING 1996-08-31 Chinese police have detained veteran dissident Wang Donghai , the New York-based pressure group Human Rights in China said on Saturday . Police in Hangzhou , capital of the eastern province of Zhejiang , told Wang 's family that Wang would be sent to a study class , a euphemism for coercive ideological reform , the group said . Police gave no reason for detaining Wang on Friday and would not let his family meet him or say where he was being held , the group said . Police also would not say why Wang was being sent to a study class -- a holdover from the chaotic 1966-76 Cultural Revolution -- or say when he would be released , the group said . Wang 's family and Hangzhou police could not be reached for immediate comment . The group demanded Wang 's release and said his detention was a dangerous signal China was returning to its Cultural Revolution days . Last month , Wang , 45 , a veteran dissident of the 1979 Democracy Wall movement , was ordered to serve one year of " re-education through labour " , but released because of poor health . Re-education through labour is an administrative punishment with a maximum of three years that can be imposed by police without recourse to prosecutors or the courts . Wang was jailed for two years for organising street protests after the military crushed pro-democracy demonstrations by students at Beijing 's Tiananmen Square on June 4 , 1989 , with heavy loss of life . Chinese authorities appeared to be using administrative punishment more frequently to take dissidents out of circulation without having to go through a more complicated judicial process to impose criminal sentences , Western diplomats have said . +China police detains dissident Wang Donghai . BEIJING 1996-08-31 Chinese police have detained dissident Wang Donghai , the New York-based pressure group Human Rights in China said on Saturday . Police detained Wang on Friday and would not let his family meet him or say where he was being held , the group said . The pressure group said Wang would be sent to a study class , often a euphemism in China for ideological reform . Wang 's family could not immediately be reached for comment . Last month , Wang , 45 , a veteran dissident of the 1979 Democracy Wall movement , was ordered to serve one year of " re-education through labour " , but released because of poor health . Re-education through labour is an administrative punishment with a maximum of three years that can be imposed by police without recourse to prosecutors or the courts . Wang was jailed for two years for organising street protests after the military brutally crushed pro-democracy demonstrations by students at Beijing 's Tiananmen Square on June 4 , 1989 , with heavy loss of life . +Hong Kong jails 88-year-old drug trafficker . HONG KONG 1996-08-31 An 88-year-old army veteran was jailed for 15 years by a Hong Kong court for drugs trafficking after he admitted he had stashed heroin under his mattress , a newspaper said on Saturday . " I am sorry to my ancestors for five generations , " Chen Chun-yeh told the High Court after sentencing on Friday , the Hong Kong Standard said . " Tell my sons to collect my bones , " he said after hearing he was likely to die behind bars . Chen , a former army secretary of the Chinese Nationalist regime which fled from mainland China to Taiwan in 1949 , pleaded guilty to trafficking 42 kg ( 92 pounds ) of drugs that could have been turned into 25 kg ( 55 pounds ) of heroin . The ex-officer admitted stashing heroin under his mattress . +China cities to ban disposable plastic containers . BEIJING 1996-08-31 Two Chinese cities are to ban the use of disposable plastic containers as part of efforts to fight pollution , the China Daily said on Saturday . Authorities in Wuhan , capital of the central province of Hubei , would punish those who sell or use disposable plastic containers from September 1 , the newspaper said . It did not elaborate . The city 's industrial and commercial departments would confiscate disposable plastic containers and police would prevent new ones from entering the city , it said . Wuhan consumes more than 200 million disposable plastic containers a year , the newspaper said . The boomtown of Guangzhou , capital of the southern province of Guangdong , would ban disposable plastic containers by the end of 1996 , it said . Guangzhou uses up 500,000 such containers each day , the newspaper said . It gave no further details . +Iraqi Kurds say Iranian troops enter north Iraq . ISTANBUL 1996-08-31 Iranian troops on Saturday entered Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq in the wake of an assault backed by Baghdad into the region , an Iraqi Kurdish group told Reuters . " They entered this morning . They have occupied the area to the depth of 40 km ( 25 miles ) . They have established a headquarters in Chuman , " Faik Nerweyi of the Kurdistan Democratic Party ( KDP ) told Reuters by telephone from Ankara . Nerweyi said he did not know the size or nature of the Iranian force in northern Iraq , but said KDP fighters had been easily outgunned in the area close to the Iranian border and had quickly withdrawn further west . " They were far too strong , " he said . Nerweyi said he did not know if there were any casualties . A U.N. official in Baghdad said the KDP , backed by Iraqi tanks , heavy artillery and helicopters had taken control of the main northern Iraqi city of Arbil after fighting on Saturday . U.S. President Bill Clinton has authorised the repositioning of U.S. firepower in the Gulf region in response to the Iraqi attacks . The KDP charges that the rival Patriotic Union of Kurdistan , which took control of Arbil in fighting in December 1994 , has backing from Iran . The PUK accuses the KDP of collaborating with Baghdad . Northern Iraq has been under Iraqi Kurdish control since after the 1991 Gulf War . U.S.-led allied planes based in Turkey are intended to protect the Kurds from Baghdad . +Ceasefire monitors to meet in south Lebanon . JERUSALEM 1996-08-31 A committee monitoring the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hizbollah guerrillas will meet in south Lebanon on Sunday to discuss an Israeli complaint against the Islamic group , the Israeli army said . Representatives of the five nations making up the committee -- Israel , Lebanon , Syria , France and the United States -- will meet at 11 a.m. ( 0800 GMT ) in Naqoura , the coastal headquarters of the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon ( UNIFIL ) . " The committee will meet following a complaint by Israel over an incident in which two Lebanese residents were injured by Hizbollah fire in the Sikhin village ... on August 29 , " an Israeli army spokeswoman said on Saturday . The monitoring committee was set up to deal with violations of an April 25 ceasefire understanding that ended 17 days of fighting between Israel and the guerrillas . The understandings forbid firing from or at civilian targest but do not rule out guerrilla attacks on Israeli troops and their local militia allies in south Lebanon . Around 1,000 Israeli troops patrol a 15 km ( nine-mile ) south Lebanon occupation zone which the Jewish state carved out in 1985 to prevent attacks on its northern bordder . Hizbollah ( Party of God ) gunmen have waged a guerrilla war to oust Israel from the area . +KPD confirms Iraqi military aid-U.N. official . BAGHDAD 1996-08-31 Kurdistan Democratic Party ( KDP ) of Massoud Barzani said that it was being backed by Iraqi heavy armour and artillery in a battle with rival Kurds for the city of Arbil , a senior U.N. official in Baghdad said . " They have confirmed to us that Iraqi troops are taking part in the attack on Arbil ... We got the information from KDP leaders in KDP headquarters in Saladdin , " the official , who asked not to be identified , told Reuters . +Fire destroys restaurant in Bahraini village . MANAMA 1996-08-31 A fire has completely gutted a Turkish-operated restaurant in a Bahraini village , residents said . They said a fire broke out at Shul'ala restaurant in the early hours on Saturday in al-Daih village , five km ( three miles ) west of the capital Manama . It was not immediately clear what caused the fire or if there were any casualties . Government officials had no immediate comment . +Iraq 's Aziz says Baghdad aiding KDP against rivals . BAGHDAD 1996-08-31 Iraq 's Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz said on Saturday Iraqi troops were fighting in northern Iraq to aid Kurdish rebel leader Massoud Barzani against rival forces . " The leadership has decided to provide support and military aid to Mr Massoud Barzani and his comrades to enable them confront the vicious aggression ... from ( Patriotic Union of Kurdistan chief ) Jalal Talabani , " Aziz said in a statement carried by the official Iraqi News Agency ( INA ) . Aziz said Iraq 's military intervention , the first on such scale since the U.S. and allies decided to protect Iraqi Kurds against Baghdad , was in response to a plea from Barzani to President Saddam Hussein to back him militarily and save his people from attacks by Iran and Talabani . He said Barzani sent a message to Saddam on August 22 in which he said : " The conspiracy is beyond our capability therefore we plead with your excellency to order Iraqi armed forces to interfere to help us to evade the foreign threat and put an end to Talabani 's treason and conspiracy . " U.N. relief officials said they were not aware that the tanks advancing on Arbil were manned by Iraqi troops as they advanced from KDP-controlled areas and raised KDP flags . +U.N. denies reports of Iraqi tank assault on Arbil . BAGHDAD 1996-08-31 United Nations relief officials said on Saturday the fighting in Arbil in northern Iraq was between rival Kurdish factions and they were not aware of any Iraqi military advance on the city . " KDP ( Kurdistan Democratic Party ) is trying to overtake the city . They are using tanks . I think they will succeed . We have in no way seen any Iraqi troops in the city or in its approaches , " a U.N. relief official told Reuters . +PRESS DIGEST - Tunisia - Aug 31 . TUNIS 1996-08-31 These are the leading stories in the Tunisian press on Saturday . Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy . LA PRESSE - After Tunisia called on France to respect Tunisian immigrants ' dignity , France says it welcomes legal Tunisian residents . - Tunisia 's exports of spare parts amounted to 220 million dinars in 1995 . LE TEMPS - Trade talks between Tunisia and the Palestinian Authority . - Speaker of parliament Habib Boulares arrives in Tripoli to represent President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali at the Libyan revolution anniversary celebrations . ( $ 1 = 0.96 dinar ) +Automakers , U.S. agency plan air bag safety ads . DETROIT 1996-08-31 Automakers , suppliers , insurers and the federal government 's auto safety agency Saturday launched a $ 10 million safety awareness campaign aimed at reducing the number of children killed accidentally by air bags in cars and trucks . Officials said they will work with law enforcement agencies , pediatricians and media to warn parents about the dangers that air bags pose to children and adults not wearing seatbelts . Since 1993 , 24 children have been killed by the explosive force of automotive air bags , which inflate at speeds up to 200 miles per hour . The first portion of the campaign involves pickup trucks equipped with billboards that were driving along some of the nation 's busiest interstate highways during the Labor Day weekend , including Interstate 95 on the East Coast , Interstates 80 and 90 in the Midwest and Interstate 5 in California . The boards read : " Air Bag Safety : Everyone Buckled , Kids in Back . " Janet Dewey , executive director of the industry-funded National Automobile Occupant Protection Campaign , said most of the injuries to children occurred because they were not wearing seatbelts . A child 's chances of being killed in a car accident , whether the vehicle was equipped with an air bag or not , is reduced by 29 percent when they are in the rear seat , she said . The auto industry was about three to six years away from introducing " smart " air bags with the ability to detect the size and position of an occupant and adjust inflation pressures accordingly . Current air bags were designed to halt the forward momentum of an average-sized , unbelted adult male , not a small child . Automakers petitioned the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to allow them to introduce air bags that inflate less aggressively to help reduce unwanted injuries . " Even if changes are made to airbags today , we 'd still have 20 million vehicles on the road with current technology , " Dewey said . " The public has n't been getting the message . " +Two die as New Hampshire motel explodes and burns . ROCHESTER , N.H. 1996-08-30 Adds deaths , other details ) An explosion leveled Rochester 's one-story Lilac Falls Motel , killing two people , fire officials said Friday . " It was an explosion , and then it got involved in fire . As far as I know , it 's been to four alarms -- more trucks , more people , " said Don Penney of the Rochester Fire Department said . Eyewitnesses told Boston television stations they saw a gasoline truck parked behind the Lilac Falls Motel and smelled gasoline shortly before the explosion . Fire department officials said they were investigating the cause of the blast and searching for any more casualties . Officials did not immediately identify the victims . Local hospital officials said a few firemen were treated for smoke inhalation but there were no other injuries . +Car kills two trying to avoid Texas drag race . DALLAS 1996-08-31 An illegal drag race on a Dallas street turned deadly when another vehicle veered into the crowd , killing two people and injuring a dozen more , police said Saturday . Organisers tried to block off traffic while preparing the drag race late on Friday , but an allegedly drunk driver was unable to slow down in time and ran into a group of spectators as he swerved to avoid one of the cars that was to take part in the race . A 26-year-old man and an 18-year-old woman were killed . The driver , aged 51 , was arrested and charged on two counts of intoxicated manslaughter . A police spokesman said the straight , flat stretch of road was often used illegally as a drag strip by Dallas youths . +U.S. warplanes , ships in Gulf await Clinton order . Jim Adams WASHINGTON 1996-08-31 More than 300 U.S. warplanes and 20 ships were available on Saturday in case President Bill Clinton ordered the use of U.S. force against Iraqi military action in northern Iraq , U.S. defense officials said . They said 200 fighter planes , including 79 on the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson , were already in the Gulf ; the aircraft carrier Enterprise was in the eastern Mediterranean with 79 more , and an air expeditionary force with up to 40 more was ready to fly from the United States if ordered . " Yesterday the president ordered the Department of Defense to take prudent planning steps to have forces ready to deploy to the region should he direct us to do so , " Pentagon spokesman Doug Kennett said . " We have taken those prudent planning steps . " Clinton said on Saturday he had ordered U.S. forces in the Gulf to go on high alert and was reinforcing them in response to Iraqi attacks on Kurdish dissidents in northern Iraq . " These developments ... cause me grave concern , " Clinton said at a campaign stop in Troy , Tennessee . But he added , " It is premature at this time , and I want to emphasize that , highly premature to speculate on any response we might have . " The U.S. defense officials said military flights to enforce no-fly zones in both northern and southern Iraq doubled over the weekend . Clinton said Iraqi military forces overran the city of Arbil , which has been held since 1994 by Kurdish rebels who Baghdad says are backed by Iran . There were unconfirmed reports that Iran had sent troops into northern Iraq in response to Iraq 's attack . U.S. plans rely heavily on U.S. air attacks on Iraqi forces , but there are also 23,000 U.S. troops in the region , according to defense officials . In addition to the 158 F / A-18 , F-14 and other fighter planes on the aircraft carriers Vinson and Enterprise , the Air Force air expeditionary force of 30 to 40 F-15 and F-16 fighter planes and fuel tankers is ready to fly from three U.S. bases in the United States , they said . The expeditionary force would include nearly 1,000 Air Force personnel in ground and support crews , they said . The 23,000 U.S. military people already in the Gulf consist of 15,000 sailors and Marines , 6,000 U.S. servicemen based primarily in Saudi Arabia and 2,000 U.S. troops in the area for military exercises . Most of the Marines are on three ships in the Tarawa Amphibious Readiness Group . The Carl Vinson leads a battle group that includes seven other ships , and there are nine other U.S. ships in the Gulf for a total of 20 . +Two missing Belgian teenagers found unharmed . BRUSSELS 1996-08-31 Two Belgian teenage girls missing since Thursday have been found unharmed , police said on Saturday . " The girls , Rachel and Severine , have been found . They are unharmed , " a police official in Liege said . He declined to say whether the girls had been kidnapped or whether they had gone away of their own accord . Late on Friday , the two girls -- Rachel Legeard , 18 , and Severine Potty , 19 -- were reported missing after failing to return home from a shopping trip to the eastern town of Liege on Thursday . Earlier , police declined to comment on whether it suspected a link with the Marc Dutroux case , the paedophile kidnap , sex abuse and murder scandal which has rocked Belgium in the past two weeks . +Algeria restaurant bomb kills seven - newSpaper . PARIS 1996-08-31 A bomb explosion in a restaurant west of Algiers on Friday killed seven people , an Algerian newspaper said on Saturday . Algerian security forces said in a statement that two people were killed and six were wounded when a home-made bomb ripped through a restaurant in the coastal town of Staoueli . But Le Matin newspaper , quoting witnesses , said the bomb killed seven people and wounded 20 . Liberte newspaper said the bomb was hidden in a bag in front of the restaurant and that a booby-trapped car was defused near the restaurant shortly before the bomb went off . A week ago a home-made bomb exploded in a market in the western coastal town of Bou Haroun , 65 km ( 40 miles ) from Algiers . Newspapers said it killed two women and five children . Algerian newspapers quoted the Human Rights National Observatory ( ONDH ) , a government-appointed watchdog , as saying earlier in August that about 1,400 civilians had been killed in bomb attacks blamed on Moslem guerrillas in the past two years . An estimated 50,000 people have died in Algeria 's violence pitting Moslem rebels against government forces since early 1992 when the authorities cancelled a general election in which radical Islamists had taken a commanding lead . +Iran agents stormed German diplomat 's home -- Bonn . BONN 1996-08-31 Iranian security forces burst into the home of a German cultural attache in Tehran a month ago and seized his guests for questioning , Bonn 's foreign ministry said on Saturday . A spokesman said he could substantially confirm a report in the news weekly Der Spiegel , which said Iranian secret police burst in while attache Jens Gust was entertaining six Iranian writers and their wives . Gust was threatened with violence , then locked into a room to be interrogated on suspicion of " promoting activities hostile to the state " while his guests were taken away , the magazine said . The ministry spokesman said the German embassy immediately made a sharp protest to the Tehran government . The Iranian ambassador was also summoned to the ministry in Bonn to hear a sharp protest and " disapproval of this glaring breach of the principles of international law " , he added . Iran subsequently said it regretted the incident , which it said had been the result of a misunderstanding . All those detained appeared to have been freed , the spokesman said . Relations between the two countries are currently under strain because of the testimony in a Berlin court of former Iranian president Abolhassan Banisadr . Banisadr , an avowed opponent of the Tehran government who now lives in exile , accused top Iranian leaders of personally ordering the assassination of three exiled Kurdish leaders in a Berlin restaurant in 1992 . Iran has asked Germany to extradite Banisadr , who is due is due back in Berlin next Thursday to continue his testimony . Banisadr , who received political asylum in France after fleeing there in 1981 , told Der Spiegel he did not plan to ask for a guarantee of safe conduct . If Germany were to extradite him , he said , it would " lose face before the whole world " . German prosecutors have already accused Iran 's intelligence minister Ali Fallahiyan of ordering the killing of the Kurdish leaders . Iran , which denies the allegations , urged German authorities to disregard Banisadr 's testimony and said it could hurt relations . +Italy 's Dini meets Burundi negotiator Nyerere . ROME 1996-08-31 Italian Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini on Saturday met former Tanzanian president Julius Nyerere , the international negotiator for Burundi , the ministry said . Nyerere arrived in Rome this week on a private visit and held talks with the U.S. special envoy to Burundi , Howard Wolpe , and the Sant ' Egidio Community , an Italian Roman Catholic organisation which has been monitoring Burundi closely . " ( Nyerere ) informed Minister Dini of the latest developments in the ( Great Lakes ) region , with particular respect to Burundi following the military coup d'etat on July 25 , " the ministry said in a statement . It gave no details of their talks . Nyerere was due to be presented with an " Artisans for Peace " prize by the Lay Volunteers ' International Organisation on Sunday . He leaves Rome on Monday . The U.N. Security Council on Friday condemned the coup by retired Tutsi major Pierre Buyoya and for the first time said in a resolution it intended to pressure Buyoya into unconditional negotiations with all parties and factions " without exception " . Buyoya on Saturday dismissed its threat of an arms embargo against Burundi and flatly ruled out talks with Hutu rebels . Some 150,000 people -- mostly civilians -- have died in Burundi since 1993 when the country 's first democratically elected Hutu president was killed in an attempted army coup . +Nato declines comment on fighting in Iraq . BRUSSELS 1996-08-31 The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation 's spokesman on Saturday declined all comment on reports of armed conflict in northern Iraq . But a NATO official told Reuters : " We are watching the situation closely . " Earlier on Saturday , an Iraqi Kurd leader said both Iraqi troops and Kurdistan Democratic Party ( KDP ) forces were attacking the city of Arbil in northern Iraq . +More automatic weapons stolen in Belgium . BRUSSELS 1996-08-31 More than 10 weapons , including automatic Kalashnikov rifles , were stolen from an arms store in Belgium , police said on Saturday . A policeman in the southern Belgian town of Chatelet told Reuters that thieves used a car to ram the window of an arms store in neighbouring Chatelineaux last night . It was the second arms robbery this week . On Tuesday , thieves stole about 40 forearms from a shooting range in southern Belgium , including Kalashnikov , Uzi and Fal automatic weapons . +No trace of two missing teenagers in Belgium . BRUSSELS 1996-08-31 Belgian police said on Saturday they had found no trace of two teenage girls reported missing during a shopping trip three days ago . " There is no trace so far , the enquiry is continuing , " a Liege police official told Reuters . Late on Friday , Liege police said in a statement that on Thursday , Rachel Legeard , 18 , and Severine Potty , 19 , had gone shopping to the eastern town of Liege on Thursday , where Legeard 's wallet had been stolen . After reporting the theft to the police , they took a bus home and reportedly got off the bus before arriving in their home village of Nandrin . They have not been seen since . Police declined to comment on whether it suspected a link with the Marc Dutroux case , the paedophile kidnap , sex abuse and murder scandal which has rocked Belgium in the past two weeks . +Controversial IRA film screened at Venice festival . Vera Haller VENICE , Italy 1996-08-31 Dublin-born director Neil Jordan says he never lost more sleep over a film than over " Michael Collins " , his controversial epic about the IRA which has its premiere on Saturday at the Venice Film Festival . The film , starring Liam Neeson and Julia Roberts , recounts the life of Michael Collins , the Irish Republican Army 's Director of Intelligence who fought for Irish independence from 1919 to 1921 . Although not due for release in Britain until early next year , some politicians have already said they feared it would fan sectarian tensions in British-ruled Northern Ireland . Jordan defends his decision to make the film , whose screenplay he wrote himself after years of research , saying it was " more about history than any political statement " . " The film spares neither the Irish nor the British in its depiction of the savagery of the time , " Jordan said in a statement released by Warner Bros . " How often has independence been achieved without bloodshed ? Very rarely . " Jordan , whose 1992 film " The Crying Game " also came under fire for what was perceived as a sympathetic portrayal of the IRA , said Collins was more than just a revolutionary . " He developed techniques of guerilla warfare later copied by independence movements around the world , from Mao Tse-Tung in China to Yitzak Shamir in Israel , " Jordan said . " Collins would never be a proponent of contemporary terrorism as practised today . He was a soldier and a statesman and , over time , a man of peace . " Leeson , the Northern Ireland-born actor who was nominated for an Oscar for best actor for his performance in " Schindler 's List " , plays the lead role in Jordan 's film . Aidan Quinn portrays Harry Boland , Collins ' best friend , and rival for the love of Kitty Kiernan , played by Roberts . Much of the film was shot on location in Dublin with Jordan using thousands of its citizens as unpaid extras . A set , however , was used for the fighting scenes . Noting that information about Collins was " as mysterious as the existence he maintained " , Jordan said he made some historical assumptions in the film . " I have made choices about certain events based on my own extensive research into his letters and reported speeches , " he said . " I wanted to make this a story as accurate as possible without killing it dramatically and I think I have . It is a very true film . " One of the assumptions is his interpretation of the murky circumstances surrounding the shooting death of Collins , who had broken with his comrades when he sought a negotiated settlement with Britain , in an ambush in 1922 . " I have never lost more sleep over the making of a film than I have over ' Michael Collins ' , but I 'll never make a more important one , " Jordan said . " In the life of one person you can tell the events that formed the north and south of Ireland as they are today . " diff --git a/test-A/in.tsv b/test-A/in.tsv new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3d6f0e0 --- /dev/null +++ b/test-A/in.tsv @@ -0,0 +1,230 @@ +SOCCER - JAPAN GET LUCKY WIN , CHINA IN SURPRISE DEFEAT . Nadim Ladki AL-AIN , United Arab Emirates 1996-12-06 Japan began the defence of their Asian Cup title with a lucky 2-1 win against Syria in a Group C championship match on Friday . But China saw their luck desert them in the second match of the group , crashing to a surprise 2-0 defeat to newcomers Uzbekistan . China controlled most of the match and saw several chances missed until the 78th minute when Uzbek striker Igor Shkvyrin took advantage of a misdirected defensive header to lob the ball over the advancing Chinese keeper and into an empty net . Oleg Shatskiku made sure of the win in injury time , hitting an unstoppable left foot shot from just outside the area . The former Soviet republic was playing in an Asian Cup finals tie for the first time . Despite winning the Asian Games title two years ago , Uzbekistan are in the finals as outsiders . Two goals from defensive errors in the last six minutes allowed Japan to come from behind and collect all three points from their opening meeting against Syria . Takuya Takagi scored the winner in the 88th minute , rising to head a Hiroshige Yanagimoto cross towards the Syrian goal which goalkeeper Salem Bitar appeared to have covered but then allowed to slip into the net . It was the second costly blunder by Syria in four minutes . Defender Hassan Abbas rose to intercept a long ball into the area in the 84th minute but only managed to divert it into the top corner of Bitar 's goal . Nader Jokhadar had given Syria the lead with a well-struck header in the seventh minute . Japan then laid siege to the Syrian penalty area for most of the game but rarely breached the Syrian defence . Bitar pulled off fine saves whenever they did . Japan coach Shu Kamo said : ' ' The Syrian own goal proved lucky for us . The Syrians scored early and then played defensively and adopted long balls which made it hard for us . ' ' Japan , co-hosts of the World Cup in 2002 and ranked 20th in the world by FIFA , are favourites to regain their title here . Hosts UAE play Kuwait and South Korea take on Indonesia on Saturday in Group A matches . All four teams are level with one point each from one game . +RUGBY UNION - CUTTITTA BACK FOR ITALY AFTER A YEAR . ROME 1996-12-06 Italy recalled Marcello Cuttitta on Friday for their friendly against Scotland at Murrayfield more than a year after the 30-year-old wing announced he was retiring following differences over selection . Cuttitta , who trainer George Coste said was certain to play on Saturday week , was named in a 21-man squad lacking only two of the team beaten 54-21 by England at Twickenham last month . Stefano Bordon is out through illness and Coste said he had dropped back row Corrado Covi , who had been recalled for the England game after five years out of the national team . Cuttitta announced his retirement after the 1995 World Cup , where he took issue with being dropped from the Italy side that faced England in the pool stages . Coste said he had approached the player two months ago about a comeback . " He ended the World Cup on the wrong note , " Coste said . " I thought it would be useful to have him back and he said he would be available . I think now is the right time for him to return . " Squad : Javier Pertile , Paolo Vaccari , Marcello Cuttitta , Ivan Francescato , Leandro Manteri , Diego Dominguez , Francesco Mazzariol , Alessandro Troncon , Orazio Arancio , Andrea Sgorlon , Massimo Giovanelli , Carlo Checchinato , Walter Cristofoletto , Franco Properzi Curti , Carlo Orlandi , Massimo Cuttitta , Giambatista Croci , Gianluca Guidi , Nicola Mazzucato , Alessandro Moscardi , Andrea Castellani . +SOCCER - LATE GOALS GIVE JAPAN WIN OVER SYRIA . AL-AIN , United Arab Emirates 1996-12-06 Two goals in the last six minutes gave holders Japan an uninspiring 2-1 Asian Cup victory over Syria on Friday . Takuya Takagi headed the winner in the 88th minute of the group C game after goalkeeper Salem Bitar spoiled a mistake-free display by allowing the ball to slip under his body . It was the second Syrian defensive blunder in four minutes . Defender Hassan Abbas rose to intercept a long ball into the area in the 84th minute but only managed to divert it into the top corner of Bitar 's goal . Syria had taken the lead from their first serious attack in the seventh minute . Nader Jokhadar headed a cross from the right by Ammar Awad into the top right corner of Kenichi Shimokawa 's goal . Japan then laid siege to the Syrian penalty area and had a goal disallowed for offside in the 16th minute . A minute later , Bitar produced a good double save , first from Kazuyoshi Miura 's header and then blocked a Takagi follow-up shot . Bitar saved well again from Miura in the 37th minute , parrying away his header from a corner . Japan started the second half brightly but Bitar denied them an equaliser when he dived to his right to save Naoki Soma 's low drive in the 53rd minute . Japan : 19 - Kenichi Shimokawa , 2 - Hiroshige Yanagimoto , 3 - Naoki Soma , 4 - Masami Ihara , 5 - Norio Omura , 6 - Motohiro Yamaguchi , 8 - Masakiyo Maezono ( 7 - Yasuto Honda 71 ) , 9 - Takuya Takagi , 10 - Hiroshi Nanami , 11 - Kazuyoshi Miura , 15 - Hiroaki Morishima ( 14 - Masayuki Okano 75 ) . Syria : 24 - Salem Bitar , 3 - Bachar Srour ; 4 - Hassan Abbas , 5 - Tarek Jabban , 6 - Ammar Awad ( 9 - Louay Taleb 69 ) , 8 - Nihad al-Boushi , 10 - Mohammed Afash , 12 - Ali Dib , 13 - Abdul Latif Helou ( 17 - Ammar Rihawiy 46 ) , 14 - Khaled Zaher ; 16 - Nader Jokhadar . +FREESTYLE SKIING-WORLD CUP MOGUL RESULTS . TIGNES , France 1996-12-06 Results of the World Cup freestyle skiing moguls competition on Friday : Men 1. Jesper Ronnback ( Sweden ) 25.76 points 2. Andrei Ivanov ( Russia ) 24.88 3. Ryan Johnson ( Canada ) 24.57 4. Jean-Luc Brassard ( Canada ) 24.40 5. Korneilus Hole ( Norway ) 23.92 6. Jeremie Collomb-Patton ( France ) 23.87 7. Jim Moran ( U.S. ) 23.25 8. Dominick Gauthier ( Canada ) 22.73 9. Johann Gregoire ( France ) 22.58 10. Troy Benson ( U.S. ) 22.56 Women 1. Tatjana Mittermayer ( Germany ) 24.32 2. Candice Gilg ( France ) 24.31 3. Minna Karhu ( Finland ) 24.05 4. Tae Satoya ( Japan ) 23.75 5. Ann Battellle ( U.S. ) 23.56 6. Donna Weinbrecht ( U.S. ) 22.48 7. Liz McIntyre ( U.S. ) 22.00 8. Elena Koroleva ( Russia ) 21.77 9. Ljudmila Dymchenko ( Russia ) 21.59 10. Katleen Allais ( France ) 21.58 +SOCCER - ASIAN CUP GROUP C RESULTS . AL-AIN , United Arab Emirates 1996-12-06 Results of Asian Cup group C matches played on Friday : Japan 2 Syria 1 ( halftime 0-1 ) Scorers : Japan - Hassan Abbas 84 own goal , Takuya Takagi 88 . Syria - Nader Jokhadar 7 Attendance : 10,000 . China 0 Uzbekistan 2 ( halftime 0-0 ) Scorers : Shkvyrin Igor 78 , Shatskikh Oleg 90 Attendence : 3,000 Standings ( tabulate under played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Uzbekistan 1 1 0 0 2 0 3 Japan 1 1 0 0 2 1 3 Syria 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 China 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 +CRICKET - PAKISTAN V NEW ZEALAND ONE-DAY SCOREBOARD . [ CORRECTED 14:06 GMT ] SIALKOT , Pakistan 1996-12-06 Scoreboard in the second one-day cricket international between Pakistan and New Zealand on Friday : Pakistan Saeed Anwar run out 91 ( corrects from 90 ) Zahoor Elahi b Cairns 86 ( corrects from 87 ) Ijaz Ahmad c Spearman b Vaughan 59 Inzamamul Haq st Germon b Astle 2 Wasim Akram b Harris 4 Shahid Afridi b Harris 2 Moin Khan c Astle b Harris 1 Waqar Younis st Germon b Harris 0 Saqlain Mushtaq b Harris 2 Mushtaq Ahmad not out 5 Salim Malik not out 1 Extras ( lb-8 nb-2 w-14 ) 24 Total ( for 9 wickets in 47 overs ) 277 Fall of wicket : 1-177 ( corrects from 1-178 ) 2-225 3-240 4-247 5-252 6-260 7-261 8-269 9-276 Bowling : Doull 8-1-60-0 ( w-3 ) , Kennedy 3-0-24-0 ( w-7 nb-1 ) , Cairns 8-1-35-1 ( w-2 ) , Vaughan 9-1-55-1 , Harris 10-0-42-5 ( w-1 ) , Astle 9-0-53-1 ( w-1 nb-1 ) New Zealand innings B. Young c Moin Khan b Waqar 5 C. Spearman c Moin Khan b Wasim 0 A. Parore c Ijaz Ahmad b Saqlain 37 S. Fleming c and b Afridi 88 C. Cairns b Saqlain 10 N. Astle c Ijaz Ahmad b Salim Malik 20 C. Harris lbw b Wasim 22 L. Germon lbw b Afridi 2 J. Vaughan c Moin Khan b Wasim 13 S. Doull c subs ( M. Wasim ) b Waqar 1 R. Kennedy not out 7 Extras ( b-9 lb-3 w-12 nb-2 ) 26 Total ( all out in 42.1 overs ) 231 Fall of wickets : 1-3 2-7 3-125 4-146 5-170 6-190 7-195 8-213 9-216 . Bowling : Wasim Akram 8.1-0-43-3 ( 9w , 1nb ) , Waqar Younis 6-0-32-2 ( 2w , 1nb ) , Saqlain Mushtaq 8-0-54-2 , Mushtaq Ahmad 10-0-42-0 ( 1w ) , Shahid Afridi 7-0-40-2 , Salim Malik 2.5-0-8-1 , Ijaz Ahmad 0.1-0-0-0 . Result : Pakistan won by 46 runs . Third one-day match : December 8 , in Karachi . +SOCCER - ENGLISH F.A. CUP SECOND ROUND RESULT . LONDON 1996-12-06 Result of an English F.A. Challenge Cup second round match on Friday : Plymouth 4 Exeter 1 +SOCCER - BLINKER BAN LIFTED . LONDON 1996-12-06 Dutch forward Reggie Blinker had his indefinite suspension lifted by FIFA on Friday and was set to make his Sheffield Wednesday comeback against Liverpool on Saturday . Blinker missed his club 's last two games after FIFA slapped a worldwide ban on him for appearing to sign contracts for both Wednesday and Udinese while he was playing for Feyenoord . FIFA 's players ' status committee , meeting in Barcelona , decided that although the Udinese document was basically valid , it could not be legally protected . The committee said the Italian club had violated regulations by failing to inform Feyenoord , with whom the player was under contract . Blinker was fined 75,000 Swiss francs ( $ 57,600 ) for failing to inform the Engllsh club of his previous commitment to Udinese . +SOCCER - LEEDS ' BOWYER FINED FOR PART IN FAST-FOOD FRACAS . LONDON 1996-12-06 Leeds ' England under-21 striker Lee Bowyer was fined 4,500 pounds ( $ 7,400 ) on Friday for hurling chairs at restaurant staff during a disturbance at a McDonald 's fast-food restaurant . Bowyer , 19 , who was caught in the act by security cameras , pleaded guilty to a charge of affray at a court in London . He was fined and ordered to pay a total of 175 pounds to two members of staff injured in the fracas in an east London restaurant in October . Leeds had already fined Bowyer 4,000 pounds ( $ 6,600 ) and warned him a repeat of his criminal behaviour could cost him his place in the side . Bowyer , who moved to the Yorkshire club in August for 3.5 million pounds ( $ 5.8 million ) , was expected to play against Middlesbrough on Saturday . +BASKETBALL - EUROLEAGUE STANDINGS . LONDON 1996-12-06 Standings in the men 's EuroLeague basketball championship after Thursday 's matches ( tabulate under played , won , lost , points ) : Group A CSKA Moscow ( Russia 9 6 3 15 Stefanel Milan ( Italy ) 9 6 3 15 Maccabi Tel Aviv ( Israel ) 9 5 4 14 Ulker Spor ( Turkey ) 9 4 5 13 Limoges ( France ) 9 3 6 12 Panionios ( Greece ) 9 3 6 12 Group B Teamsystem Bologna ( Italy ) 9 7 2 16 Olympiakos ( Greece ) 9 5 4 14 Cibona Zagreb ( Croatia ) 9 5 4 14 Alba Berlin ( Germany ) 9 5 4 14 Estudiantes Madrid ( Spain ) 9 5 4 14 Charleroi ( Belgium ) 9 0 9 9 Group C Panathinaikos ( Greece ) 9 7 2 16 Ljubljana ( Slovenia ) 9 6 3 15 Villeurbanne ( France ) 9 6 3 15 Barcelona ( Spain ) 9 4 5 13 Split ( Croatia ) 9 4 5 13 Bayer Leverkusen ( Germany ) 9 0 9 9 Group D Efes Pilsen ( Turkey ) 9 7 2 16 Pau-Orthez ( France ) 9 5 4 14 Partizan Belgrade ( Yugoslavia ) 9 5 4 14 Kinder Bologna ( Italy ) 9 4 5 13 Sevilla ( Spain ) 9 4 5 13 Dynamo Moscow ( Russia ) 9 2 7 11 +RUGBY UNION - LITTLE TO MISS CAMPESE FAREWELL . Robert Kitson LONDON 1996-12-06 Centre Jason Little will miss Australia 's end-of-tour fixture against the Barbarians at Twickenham on Saturday . Little has opted not to risk aggravating the knee injury which ruled him out of a large chunk of the tour and is replaced by fellow Queenslander Daniel Herbert . Owen Finegan has recovered from the knocks he took in last weekend 's test against Wales and retains his place in the back-row ahead of Daniel Manu . The Wallabies have their sights set on a 13th successive victory to end their European tour with a 100 percent record but also want to turn on the style and provide David Campese with a fitting send-off in his final match in Australian colours . The Wallabies currently have no plans to make any special presentation to the 34-year-old winger but a full house of 75,000 spectators will still gather in the hope of witnessing one last moment of magic . Campese will be up against a familiar foe in the shape of Barbarians captain Rob Andrew , the man who kicked Australia to defeat with a last-ditch drop-goal in the World Cup quarter-final in Cape Town . " Campo has a massive following in this country and has had the public with him ever since he first played here in 1984 , " said Andrew , also likely to be making his final Twickenham appearance . On tour , Australia have won all four tests against Italy , Scotland , Ireland and Wales , and scored 414 points at an average of almost 35 points a game . League duties restricted the Barbarians ' selectorial options but they still boast 13 internationals including England full-back Tim Stimpson and recalled wing Tony Underwood , plus All Black forwards Ian Jones and Norm Hewitt . Teams : Barbarians - 15 - Tim Stimpson ( England ) ; 14 - Nigel Walker ( Wales ) , 13 - Allan Bateman ( Wales ) , 12 - Gregor Townsend ( Scotland ) , 11 - Tony Underwood ( England ) ; 10 - Rob Andrew ( England ) , 9 - Rob Howley ( Wales ) ; 8 - Scott Quinnell ( Wales ) , 7 - Neil Back ( England ) , 6 - Dale McIntosh ( Pontypridd ) , 5 - Ian Jones ( New Zealand ) , 4 - Craig Quinnell ( Wales ) , 3 - Darren Garforth ( Leicester ) , 2 - Norm Hewitt ( New Zealand ) , 1 - Nick Popplewell ( Ireland ) . Australia - 15 - Matthew Burke ; 14 - Joe Roff , 13 - Daniel Herbert , 12 - Tim Horan ( captain ) , 11 - David Campese ; 10 - Pat Howard , 9 - Sam Payne ; 8 - Michael Brial , 7 - David Wilson , 6 - Owen Finegan , 5 - David Giffin , 4 - Tim Gavin , 3 - Andrew Blades , 2 - Marco Caputo , 1 - Dan Crowley . +GOLF - ZIMBABWE OPEN SECOND ROUND SCORES . HARARE 1996-12-06 Leading second round scores in the Zimbabwe Open at the par-72 Chapman Golf Club on Friday ( South African unless stated ) : 132 Des Terblanche 65 67 133 Mark McNulty ( Zimbabwe ) 72 61 134 Steve van Vuuren 65 69 136 Nick Price ( Zimbabwe ) 68 68 , Justin Hobday 71 65 , Andrew Pitts ( U.S. ) 69 67 138 Mark Cayeux ( Zimbabwe ) 69 69 , Mark Murless 71 67 139 Hennie Swart 75 64 , Andrew Park 72 67 140 Schalk van der Merwe ( Namibia ) 67 73 , Desvonde Botes 72 68 , Greg Reid 72 68 , Clinton Whitelaw 70 70 , Brett Liddle 75 65 , Hugh Baiocchi 73 67 141 Adilson da Silva ( Brazil ) 72 69 , Sammy Daniels 73 68 , Trevor Dodds ( Namibia ) 72 69 142 Don Robertson ( U.S. ) 73 69 , Dion Fourie 69 73 , Steve Waltman 72 70 , Ian Dougan 73 69 +SOCCER - UNCAPPED PLAYERS CALLED TO FACE MACEDONIA . BUCHAREST 1996-12-06 Romania trainer Anghel Iordanescu called up three uncapped players on Friday in his squad to face Macedonia next week in a World Cup qualifier . Midfielder Valentin Stefan and striker Viorel Ion of Otelul Galati and defender Liviu Ciobotariu of National Bucharest are the newcomers for the European group eight clash in Macedonia on December 14 . Iordanescu said he had picked them because of their good performances in the domestic championship in which National Bucharest are top and Otelul Galati third . " I think it 's fair to give them a chance , " he told reporters . League title-holders Steaua Bucharest , who finished bottom of their Champions ' League group in the European Cup , have only two players in the squad . Attacking midfielder Adrian Ilie , who recently moved from Steaua to Turkish club Galatasaray , is ruled out after two yellow-card offences . Squad : Goalkeepers - Bogdan Stelea , Florin Prunea . Defenders - Dan Petrescu , Daniel Prodan , Anton Dobos , Cornel Papura , Liviu Ciobotariu , Tibor Selymess , Iulian Filipescu . Midfielders - Gheorghe Hagi , Gheorghe Popescu , Constantin Galca , Valentin Stefan , Basarab Panduru , Dorinel Munteanu , Ovidiu Stinga . Forwards - Ioan Vladoiu , Gheorghe Craioveanu , Ionel Danciulescu , Viorel Ion . REUTER +SOCCER - BRAZILIAN CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS . RIO DE JANEIRO 1996-12-05 Results of Brazilian soccer championship semifinal , first leg matches on Thursday . Goias 1 Gremio 3 Portuguesa 1 Atletico Mineiro 0 +CRICKET - LARA ENDURES ANOTHER MISERABLE DAY . Robert Galvin MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 Australia gave Brian Lara another reason to be miserable when they beat West Indies by five wickets in the opening World Series limited overs match on Friday . Lara , disciplined for misconduct on Wednesday , was dismissed for five to extend a disappointing run of form on tour . Australia , who hold a 2-0 lead in the five-match test series , overhauled West Indies ' total of 172 all out with eight balls to spare to end a run of six successive one-day defeats . All-rounder Greg Blewett steered his side to a comfortable victory with an unbeaten 57 in 90 balls to the delight of the 42,442 crowd . Man-of-the match Blewett came to the wicket with the total on 70 for two and hit three fours during an untroubled innings lasting 129 minutes . His crucial fifth-wicket partnership with fellow all-rounder Stuart Law , who scored 21 , added 71 off 85 balls . Lara looked out of touch during his brief stay at the crease before chipping a simple catch to Shane Warne at mid-wicket . West Indies tour manager Clive Lloyd has apologised for Lara 's behaviour on Tuesday . He ( Lara ) had told Australia coach Geoff Marsh that wicketkeeper Ian Healy was unwelcome in the visitors ' dressing room . The Melbourne crowd were clearly angered by the incident , loudly jeering the West Indies vice-captain as he walked to the middle . It was left to fellow left-hander Shivnarine Chanderpaul to hold the innings together with a gritty 54 despite the handicap of an injured groin . Chanderpaul was forced to rely on a runner for most of his innings after hurting himself as he scurried back to his crease to avoid being run out . Pakistan , who arrive in Australia later this month , are the other team competing in the World Series tournament . +CRICKET - AUSTRALIA V WEST INDIES WORLD SERIES SCOREBOARD . MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 Scoreboard in the World Series limited overs match between Australia and West Indies on Friday : West Indies S. Campbell c Healy b Gillespie 31 R. Samuels c M. Waugh b Gillespie 7 B. Lara c Warne b Moody 5 S. Chanderpaul c Healy b Blewett 54 C. Hooper run out 7 J. Adams lbw b Moody 5 J. Murray c Blewett b Warne 24 N. McLean c and b M. Waugh 7 K. Benjamin b Warne 8 C. Ambrose run out 2 C. Walsh not out 8 Extras ( lb-10 w-1 nb-3 ) 14 Total ( 49.2 overs ) 172 Fall of wickets : 1-11 2-38 3-64 4-73 5-81 6-120 7-135 8-150 9-153 . Bowling : Reiffel 10-2-26-0 ( nb-3 ) , Gillespie 10-0-39-2 , Moody 10-1-25-2 , Blewett 6.2-0-27-1 , Warne 10-0-34-2 ( w-1 ) , M. Waugh 3-0-11-1 . Australia M. Taylor b McLean 29 M. Waugh c Murray b Benjamin 27 R. Ponting lbw McLean 5 G. Blewett not out 57 M. Bevan st Murray b Hooper 3 S. Law b Hooper 21 T. Moody not out 3 Extras ( lb-17 nb-8 w-3 ) 28 Total ( for five wickets , 48.4 overs ) 173 Fall of wickets : 1-59 2-70 3-78 4-90 5-160 . Did not bat : I. Healy , P. Reiffel , S. Warne , J. Gillespie . Bowling : Ambrose 10-3-19-0 ( 2nb 1w ) , Walsh 9-0-34-0 ( 4nb ) , Benjamin 9.4-0-43-1 ( 1nb 1w ) , Hooper 10-0-27-2 ( 1nb ) , McLean 10-1-33-2 ( 1w ) . Result : Australia won by five wickets . +CRICKET - AUSTRALIA BEAT WEST INDIES BY FIVE WICKETS . MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 Australia beat West Indies by five wickets in a World Series limited overs match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Friday . Scores : West Indies 172 all out in 49.2 overs ( Shivnarine Chanderpaul 54 ) ; Australia 173-5 in 48.4 overs ( Greg Blewett 57 not out ) . +CRICKET - WEST INDIES 172 ALL OUT IN 49.2 OVERS V AUSTRALIA . MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 West Indies were all out for 172 off 49.2 overs in the World Series limited overs match against Australia on Friday . +CRICKET - SHEFFIELD SHIELD SCORE . HOBART , Australia 1996-12-06 Score on the first day of the four-day Sheffield Shield match between Tasmania and Victoria at Bellerive Oval on Friday : Tasmania 352 for three ( David Boon 106 not out , Shaun Young 86 not out , Michael DiVenuto 119 ) v Victoria . +CRICKET - LARA SUFFERS MORE AUSTRALIAN TOUR MISERY . MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 West Indies batsman Brian Lara suffered another blow to his Australian tour , after already being disciplined for misconduct , when he was dismissed cheaply in the first limited overs match against Australia on Friday . Lara , who earned a stern rebuke from his own tour management after an angry outburst against Australia wicketkeeper Ian Healy , scored five to prolong a run of poor form with the bat . The West Indies vice-captain struggled for timing during his 36-minute stay at the crease before chipping a ball from medium pacer Tom Moody straight to Shane Warne at mid-wicket . West Indies were 53 for two in 15 overs when rain stopped play at the Melbourne Cricket Ground after captain Courtney Walsh won the toss and elected to bat . Lara 's outburst three days ago has clearly turned some of the Australian public against him . As he walked to the wicket he was greeted by loud jeers from sections of the crowd . On several occasions during his innings , the crowd joined together in a series of obscene chants against him . Tour manager Clive Lloyd on Wednesday apologised for Lara 's behaviour in confronting Australia coach Geoff Marsh in the opposition dressing room to protest against his dismissal in the second test on Tuesday . Lloyd did not say what form the discipline would take . Lara , who holds the record for the highest score in test and first-class cricket , was unhappy about Healy 's role in the incident and questioned whether the ball had carried to the Australia keeper . Australia went on to win the match at the Sydney Cricket Ground by 124 runs to take a two-nil lead in the five-test series after Lara failed in both innings . Lara has yet to score a century since West Indies arrived in Australia five weeks ago . Both West Indies and Australia team management have played down the incident , stressing that relations between the two sides have not been adversely affected . Pakistan , who arrive next week , are the third team in the triangular World Series tournament . +CRICKET - WEST INDIES TO BAT AFTER WINNING THE TOSS . MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 West Indies captain Courtney Walsh elected to bat after winning the toss in the first match in the World Series limited overs competition against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Friday . Teams : Australia - Mark Taylor ( captain ) , Mark Waugh , Ricky Ponting , Greg Blewett , Michael Bevan , Stuart Law , Tom Moody , Ian Healy , Paul Reiffel , Shane Warne , Jason Gillespie , Glenn McGrath 12th man . West Indies - Sherwin Campbell , Robert Samuels , Brian Lara , Shivnarine Chanderpaul , Carl Hooper , Jimmy Adams , Junior Murray , Nixon McLean , Kenneth Benjamin , Curtly Ambrose , Courtney Walsh ( captain ) , Roland Holder 12th man . +BADMINTON - WORLD GRAND PRIX RESULTS . BALI 1996-12-06 Results in last of the group matches at the World Grand Prix badminton finals on Friday : Men 's singles Group B Chen Gang ( China ) beat Martin Londgaard Hansen ( Denmark ) 15-12 15-6 Dong Jiong ( China ) beat Thomas Stuer-Lauridsen ( Denmark ) 15-10 15-6 Indra Wijaya ( Indonesia ) beat Ong Ewe Hock ( Malaysia ) 5-15 15-11 15-11 Group C Sun Jun ( China ) beat Rashid Sidek ( Malaysia ) 15-12 17-14 Hermawan Susanto ( Indonesia ) beat Soren B. Nielsen ( Denmark ) 15-8 15-2 Group D Allan Budi Kuksuma ( Indonesia ) beat Poul-Erik Hoyer-Larsen ( Denmark ) 15-7 15-4 Budi Santoso ( Indonesia ) beat Hu Zhilan ( China ) 15-4 15-5 Semifinals ( on Saturday ) : Fung Permadi ( Taiwan ) v Indra Wijaya ( Indonesia ) ; Sun Jun ( China ) v Allan Budi Kusuma ( Indonesia ) Women 's singles Group A Gong Zhichao ( China ) beat Mia Audina ( Indonesia ) 11-2 12-10 Group B Ye Zhaoying ( China ) beat Meiluawati ( Indonesia ) 11-6 12-10 Group C Camilla Martin ( Denmark ) beat Wang Chen ( China ) 11-0 12-10 Group D Susi Susanti ( Indonesia ) beat Han Jingna ( China ) 11-5 11-4 . Semifinals ( on Saturday ) : Susi Susanti ( Indonesia ) v Camilla Martin ( Denmark ) ; Ye Zhaoying ( China ) v Gong Zichao ( China ) . +SOCCER - ARAB CONTRACTORS WIN AFRICAN CUP WINNERS ' CUP . CAIRO 1996-12-06 Result of the second leg of the African Cup Winners ' Cup final at the National stadium on Friday : Arab Contractors ( Egypt ) 4 Sodigraf ( Zaire ) 0 ( halftime 2-0 ) Scorers : Aly Ashour 7 , 56 penalty , Mohamed Ouda 24 , 73 Contractors won 4-0 on aggregate . +NHL ICE HOCKEY - STANDINGS AFTER THURSDAY 'S GAMES . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 Standings of National Hockey League teams after games played on Thursday ( tabulate under won , lost , tied , goals for , goals against , points ) : EASTERN CONFERENCE NORTHEAST DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS HARTFORD 12 7 6 77 76 30 BUFFALO 13 12 1 77 76 27 BOSTON 10 11 4 74 84 24 MONTREAL 10 14 4 96 103 24 PITTSBURGH 9 13 3 81 91 21 OTTAWA 7 11 6 62 72 20 ATLANTIC DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS FLORIDA 17 4 6 83 53 40 PHILADELPHIA 14 12 2 75 75 30 NEW JERSEY 14 10 1 61 61 29 WASHINGTON 13 12 1 69 66 27 NY RANGERS 10 13 5 91 81 25 NY ISLANDERS 7 11 8 65 72 22 TAMPA BAY 8 15 2 69 81 18 WESTERN CONFERENCE CENTRAL DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS DETROIT 15 9 4 81 53 34 DALLAS 16 9 1 74 60 33 CHICAGO 12 12 3 71 67 27 ST LOUIS 13 14 0 78 81 26 TORONTO 11 15 0 76 89 22 PHOENIX 9 13 4 61 74 22 PACIFIC DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS COLORADO 17 6 4 97 56 38 VANCOUVER 14 11 1 84 83 29 EDMONTON 13 14 1 94 88 27 LOS ANGELES 11 13 3 72 83 25 SAN JOSE 10 13 4 69 87 24 CALGARY 10 16 2 65 77 22 ANAHEIM 9 14 4 73 86 22 FRIDAY , DECEMBER 6 ANAHEIM AT BUFFALO TORONTO AT NY RANGERS PITTSBURGH AT WASHINGTON MONTREAL AT CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA AT DALLAS ST LOUIS AT COLORADO OTTAWA AT EDMONTON +NHL ICE HOCKEY - THURSDAY 'S RESULTS . [ CORRECTED 08:40 GMT ] NEW YORK 1996-12-06 ( Corrects headline from NBA to NHL and corrects team name in second result from La Clippers to Ny Islanders . ) Results of National Hockey League games on Thursday ( home team in CAPS ) : Hartford 4 BOSTON 2 FLORIDA 4 Ny Islanders 2 NEW JERSEY 2 Calgary 1 Phoenix 3 ST LOUIS 0 Tampa Bay 2 LOS ANGELES 1 +NFL AMERICAN FOOTBALL-COLTS CLOBBER EAGLES TO STAY IN PLAYOFF HUNT . INDIANAPOLIS 1996-12-06 The injury-plagued Indianapolis Colts lost another quarterback on Thursday but last year 's AFC finalists rallied together to shoot down the Philadelphia Eagles 37-10 in a showdown of playoff contenders . Marshall Faulk rushed for 101 yards and two touchdowns and Jason Belser returned an interception 44 yards for a score as the Colts improved to 8-6 , the same mark as the Eagles , who lost for the fourth time in five games . Paul Justin , starting for the sidelined Jim Harbaugh , was 14-of-23 for 144 yards and a touchdown for the the Colts , who played their last home game of the season . Indianapolis closes with games at Kansas City and Cincinnati . The Eagles were held without a touchdown until the final five seconds . Philadelphia , which fell from an NFC East tie with the Dallas Cowboys and Washington Redskins , go on the road against the New York Jets and then entertain Arizona . The loss by Philadelphia allowed the idle Green Bay Packers ( 10-3 ) to clinch the first NFC playoff berth . The Colts won despite the absence of injured starting defensive tackle Tony Siragusa , cornerback Ray Buchanan and linebacker Quentin Coryatt . Faulk carried 16 times , including a 13-yard TD run in the first quarter and a seven-yard score early in the final period . Justin made his second straight start for Harbaugh , who has a knee injury . Justin suffered a sprained right shoulder in the third quarter and did not return . Third-stringer Kerwin Bell , a 1988 draft choice of the Miami Dolphins , made his NFL debut and was 5-of-5 for 75 yards , including a 20-yard scoring strike to Marvin Harrison in the third period . A 39-yard interference penalty against Philadelphia 's Troy Vincent set up Faulk 's first score around left end that capped an 80-yard march 5:17 into the game and the rout was on . Eagles quarterback Ty Detmer was 17-of-34 for 182 yards before he was benched . Ricky Watters , who leads the NFC in rushing , left the game after getting kneed to the helmet after gaining 33 yards on seven carries . +NBA BASKETBALL - STANDINGS AFTER THURSDAY 'S GAMES . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 Standings of National Basketball Association teams after games played on Thursday ( tabulate under won , lost , percentage , games behind ) : EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L PCT GB MIAMI 14 4 .778 - NEW YORK 10 6 .625 3 ORLANDO 8 6 .571 4 WASHINGTON 7 9 .438 6 PHILADELPHIA 7 10 .412 6 1/2 BOSTON 4 12 .250 9 NEW JERSEY 3 10 .231 8 1/2 CENTRAL DIVISION W L PCT GB CHICAGO 17 1 .944 - DETROIT 13 3 .813 3 CLEVELAND 11 5 .688 5 ATLANTA 10 8 .556 7 CHARLOTTE 8 8 .500 8 MILWAUKEE 8 8 .500 8 INDIANA 7 8 .467 8 1/2 TORONTO 6 11 .353 10 1/2 WESTERN CONFERENCE MIDWEST DIVISION W L PCT GB HOUSTON 16 2 .889 - UTAH 14 2 .875 1 MINNESOTA 7 10 .412 8 1/2 DALLAS 6 11 .353 9 1/2 DENVER 5 14 .263 11 1/2 SAN ANTONIO 3 13 .188 12 VANCOUVER 2 16 .111 14 PACIFIC DIVISION W L PCT GB SEATTLE 15 5 .750 - LA LAKERS 13 7 .650 2 PORTLAND 11 8 .579 3 1/2 LA CLIPPERS 7 11 .389 7 GOLDEN STATE 6 12 .333 8 SACRAMENTO 6 12 .333 8 PHOENIX 2 14 .125 11 FRIDAY , DECEMBER 6 NEW JERSEY AT BOSTON CLEVELAND AT DETROIT NEW YORK AT MIAMI PHOENIX AT SACRAMENTO VANCOUVER AT SAN ANTONIO MINNESOTA AT UTAH CHARLOTTE AT PORTLAND INDIANA AT GOLDEN STATE ORLANDO AT LA LAKERS +NFL AMERICAN FOOTBALL-STANDINGS AFTER THURSDAY 'S GAME . NEW YORK 1996-12-05 National Football League standings after Thursday 's game ( tabulate under won , lost , tied , points for and points against ) : AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EASTERN DIVISION W L T PF PA NEW ENGLAND 9 4 0 355 269 BUFFALO 9 4 0 267 215 INDIANAPOLIS 8 6 0 269 284 MIAMI 6 7 0 285 266 NY JETS 1 12 0 221 368 CENTRAL DIVISION W L T PF PA PITTSBURGH 9 4 0 299 211 HOUSTON 7 6 0 291 254 JACKSONVILLE 6 7 0 263 288 CINCINNATI 5 8 0 299 318 BALTIMORE 4 9 0 320 369 WESTERN DIVISION W L T PF PA X-DENVER 12 1 0 351 199 KANSAS CITY 9 4 0 262 230 SAN DIEGO 7 6 0 277 323 OAKLAND 6 7 0 274 234 SEATTLE 5 8 0 250 317 NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EASTERN DIVISION W L T PF PA DALLAS 8 5 0 254 201 WASHINGTON 8 5 0 291 251 PHILADELPHIA 8 6 0 313 302 ARIZONA 6 7 0 248 332 NY GIANTS 5 8 0 200 250 CENTRAL DIVISION W L T PF PA Y-GREEN BAY 10 3 0 346 191 MINNESOTA 7 6 0 243 245 CHICAGO 5 8 0 202 248 DETROIT 5 8 0 263 289 TAMPA BAY 4 9 0 153 243 WESTERN DIVISION W L T PF PA SAN FRANCISCO 10 3 0 325 198 CAROLINA 9 4 0 292 164 ST LOUIS 4 9 0 246 334 ATLANTA 2 11 0 234 393 NEW ORLEANS 2 11 0 184 291 X -- CLINCHED DIVISION TITLE Y -- CLINCHED PLAYOFF BERTH SUNDAY , DECEMBER 8 ST LOUIS AT CHICAGO BALTIMORE AT CINCINNATI DENVER AT GREEN BAY JACKSONVILLE AT HOUSTON NY GIANTS AT MIAMI ATLANTA AT NEW ORLEANS SAN DIEGO AT PITTSBURGH WASHINGTON AT TAMPA BAY DALLAS AT ARIZONA NY JETS AT NEW ENGLAND BUFFALO AT SEATTLE CAROLINA AT SAN FRANCISCO MINNESOTA AT DETROIT MONDAY , DECEMBER 9 KANSAS CITY AT OAKLAND +NFL AMERICAN FOOTBALL-THURSDAY 'S RESULT . NEW YORK 1996-12-05 Result of National Football League game on Thursday ( home team in CAPS ) : INDIANAPOLIS 37 Philadelphia 10 +NCAA AMERICAN FOOTBALL-OHIO STATE 'S PACE FIRST REPEAT LOMBARDI AWARD WINNER . HOUSTON 1996-12-05 Ohio State left tackle Orlando Pace became the first repeat winner of the Lombardi Award Thursday night when the Rotary Club of Houston again honoured him as college football 's lineman of the year . Pace , a junior , helped Ohio State to a 10-1 record and a berth in the Rose Bowl against Arizona State . He was the most dominant offensive lineman in the country and also played defensive line in goal-line situations . Last year , Pace became the first sophomore to win the award since its inception in 1970 . Pace outdistanced three senior finalists -- Virginia Tech defensive end Cornell Brown , Arizona State offensive tackle Juan Roque and defensive end Jared Tomich of Nebraska . The Lombardi Award is presented to the college lineman who , in addition to outstanding effort on the field , best exemplifies the characteristics and discipline of Vince Lombardi , legendary coach of the Green Bay Packers . +SOCCER - DUTCH FIRST DIVISION RESULTS / STANDINGS . AMSTERDAM 1996-12-06 Result of Dutch first division soccer match played on Friday : RKC Waalwijk 1 Willem II Tilburg 2 Standings ( tabulate under played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : PSV Eindhoven 18 13 3 2 52 14 42 Feyenoord 17 11 3 3 29 20 36 Twente Enschede 18 10 4 4 28 15 34 Graafschap Doetinchem 18 9 3 6 29 22 30 Vitesse Arnhem 18 8 5 5 29 21 29 Ajax Amsterdam 18 7 8 3 23 16 29 Heerenveen 18 7 7 4 30 20 28 Roda JC Kerkrade 17 7 6 4 19 21 27 Utrecht 18 4 10 4 26 24 22 Volendam 18 5 6 7 20 23 21 Sparta Rotterdam 19 6 3 10 21 25 21 NAC Breda 18 6 3 9 17 29 21 Willem II Tilburg 18 5 4 9 19 31 19 Groningen 18 4 6 8 20 31 18 AZ Alkmaar 18 5 2 11 16 23 17 Fortuna Sittard 17 3 7 7 14 28 16 NEC Nijmegen 18 3 7 8 19 32 16 RKC Waalwijk 19 3 5 11 18 33 14 +SOCCER - GERMAN FIRST DIVISION RESULTS / STANDINGS . BONN 1996-12-06 Results of German first division soccer matches played on Friday : Bochum 2 Bayer Leverkusen 2 Werder Bremen 1 1860 Munich 1 Karlsruhe 3 Freiburg 0 Schalke 2 Hansa Rostock 0 Standings ( tabulated under played , won , drawn , lost , goals for goals against points ) : Bayer Leverkusen 17 10 4 3 38 22 34 Bayern Munich 16 9 6 1 26 14 33 VfB Stuttgart 16 9 4 3 39 17 31 Borussia Dortmund 16 9 4 3 33 17 31 Karlsruhe 17 8 4 5 30 20 28 VfL Bochum 16 7 6 3 23 21 27 1. FC Cologne 16 8 2 6 31 27 26 Schalke 04 17 7 4 6 25 26 25 Werder Bremen 17 6 4 7 29 28 22 MSV Duisburg 16 5 4 7 16 22 19 SV 1860 Munich 17 4 6 7 25 31 18 FC St. Pauli 15 5 3 7 21 28 18 Fortuna Dusseldorf 16 5 3 8 13 24 18 Hamburger SV 16 4 5 7 20 25 17 Arminia Bielefeld 16 4 4 8 18 28 16 FC Hansa Rostock 17 4 3 10 19 26 15 Borussia Monchengladbach 16 4 3 9 12 22 15 SC Freiburg 17 4 1 12 20 40 13 +SOCCER - FRENCH LEAGUE SUMMARIES . PARIS 1996-12-06 Summaries of French first division matches on Friday : Lens 0 Nantes 4 ( Japhet N'Doram 7 , Claude Makelele 42 , Jocelyn Gourvennec 67 , Christophe Pignol 72 ) . Halftime 0-2 . Attendance : 15,000 . Paris St Germain 1 ( Bruno N'Gotty 2 ) Nancy 2 ( Paul Fischer 70 , Phil Gray 89 ) . 1-0 . 30,000 . +SOCCER - DUTCH FIRST DIVISION SUMMARIES . AMSTERDAM 1996-12-06 Summary of Dutch first division soccer match played on Friday : RKC Waalwijk 1 ( Starbuck 76 ) Willem II Tilburg 2 ( Konterman 45 , Van der Vegt 77 ) . Halftime 0-1 . Attendance 5,300 . +SOCCER - FRENCH LEAGUE STANDINGS . PARIS 1996-12-06 Standings in the French first division after Friday 's matches ( tabulate under played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , against , points ) : Paris Saint-Germain 21 12 6 3 34 15 42 Monaco 20 12 5 3 36 16 41 Bordeaux 20 9 7 4 29 21 34 Strasbourg 20 11 1 8 27 27 34 Bastia 20 9 6 5 27 22 33 Auxerre 20 8 8 4 26 12 32 Metz 20 8 7 5 21 16 31 Nantes 21 7 9 5 41 25 30 Guingamp 20 7 7 6 18 18 28 Lille 20 7 7 6 22 28 28 Marseille 20 6 8 6 18 17 26 Lyon 20 6 8 6 24 31 26 Rennes 20 7 4 9 23 28 25 Lens 21 7 4 10 25 34 25 Le Havre 20 5 7 8 20 21 22 Cannes 20 5 7 8 13 22 22 Montpellier 20 3 9 8 17 24 18 Caen 20 3 7 10 12 23 16 Nancy 21 3 7 11 14 26 16 Nice 20 3 4 13 17 38 13 +SOCCER - FRENCH LEAGUE RESULTS . PARIS 1996-12-06 Results of French first division matches on Friday : Lens 0 Nantes 4 Paris St Germain 1 Nancy 2 +SOCCER - GERMAN FIRST DIVISION SUMMARIES . BONN 1996-12-06 Summaries of matches played in the German first division on Friday : Bochum 2 ( Stickroth 30th pen , Wosz 89th ) Bayer Leverkusen 2 ( Kirsten 18th , Ramelow 56th ) . Halftime 1-1 . Attendance : 24,602 Werder Bremen 1 ( Bode 85th ) 1860 Munich 1 ( Bormirow 8th ) . Halftime 0-1 . Attendance 33,000 Karlsruhe 3 ( Reich 29th , Carl 44th , Dundee 69th ) Freiburg 0 . Halftime 2-0 . Attendance 33,000 Schalke 2 ( Mulder 2nd and 27th ) Hansa Rostock 0 . Halftime 2-0 . Attendance 29,300 +TENNIS - GRAND SLAM CUP QUARTER-FINAL RESULTS . MUNICH , Germany 1996-12-06 Quarter-final results at the $ 6 million Grand Slam Cup tennis tournament on Friday : Goran Ivanisevic ( Croatia ) beat Mark Woodforde ( Australia ) 6-4 6-4 Yevgeny Kafelnikov ( Russia ) beat Jim Courier ( U.S. ) 2-6 6-4 8-6 +SOCCER - WEAH HEAD-BUTT DEPRIVES PORTUGAL OF COSTA . LISBON 1996-12-06 Portugal called up Porto central defender Joao Manuel Pinto on Friday to face Germany in a World Cup qualifier in place of injured club colleague Jorge Costa , who is still nursing a broken nose after being head-butted by Liberian striker Georg Weah . Costa has not played since being struck by the AC Milan forward after a bad-tempered European Champions ' League game on November 27 . Portugal lead European qualifying group nine with seven points from four games , one more than Ukraine and three more than Germany , who have only played twice . The Portuguese host Germany on December 14 . Squad : Goalkeepers - Vitor Baia ( Barcelona , Spain ) , Rui Correia ( Braga ) : Defenders - Paulinho Santos ( Porto ) , Sergio Conceicao ( Porto ) , Joao Manuel Pinto ( Porto ) , Oceano Cruz ( Sporting ) , Fernando Couto ( Barcelona ) , Helder Cristovao ( Deportivo Coruna , Spain ) , Dimas Teixeira ( Juventus , Italy ) , Carlos Secretario ( Real Madrid , Spain ) : Midfielders - Rui Barros ( Porto ) , Jose Barroso ( Porto ) , Luis Figo ( Barcelona ) , Paulo Bento ( Oviedo , Spain ) , Jose Taira ( Salamanca , Spain ) : Forwards - Antonio Folha ( Porto ) , Joao Vieira Pinto ( Benfica ) , Paulo Alves ( Sporting ) , Rui Costa ( Fiorentina , Italy ) , Jorge Cadete ( Celtic Glasgow , Scotland ) . +SOCCER SHOWCASE-BETTING ON REAL MADRID V BARCELONA . MADRID 1996-12-06 William Hill betting on Saturday 's Spanish first division match between Real Madrid and Barcelona : To win : 6-5 Real Madrid ; 7-4 Barcelona Draw : 9-4 Correct score : Real Madrid to win Barcelona to win 1-0 13-2 1-0 15-2 2-0 9-1 2-0 12-1 2-1 8-1 2-1 10-1 3-0 20-1 3-0 28-1 3-1 16-1 3-1 22-1 3-2 25-1 3-2 25-1 4-0 50-1 4-0 100-1 4-1 40-1 4-1 80-1 4-2 50-1 4-2 80-1 Draw : 0-0 8-1 1-1 11-2 2-2 14-1 3-3 50-1 Double result : half-time full-time 5-2 Real Madrid Real Madrid 14-1 Real Madrid Draw 28-1 Real Madrid Barcelona 5-1 Draw Real Madrid 4-1 Draw Draw 11-2 Draw Barcelona 25-1 Barcelona Real Madrid 14-1 Barcelona Draw 4-1 Barcelona Barcelona First goalscorer of match : Real Madrid Barcelona 9-2 Davor Suker 9-2 Ronaldo 5-1 Pedrag Mijatovic 7-1 Luis Figo 7-1 Raul Gonzalez 7-1 Juan Pizzi 12-1 Fernando Redondo 9-1 Giovanni 14-1 Victor Sanchez 12-1 Guillermo Amor 16-1 Jose Amavisca 14-1 Roger Garcia 16-1 Manolo Sanchis 14-1 Gheorghe Popescu 16-1 Roberto Carlos 16-1 JosepGuardiola 20-1 Fernando Hierro 20-1 Ivan de laPena 20-1 Luis Milla 25-1 Luis Enrique 33-1 Fernando Sanz 25-1 AbelardoFernandez 40-1 Carlos Secretario 28-1 Sergi Barjuan 40-1 Rafael Alkorta 33-1 Albert Ferrer 40-1 Chendo Porlan 33-1 Miguel Nadal 40-1 Laurent Blanc +SOCCER SHOWCASE-FANS FACE BREATHALYSER TESTS , PAPER SAYS . MADRID 1996-12-06 Spanish police will breathalyse fans at the gates of the Santiago Bernabeu stadium and ban drunk supporters from Saturday 's big Real Madrid-Barcelona game , the Madrid daily El Mundo said on Friday . Although there are no known precedents in the country , the action is envisaged in Spanish legislation governing sports events . Tickets for the game stipulate that supporters will be barred if they are " under the effects of alcohol " . +SOCCER - SPANISH FIRST DIVISION STANDINGS . MADRID 1996-12-06 Standings in the Spanish first division ahead of this weekend 's games . ( tabulate under games played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , against , points ) : Real Madrid 15 10 5 0 31 12 35 Barcelona 15 10 4 1 46 19 34 Deportivo Coruna 15 9 6 0 23 7 33 Real Betis 15 8 5 2 28 13 29 Atletico Madrid 15 8 3 4 26 17 27 Athletic Bilbao 15 7 4 4 28 22 25 Real Sociedad 15 7 3 5 20 18 24 Valladolid 15 7 3 5 19 18 24 Racing Santander 15 5 7 3 15 15 22 Rayo Vallecano 15 5 5 5 21 19 20 Valencia 15 6 2 7 23 22 20 Celta Vigo 15 5 5 5 17 17 20 Tenerife 15 5 4 6 23 17 19 Espanyol 15 4 4 7 17 20 16 Oviedo 15 4 4 7 17 21 16 Sporting Gijon 15 4 4 7 15 22 16 Logrones 15 4 3 8 11 33 15 Zaragoza 15 2 8 5 18 23 14 Sevilla 15 4 2 9 13 20 14 Compostela 15 3 4 8 13 28 13 Hercules 15 2 2 11 11 29 8 Extremadura 15 1 3 11 8 30 6 +SOCCER - SPAIN PICK UNCAPPED ARMANDO FOR WORLD CUP CLASH . MADRID 1996-12-06 Spain coach Javier Clemente has added uncapped Deportivo Coruna midfielder Armando Alvarez to his squad for the World Cup qualifier against Yugoslavia on December 14 . " I do n't believe it ... I thought it was a joke , " said Armando who replaces injured Atletico Madrid playmaker Jose Luis Caminero . +SOCCER - FIFA BOSS HAVELANGE STANDS BY WEAH . ROME 1996-12-06 FIFA chairman Joao Havelange said on Friday he would personally present AC Milan George Weah with world soccer 's fair play award despite the striker 's attack on Porto captain Jorge Costa . In an interview with the Italian newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport , he was quoted as saying Weah had been provoked into the assault which left Costa with a broken nose . " FIFA has named the Liberian for its 1996 Fair Play award and it is not going to change its decision , " Havelange said . " A reaction , provoked , cannot erase 10 years of loyalty everywhere and in every competition . " I will be happy to give him the award personally on January 20 in Lisbon and I 'm confident that Costa himself will be there beside me on that day to shake his hand . " Weah was suspended for one match by UEFA , European soccer 's governing body , pending a fuller investigation . The incident took place in the players ' tunnel after a European Champions ' League match on November 20 . Weah has admitted head butting Costa but said he reacted to racist taunts . He has offered to apologise if Costa acknowledges the provocation . Costa , who needed surgery on his nose , has not accepted the offer and was reported to be considering suing Weah . Weah served out his suspension during Milan 's 2-1 home defeat by Rosenborg of Norway on Wednesday . The defeat put the Italians out of the Europoean Cup . +GUNMEN WOUND TWO MANCHESTER UNITED FANS IN AUSTRIA . VIENNA 1996-12-06 Two Manchester United soccer fans were wounded by unidentified gunmen on Friday and taken to hospital in the Austrian capital , police said . " The four Britons were shot at from a Mercedes car at around 1 a.m. , " a spokeswoman told Reuters . The two men were hit in the pelvis and leg . Police said their lives were not in danger . The fans , in Austria to watch their team play Rapid Vienna last Wednesday , may have been involved in a pub brawl earlier , the spokeswoman said . Manchester United won 2-0 . +SOCCER - ITALIAN FIRST DIVISION MATCHES THIS WEEKEND . ROME 1996-12-06 Italian Serie A games to be played on Sunday ( league positions in parentheses , all kick- off times GMT ) : Bologna ( 4 ) v Piacenza ( 13 ) 1330 Along with leaders Vicenza , fourth-placed Bologna represent the biggest surprise of this Italian autumn . Led as usual by Swede Kennet Andersson and Russian Igor Kolyvanov in attack , Bologna can expect a tough home match against a Piacenza side still exultant after a 3-2 league win over AC Milan last Sunday . Cagliari ( 16 ) v Reggiana ( 18 ) 1530 Cagliari start favourite in this relegation scrap following draws with Napoli and Inter in last two outings but will be without suspended Swiss defender Ramon Vega . Bottom team Reggiana are also without a suspended defender , German Dietmar Beiersdorfer . Fiorentina ( 10 ) v Perugia ( 8 ) 1330 Fiorentina will be without three suspended players -- defenders Daniele Carnasciali and Lorenzo Amoruso and midfielder Emiliano Bigica -- for a difficult home match against unpredictable , attack-oriented Perugia led by in-form Croat striker Milan Rapajic and the experienced Fausto Pizzi . Lazio ( 12 ) v AS Roma ( 7 ) 1930 Poor man 's Roman derby in what has been a miserable season for both Rome teams , already eliminated from the Italian and UEFA Cups . Lazio have injury doubts about striker Pierluigi Casiraghi , Czech midfielder Pavel Nedved and defender Paolo Negro , while Roma present a full strength side led by Argentine Abel Balbo , Marco Delvecchio and Francesco Totti in attack . AC Milan ( 9 ) v Udinese ( 11 ) 1330 Can Milan sink any further ? Following their midweek Champions ' League elimination by Norwegian side Rosenborg , a morale-boosting win is badly needed . Liberian striker George Weah makes a welcome return for Milan alongside Roberto Baggio , with Montenegrin Dejan Savicevic in midfield . Good news for Milan is that Udinese 's German striker Oliver Bierhoff is out through injury . Napoli ( 5 ) v Verona ( 17 ) 1330 In-form Napoli should prove too strong for second from bottom Verona despite the absence of their suspended Argentine defender Roberto Ayala . Verona 's slim chances have been further reduced by a knee injury to their experienced midfielder Eugenio Corini . Parma ( 14 ) v Atlalanta ( 15 ) 1330 Parma may field new signing , Croat midfielder Mario Stanic , in an attempt to lift a miserable season which has seen them go without a win since a 1-0 triumph over Cagliari eight weeks ago . Parma 's French midfielder Daniel Bravo and defender Fabio Cannavaro are suspended while Argentine Nestor Sensini is out through injury . Atalanta look to Filippo Inzaghi , scorer of eight goals . Sampdoria ( 6 ) v Juventus ( 3 ) 1330 All-conquering Juventus field their most recent signing , Portuguese defender Dimas , while Alessandro Del Piero and Croat Alen Boksic lead the attack . The new world club champions may prove too strong for a Sampdoria side led by captain Roberto Mancini but missing injured French midfielder Pierre Laigle . Vicenza ( 1 ) v Internazionale ( 2 ) 1330 Not exactly a clash of the titans but an intriuguing match nonetheless . Full strength Vicenza , led by Uruguayan Marcelo Otero , may continue their surprise run at the top against an Inter side that has been less than impressive in three successive home draws . Inter will be without suspended French defender Joceyln Angloma and injured Chilean striker Ivan Zamorano . +BASKETBALL - EUROLEAGUE RESULT . BRUSSELS 1996-12-06 Result of a EuroLeague basketball match on Thursday : Group B In Charleroi : Charleroi ( Belgium ) 75 Estudiantes Madrid ( Spain ) 82 ( 34-35 ) Leading scorers : Charleroi - Eric Cleymans 18 , Ron Ellis 18 , Jacques Stas 14 Estudiantes - Harper Williams 20 , Chadler Thompson 17 , Juan Aisa 14 Group D In Belgrade : Partizan Belgrade ( Yugoslavia ) 78 Kinder Bologna ( Italy ) 70 ( halftime 44-35 ) Leading scorers : Partizan - Dejan Koturovic 21 Kinder - Zoran Savic 18 +SQUASH - EYLES WITHIN SIGHT OF FIFTH TITLE OF YEAR . BOMBAY , India 1996-12-06 World number two Rodney Eyles moved within sight of his fifth title of the year on Friday when he hurried in only 40 minutes to the final of the richest squash tournament outside the World Open , the $ 105,000 Mahindra International . The Australian brushed aside unseeded Englishman Mark Cairns 15-7 15-6 15-8 . Top-seeded Eyles now meets titleholder Peter Nicol of Scotland who overcame Simon Parke of England 15-7 15-12 15-12 . Nicol was full of praise for his opponent who has battled testicular cancer to return to the circuit . " He 's a remarkably courageous player , " said Nicol . +SQUASH - MAHINDRA INTERNATIONAL SEMIFINAL RESULTS . BOMBAY , India 1996-12-06 Results of semifinals in the Mahindra International squash tournament on Friday : Peter Nicol ( Scotland ) beat Simon Parke ( England ) 15-7 15-12 15-12 Rodney Eyles ( Australia ) beat Mark Cairns ( England ) 15-7 15-6 15-8 . Final : Nicol v Eyles , on Saturday . +GUNMEN KILL FOUR IN S.AFRICA 'S ZULU PROVINCE . DURBAN , South Africa 1996-12-06 At least four people have been shot dead in two suspected political attacks in South Africa 's volatile Zulu heartland , police said on Friday . A police spokesman said two youths believed to be supporters of President Nelson Mandela 's African National Congress ( ANC ) had been killed when unknown gunmen opened fire at the rural settlement of Izingolweni on KwaZulu-Natal province 's south coast on Thursday night . The victims were 18 and 20 , he said , adding one other youth had been wounded in the shooting . In another attack , also on the province 's south coast on Thursday night , two men were shot dead near Umkomaas . " We suspect that these killings are linked to politics , " spokesman Bala Naidoo told Reuters . There had been no arrests . The killings came just hours after violence monitors said they were not optimistic of a peaceful festive season in KwaZulu-Natal and pointed the south coast region where 18 people were massacred last Christmas as one of potential hot spots . They said the recent lull in political feuding could be upset as thousands of migrant workers , some tense with grudges brewed in the cities and keen to settle old scores , flock back to their home villages . More than 14,000 people have lost their lives in over a decade of political turf wars between the ANC and Zulu Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi 's Inkatha Freedom Party in the province . +HAVEL PRAISES CZECH NATIVE ALBRIGHT AS FRIEND . Klara Gajduskova PRAGUE 1996-12-06 Czech President Vaclav Havel on Friday welcomed the appointment of Madeleine Albright , who is of Czech extraction , as the United States ' first woman Secretary of State . In a statement Havel , who is recovering from cancer surgery , said : " Madeleine Albright is a distinguished friend , a tested diplomat , and a true American of fine origins . " " I look forward to continuing our good relations ... with the United States and with the first woman ever to hold the position of Secretary of State . I wish her well , " Havel said in a statement to Reuters . Havel , who helped lead the " velvet revolution " that ousted the Communist regime in Prague in 1989 , invited Albright , then working for a private foreign policy think tank , to advise his new democratic government in 1990 . Havel had a small malignant tumour removed from his lung on Monday and is recovering in hospital . Albright , born Marie Korbelova to a Czechoslovak diplomat in 1937 , fled with her family to the United States after the Communists came to power in a coup in 1948 . As an academic , Albright studied and lectured on Europe 's 20th century problems before becoming U.S. ambassador to the United Nations . Czech diplomats , seeking to have their country included in the expected expansion of NATO , praised the selection of Albright , known to be a strong supporter of alliance 's integration of former Soveit-bloc countries . " The nomination ... is a clear signal that one key of the lines of foreign policy will be the strengthening of the trans-Atlantic cooperation , a creation of strategic partnership between Europe and the US , " Foreign Minister Josef Zieleniec told Reuters . " ( Albright ) is a convinced advocate of NATO enlargement and of stabilisation of security structures . " Czech ambassador to the United Nations , Karel Kovanda , told the daily Mlada Fronta Dnes that Albright " is a little light in our diplomatic heaven , " but warned against expecting her to exert any influence in favour of the Czechs . +RADIO ROMANIA AFTERNOON HEALINES AT 4 PM . BUCHAREST 1996-12-06 Radio Romania news headlines : * The Democratic Convention signed an agreement on government and parliamentary support with its coalition partners the Social Democratic Union and the Hungarian Democratic Union ( UDMR ) . The ceremony was attended by President Emil Constantinescu . * The three parties in the government coalition have committed themselves to a real reform of Romania 's economy , Constantinescu said after the ceremony . * The UDMR wants to contribute to social reform and economic revival in Romania , union leader Marko Bela said . * The international airport in Timisoara and the domestic airports in Arad , Oradea and Sibiu were closed due to fog . -- Bucharest Newsroom 40-1 3120264 +CZECH VICE-PM SEES WIDER DEBATE AT PARTY CONGRESS . PRAGUE 1996-12-06 Saturday 's national congress of the ruling Czech Civic Democratic Party ( ODS ) will discuss making the party more efficient and transparent , Foreign Minister and ODS vice-chairman Josef Zieleniec , said on Friday . " Modernisation and more profesionalism of the party 's structure , having financing of the party be more transparent ... are absolutely fundamental , " Zieleniec , who is also vice-premier in the government , told Reuters . He said after June general elections in which the ruling three-party coalition lost its parliamentary majority , the ODS executive , led by Prime Minister Vaclav Klaus , had developed proposals on these subjects to present at the congress on Saturday in the Czech second city Brno . " I am convinced , that the congress will tackle these proposals , " he said . The ODS , a party in which Klaus often tries to emulate the style of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher , has been in control of Czech politics since winning general elections in 1992 . Zieleniec in the summer led calls for the party and its leadership to listen to more diverse opinions , a thinly-veiled criticism of Klaus who has spearheaded the country 's post-Communist economic reforms . The party , led by the vigorously-confident Klaus , took 32 of 81 seats after late November runoff elections to the new upper house of Czech parliament . But after the first round vote a week before , the ODS had the potential to win as many 79 seats . Klaus and his coalition lost its majority in parliament in June lower house elections after the left-wing opposition consolidated , putting the centre-left Social Democrats in a strong second-place position . -- Prague Newsroom 42-2-2423-0003 +POLAND GOT MONEY FROM POST-WAR SWISS ACCOUNTS . Marcin Grajewski WARSAW 1996-12-06 Poland said on Friday that Swiss bank accounts , which in many cases belonged to Polish Jews who died in the Holocaust , were used in debt settlements between the two countries after the World War Two . Foreign Minister Dariusz Rosati , unveiling first findings of a special government commission , said that in 1970s the then communist Poland received 460,000 Swiss francs from the accounts . " In 1970s , Poland received from unclaimed accounts in Switzerland a sum of 460,000 francs . What was its right ( to the money ) ...I do not know , " Rosati told a news conference . Switzerland stands accused by Senator Alfonse D'Amato , chairman of the powerful U.S. Senate Banking Committee , of agreeing to give money to Poland from unclaimed bank accounts of Polish citizens , as part of an accord on compensating Swiss nationals whose assets had been seized in communist Poland . Many of these citizens were Jews murdered during the war , when Nazi German invaders killed most of Poland 's 3.5 million Jews . Rosati did not say whether the payment in 1970s was part of the 1949 agreement between Warsaw and Switzerland on compensation to Swiss citizens whose assets were seized by the Soviet-imposed communists authorities after World War Two . " I expect that the commission will finish gathering information within two to three weeks and then more details will be provided , " Rosati said . Rosati confirmed that the 1949 agreement had provided for granting Switzerland about 53 million francs and most of this sum was repaid with coal exports . He said , however , that Switzerland did get about 16,000 francs from the so-called " dead accounts " as part of the compensation . " About 16,000 francs were seized from accounts of four or five Polish citizens , whose data we do not precisely know . The issue is of moral and legal nature , because its financial significance is small , " Rosati said . Under pressure from international Jewish organisations , Swiss government has devised a plan to pay out millions of dollars in unclaimed bank accounts as a conciliatory gesture toward Holocaust victims . The conservative Radical Democrats ( FDP ) have said they would ask parliament next week to order Swiss banks to put some 40 million Swiss francs ( $ 31 million ) in dormant wealth into a fund earmarked for Jewish groups and charitable organisations . But Swiss banks and the country 's Jewish community voiced doubts whether the plan would work . +INTERVIEW-ZYWIEC SEES NO BIG 97 NET RISE . Steven Silber WARSAW 1996-12-06 Polish brewer Zywiec 's 1996 profit slump may last into next year due in part to hefty depreciation charges , but recent high investment should help the firm defend its 10-percent market share , the firm 's chief executive said . Company President Jean van Boxmeer told Reuters in an interview on Friday that the firm , whose net profit fell 77 percent in the first 10 months of 1996 despite a 30-percent rise in sales , might only post slightly better profits in 1997 before having a chance to make a more significant turnaround . So far this year Zywiec , whose full name is Zaklady Piwowarskie w Zywcu SA , has netted six million zlotys on sales of 224 million zlotys . It has produced 1.5 million hectolitres . Van Boxmeer would not say how much higher 1997 profits or market share could be but said sales of leading Polish brewers should rise as the country 's young urban professionals gradually switch from vodka to beer . " The perspective on growth is such that reasonably we can think that somewhere between 65 and 80 litres per year is certainly reachable , " van Boxmeer said on Polish per-capita beer consumption , currently around 40 litres . He said the 65-80-litre level could be reached in the next ten years and make Poland , with its 40-million population , Europe 's third largest beer market after Germany and Britain . Van Boxmeer said Poland 's top five brewers , which produce about 55 percent of the country 's beer , could all raise market share as some of the numerous small brewers fall to competition from the large brewers with foreign investors . Zywiec is 31.8-percent owned by Heineken while Carlsberg has the same amount in Okocim . Earlier this year South African Breweries Ltd ( SAB ) bought strategic stakes in the unlisted Lech and Tychy brewers , which together hold more than 20 percent of the market , and Australia 's Brewpole BV has a controlling stake in Poland 's larges t brewery , Elbrewery Company Ltd. ( EB ) . Van Boxmeer said the tough competition had prevented Zywiec from raising prices in line with inflation , which had added to the pressure on the firm 's margins . He said advertising costs would also increase in the fight for market share . But he said the company 's investment of more than $ 100 million already this decade , largely in production , would help position it to compete with such competitors as brewers from the neighbouring Czech Republic . Some analysts say cheaper but high-quality Czech imports could invade Poland once tariffs for CEFTA countries are lifted in 1998 , but van Boxmeer says such a threat might be exaggerated despite the Czech beer market 's overcapacity . " I think Polish consumers in general are quite proud of their beers -- and I 'm speaking about all the brands -- and as we make good beers ... I think that this fidelity to our beers is a factor which can limit the Czech beers , " he said . Van Boxmeer said Zywiec had its eye on Okocim , which has said it would start producing Carlsberg beer next year , but that Zywiec 's potential production of Heineken was a medium-term possibility rather than a short-term one . He said his firm would be better off concentrating on its leading brand , Zywiec Full Light , which accounts for 85 percent of sales and is the country 's largest-selling brand . " You will not win the war of the Polish beer market with imported international brands , " van Boxmeer said , adding that Heineken would remain an up-market import in Poland . Van Boxmeer also said Zywiec would be boosted by its recent shedding of soft drinks which only accounted for about three percent of the firm 's overall sales and for which 7.6 million zlotys in provisions had already been made . -- Warsaw Newsroom +48 22 653 9700 +HAVEL HAS TRAECHEOTOMY AFTER CONDITIONS WORSENS . PRAGUE 1996-12-06 Doctors performed an emergency tracheotomy to help Czech President Vaclav Havel breathe after cancer surgery on his lungs earlier this week , a spokesman said on Friday . He said that the procedure to insert a device into Havel 's throat , done after his breathing worsened on Thursday , had helped , and the president 's condition significantly improved . " A worsening in the president 's lung functions took place yesterday , " presidential spokesman Ladlislav Spacek said in a statement . " A tracheotomy was performed and supportive breathing was installed through the help of a breathing device , " he said . " After these steps , the president 's condition signigicantly improved . " Havel has been recovering from surgery on Monday which removed a small malignant tumour and half of his right lung . Doctors after the operation said that they had caught the cancer early , and that Havel could fully recover from the surgery within six weeks . His spokesman said on Thursday that Havel , 60 and a heavy smoker , had also developed a slight case of pneumonia in the left lung . +UK-US open skies talks end , no date to restart . LONDON 1996-12-06 The UK Department of Transport on Friday said that the latest round of " open skies " talks with the U.S. had ended with no deal on liberalising the transatlantic flight market and no date set for when talks would restart . A spokesman for the DOT told Reuters " We have had talks towards concluding a new air service agreement which would produce liberalisation ... useful progress was made on a number of issues , but not all . No date has been set for further talks . " +Tambang Timah at $ 15.575 in London . LONDON 1996-12-07 PT Tambang Timah closed at $ 15.575 per GDR in London on Friday . It recorded the day 's low of $ 15.475 and the day 's high of $ 15.725 . It closed at $ 15.80 on Thursday . One Global Depository Receipt represents 10 common shares . -- Jakarta newsroom +6221 384-6364 +Telkom at $ 35 in London . LONDON 1996-12-07 PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia ( Telkom ) closed at $ 35 in London on Friday . It recorded the day 's low of $ 34.475 and the day 's high of $ 35.375 . Its previous close on Thursday as $ 35.63 . One ADS represents 20 ordinary shares -- Jakarta newsroom +6221 384-6364 . +Woman charged over N. Ireland arms find . BELFAST 1996-12-06 A woman was charged on Friday with terrorist offences after three Irish Republican Army mortar bombs were found in a Belfast house , police said . Police said the bombs were found hidden with incendiaries and ammunition that were blocked up behind a kitchen wall . The 35-year-old woman was charged with possession of explosives with intent to endanger life and making a house available for the purpose of terrorism , police said . She will appear in court on Saturday . Her name was not released . Security forces said the bombs may have been intended for use in a pre-Christmas bombing campaign by the guerrilla group that is battling to oust Britain from Northern Ireland . +Britain sets conditions to clear American alliance . Edna Fernandes LONDON 1996-12-06 The British government warned Friday that it would refer the proposed trans-Atlantic alliance between British Airways Plc and American Airlines to Britain 's Monopolies and Mergers Commission unless the carriers complied with a number of conditions . Trade and Industry Secretary Ian Lang added that even if the conditions were met by both airlines , final clearance would hinge on an open skies deal between Britain and the United States to liberalise trans-Atlantic air traffic , which would create greater competition on the routes . Lang said he supported conditions proposed by Britain 's Office of Fair Trading , which was asked to examine the case last month . " I agree ... that without suitable undertakings the alliance would be likely to lead to a significant loss of actual and potential passengers , on those routes where BA and AA currently compete and for all passengers on the trans-Atlantic market route between the UK and U.S. , " he said . His comments came just minutes after the latest set of open skies talks ended in London with no deal signed . Industry sources said there was no new date for fresh talks and blamed the deadlock on uncertainty over whether the British Airways-American deal would be cleared . The conditions for clearance of the alliance were that British Airways and American drop 168 slots at London Heathrow airport , the busiest in Europe . American 's parent , AMR Corp. , said it did not view the terms as a " deal breaker . " However , it called the conditions " more severe " than those imposed by other regulatory authorities on similar airline alliances . British Airways 's initial response was that " unconditional divestiture of slots is unprecedented and if done it must be on the basis of fair market value . " It added that it would be " prepared to take reasonable steps to assist the introduction of additional competition . " The government also wants British Airways to drop a clause in its agreement with USAir that bars it from competing on trans-Atlantic routes , and said both British Airways and American should be prepared to reduce services on the London to Dallas-Fort Worth route in the event that a new entrant wishes to enter . It also suggested losing some slots on the London-to-Boston route . The Office of Fair Trade called for British Airways / American to allow third-party access to their joint frequent flyer programme where the applicant does not have access to an equivalent programme . Lang said responses should be made to the Office of Fair Trading by Jan. 10 , 1997 . +Med oil products mostly lower as Elf strike ends . LONDON 1996-12-06 Mediterranean oil products were steady to mostly lower on Friday after Elf refinery workers voted to end their nine-day strike . Gas oil erased Thursday 's gains , plunging $ 5.50 a tonne in line with the screen . Volume was very thin and market remained long , with premiums down $ 1 at about high cif quotes +$0.50 basis Genoa . " The sharp moves on the screen make everyone nervous , " a trader said . Trades were discussed in 0.2 , 0.5 and one percent heating oil into Syria and Lebanon and there were fresh inquiries from France and Spain for low sulphur diesel . Interest remains focussed on a tender by India for a second purchase of high speed diesel for January delivery . Fuel oil lost ground sharply with weaker crude , but also suffered from some pricing pressure . High sulphur cracked fuel lost about $ 3 to $ 109-111 fob Med with several cargoes threatening to overhang the market . The chance of material heading north , talked earlier this week , may be in jeopardy now since American fuel oil is expected to head transatlantic following outages at two coking units in the U.S . Up to 165,000 tonnes of fuel will have to find a new home and with the arbitrage from the U.S. to Europe open Rotterdam is a prime candidate . Low sulphur prices were lower with cif Med pegged in the mid to low $ 140s . Gasoline prices fell after striking Elf refinery workers voted to go back to work , traders said . But an open arbitrage to the U.S. and tight Italian supplies after Elf scooped up Med material over the last week , continued to underpin prices into next week . +New meningitis scare hits Britain . LONDON 1996-12-06 A boy has died from meningitis and a girl from the same school has contracted the disease in the second such scare to hit Britain in as many weeks , health authorities said on Friday . The 16-year-old who attended Sale Grammar School in the northern England city of Manchester died less than a day after becoming ill . The 15-year-old girl is also suffering from the disease and hospital officials described her condition as serious . " At the moment there is no evidence the two cases are linked . However , we are assuming they are as a precaution for the time being , " a spokeswoman said . The more than 1,260 students at the school are being given antibiotics as a precaution . Wales grappled with its own cluster of meningitis cases on a university campus in Cardiff . At least two people have died and hundreds have been vaccinated in an effort to contain the virus . In Scotland , eight people have died and hundreds more are fighting a widespread food-poisoning outbreak . A health authority spokeswoman said 78 people suspected of having the disease , including 64 confirmed cases , were still being treated . Three were listed in poor condition . More than 290 people have reported symptoms in Lanarkshire county , the worst-hit area , since the outbreak first came to light after people ate tainted meat pies at a pensioners ' lunch . +Major 's office-Conservatives still have majority . LONDON 1996-12-06 British Prime Minister John Major 's office said on Friday that rebel Conservative MP Sir John Gorst had not " resigned the whip " ( quit the parliamentary party ) and the government still had a majority in the 651-seat parliament . " He ( Gorst ) isreserving the right not to cooperate , but he has not resigned the whip . The government still has a majority , " a spokesman from Major 's office in Downing Street said . Gorst 's office said later the MP would not feel himself obliged to vote with the government . He said at one point during a press conference : " I have seen my whip ( party manager ) for next week which , of course , does n't mean very much to me now . " Before Gorst 's statement , Major had a one-seat majority in the 651-seat House of Commons lower house of parliament . In his formal statement , Gorst said : " I am today withdrawing my cooperation from the government and shall not treat the " whip ' as either a summons to attend the House of Commons or as placing me under any obligation to vote as advised . " Gorst resigned over a hospital closure in his constituency . +Electronic Data bags flight data contract . LONDON 1996-12-06 Information technology firm Electronic Data Systems said on Friday it had bagged a contract for the first air traffic control project being funded under the Private Finance Initiative . In a statement , EDS said the contract would be in the region of 50 million stg . The contract involved upgrading the flight data processing system at the Oceanic Control Centre in Prestwick in south west Scotland for National Air Traffic Services Ltd ( NATS ) , subsidiary of the Civil Aviation Authority . The system is responsible for the control of aircraft flying transatlantic routes from Europe and North America . The system , which would use satellite technology , is scheduled to enter service in 2000 . -- London Newsroom +44-171-542 7717 +RTRS - Cricket - Play restarts in Australia-West Indies match . MELBOURNE 1996-12-06 Play restarted in the first World Series limited overs match between West Indies and Australia after a rain delay of 50 minutes on Friday . West Indies resumed their innings on 53 for two with opener Sherwin Campbell on 25 and Shivnarine Chanderpaul 10 . Rain earlier delayed the start of play by 30 minutes . -- Sydney Newsroom 61-2 9373-1800 +Cricket - Pakistan beat New Zealand by 46 runs . SIALKOT , Pakistan 1996-12-06 Pakistan beat New Zealand by 46 runs on Friday to take an unbeatable 2-0 lead in the three-match one-day series . Scores : Pakistan 277-9 , New Zealand 231 +Manitoba Pork forward contract PM prices - Dec 6 . WINNIPEG 1996-12-06 Manitoba Pork closing forward contract prices in Canadian dollars per hundred lbs ( Cwt ) for Dec 6 including minimum guaranteed price -- CONTRACT PREVIOUS CLOSE PM CLOSE PM CLOSING RANGE DATE PM CLOSE FIXED MINIMUM AT 1230 CST Feb 97 79.94 79.67 75.55 77.01-81.80 Mar 97 76.37 76.12 72.02 73.47-78.24 Apr 97 74.13 74.69 70.59 72.04-76.81 May 97 76.51 77.07 72.97 74.42-79.19 Jun 97 77.53 77.24 73.17 74.62-79.35 Jul 97 74.45 74.01 69.95 71.39-76.12 Aug 97 72.41 72.07 68.01 69.45-74.18 Sep 97 69.18 69.24 65.17 66.61-71.34 Oct 97 68.00 68.05 63.98 65.43-70.16 Nov 97 68.00 68.05 63.98 65.43-70.16 Note : Manitoba Government Price Index ( C$ per cwt ) - Dec 4 87.16 Manitoba 's Hog Price Range : 84.00-86.00 per cwt CAN / U.S. DOLLAR EXCHANGE RATE : 1.3570 Source : Manitoba Pork . ( ( Winnipeg bureau 204-947-3548 ) ) +Canadian West Coast Vessel Loadings - CWB . WINNIPEG 1996-12-06 The Canadian Wheat Board reported six ships loading , 10 waiting and four due at the Canadian West Coast , as of Friday . The longest wait to load on the West Coast was 13 days . Two ship loaded in Thunder Bay , one waited and seven were due . Two ships loaded on the East Coast , three waited to load , six were due . Port Loading Waiting Vancouver 5 7 Prince Rupert 1 3 ( ( Gilbert Le Gras 204 947 3548 ) ) +New York timecharter fixtures - Dec 6 . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 No new fixtures reported from New York . -- New York Commodities Desk +1 212 859 1640 +New York coal / ore / scrap fixtures - Dec 6 . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 ORE - Maritime Queen 70,000 tonnes Dampier / Kaohsiung 20-30/12 $ 5.25 fio 35,000 / 30,000 China Steel . -- New York Commodities Desk +1 212 859 1640 +Clean tankers fixtures and enquiries - 2321 GMT . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 FIXTURES - WESTERN HEMISPHERE - Danila 28.5 16/12 Caribs / up W224 Mobil . -- New York Commodities Desk , 212-859-1640 +Dirty tanker fixtures and enquiries - 2317 GMT . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 MIDEAST / RED SEA - Thai Resource 264 31/12 Ras Tanura / Red Sea W46.50 Mobil . MEDITERRANEAN - Lula I 85 25/12 Sidi Kreir / Augusta W100 Exxon . Spetses 139 17/12 Sidi Kreir / Augusta W97.50 Exxon . Mesipia 77.5 17/12 Bajaia / Fos W105 Exxon . -- New York Commodities Desk +1 212 859 1640 +NYC Jan refunding has its 1st Euro floating rate . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 New York City on Friday said that it planned a $ 775 million refunding for January that will include its first floating rate issue of taxable debt for European investors . A city official , who declined to be named , explained that Goldman , Sachs , which this summer was demoted to the second tier of the syndicate , proposed the floating rate issue and as a result was promoted to book runner for this offering . By selling the floating rate debt , the city hopes to establish a benchmark , the city official said , adding that it needed a large deal to accomplish this objective . The city in late June sold its first issue of Euronotes , a strategy that it says saved it $ 500,000 in interest costs , and it has been trying to build on this strategy of expanding the pool of potential investors since then . In November , New York City said it became the first U.S. municipality to offer bonds for sale in European markets by competitive bidding as it listed taxable bonds on the London Stock Exchange . The refunding planned for January also includes a $ 475 million tax-exempt offering . No specific date in January has been selected for the debt sale , the official added . -- Joan Gralla , 212-859-1654 +USDA gross cutout hide and offal value . DES MOINES 1996-12-06 The hide and offal value from a typical slaughter steer for Friday was estimated at $ 9.54 per cwt live , dn 0.05 when compared to Thursday 's value . - USDA +Wall St speculates about Santa Fe savior . Brendan Intindola NEW YORK 1996-12-06 Homestake Mining Co tops Wall Street 's list as the most likely white knight buyer for Santa Fe Pacific Gold Corp if Santa Fe rejects unsolicited suitor Newmont Mining Corp . Santa Fe is so far mum on the more than $ 2 billion stock swap takeover proposal from Newmont , announced Thursday . Wall Street , since the bid , has speculated that any deal between Newmont and Santa Fe would be a " bear hug , " or a reluctantly negotiated agreement where the buyer is not necessarily a friendly suitor . Newmont said the companies have had previous contact , though declined to detail the encounters . Analysts predict Santa Fe will go to the highest bidder , and that if a rival buyer is found , Newmont may not be able to match its offer . They said the Santa Fe deal , which includes desirable Nevada mining territory , would only payoff for Newmont longer term . Newmont , in fact , will not benefit from the Santa Fe acquisition on an earnings basis for at least two years , which also limits its capacity to raise its offer . Any deal , friendly or hostile , would almost assuredly be a stock swap , which is necessary to preserve the tax-free , pooling-of-interest accounting , they said . Analysts and arbitrageurs immediately ruled out Barrick Gold Corp and Bre-X Minerals Ltd as Santa Fe saviors because they are locked in negotiations over their splitting Indonesia 's Busang vast gold deposit . Placer Dome Inc too was considered unlikley because it is focusing on geographic expansion in areas that do match Santa Fe 's Nevada , South America and Central Asia presence , they said . A Homestake spokesman was not immediately available to comment on speculation that it tops the list . Homestake , based in San Francisco , operates gold mines in the United States , Australia , Chile and Canada . Earnings in 1995 were $ 0.22 per share , or $ 30.3 million , on revenues of $ 746.3 million . Santa Fe is headquartered Albuquerque , N.M. and reported 1995 earnings of $ 0.30 per share , or $ 40 million , on revenues of $ 350 million . Santa Fe has mining and exploration operations in Nevada , California , Montana , Canada , Brazil , Australia , Chile , Kazakstan , Mexico and Ghana . PaineWebber analyst Marc Cohen said he lowered his rating on Newmont to neutral from attractive today because if Newmont merged with Santa Fe , investors would have to wait until the second half of 1998 to realize earnings accretion . " I think Homestake could come in as a white knight , but how much is someone willing to come in above the Newmont number . One would have to outbid by at least 15 percent , but there is going to be a ( Santa Fe ) deal with someone , " he said . " Longer term , two to three years out , ( a Newmont-Santa Fe deal ) is positive , it does all the right things . But in the near-term it is , at worst , neutral , " the analyst added . Newmont proposed to Santa Fe a stock-swap merger at a ratio of 0.33 Newmont shares for each Santa Fe shares . In Friday New York Stock Exchange trade , Newmonth was off 1/2 to 46-5/8 while Santa Fe added 1/4 to 15-1/8 . " Newmont said it wants to discuss a friendly deal with Santa Fe , which is almost always a euphemism for ' We have more money in our pocket , ' " said an arb , referring to a possible sweetened bid from Newmont . Two other arbs called Newmont 's move a " a 32 cent bid " because there is no formal tender offer , only the proposal letter " mailed " to Santa Fe 's board . -- Wall Street Desk , 212-859-1734 . +Russ Berrie president to retire in July . OAKLAND , N.J. 1996-12-06 Russ Berrie and Co Inc said on Friday that A. Curts Cooke will retire as president and chief operating officer effective July 1 , 1997 . Cooke will provide consulting services to the company through July 1 , 1998 , and will continue to serve as a director , the toy and gift maker said . +Zimbabwe executes convicted murderer . HARARE 1996-12-06 Zimbabwe hanged a convicted murderer on Friday , bringing to eight the number of executions carried out in the past year . A statement said Piniel Sindiso Ncube was hanged at dawn . President Robert Mugabe 's government has resisted pressure from local and international human rights groups to abolish the death sentence . +Multinational commander going back to east Zaire . Jonathan Wright NAIROBI 1996-12-06 The Canadian general in charge of a multinational force for eastern Zaire said on Friday he was going back to Zaire for more information about the plight of about 165,000 Rwandan refugees adrift in the countryside . Lieutenant-General Maurice Baril told a news conference in Nairobi his main concern was for a large group of about 150,000 refugees living off the land in a valley about 65 km ( 40 miles ) west of the eastern city of Goma . If he decided it was necessary and safe for the aircrew , he would not hesitate to order airdrops of food for the refugees , even against the wishes of the government in Kinshasa and the Zairean rebels who control much of eastern Zaire , he said . " Tomorrow I 'm going into Rwanda and my intention is to go across into eastern Zaire and try to find out for the second time what the situation is on the ground , " he said . General Baril saw rebel leader Laurent Kabila in Goma last week but the rebels told him the crisis was over because most of the Rwandan refugees have already gone home . The rebels do not want the multinational force to deploy on the ground , for fear it might help the Zairean army regain control of the area . Kinshasa opposes airdrops , apparently because the food could fall into the hands of the rebels and their local supporters . Canadian Defence Minister Doug Young said on Thursday that the multinational force would probably not have to make food airdrops or intervene militarily in any major way . " It does n't look as though they ( airdrops ) are going to be required in any significant way because the NGOs ( non-governmental organisations ) are in that area on the border between Zaire and Rwanda , " Young told reporters . But General Baril said it would be premature to rule out any course of action until he had more information . " We hope that if the front moves forward or stabilises then we will have access ( to the large group of refugees ) with reconnaissance or humanitarian agencies . " If they ca n't move because they are too weak , then we will probably consider very seriously using air delivery means ( airdrops ) ...It 's complex , it 's dangerous for the air crew that fly in there and it will have to be absolutely necessary . If it is necessary , I wo n't hesitate to use it , " he said . Asked if he would disregard the objections of the Zairean government , he said : " It would have to be in the last resort . It would have to mean that tens of thousands of lives are in danger . Do you think that I would have a conscience problem doing it or not at that time ? And my mandate is also under Chapter Seven to operate in eastern Zaire . " Under Chapter Seven of the U.N. charter , the Security Council has wide powers to preserve peace and security . " I know their ( the Zairean government 's ) position and I know it 's very delicate and we are very sensitive to their position also , " the general added . He denied that his contacts , criticised by Kinshasa , with the Zairean rebels amounted to negotiations . " I do n't negotiate , " he said . " I coordinate with those who are holding ground and that 's a wise thing to do . When we do n't know where the front is , we do n't know what the risk is . " Baril said that apart from the group of 150,000 , U.S. and British reconnaissance plans had tracked two much smaller groups of refugees -- one of up to 1,000 north of the town of Masisi and one of up to 8,000 on the road from Bukavu west to Kindu . The Kisangani office of the medical charity Medecins sans Frontieres said on Friday that more than 100,000 refugees were trekking northwest from the Goma-Bukavu area and many of them were now in the town of Walikale . The general did not mention these refugees , who are on the outer limit of the strip the planes have been checking . +Mauritius put on cyclone alert . PORT LOUIS 1996-12-06 Mauritian authorities put the Indian Ocean island on cyclone alert on Friday . The weather services office said the centre of the intense tropical cyclone Daniella was 570 km ( 310 miles ) north by northwest of the island on Friday afternoon and was moving south by southwest at eight km an hour ( four knots ) . Although not threatening Mauritius directly , it is coming closer to the island and could change direction , it added . Winds up to 75 km an hour ( 40 knots ) could blow over Mauritius during the night of Friday to Saturday , it said . The weather in the capital Port Louis was heavily cloudy on Friday afternoon with occasional showers . The northeastern coast of the nearby island of Madagascar has also gone on alert . +U.N. evacuates staff from Central African Republic . ABIDJAN 1996-12-06 The United Nations evacuated its staff in the Central African Republic on Friday because of mounting violence in a two-week-old army mutiny in the capital , a U.N. official said . The official from the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said a chartered plane had picked up the staff from Bangui and was heading for Abidjan , Ivory Coast . +Senegal proposes foreign minister for U.N. post . DAKAR 1996-12-06 Senegal 's President Abdou Diouf said on Friday he was proposing his foreign minister Moustapha Niasse for the post of United Nations secretary-general . Diouf announced his intention to reporters when he returned from the Franco-African summit in Burkina Faso where an African successor to Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali was discussed . The United States has vetoed a second term for the Egyptian but left the door open for another African candidate . " If Africa does not wish to lose its turn we have to act fast , " Diouf said . " Some of my brother heads of state asked me if I would n't nominate Moustapha Niasse . I see in him the profile of a secretray-general of the United Nations and I have given my endorsement . " +Ex-minister , son killed in Central Africa unrest . Raphael Kopessoua BANGUI 1996-12-06 A former cabinet minister in Central African Republic and his son were abducted from their home and murdered in growing ethnic violence in the capital Bangui , a government minister said on Friday . With violence spiralling out of control , France voiced backing for the elected Bangui government but said its troops based in the former colony under defence pacts would not help it combat army mutineers . " France cannot be involved in the domestic political debate , " President Jacques Chirac told a news conference at the end of a Franco-African summit in Burkina Faso . " French troops may only take part in maintaining order to avoid major abuses and protect foreign communities , " he said . Public Service Minister David Dofara , who is the head of the national Red Cross , told Reuters he had seen the bodies of former interior minister Christophe Grelombe and his son , who was not named . Witnesses said they had been seized by troops loyal to President Ange-Felix Patasse at dawn on Thursday when they clashed with soldiers staging a mutiny since November 16 . Grelombe is from the Yakoma tribe to which most of the rebel soldiers belong . The uprising began over pay demands but has turned into a campaign to topple Patasse , sparking ethnic violence and dividing the capital . The former minister and his son had been taken from their home close to the presidential palace , which is guarded by loyalist soldiers backed by French troops based in Bangui . The bodies were found on Thursday in an open field about two km ( one mile ) further away , said Dofora and other witnesses . The men were seized as loyalist forces and French troops fought gunbattles with mutineers who fired rockets into the city centre . A French-owned hotel was slightly damaged . Yakomas are hounded in stronghold districts of Patasse 's Baya people while other tribes have fled areas in rebel hands . Roadblocks have been erected in city districts while central Bangui , which is patrolled by French troops with tanks , is deserted . Shops and businesses have remained shut this week . The Franco-African summit decided to send a mission Bangui to seek ways of containing the mutiny and a threat of civil war . Chirac said Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore would visit Bangui " in the coming hours " with the heads of state of Gabon , Mali and Chad to try and establish dialogue between authorities and rebels . The mutiny forced Patasse to miss the summit . His spokesman had predicted the meeting to send an assessment mission . Patasse , who won Central Africa 's first multi-party elections , refuses to resign . Church-led meadiation attempts hit deadlock over rebel demands for his departure . Soldiers staged mutinies in April and May , with French troops stepping in with tanks and helicopters to quell the more serious second uprising . Patasse offered concessions and amnesty to rebels before the May rebellion ended after rebels looted the city centre . Rebels accuse Patasse of tribalism and of arming his civilian supporters and hired guns from Sudan and Chad . Mutineers have vowed to disarm all civilians and to chase out the foreign forces knwon as Codos . Hospital sources and witnesses said about 10 people were known to have been killed in the more than two weeks of fighting , including two rebels killed in Thursday 's clashes . An undetermined number of people are reported to have been abducted and killed outside the town by tribal vigilante groups . In Thursday 's fighting , French troops fired back as mutineers trying to break out of their strongholds rained mortar shells on the city centre . +Five die as SAfrican crop plane hits pickup . JOHANNESBURG 1996-12-06 Five people were killed when a crop-spraying plane preparing for takeoff crashed into a light delivery vehicle in South Africa 's North West region , state radio reported on Friday . The freak accident occurred in Mafikeng on Thursday . The pilot survived the crash , but the driver and passengers of the van were killed . +WEATHER - Conditions at CIS airports - Dec 6 . MOSCOW 1996-12-06 No weather-related closures of CIS airports are expected on December 7 and 8 , the Russian Weather Service said on Friday . -- Moscow Newsroom +7095 941 8520 +Skinheads attack Bratislava Rabbi - police . BRATISLAVA 1996-12-06 Four skinheads attacked and insulted the rabbi of Bratislava , Baruch Meyers , in the city centre on Friday , but he escaped unharmed , a police spokesman told Reuters . " A group of four skinheads attacked the rabbi , one kicked him in the hand but caused no injury , " the spokesman said . " All four attackers were apprehended and two have been detained , " the spokesman added He was unable to give more details . " The further procedure is now in the hands of the local police investigator , " the spokesman said . It was the second attack by skinheads in two years on Meyers , an American . Meyers was not available for comment . +Albanian jailed for threat of bomb suicide . TIRANA 1996-12-06 An Albanian court on Friday sentenced a man who threatened to blow himself up outside President Sali Berisha 's office to 13 years in jail for guerrilla action and illegal possession of arms . Buza last April said he would blow himself up outside the presidential palace unless he was allowed to speak to Berisha , who was at the time meeting Italian President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro . Buza was overpowered by riot police less than one hour after he began his action . " Evaluating all the conditions of the case the court thinks the sentence should be lower than the minimum ( 15 years ) , " Tirana judge Qazim Gjonaj added . The defendant denied the charges , saying his action was intended to urge the authorities to give him a $ 20,000 loan . Medical experts had concluded Buza was mentally unstable but fully responsible for the act he had committed , Gjonaj said . +Polish ex-communist president to visit Pope . WARSAW 1996-12-06 Poland 's ex-communist President Aleksander Kwasniewski is likely to visit Polish-born Pope John Paul in early 1997 despite uneasy relations between the Vatican and Warsaw , the foreign minister said on Friday . " President Kwasniewski plans to visit Italy on a invitation from President Oscar Scalfaro . A meeting with the Pope is also planned , " Dariusz Rosati told a news conference . Rosati said that the atmosphere of the meeting , if it takes place , would largely depend on the progress in talks on ratification of a treaty between Warsaw and the Vatican . @ The ratification of the treaty , which was signed in 1993 by the then right-centrist government , is being delayed by an ex-communist party , which won parliamentary elections in the same year and now dominates parliament . The party , the Democratic Left Alliance , says the agreement would give the Catholic Church too much influence over life in Poland and could infringe on rights of other religious groups and non-believers . The relations with the Vatican have also been soured by a recent relaxation of Poland 's anti-abortion rules , which Kwasniewski signed into law last month . +Russia warns Norilsk , not expected to liquidate it . Lynnley Browning MOSCOW 1996-12-06 Russian Finance Minister Alexander Livshits warned financially-troubled Norilsk Nickel on Friday that it must pay overdue taxes , but analysts said the firm would not be liquidated or that its would assets would be frozen . " Norilsk really is a big debtor , both to the federal and regional budgets , " said Konstantin Chernyshev , equities analyst at Moscow brokerage Rinaco Plus and a Norilsk watcher . " Livshits 's words are an attempt to put pressure on the company . " The official Itar-Tass news agency quoted Livshits as telling parliamentary deputies that RAO Norilsky Nikel 0#NKEL.RUO had to pay its tax arrears and that bankruptcy procedures applied to the metals group . " If it was an unsolicited statement and a bolt out of the blue , then it obviously means something , " said Christopher Granville , chief economist at United City Bank in Moscow . " But if it was a response to a deputy 's question that was essentially loaded , then it was the only answer he could have given . " Russian tax and cabinet authorities , under pressure from the International Monetary Fund to boost tax revenues as a condition for receiving payments of a $ 10 billion , three-year loan to Moscow , have been striking fear into the hearts of some of Russia 's most prominent industrial firms by saying they must pay up or face liquidation . " They could freeze metal , but it 's not a long-term solution to the problem and would n't put money in the budget , " Chernyshev said . " I do n't think they would do that . " Entire social infrastructures in the icy Far North where Norilsk is based depend on the company , and Moscow has said it has no finances to resettle hundreds of thousands of people -- an expenditure which could far outstrip Norilsk 's debts . Norilsk officials declined to comment . Analysts said the government , while anxious about Norilsk 's debts , is highly unlikely to bring the nickel , copper , cobalt , platinum and platinum group metals producer to its knees or take measures that could significantly affect output . But it also wants Norilsk , the world 's second-largest nickel producer , to clean up its act . " The procedure of bankruptcy will be applied , " Tass quoted Livshits as telling Duma deputies about Norilsk . It indirectly quoted him as saying Norilsk should first pay salary arrears , which in the past have led to worker strikes . " It is unlikely that Norilsk will pay these debts in the near-term -- the company will remain a debtor in the near future , " Chernyshev said . He estimated the company 's regional debts at least one trillion roubles and said 30 percent of the giant Krasnoyarsk regional budget was fuelled by Norilsk money . Norilsk 's new majority shareholder , Russian commerical bank Uneximbank , has said it is reorganising metal exports through Interrosimpex in order to boost revenues . But the changes have yet to improve significantly Norilsk 's situation . " Uneximbank has inherited a mountain and whether or not they climb out and over it remains to be seen , " said one metals source . Norilsk said in September that it total debts , including unpaid salaries to workers , were 13 trillion roubles . The company said last month that it had worked out a tax payment schedule with authorities , after regional tax officials threatened to seize some nickel and copper assets . -- Moscow Newsroom , +7095 941 8520 +Estonian Tallinna Pank 11-mo net 46.6 mln kroons . TALLINN 1996-12-06 Tallinna Pank , one of the largest banks in Estonia , made a 11-month 1996 net profit of 46.6 million kroons , the bank said on Friday . It said in a statement that it made profits of 4.5 million kroons in November . The bank made a profit of 20.1 million kroons in the first half of the year . Tallinna Pank said its assets rose 17.8 million kroons to 1.84 billion kroons . Demand deposits rose to 855.8 million kroons from 834.6 million kroons and time deposits increased to 295.1 million kroons from 285.3 million kroons . -- Riga Newsroom , +371 721 5240 +Russia ready for constructive work with Albright . MOSCOW 1996-12-06 Russia said on Friday it expected a constructive relationship with Madeleine Albright , nominated by U.S. President Bill Clinton to be Secretary of State . Interfax news agency quoted First Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov as saying Moscow was ready for " most active and constructive " work with Albright . But he noted that policy would be shaped by Clinton and President Boris Yeltsin . Clinton and Yeltsin are due to meet next March for their first summit since both were re-elected . " Our countries ' leaders have agreed to meet in March , 1997 . The Russian foreign ministry believes the new directions in the development of Russian-U.S. relations will be worked out there , " Ivanov told Interfax . Interfax , outlining Albright 's biography , pointed out that she had defended Washington 's interests fiercely as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and that this had included actively supporting NATO 's plans to expand eastwards . Russia opposes NATO 's plans to take in countries of eastern and central Europe which used to be part of the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact , saying such moves would threaten its security . +Yeltsin plans return to Kremlin for Dec 25 - speaker . MOSCOW 1996-12-06 Russian President Boris Yeltsin , who had heart bypass surgery a month ago , plans to return to work on December 25 , the head of the upper chamber of parliament told Interfax news agency on Friday . " Today he is a mobile , energetic man with lots of colour in his cheeks , " said Yegor Stroyev who met Yeltsin , 65 , on Friday at a country residence . " He told me that he had lost 20 kg ( 44 lbs ) which is natural after such an operation . " December 25 , a normal working day in Russia , is the fifth anniversary of Yeltsin 's arrival in the Kremlin . He took over there , and took control of the red button controlling nuclear arms , in December 1991 when Mikhail Gorbachev resigned , marking the end of the Soviet Union . Yeltsin has been shown a few times on television since his quintuple bypass on November 5 but has yet to deliver any major television or radio address to the nation . Surgeon Renat Akchurin who led the operation , told Itar-Tass news agency Yeltsin was working up to four hours a day at his residence . +Bomb explodes outside home of expelled Slovak MP . BRATISLAVA 1996-12-06 A bomb exploded on Friday outside the home of a Slovak politician expelled from parliament after he quit the ruling party , complaining of a lack of democracy in the country . The official TASR news agency said the explosion blew out all ground floor windows of Frantisek Gaulieder 's family home in Galanta , western Slovakia , and damaged the main entrance , but no-one was injured . Gaulieder , formerly a member of Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar 's ruling Movement for a Democratic Slovakia , was stripped of his parliamentary mandate on Wednesday after leaving the party last month in protest over what he said was a lack of democracy in the country . He said he had been receiving anonymous death threats since making the move . " This was an act of terrorism and now I fear not only for my own life , but also of that of my wife and children , " he told TASR . Gaulieder 's family was sleeping in a bedroom at the back of the house and were unharmed by the blast . It was not immediately clear who was behind the blast . +Bomb explodes at mosque in central Bulgaria . SOFIA 1996-12-06 A bomb exploded on Friday at a mosque in the central Bulgarian town of Kazanluk , causing damage but no injuries , state radio said . Violent crime has soared since the collapse of communism in 1989 as Bulgaria moves to a market economy . Bombings are often carried out by criminals to settle scores but the motive in this case was not immediately clear . Some residents of the Kazanluk area are Moslems who converted to Islam during Ottoman Turkish rule . The majority in Bulgaria are Christians . The radio quoted police as saying the blast broke windows and shattered the door of the mosque . +Hungary o / n rates end up before Dec 10 tax payment . BUDAPEST 1996-12-06 Hungarian overnight interest rates closed higher on Friday as market liquidity tightened before the December 10 social security contribution payment deadline , dealers said . " The banks are already preparing for the December 10 tax payment , " said Budapest Bank 's Sandor Tolonics . " They expect a larger-than-average payment . " The overnight market opened at 22.00 / 22.75 percent , then substantial money was taken up at 22.5 percent . But later , rates dropped and closed at 22.00 / 22.25 as a large bank finished borrowing money . On Thursday , overnight rates moved between 21.625 and 22.125 . Dealers said liquidity could tighten further early next week as the social security contribution payments date approaches . -- Sandor Peto , Budapest newsroom ( 36 1 ) 327 4040 +Mexico stocks off lows but still hit by Greenspan . MEXICO CITY Mexican stocks closed sharply lower Friday , but had made a tentative recovery as initial panic and volatility abated . " It was Greenspan at first . Then once we saw the Dow ( Jones industrial average ) was not about to crash , some buyers stepped in , " said a trader , referring to Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan , whose comments that assets were " irrationally exhuberant " upset financial markets worldwide . The blue-chip IPC index ended down 1.29 points , or 43.56 percent , at 3,333.05 . Volume was regular at 74.7 million shares traded . Mexican stocks were also hurt by U.S. long bond rates which had begun to rise before Greenspan 's comments and were inflated by employment data released before trade began in Mexico . Yields on U.S. 30-year Treasury bonds were 6.51 percent when stock trading closed in Mexico , unchanged from Thursday . On the broad market , 107 stocks changed hands , of which losers well outnumbered winners by 75 to 13 . Traders noted the lack of blue chips or stocks traded at significant volume among the gainers . Simec , the steelmaking arm of the debt-ridden Sidek group headed the losers , off 7 centavos ( 1 cent ) at 1.40 pesos ( 18 cents ) . Sidek fell 4 centavos ( 1 cent ) to 95 centavos ( 12 cents ) . Traders also remarked that Mexican ADRs suffered in New York . Heavyweights Telmex and Televisa ended off 25 cents and 75 cents , respectively , at $ 31.125 and $ 25.875 . " Falling share prices in New York do n't hurt Mexico as long as it happens gradually , as earlier this week . It 's a sudden plunge that takes its toll , " said Carlos Ponce , research director at Santander . Traders and analysts differed as to how firm the relative recovery on Friday was . " Some buyers stepped in , but the market was not very convinced . Volume was lackluster , " said one trader . " The market 's very healthy , we 're buying , " said another trader . Ponce said shares were certainly attractively priced in Mexico , but would not appreciate until foreign buyers stepped in , which they had yet to do . ' +Plastic surgery gets boost in Brazil . Simona de Logu RIO DE JANEIRO 1996-12-06 Plastic surgery is booming , especially among men , as Brazilians spend much of their new-found wealth on the latest beauty treatments , said the organisers of a four-day international plastic surgery conference that opened on Friday . The number of plastic surgeries in Brazil has jumped 30 percent to an estimated 150,000 this year since an anti-inflation plan was introduced in July 1994 , Farid Hakme , the president of the Brazilian Plastic Surgery Society ( SBCP ) , said . The number of operations on men increased even more -- by 80 percent , from 8,000 in 1994 to 15,000 in 1995 , he said . " Brazil ranks right at the top for plastic surgery with respect to the number of surgeons , the number of patients , number of operations , number of conferences . Our statistics are the highest for everything , " Hakme said . " We believe the increase in plastic surgeries for men results from the difficulties in the job market . People need to have a more youthful look to compete in the job market , given the profound changes in Latin America 's economy . " A controlled exchange rate , trade liberalisation and tight monetary policies have also dramatically curbed inflation , making more money available for cosmetic surgery . Brazil has been at the forefront in plastic surgery for decades and is home to one of the most famous surgeons , Ivo Pitangy . There are 6,000 plastic surgeons there , of which 4,500 have qualified to be members of the SBCP . Every year , 500 new plastic surgeons graduate in Brazil and medical students from all over the world come to study there . Hakme attributes Brazil 's fascination with plastic surgery not to excessive vanity but to the country 's mix and match of different races , which can create physical disharmonies . " What happens is the nose sometimes does n't match the mouth or the buttocks do n't match with the legs , " he said . Brazil 's most sought-after beauty treatment is liposuction in which fat is sucked away from areas of the body , with about 30,000 operations a year at a cost of $ 3,000 to $ 4,000 each . Stomach tucks and breast operations are also popular since the tropical climate calls for flesh-baring fashions , but unlike women elsewhere Brazilians tend to have breast reductions and buttock implants . " The women who want to reduce their breasts here would probably want to increase them in the United States , " SBCP Vice-President Oswaldo Saldanha said . " Beauty ideals and cultures are different in every country . " Plastic surgery scares like the case in which Brazilian model Claudia Liz fell into a coma after being anaesthetised for a liposuction in October are not much of a deterrent . Saldanha said operations fell 30 percent immediately after that case but the rate was back to normal now . +Daily Argentine grain fixings - Camaras Arbitrales . BUENOS AIRES 1996-12-06 Avg December 5 price fix : Buenos Aires Quequen Rosario Bahia Blanca Oats unq unq unq unq Wheat 121 130 121.3 121 Maize ( Flint ) 113 114 113.7 112 Maize ( Dent ) 113 114 113.7 112 Sorghum unq unq unq unq Millet unq unq 90 unq Soybeans 283 unq 283 unq Sunseeds 219 216 220 216 -- Buenos Aires Newsroom +541 318-0655 +Mexican daily port , shipping update for Dec 6 . MEXICO CITY 1996-12-06 All major ports were open as of 1000 local / 1600 GMT , the Communications and Transportation Ministry said in a daily update . Tampico port authorities said fishing restrictions were in place in an area adjacent to the port because of a geophysical study being carried out in deep waters of the region from the ship Kenda . The ministry updated port conditions and shipping warnings for the Gulf of Mexico , Caribbean and Pacific Coast . - Pacific Coast : Light rains along the coast of southern Baja California and Sinaloa , with the rest of the coast seeing clear skies . Winds from the northeast of 10 to 15 knots ( 19 to 28 kilometers / 11 to 17 miles per hour ) . A new front is seen emerging during the course of Friday , affecting the north of the Baja California peninsula and Sonora state , bringing lower temperatures , light rains and waves up to six feet . - Gulf of Mexico : Cold front bringing light rains to the coast of Tamaulipas , but with the rest of the Gulf in clear skies . Winds from the northeast at 10 to 15 knots ( 19 to 28 kilometers / 11 to 17 miles per hour ) . - Caribbean : Tropical air carrying sporadic light rains over the coast of Quintana Roo state . Winds from the northeast at 10 to 15 knots with waves three to five feet high . -- Chris Aspin , Mexico City newsroom +525 728-7903 +Brazil exam cheats caught using " pager " watches . RIO DE JANEIRO 1996-12-06 Brazilian students have been caught cheating in university entrance exams by using digital watches which gave the correct answers to test questions , a newspaper said on Friday . Rio de Janeiro state university officials discovered students were paying 15,000 reais ( $ 14,563 ) for the special watches , which operated like a telephone pager to receive correct answers , O Globo said . Seventy-seven students were found with the watches and disqualified , O Globo said . +Chile , Mexico to seek to broaden trade deal . SANTIAGO 1996-12-05 Chile and Mexico will start negotiations next year to broaden their free trade agreement to include services and investments , Finance Minister Eduardo Aninat said . Chile hopes to broaden the treaty signed in 1994 beyond reduction of tariffs on imports and exports and add provisions covering services and investment codes , said Aninat . Both areas tend to more laden with friction in free trade negotiations than tariff reduction . ' ' In January or February , we 'll have some very close contacts with Mexico to add the issue of services and advance on the issue of investments , ' ' Aninat told reporters after signing a free trade deal with Canada . ' ' We want to give the treaty between Mexico and Chile greater depth and coverage than it has now . It 's very good now , but it practically only covers trade in goods , ' ' he said . Aninat also said he was confident the Chilean Congress would ratify the treaty with Congress quickly . ' ' The reactions from business and unions which I have seen have been almost unanimously positive , so I do n't see any problem , ' ' he said . -- Roger Atwood , Santiago newsroom +56-2-699-5595 x211 +Indonesia 's Belo leaves for Nobel award ceremony . DILI , East Timor 1996-12-06 East Timorese Roman Catholic Bishop Carlos Belo left Dili on Friday on his way to Norway for the awards ceremony as co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize . Witnesses said Belo left the territory for the Indonesian capital Jakarta accompanied by five other people . It was not immediately known when he would arrive in Oslo . The bishop will jointly receive the Nobel award next Tuesday with East Timorese-born activist Jose Ramos Horta , who lives in self-exile in Australia . The Indonesian government has condemned the inclusion of Ramos Horta in the award , and Foreign Minister Ali Alatas said on Friday that Indonesia would not be represented officially at the ceremony in the Norwegian capital . " I sincerely believe that this unfortunate choice in giving the honour to such a controversial figure as Ramos Horta ... will exacerbate the problem in finding a solution ( to East Timor ) , " Alatas said on Friday . He was responding to questions at a news conference called to discuss next week 's ministerial meeting of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference ( OIC ) in Jakarta . Ramos Horta has been a vocal leader of the opposition to Jakarta 's rule in the territory . Belo and Ramos Horta were awared the prize for their efforts to secure a peaceful solution to the issue of East Timor , a former Portuguese colony which Indonesia invaded in 1975 and annexed the following year . The United Nations has never recognised Jakarta 's move . Alatas said the government 's position on the Nobel Peace Prize would have been different if it had been awarded solely to Belo . Asked if the Indonesian ambassador to Norway would have attended the ceremony if only Belo had been involved , Alatas replied : " Probably , yes , but that is a hypothetical question . " Alatas said on Tuesday that on his way back from Oslo , Belo would visit the Vatican to see the Pope , and would also meet German Chancellor Helmut Kohl in Bonn . Kohl had wanted to meet Belo during the chancellor 's official visit to Indonesia last month , but the bishop was too busy in East Timor to come to Jakarta . +China to open port in Hainan to foreign ships . BEIJING 1996-12-06 China 's State Council , or cabinet , has given a port in the southern province of Hainan permission to open to foreign vessels , the Xinhua news agency said on Friday . Xinhua did not say when Qinglan port in Wenchang city would be opened to foreign vessels . Wenchang has built a berth for 5,000 deadweight-tonne container ships at the port and invested 34 million yuan ( $ 4.1 million ) to dredge the harbour , Xinhua said . It gave no further details . ( $ 1 = 8.3 yuan ) +Government disperses protest with water cannons . RANGOON 1996-12-07 Burmese troops and riot police moved in to disperse a student street protest at a suburban road junction near the Ranyon ( Rangoon ) University early on Saturday , witnesses said . They said police and troops used water cannons from fire engines to subdue about 120 university students sitting in at the centre of the junction at about 3 a.m. before they moved in to round them up . The students , who had staged an 11-hour protest at the junction in northern Rangoon , were taken away in three vehicles . The witnesses said some of the students were hit with batons while they were herded onto the vehicles and it was believed they were taken to the Insein prison in suburban Rangoon . The protesting students , mostly from Rangoon University , were demanding the right to organise independent unions on campuses and the release of about 80 student leaders currently in jail . They were among 500 students who started demonstrating at the intersection on late Friday afternoon . The protest was the second major one in five days in the capital . +Burmese students march briefly out of campus . Vithoon Amorn RANGOON 1996-12-06 About 200 Burmese students marched briefly from troubled Yangon Institute of Technology in northern Rangoon on Friday towards the University of Yangon six km ( four miles ) away , and returned to their campus , witnesses said . Seven truckloads of armed riot police and three fire engines were on standby at one of the junctions near the institute . There were no clashes . " They are now back in the YIT campus , " an institute official who declined to be identified told Reuters by telephone . One of two roads leading to the University of Yangon from the institute had been closed by authorities . But about 300 university students were still gathered outside the gates of their campus , witnesses said . They were singing peacefully . On Monday and Tuesday , students from the institute and the university launched protests against what they said was unfair handling by police of a brawl between some of their colleagues and restaurant owners in October . On Tuesday and Wednesday , opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was restricted to her home by the military government to prevent her from being drawn into the protests . She was allowed to move freely on Thursday . The protest culminated at dawn on Tuesday with several hundred students being detained briefly by police in central Rangoon . The street protests were the biggest seen in the capital since the student-led pro-democracry demonstrations of September 1988 when the junta crushed the uprising . Thousands were killed or imprisoned . Earlier on Friday some of the students , who were held briefly by police during the protests earlier this week , said they were still dissatisfied with the military government . They told Reuters they were unhappy that the ruling State Law and Order Restoration Council ( SLORC ) had not heeded their calls for the right to organise independent unions on campus . " We still want government answers to our demands . We want police punishment to be published in newspapers , " one student said . But the students stressed their protests were non-political and they had no contact with Suu Kyi 's National League for Democracy ( NLD ) . Suu Kyi , a Nobel laureate and daughter of independence hero Aung San , and key NLD officials have also denied any link with the students . But they have said both parties had a " moral link " in that they were against police brutality and injustice . The students also demanded the government announce punishments meted out to policemen who they said had manhandled students involved in a brawl with some restaurant owners near the Yangon institute in October . The students appealed to the government not to close the institute because of their latest demonstration . The institute was shut for nearly two years after the 1988 uprising . On Friday , the road leading to Suu Kyi 's lakeside residence in central Rangoon remained closed by police . +Union leaders outraged by WTO snub to ILO head . SINGAPORE 1996-12-06 International trade union leaders on Friday expressed outrage that the head of the International Labour Organisation ( ILO ) had been barred from speaking at next week 's WTO meeting in Singapore . Bill Jordan , general secretary of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions ( ICFTU ) , told a news conference the withdrawal of a WTO invitation to ILO director general Michel Hansenne was " outrageous behaviour on the part of an organisation that wants to command respect in the world " . Jordan said a small group of developing nations that oppose linking trade talks and labour conditions had pressured World Trade Organisation ( WTO ) officials to prevent Hansenne from taking the platform to urge such links . " It is to their shame that those who are responsible for encouraging this meeting responded ( to the pressure ) in silencing him , " Jordan said after the opening of an ICFTU conference on international labour standards and trade . The three-day trade union conference in Singapore hopes to push labour issues onto the WTO agenda . Jordan said the WTO 's credibility was at stake over the issue of trade and labour . The ICFTU said it wanted the WTO conference beginning on Monday to outlaw forced and child labour , end discrimination in hiring , and guarantee the right to join a union . Bill Brett , chairman of the ILO Workers Group , told Reuters before the news conference he was " not too surprised , but very disappointed " that the speaking invitation had been withdrawn . " Some governments are very determined to stop the issue ( of trade and labour rights ) being discussed , " he said , adding that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations ( ASEAN ) seemed particularly hostile to the ILO agenda . ASEAN groups Brunei , Indonesia , Malaysia , the Philippines , Singapore , Thailand and Vietnam . The ILO wants a trade and labour rights " social clause " included in the final ministerial statement issued by WTO leaders at the end of the meeting , the organization 's first ministerial-level gathering . Speaking to ICFTU delegates , Richard Eglin , director of the WTO secretariat , said the WTO was capable of making a significant contribution to governmental efforts to solve social problems . But he said the WTO 's organisational structure made it difficult to impose on its members a social clause such as that called for by the ILO . +Indian rubber demand seen outstripping production . SINGAPORE 1996-12-06 Indian rubber demand is seen outpacing local production in the 1996/97 April / March season and the trend will persist way into the next century , the chairman of the Rubber Board of India said on Friday . K.J. Matthew said at the Asia Rubber Markets meeting here Indian production of natural rubber in 1996/97 will reach 547,000 tonnes against projected demand of 578,000 tonnes , a gap of 31,000 tonnes . For synthetic rubber , production reached 68,200 tonnes in 1995/96 while consumption in the same season hit 134,085 tonnes , Matthew added . " Though schemes designed to realise further increases in the production of natural rubber are being operated successfully , the demand-supply gap is expected to widen , " he said . Indian synthetic rubber output is not expected to rise significantly in the next season but demand will rise to 145,000 tonnes . Matthew estimates that by the 2000/01 season , the gap between natural rubber output and consumption will rise to 51,000 tonnes and 319,000 tonnes in 2010/11 . Natural rubber production will go up to 695,000 tonnes in 2000/01 against consumption of 746,000 tonnes . In 2010/11 , domestic demand should rise further to 1.233 million tonnes while production will only reach about 914,000 tonnes . One way to bridge the widening gap is to put more land under cultivation which the Rubber Board official estimates will reach 220,000 hectares between now and the year 2003 although Matthew said this may not be possible at this time in India . " The development objective for the rubber plantation industry will be to increase production to the best extent possibly with a view to minimising imports of natural rubber , " he said . -- Singapore Newsroom ( 65-8703305 ) +Japan 's authorities seen seeking to rein in dollar . George Nishiyama TOKYO 1996-12-06 Comments by Japan 's tight-lipped central bank chief and an influential top bureaucrat are further signs that the nation 's authorities want to keep the dollar at current levels , market sources said on Friday . In a rare expression of a view on currencies by the Bank of Japan ( BOJ ) governor , Yasuo Matsushita was quoted in Japan 's leading economic daily on Friday as saying that he sees no further , immediate fall in the yen . This followed a widely watched television appearance late on Thursday by Eisuke Sakakibara , a high-ranking Finance Ministry official , who denied he had said he wants to guide the dollar lower to between 108 and 110 yen . But many in the market thought Sakakibara 's real intentions lay elsewhere , and took more notice of his comments about the U.S. government 's stance on the dollar , dealers said . " I think his views on ( U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert ) Rubin 's comments were indeed what he himself thinks about the dollar , " said Hank Note , chief dealer at Sumitomo Bank . Asked about Rubin 's comment that a strong dollar was in U.S. interests , Sakakibara said the remark does not necessarily mean the United States supports a stronger dollar . " It 's a strong dollar , not stronger . In that sense , the comments are not pointing to a certain direction , " he said . " It shows that Sakakibara is not for a stronger dollar either , " said Sumitomo 's Note . Takao Sakoh , first vice president at Union Bank of Switzerland in Tokyo , said : " Maybe a dollar at 104.50 yen is not acceptable ( to Sakakibara ) , but it may be okay at the current level , at the lower end of 112 yen . " Market participants have kept a close eye on Sakakibara , chief of the ministry 's International Finance Bureau , as a comment he made in November after the dollar hit this year 's high of 114.92 yen pushed the currency down sharply . He had said then that the market 's view on Japan 's economy was too pessimistic and that he believed it was stronger than the market thought . Dealers have come to refer to 115 yen as the " Sakakibara ceiling " for the dollar following the remark . Adding to the comments by " Mr Yen " , as Sakakibara is known for his prominence in the currency market , was BOJ governor Matsushita 's remark . " The recent level of the yen exchange rate has been stable , and it does not appear to be moving towards a further depreciation of the yen immediately , so import prices are likely to stabilise at current levels , " Matsushita said in an interview with the Nihon Keizai Shimbun . " The fact that he touched on the issue of inflation triggered by import prices shows that the BOJ does not want a further depreciation of the yen , past 115 yen , " said Yasuhito Kawashima , chief forex manager at Toyo Trust & Banking Co . Some said the central bank may have been concerned a weaker yen would lead to unfounded pessimism about Japan 's economy . " There was concern that foreign investors may sell Japanese stocks if the dollar goes above 115 yen . The BOJ does not want the yen 's weakness to lead to pessimism over the economy , " said Taisuke Tanaka , market strategist with Credit Suisse in Tokyo . Senior BOJ officials have separately said financial markets ' views on the economy have been too negative . " I realise there are negative views in the markets about the impact of the consumption tax hike and drop in public spending , but the markets appear to be exaggerating the magnitude of the negative impact , " a senior BOJ official told Reuters on Friday . The consumption tax is due to raised in April from three to five percent . +Lebanon sentences pro-Israeli warlord to death . Haitham Haddadin BEIRUT 1996-12-06 A Lebanese military court on Friday sentenced to death in absentia the commander of Israel 's surrogate militia in south Lebanon on treason charges . The court convicted General Antoine Lahd , head of the South Lebanon Army ( SLA ) , of collaborating with Israel with which Lebanon is officially at war . Lahd , a 69-year-old former Lebanese army major-general , heads the 3,000-strong SLA militia which helps Israel hold a border zone in south Lebanon to ward off cross-frontier guerrilla raids on northern Israel . Lahd said a few days after the trial began on February 16 that Lebanese authorities must drop the charges or risk blocking any peace deal with the Jewish state . He said Israel was capable of pressuring Lebanon 's Syrian-backed government to stop the legal pursuit . The charges against Lahd were : forming a hostile army , carrying weapons on Israel 's side , helping Israel strip off a part of Lebanese territory by violence , forming an armed gang , killing or trying to kill Lebanese civilians by artillery shelling and kidnapping Lebanese citizens for long periods . Shortly before Lahd 's trial began , a Beirut military prosecutor charged another 89 former Lebanese army soldiers with collaborating with Israel . No date has been set for the trial of the men , all members of the SLA living in the Israeli-held zone in south Lebanon . Israel and Lahd have repeatedly demanded safety guarantees for the SLA -- a mixed Christian-Shi'ite Moslem force -- which the Jewish states regards as loyal allies . Israel has said the Lebanese army must incorporate the SLA fighters into its ranks as an army brigade as a condition for peace . But Lebanese political analysts have said that would be out of the question and Lebanese authorities pre-empted the issue by taking legal action against Lahd . Former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres , calling Lahd " a great Lebanese patriot " , said earlier this year Lebanon had insulted the SLA commander by ordering his arrest on the treason charges . Peres , who was ousted in May by rightwing Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu , said there could not be real negotiations with Lebanon " unless it will stop the maltreatment of the SLA and its commanders . " The Beirut military court also sentenced to life in jail in absentia Etian Saqr , former head of the pro-Israeli Guardians of the Cedars , a small rightwing Christian civil war militia . Saqr , whose trial was concurrent with Lahd 's , was convicted of " contacting the Israeli enemy , passing information to Israel and undertaking hostile acts against Lebanon " . +Texas / w Okla fed cattle market thin at $ 67 - USDA . AMARILLO 1996-12-06 Trade was slow in the Panhandle area Friday , USDA said . Slaughter steers and heifers were $ 1.00 per cwt lower . Feedlots reporting moderate inquiry . Sales reported on 8,200 head slaughter steers and 1,000 heifers ; following weekly movement of 71,200 head . Note - all cattle prices based on net weights FOB the feedlot after a 4 percent shrink . Slaughter Steers - Select and Choice 2-3 1150-1200 lbs 67.00 . Slaughter Heifers - Select and Choice 2-3 1050-1100 lbs 67.00 . Confirmed - 9,300 Week Ago - None Year Ago - None ( ( Chicago newsdesk 312 408 8720 ) ) +USDA daily cattle and hog slaughter - Dec 6 . Est daily livestock slaughter under Fed inspection - USDA CATTLE CALVES HOGS Friday 12/06/96 ( est ) 132,000 7,000 359,000 Week ago ( est ) 130,000 6,000 346,000 Year ago ( act ) 132,000 6,000 336,000 Saturday 12/07/96 ( est ) 38,000 0 18,000 Week to date ( est ) 688,000 31,000 1,810,000 Same Period Last Week ( est ) 601,000 26,000 1,547,000 Same Period Last Year* ( act ) 685,000 31,000 1,914,000 1996 Year to date 33,549,000 1,589,000 84,894,000 1995 Year to date* 32,970,000 1,305,000 88,800,000 Percent change 1.8 % 21.8 % - 4.4 % *1995 totals adjusted to reflect NASS revisions 1996 Totals are subject to revision Yearly totals may not add due to rounding . Previous day estimated Steer and Heifer Cow and Bull Thursday 100,000 33,000 +BALANCE - Hartford , Conn . , $ 11 mln . CITY OF HARTFORD , CONNECTICUT RE : $ 25,000,000 GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS MOODY 'S : Aaa / A1 S&P : AAA / AA- Delivery Date : 12/16/1996 FSA INSURED Maturity Balance Coupon List 12/15/2000 1,250M 6.25 4.10 12/15/2001 575M 4.60 4.20 12/15/2003 265M 4.40 4.40 12/15/2004 625M 4.50 4.50 12/15/2005 55M 4.60 4.60 12/15/2006 145M 4.70 4.70 12/15/2007 850M 4.85 4.85 12/15/2008 1,200M 4.95 4.95 12/15/2009 1,240M 5.05 5.05 12/15/2010 1,250M 5.15 5.15 12/15/2011 1,240M 5.25 5.25 12/15/2012 1,200M 5.25 5.30 12/15/2013 1,135M 5.30 5.35 12/15/2014 850M 5.30 5.35 Total : 11,880M State Street Bank and Trust Company Prudential Securities Incorporated PaineWebber Incorporated First Union Capital Markets Corp. - NJ -- U.S. Municipal Desk , 212-859-1650 +14 years later , Florida man dies for killing . TALLAHASSEE , Fla. 1996-12-06 Fourteen years after he bludgeoned and shot a man whose trailer home he robbed in 1982 , John Mills Jr . , 41 , was put to death in Florida 's electric chair Friday . As Glenn Lawhon , a rural Florida minister who is the victim 's father , looked on , Mills was pronounced dead at 7:13 a.m. EST ( 1213 GMT ) for the murder of Lester Lawhon . Speaking in Arabic , Mills made a final statement before an anonymous citizen flipped the switch that sent 2000 volts of electricity through his body , said Department of Corrections spokesman Eugene Morris , who was present at the execution . " I bear witness that there is no God but Allah and I bear witness that the prophet Mohammed is the messenger of God , " he quoted Mills as saying . Prison officials said they had no record of Mills ' official conversion , but they said that , on May 14 , 1991 , he had asked that a new name , Yuhanna Abdullah Muhammed , be added to his prison file , which is usually an indication of a conversion to Islam . Mills is the 38th person to die in Florida 's electric chair since the U.S. Supreme Court reversed itself in 1976 and legalised the death penalty . Prison officials said Mills made no special request for a last meal and did not eat the steak , fried potatoes and orange juice offered him . He spent Thursday with family members and his spiritual adviser , Morris said . Mills was scheduled to die Wednesday but had his sentence temporarily postponed by the Florida Supreme Court . On Thursday , the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta denied his appeal in federal court . In March 1982 , Mills and accomplice Michael Frederick knocked on the door of Lester Lawhon 's trailer in an attempt to rob it , police said . Lester Lawhon was taken to a nearby airstrip where he was bludgeoned with a tire iron . Mills then fired two shots that killed Lawhon as the victim tried to run away . Frederick is serving a 347-year sentence . +New York grain freight fixtures - Dec 5 . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 Mana 50,000 tonnes soybeans USG / China 10-15/12 $ 23.50 10,000 / 4,000 GeePee . -- New York Commodities Desk +1 212 859 1640 +Iowa-S Minn fed cattle market quiet , no sales-USDA . DES MOINES 1996-12-06 Slaughter steers and heifers not tested , compared with Thursday 's close , USDA said . Trade slow . Demand and seller interest light . Offerings light . Steers - Select and Choice 2-4 no sales . Heifers - Select and Choice 2-4 no sales . Carcass Basis ( weight only ) Compared Thursdays Close - Slaughter steers and heifers not tested . Steers - Select and Choice 2-4 no sales . Holstein - ( weight only ) Select to mostly Choice 2-3 1250-1400 lbs no sales . Holsteins - ( grade and weight ) Choice 2-3 1250-1450 lbs no sales Select 2-3 1250-1450 lbs no sales . Heifers - Select and Choice 2-4 no sales . Confirmed - None Week Ago - 800 Year Ago - 900 Wk to Date - None Week Ago - 800 Year Ago - 900 ( ( Chicago newsdesk 312-408-8720 ) ) +Man stole pigs , tipped strippers , gets 10 years . APPLETON , Wis . 1996-12-06 A farmhand used the proceeds from stolen pigs to lavish tips on dancers at strip clubs and offered one $ 3,000 to pay for breast implant surgery , authorities said Friday . In sentencing Darrel Voeks , 38 , to a 10-year prison term on Thursday , Outagmie County Circuit Court Judge Dennis Luebke said he was " a thief by habit . " " You are self-indulgent . You are narcissitic , " Luebke said at the sentencing , adding Voeks should pay restitution of more than $ 100,000 to the farming family who had hired him . Voeks , who was already on probation for prior pig thefts , pleaded that he was trying to pay bills for his ex-wife and children . But the court heard that receipts showed much of the money went to dancers at strip clubs where he was known as a big tipper . One stripper said Voeks offered to give her $ 3,000 for breast implant surgery . +Canadian grain statistics weekly . CHICAGO , Dec 6 ( Reuter ) Statistics for the week ending December 1 in 000 's tonnes . - Canadian Grain Commission Visible Supplies Farmers Deliveries Curr Wk Yr Ago Curr Wk Yr to Date Yr Ago Wheat 4320.2 3909.3 288.5 6278.9 5580.0 Durum 1168.9 1225.0 44.3 965.3 1069.6 Oats 286.5 284.6 31.9 937.3 581.2 Barley 1074.0 1104.8 178.0 2531.4 1897.1 Rye 44.6 86.3 2.3 108.2 119.2 Flax 165.2 181.9 14.9 231.4 332.9 Canola 646.6 769.4 60.5 1902.0 2147.6 Corn 79.6 163.5 9.4 95.7 252.0 Total 7785.8 7724.8 629.8 13050.2 11979.6 Exports Domestic Disappearance Curr Wk YTD Yr Ago Curr Wk YTD Yr Ago Wheat 387.4 4677.8 4553.6 55.2 1039.7 846.1 Durum 129.0 1515.9 1220.6 4.6 75.8 73.3 Oats 40.0 561.0 391.9 4.8 149.6 115.0 Barley 110.8 1203.4 506.0 48.2 941.0 786.6 Rye 4.1 60.7 57.9 3.0 10.7 18.9 Flax 7.2 154.1 235.7 1.1 22.2 15.7 Canola 47.1 988.1 1135.5 46.7 894.9 822.0 Corn 4.4 15.1 87.0 0.6 22.1 11.1 Total 730.0 9176.1 8188.2 164.2 3156.0 2686.7 In addition , Statistics Canada indicated the following exports to the U.S. between August and September 1996 , in tonnes : Oats Rye Flaxseed Canola Corn Exports 29,200 17,200 7,700 100 59,400 Year Ago 47,000 24,300 8,700 8,200 12,200 ( Chicago newsdesk 312 408 8720 ) +NYMEX natgas ends sharply lower on weather outlook . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 NYMEX Henry Hub natgas futures settled significantly lower Friday , pressured early by profit taking and driven even lower late by the National Weather Service 's bearish six to 10 day forecast , sources said . January ended 29.7 cents lower at $ 3.487 per million British thermal units after dipping to a low of $ 3.46 . Feb settled down 22 cents at $ 3.186 . Most others also were down . " Weather forecasts have been sketchy . Now the National Weather Service is calling for above-normal temperatures in more than half of the U.S. , " one futures trader said . In its forecast , the NWS said it expects above-normal temperatures " over the lower 48 states " from December 12 through December 16 . With more room to the downside anticipated early next week , traders said support in January was at $ 3.47 , then $ 3.35 . The next backstops were seen at $ 3.11 and $ 3.04 , the low set on November 21 . Resistance was pegged at the new contract high of $ 3.80 . In the cash market , Gulf Coast prices were around $ 3.60 shortly before nomination deadlines . Midcontinent prices were similarly lower in the $ 3.40s. New York city gate gas slipped into the $ 4.40s , down almost 15 cents . NYMEX said an estimated 35,662 Hub contracts traded , down from Thursday 's revised tally of 43,955 . NYMEX Alberta natgas remained untraded , with January settling at $ 1.65 , off 10 cents from Thursday . Physical prices for the weekend at the AECO storage hub were also down about 10 cents in the C$ 1.92-1.97 per gigajoule , or $ 1.52-1.56 per mmBtu range , pressured by unseasonably mild weather in western Canada . NYMEX Permian natgas , also untraded , ended 10 cents lower at $ 2.90 . In congruence with futures , Permian cash prices for the weekend fell more than 10 cents to the high - $ 3.40s. On the KCBT , January finished 26.5 cents lower at $ 3.35 after dipping to a low of $ 3.33 earlier in the session . February was down 22 cents at the close , while other deferreds were 4.5 to nine cents lower . The East / West spread narrowed by 3.2 cents to 13.7 cents ( NYMEX premium ) . Physical prices at Waha for the weekend lost more than 15 cents to the low-to-mid $ 3.50s as milder weather moved into the Southwest . -- H McCulloch , New York Power Desk +212-859-1628 +U.S. barges lightly quoted on call session . ST. LOUIS 1996-12-06 U.S. barge rates were lightly quoted Friday on the St. Louis Merchants Exchange call session . No barges traded versus no trades Thursday . - Two barges next week Illinois bid at a steady 130 percent of tariff , offered at 135 percent . - One barge , week of December 15 , lower Ohio bid 2-1/2 points higher at 105 percent , no offer . Two barges , week of January 5 , Illinois , offered five points lower at 195 percent , bid at 150 percent . - Five barges , 30-day open , mid-Mississippi ( McGregor and south ) bid at 160 percent , offered at 170 percent , no comparisons . - 36 barges , two each week May-August , Illinois , offered at 130 percent of tariff , no bid or comparison . - 36 barges , two each week May-August , mid-Mississippi offered at a steady 135 percent , bid at 120 percent ( basis one each week ) . -- Chicago newsdesk 312-408 8720 +CBOT grain / oilseed receipts and shipments . CHICAGO 1996-12-06 Grain and soybean receipts and shipments , in bushels , at delivery locations for the previous trading day , according to the Chicago Board of Trade - Receipts Shipments Wheat Chicago 0 0 St. Louis 21,346 0 Toledo 61,514 0 Corn Chicago 78,056 0 St. Louis 217,092 75,810 Toledo 285,505 561,287 Oats Chicago 0 0 Minneapolis 306,364 153,231 Soybeans Chicago 8,674 484,018 St. Louis 253,821 223,172 Toledo 64,334 160,476 ( ( Chicago Newsdesk 312-408-8720 ) ) +Clinton to have more news conferences in 2nd term . WASHINGTON 1996-12-06 President Clinton aims to hold more news conferences in his second term and will have one Dec. 13 , the White House said Friday . The president had only two formal , full-blown news conferences last year , one in January and one after he won re-election in November , although he had various other limited sessions with the press . White House spokesman Mike McCurry said Clinton " plans to have regular news conferences " during his second term . But when asked how frequent these would be , he was evasive , saying , " periodic , occasional . " " He enjoys the give and take " with reporters , the spokesman added . +Action Performance to acquire firms . TEMPE , Ariz . 1996-12-06 Action Performance Cos Inc said Friday it has agreed to acquire Motorsport Traditions Ltd and Creative Marketing & Promotions Inc for about $ 13 million in cash and stock . The two firms to be acquired have about $ 25 million in annual revenues from the design , manufacture and sale and distribution of licensed motorsports products . The deal is expected to close by the end of the year subject to due diligence and other customary closing conditions . +Half of dog bites provoked , says American vet . CHICAGO 1996-12-06 As many as 1 million dog bites are recorded in the United States every year and half of them are provoked by humans , a veterinarian told fellow animal doctors on Friday . The Humane Society of the United States estimates that between 500,000 and one million bites are delivered by dogs each year , more than half of which are suffered by children . " Most bites can be prevented by teaching children how to respect a dog , " Michael Cornwell of the Glencoe Animal Hospital in Columbus , Ohio , told the annual meeting of the American Veterinary Medical Association . " Let 's not let our kids jump on them or crawl on them . Dogs and children do n't have to have an interaction . Let 's respect their territories , " he said . Cornwell said 50 percent of reported bites were provoked by a person and 60 percent were suffered by children . He also estimated that only 25 percent of bites were reported because medical attention was not needed . Don Rieck , president of the National Animal Control Association , said aggressiveness in dogs was related more to gender than breed and a male dog that had not been neutered was three times more likely to bite than an unspayed female . The five breeds credited with the most incidents were chow chows , Rottweilers , German shepherds , cocker spaniels and Dalmatians . " The trends in dog bites by particular breeds have more to do with fad pets owned by individuals who need to have something unique . Speaking strictly of dogs , 15 years ago the macho fad pet was a Doberman . Today , Rottweilers are on the way up , " Rieck said . If approached by a stray dog , children should be taught to stand still with fists folded underneath the neck , elbows in , and gaze forward until the dog goes away . +Iowa-S Minn feedlot cattle market not tested- USDA . DES MOINES 1996-12-06 Steers and heifers were not tested , compared with Thursday 's close , USDA said . Reported sales for Fri- None . Week to Date - None . ( ( Chicago newsdesk 312-408-8720 ) ) +Nebraska fed cattle roundup - USDA . OMAHA 1996-12-06 Slaughter steers and heifers were not established Thursday . Demand limited . Seller interest light . - USDA Thursday 200 Last Week Holiday Last Year N / A Week to Date 3,500 Sm Pd Lst Wk 800 Sm Pd Lst Yr N / A Dressed Basis Delivered not well tested . Dressed Basis Steers : Few Select and Choice 2-3 , 1200-1300 lbs 112.00 ; load early 114.00 . Dressed Basis Heifers : Few Select and Choice 2-3 , 1100-1200 lbs 112.00 . +Four Africans said to vie for top U.N. post . Evelyn Leopold UNITED NATIONS 1996-12-06 Four African states are ready to nominate candidates for the post of U.N. secretary-general on Friday now that Boutros Boutros-Ghali has temporarily put aside his bid for re-election . The nominees , according to diplomats , are : Kofi Annan of Ghana , the U.N. undersecretary-general for peacekeeping ; Ahmedou Ould Abdallah of Mauritania , the former U.N. special envoy for Burundi ; Amara Essy of the Ivory Coast , its foreign minister and the U.N. General Assembly president in 1994-95 ; and Hamid Algabid of Niger , the secretary-general of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference . Representatives of the U.N. missions of Ghana , the Ivory Coast , Mauritania and Niger have scheduled a meeting with Security Council president Paolo Fulci of Italy to hand in the nominations in writing , the envoys said . It was not known if other candidates would step forward . Diplomats said General Joseph Garba of Nigeria , a U.N. General Assembly president in 1989-90 , was putting forth his own candidacy without being nominated by his country . Boutros-Ghali on Wednesday opened the door for other Africans to contest his job by saying he was suspending temporarily his candidacy but was not withdrawing completely from the race . His supporters said this meant he remained a candidate in case the race reached an impasse . The United States on Nov. 19 vetoed his bid for re-election while the other 14 Security Council members supported him . The move by the African states means that the council could begin voting on candidates next week , a procedure that could either result in a decision or turn into a bitter fight with vetoes against each nominee . The Security Council has to vote on a new secretary-general and then seek the endorsement of the 185-members General Assembly before December 31 when Boutros-Ghali 's term expires . +Spain 's police seize petrol bombs , arrest five . MADRID 1996-12-06 Spanish police said on Friday they had arrested five people and seized more than 90 petrol bombs during disturbances after a protest in the Basque country against Spain 's constitution . Hooded protesters threw burning bottles and other objects at police in Pamplona after the protest organised by Herri Batasuna , the political wing of Basque separatist group ETA . Police also confiscated eight kg ( 18 lb ) of screws , balaclavas and spray paint cans . The protest , which attracted several thousand supporters , coincided with the 18th anniversary of Spain 's constitution . +Mussolini 's granddaughter rejoins far-right party . ROME 1996-12-06 Alessandra Mussolini , the granddaughter of Italy 's Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini , said on Friday she had rejoined the far-right National Alliance ( AN ) party she quit over policy differences last month . " I 've gone back , " she told a radio show shortly after AN leader Gianfranco Fini , who was being interviewed on the programme , said the row had been resolved . " He did n't want to lose me and I did n't want to lose him . " Fini told state radio RAI he met Mussolini thanks to the good offices of Giuseppe Tatarella , AN 's leader in the Chamber of Deputies ( lower house ) , and had overcome their differences . Mussolini , 33 , resigned from the parliamentary party group for what she said were strictly political reasons . The fiery politician , who is also a niece of screen star Sophia Loren , had accused AN leaders of stifling internal party debate . Mussolini , who sits in the Chamber , told La Stampa newspaper last month after quitting AN 's parliamentary party that she was considering joining the neo-fascist Social Movement ( MS-Fiamma ) formed by some of the Duce 's World War Two followers . +German Santa in bank nearly gets arrested . HANOVER , Germany 1996-12-06 A Santa Claus distributing presents to workers in a German bank on Friday nearly ended up behind bars when a passing police patrol thought he was a robber in disguise . The man , doing his rounds in the northern city of Hanover on the day when German children traditionally receive small presents from Saint Nicholas , convinced police eventually that he was genuine . +Italy commission concludes 1997 budget examination . ROME 1996-12-06 The Italian upper house Senate budget commission has concluded its examination of Italy 's 1997 budget , and it will approve the measure officially by Saturday . From Tuesday , the full assembly of the Senate will start its examination of the financial package . -- Milan newsroom +392 66129502 +EU , Poland agree on oil import tariffs . BRUSSELS 1996-12-06 The European Union and Poland have resolved disagreements over a new Polish oil import regime , the European Commission said on Friday . The EU had objected to increases in Polish tariffs on imports of gasoline and gasoil products introduced on January 1 , 1996 , saying they contravened levels envisaged in the so-called Europe Agreement between the EU and Poland . The increases were aimed at protecting the Polish market while helping to modernise the local oil industry . " The EU and Poland have now reached a final settlement regarding issues related to the Polish import regime in the oils sector , " the Commission said in a statement . Under the agreement , Poland will abolish all oil import tariffs by 2001 , remove all oil price controls and end quantitative restrictions on imports by January 1 , 1997 . The agreement includes the early privatisation and modernisation of Polish oil refineries , which will be obliged to offer equal treatment to all buyers . The EU and Poland will monitor the settlement at six-monthly meetings . +Hindu party forces India parliament to adjourn . NEW DELHI 1996-12-06 Hindu nationalists forced adjournment of India 's lower house of parliament on Friday , in protest against a proposal to observe a minute 's silence over the destruction of a mosque by a Hindu mob in 1992 . Members of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP ) shouted pro-Hindu slogans in the house after a communist deputy made the proposal in remembrance of the Babri mosque , which was razed on December 6 , 1992 . The house was first adjourned for two hours . When it reconvened , BJP deputies resumed the slogan-shouting , and deputy speaker Suraj Bhan suspended work until Monday . The destruction of the 16th-century mosque in the northern Indian town of Ayodhya triggered nationwide Hindu-Moslem violence in which more than 3,000 people were killed . Indian officials blame revenge-minded Moslem underworld gangs in Bombay for a string of bombings in the city three months later that killed 260 people . The BJP backs a hardline Hindu campaign to build a temple at the site of the mosque , which Hindus believe was the birthplace of the Lord Rama . The campaign catapulted BJP from the political fringe to become India 's main opposition party in 1991 . +Indian Sept crude oil output falls to 2.6 mln T . NEW DELHI 1996-12-06 India 's crude petroleum output fell to 2.56 million tonnes in September from 2.83 million in the same month in 1995 , the government said on Friday . STEEL OUTPUT Sept Sept Apr-Sept Apr-Sept 1996 1995 1996 1995 Crude petroleum 2,557 2,832 15,838 17,648 Petroleum products 4,605 5,110 30,589 29,328 Note - Figures are in thousands of tonnes and preliminary . +LUXEMBOURG CHRISTMAS MARKET GOES ON WORLD WIDE WEB . BRUSSELS 1996-12-06 Luxembourg 's traditional Christmas market , which starts on Saturday and runs to December 24 , has taken to the world wide web as a way of publicising its activities . The web site ( http://www.pt.lu/infoweb/kreschtmaart ) gives details of the market 's concert programme as well as its various retailers . -- Brussels Newsroom +32 2 287 6810 , Fax +32 2 230 7710 +London coal / ore fixtures . LONDON 1996-12-06 COAL - Lantau Peak - 120,000 tones coal Hay Point or Newcastle / Kaohsiung 20-30/1 $ 5.25 and $ 5.85 fio respectively 40,000-35,000 / 28,000 shinc China Steel . Royal Clipper - 77,000 tonnes coal Maracaibo / Fos 19/12-2/1 $ 9.90 fio 20,000 shinc / 25,000 shinc Coe and Clerici . ORE - IMC TBN - 70,000 tonnes Dampier / Kaohsiung 20-30/12 $ 5.25 fio 35,000 shinc / 30,000 shinc China Steel . +UK bookmakers lengthen Conservative victory odds . LONDON 1996-12-06 UK bookmakers William Hill said on Friday they have lengthened the odds of a Conservative victory in the next general election from 9-4 to 5-2 . William Hill said the odds were the longest they had been for six months . The Labour opposition are now 1-4 favourites , it said . The election must be held by May . -- London Newsroom +44 171 542-7768 +Italy tops week of meagre bond returns - Salomon . LONDON 1996-12-06 High-flying Italy topped the league in a week of meagre returns on government bonds , Salomon Brothers said on Friday . In local currency terms , Italian BTPs offered returns of 0.85 percent in the week ended on Thursday , with fellow high-yielder Sweden close behind on 0.80 percent . The weekly government bond index rose 0.07 percent in local currency terms . France managed third place with 0.68 percent in the 16-nation world government bond index . Canada 's were the worst performing bonds . They lost 2.21 percent , depressed by a wave of new Canadian supply . Returns on Treasuries were also in negative territory at minus 0.24 percent , the poorest result after Canada and British gilts which lost 0.28 percent . Australia was the only dollar-bloc country in the table to eke out a positive return , albeit a paltry 0.02 percent . German Bunds were not much better , offering returns of 0.05 percent , while Japanese government bonds managed a 0.38 percent gain . Spanish bonds , which had been top performers in Salomon Brothers ' league table for November as a whole , turned in a more subdued weekly performance with a return of only 0.27 percent . In U.S. dollar terms , Japan was the only country to give positive returns at 1.35 percent . France lost 0.37 percent , followed by Italy on minus 0.59 percent . The biggest losers in dollar terms were British gilts , which shed 3.41 percent , Canada with minus 3.03 percent and Australia at minus 1.54 percent . Salomon 's bond index is calculated using all government bonds with over one year to maturity , weighted for market capitalisation . Only bonds freely available to institutional investors and with a certain minimum amount outstanding are included . Returns take account of price moves and accrued interest . -- Stephen Nisbet , International Bonds +44 171 6320 +OPEC basket price $ 24.20 on Thursday . LONDON 1996-12-06 The price of the OPEC basket of seven crudes stood at $ 24.20 a barrel on Thursday , against $ 23.47 on Wednesday , the OPECNA news agency said , quoting the OPEC secretariat . The basket comprises Algeria 's Saharan Blend , Indonesia 's Minas , Nigeria 's Bonny Light , Saudi Arabia 's Arabian Light , Dubai of the UAE , Venezuela 's Tia Juana and Mexico 's Isthmus . -- London Newsroom +44 171 542 7630 +Relations between Clarke , Major good - spokesman . LONDON 1996-12-06 Relations between Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke and Prime Minister John Major are good despite media reports of a rift over European policy , a spokesman for Major 's office said on Friday . Asked about the reports , the spokesman said : " Relations are good . " Asked about Major 's mood after a day of media speculation about his political fortunes , the spokesman said : " He is resolute . He is getting on with the job . " The spokesman said he was not aware of any meetings overnight between Clarke and Major , nor of any talks between the prime minister and parliamentary business managers . Both Major and Clarke were in their constituencies on Friday . +Two dead after executive jet crashes in Newfoundland . STEPHENVILLE , Newfoundland 1996-12-06 Two people were killed when an executive jet en route to Ireland from Michigan crashed on approach to an airport in Stephenville , Newfoundland , on Friday , authorities said . The pilot and co-pilot , the only two aboard , were killed in the crash of the Learjet 36 , airport manager David Snow said in a telephone interview . Snow said the plane last reported to air traffic control at about 3 A.M. local time / 1:30 A.M. EST ( 0630 GMT ) when it began its final approach about 10 miles ( 16 km ) from the airport in this east coast Canadian province . That was the last communication the aircraft made with the airport , he added . " We considered it as being missing until about 0600 ( 4:30 A.M. EST ) ( 0930 GMT ) . That 's when the wreckage was discovered , " Snow said . He said the cargo flight originated in Grand Rapids , Michigan , and was due to stop at Stephenville for refueling before going to Shannon , Ireland . The cause of the crash was not yet known . Investigators were due to fly to Stephenville later on Friday . +PLO says Arafat , Netanyahu could meet Saturday . JERUSALEM 1996-12-06 PLO negotiators said on Friday Palestinian President Yasser Arafat , Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak might all meet on Saturday to try to clinch a deal on Israel 's handover of Hebron to the PLO . " It is very possible that Arafat and Netanyahu will meet in Cairo on Saturday . There is work on arranging such a meeting hosted by President Mubarak , " one PLO official , who requested anonymity , told Reuters . Israeli officials said no meeting had yet been set . Arafat 's adviser Nabil Abu Rdainah said : " President Arafat is ready to meet Prime Minister Netanyahu but no time or date has been set for such a meeting yet . " President Arafat 's position is clear that such a meeting should come after successful negotiations so that the meeting would have positive results . Especially since the Hebron issue has not been agreed yet and the crucial disputed issues have not been resolved . " But Rdainah said Arafat would go to Cairo on Saturday for talks with Mubarak . Both Arafat and Netanyahu have expressed willingness to meet . They last met in Washington after clashes in September that killed 60 Palestinians and 15 Israelis . The violence was spurred by Israel 's opening an entrance to a tunnel near Moslem sites in Jerusalem . The Palestine Liberation Organisation ( PLO ) negotiators said the last two weeks of talks with Israel on implementing the long-delayed handover of most of Hebron to PLO rule had been " meaningless " , necessitating an Arafat-Netanyahu meeting . Mubarak 's adviser Osama el-Baz said on Thursday there were efforts to arrange a meeting between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders . Palestinian Authority Secretary General Ahmed Abdel-Rahman said on Thursday he understood it could be held in Cairo either on Friday or Sunday . Abdel-Rahman had said on Thursday he did not think Saturday would be the date because it is the Jewish sabbath . But the Jewish sabbath ends at sundown , so a night meeting would not interfere with the religious observance . +Turkey hindered by own landmines on Syrian border . ANKARA 1996-12-06 Turkey 's efforts to prevent Kurdish rebels and smugglers infiltrating from Syria are being badly hindered because the military does not have a map of its own minefields on the border , a commission of parliamentarians said . " It is not known exactly where the mines have been sown because a minefield chart cannot be found , " the commission said in a report on border protection . The report , to be debated in parliament in coming weeks , was seen by Reuters on Friday . " Officials say the minefields present an obstacle to the security forces , " it said . It said Kurdistan Workers Party ( PKK ) guerrillas sometimes know the layout of mined areas along the border better than the security forces . " Terrorists and smugglers have dug up the mines , defused them and opened up wide paths in some areas . They can come in and out easily as the minefields are not an obstacle , " it said . An armed forces spokesman was not available for comment . Turkey says Syria sponsors the PKK , fighting for Kurdish self-rule in southeast Turkey . Damascus denies aiding the rebels . The PKK also crosses into Turkey from bases in the mountains of northern Iraq . More than 21,000 people have died in the 12-year-old conflict . +Three dead in Kurd militia blood feud in Turkey . DIYARBAKIR , Turkey 1996-12-06 Three people were killed on Friday in a gun battle between rival groups of anti-guerrilla militiamen on the streets of this southeastern Turkish city , police said . Four others were wounded in the clash , caused by a blood feud between two families , the Kesers and Karabuluts , serving as state-paid village guards against Kurdish rebels . Police said the guards fired automatic weapons at each other . One of the dead was a civilian passer-by . The role of the 70,000 mainly Kurdish village guards who fight Kurdistan Workers Party ( PKK ) guerrillas in the southeast has been questioned recently after media allegations that many of them are involved in common crime . The head of the region 's main pro-state militia is at the centre of a security scandal that has shaken the government . More than 21,000 people have been killed in the 12-year-old conflict between Turkish security forces and the PKK , fighting for Kurdish autonomy or independence . +Texas / w Okla fed cattle roundup - USDA . AMARILLO 1996-12-06 Trade very slow in the Panhandle area Thursday . Slaughter steers and heifers not well tested . Feedlots reporting light inquiry from buyers . - USDA Thursday 200 Week Ago Holiday Year Ago 10,900 Wk to Date 69,100 Week Ago 58,100 Year Ago 30,800 Sales reported on 200 head steers ; 69,100 head confirmed for week to date which includes 14,000 formulated and 3,400 contracted cattle to be shipped this week . Slaughter Steers : Pen Select and Choice 2-3 , 1150 lbs 67.00 . Pen Select , few choice 2-3 1150 lbs 66.00 . +Kansas feedlot cattle roundup - USDA . DODGE CITY 1996-12-06 Trade slow . Not enough slaughter steer or heifer sales confirmed for an adequate market test . - USDA Thursday 600 week ago holiday year ago 14,200 week to date 89,300 week ago 71,000 year ago 47,200 Inquiry good , demand light . Sales confirmed on 500 slaughter steers and 100 slaughter heifers Thursday . For the week to date 89,300 head confirmed including 30,600 head of contracted or formulated cattle . Steers : Select and Choice 2-3 , 1200 lbs 67.00 . Heifers : Select and Choice 2-3 , 1150 lbs 67.00 . +Delphis Hanover weekly municipal bond yields . Delphis Hanover weekly muni bond yields calculated Dec 5 Aaa Aa A Baa 1997 3.50 3.60* 3.70 3.75 4.00 4.00 4.30 4.35 2001 4.20 4.20 4.35 4.40 4.65 4.65 5.00 5.00 2006 4.70 4.70 4.85 4.85 5.15 5.15 5.50 5.50 2011 5.15 5.15 5.30 5.30 5.60 5.60 5.90 5.90 2016 5.35 5.30 5.50 5.45 5.80 5.75 6.10 6.05 2021 5.45 5.40 5.60 5.55 5.90 5.85 6.20 6.15 2026 5.50 5.45 5.65 5.60 5.95 5.90 6.25 6.20 *from previous calculation on Nov 27 -- U.S. Municipal Desk , 212-859-1650 +ACCESS energy futures prices add to daytime gains . LOS ANGELES 1996-12-05 U.S. energy futures added to floor session gains in light NYMEX ACCESS trade Thursday , as forecasts for colder temperatures in distillate-hungry Northeastern markets raised supply concerns . " The cold weather forecasts are helping right now , " a trader said . Earlier , NYMEX crude ended daytime trade 78 cents higher at $ 25.58 a barrel , following breakthroughs of key technical levels and reports of tighter supplies . Front-month heating oil firmed 0.09 cents a gallon to 75.20 cents as roughly 100 lots changed hands within the first few hours of ACCESS . About 112 lots were exchanged overall , traders said . NYMEX gasoline for January delivery climbed 0.12 cents a gallon to 69.80 cents as a light 33 lots traded in the nearby month and 35 moved overall . January crude was barely changed from its settlement , edging up one cent to $ 25.66 a barrel . About 350 lots were traded for January and 870 in all months . -- David Brinkerhoff , Los Angeles bureau +1 213 380 2014 +U.S. blasts release of convicted bomber . WASHINGTON 1996-12-05 The United States Thursday blasted the release from a Greek prison of a Palestinian guerrilla convicted of bombing an airliner and killing a teenager in 1982 , saying the move " does not make sense . " " All of us who have been victimised by terrorists ... need to stand together against terrorists . We ca n't let terrorists out of jail when they are a danger to civilians all around the world , " State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns said . ' Mohammed Rashid " is a terrorist who deserves to be behind bars . It is inexplicable to us why he would have been allowed to leave Greece before serving his just sentence ... This is an incomprehensible move . It does not make sense , " Burns told a news briefing . He spoke after Rashid left Greece Thursday on being freed from prison early for good behaviour after serving 8-1/2 years . The Clinton administration 's strong views on this subject have been conveyed to the Greek government , Burns said . Mahammad Rashid was whisked from Korydallos maximum security prison just outside Athens to the airport where he boarded a regular Olympic Airways flight to Cairo where he would transit to Tunis and the former Palestine Liberation Organisation headquarters . Rashid , 46 , was sentenced to 18 years in prison by a Greek court in 1992 after being convicted of premeditated murder in the mid-air bombing of a Pan American airliner in 1982 . His sentence had been reduced to 15 years in 1993 . A parole court ruled recently that Rashid could be freed after serving 8-1/2 years , with time in pre-trial detention counted towards his term , but said he must be expelled immediately from Greece . The United States accuses Rashid of belonging to the May 15 Palestinian guerrilla group and being an accomplished student of master Palestinian bombmaker Abu Ibrahim . Three FBI agents who testified against Rashid during the trial , held at Korydallos prison , said they had ample evidence against Rashid for a bomb planted on a Pan American plane in Brazil in 1982 and a mid-air bomb blast on a TWA airliner approaching Athens in 1986 which killed four U.S. citizens . +School football player banned for slashing opponents . ALBUQUERQUE , N.M. 1996-12-05 A New Mexico high school football player who used razor-sharp helmet buckles to slash opponents and a referee was expelled from high school banned Thursday from competition for one year . Mike Cito , 17 , was expelled from St Pius X High School in Albuquerque after an October game in which he used the sharpened chin strap buckles to injure two opposing players and the referee . One of the players need 10 stitches to a cut on his forearm . Officials said the New Mexico Activities Association decided to bar Cito from any inter-scholastic competition until next October , regardless of the school he attends . Cito 's father , Stephen Cito , had admitted filing the metal buckles to a fine edge , saying he did it to get even with the referee and with players who had roughed up his son in a previous game . +Cyberspace squabbles overshadow copyright talks . Elif Kaban GENEVA 1996-12-06 In a gloomy Geneva conference centre built before the dawn of the Internet , groups of staid officials made a first stab on Friday at rewriting copyright laws for the digital age . But critics at the first government-level meeting to revise copyright laws in 25 years said the officials and legislators might as well be trying to police the ether . After four days of diplomatic wrangling over procedures , some 600 delegates from nations small and large got down to the nitty-gritty of setting the digital agenda for the first time . Cyberspace squabbles overshadowed the debate on a stack of proposals covering literary and artistic works , the rights of performers and producers of music and producers of databases . " If it goes on like this , we wo n't have enough time to finish all the discussions , " a frustrated Western delegate said . " They announced they will start evening sessions next week . " Attempts by copyright-based industries to ensure they get a cut from online works led to a storm of protests by Internet companies and critics who say the pacts would curb public access to online information from soccer results to stock prices . " It 's not illegal to make photocopies of newspaper articles . It 's fair use . We can read sports statistics or stock prices . But with the treaty , this kind of fact will be owned and subject to licensing , " said James Love , a consumer lobbyist heading the Washington-based Consumer Project on Technology . " None of the treaties are ready to move . These people do n't understand what they 're doing . " At stake are billions of dollars and the future of the electronic information industry -- the coming medium for the distribution of music , films , literature , software and commerce . Supporters of the three pacts say they are only an extension of existing intellectual property rights , covered by the century-old Berne Convention . But an array of opponents from the network industry to consumer , scientific and academic groups say the pacts will give sweeping powers to entertainment and copyright-based industries . A quick survey at the conference centre found few officials who had actually surfed the Internet . Mongolia 's state copyright official , Gundegma Jargalshaihan , said apologetically that he had just arrived from Ulan Bator and was not aware of the details of the digital agenda . " We do n't have money for Internet in Mongolia , " he added . Alexander Bavykin , deputy legal chief at Russia 's foreign ministry , said Moscow had yet to formulate a policy on copyright in cybersppace . He too had never browsed the Net . " I 've never tried it and why should I ? There are lots of other things in this life I have n't tried either , " he said . A visit to the computer centre offering Internet services found a lone European official clicking away on his mouse . " Internet is a potential cash cow for copyright-based industries and we need roadmaps on the information superhighway , " said Marc Pearl , vice-president of the Information Technology Association of America , a trade association of U.S. network companies opposing the treaties . " But there are a lot of dinosaurs here . People here do n't understand Internet technology . Because they do n't understand technology , they fear the unknown . " Before the Internet , those whose business was to protect copyrights knew where they stood . Their enemies were tangible if elusive , such as the people who pirated music cassettes . But the Internet , a global computer network where anything from music to software can be duplicated and distributed at the click of a computer mouse , has ripped up the rulebooks . Network operators said the draft laws would hold them responsible for copyright infringements in the system and expose them to multi-billion-dollar liabilities . " There are 500 million messages transmitted through the Internet everyday , " said Tim Casey of the U.S.-based MCI Communications Corporation . " How can we control them all ? " +Italy evacuates 17 nuns and priests from Zaire . ROME 1996-12-06 Italy said on Friday it had evacuated 17 Roman Catholic nuns and priests from Zaire where they had been at risk from fighting between government troops and ethnic Tutsi rebels . The Foreign Ministry said the 10 Europeans and seven Africans took a special flight from the Garamba national park in northern Zaire to the Ugandan capital Kampala where they were being looked after at the Italian embassy . The group had travelled from their mission on the edge of the park to a landing strip to make the rendezvous , a ministry official said . The ministry said the group consisted of 13 nuns , seven Italians and six Zaireans , and four priests , two from Belgium , one from Spain and one from Zambia . +Third Paris blast victim was Moroccan student . PARIS 1996-12-06 Moroccan Mohamed Benchaou , the third person to die after a bombing on a Paris train , was a 25-year-old student about to submit a mathematics doctorate , the Moroccan embassy said on Friday . Benchaou died of his injuries on Thursday night , two days after the blast . A newly-married Canadian woman and a man from New Caledonia died instantly in the bomb that injured 90 others in the rush-hour train . An embassy spokesman said Benchaou , the son of a Moroccan army colonel , had been due to take his doctorate in March and hoped to become a teacher . Investigators have said the explosion bore the hallmarks of Algerian Moslem fundamentalists who staged a series of bombings last year which killed eight people and injured more than 160 . +Italian President urges separatists to turn back . MANTUA , Italy 1996-12-06 Italian President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro visited the symbolic heartland of the separatist Northern League on Friday and appealed to its supporters to drop their campaign for a breakaway state . Addressing a convention on Italian unity in Mantua , where the party has set up its own " parliament of the north " , Scalfaro made a direct appeal to what he called " my friends from the League " to work instead for federal reform . " It is an invitation , a commitment , a promise . Let 's march together , " Scalfaro , a northerner himself , said . " Help Italy to teach , to propose a capacity for strong local autonomy , for the federalism which can give new vigour to our blood . But turn back from the line you are taking now , " he said . Scalfaro was in Mantua to attend a ceremony commemorating the executions there by Austrian rulers in 1852 and 1853 of a group of Italians who had campaigned for national unity . He was jeered and whistled at by a small group of League supporters when he arrived for a visit marked by heavy security . Witnesses said the protesters were outnumbered by other Italians who waved tricolour flags in the national red , white and green or shouted " Viva Italia " . The League won more than eight percent of votes at the last general election in April on a federalist platform but its leader Umberto Bossi later switched to a separatist agenda . A three-day " independence " march along the Po River in September , culminating in a declaration in Venice of a self-styled " Republic of Padania " , flopped badly . +Denmark 's Radiometer H1 result seen flat . COPENHAGEN 1996-12-06 A Reuter consensus survey sees medical equipment group Radiometer reporting largely unchanged earnings when it publishes first half 19996/97 results next Wednesday . An average of four analysts ' forecasts predicted pre-tax profit of 147.3 million crowns compared to 144.5 million in the first six months of 1995/96 . They said that the group 's failure to introduce new products was behind the share 's weak performance in 1996 , during which it has lost seven percent so far . -- Soeren Linding Jakobsen , Copenhagen newsroom +45 33969650 +Moslem fundamentalists kill 19 Algerians - agency . PARIS 1996-12-06 Moslem fundamentalists killed 19 civilians overnight in Blida province south of Algiers , Algerian security forces said on Friday . In a statement carried on the official Algerian news agency APS , the security forces said the 19 had been killed by " a group of terrorists " . +Belgian police smash major drugs rings , 30 arrested . BRUSSELS 1996-12-06 Police smashed two drugs smuggling rings and arrested 30 people after a taxidriver in Spain alerted them to a suitcase of heroin left in his cab , Belgian police said on Friday . Police seized dozens of kilos of heroin with a street value of hundreds of millions of Belgian francs , a public prosecutor 's office spokesman in the port city of Antwerp said . He said a 24-year-old Belgian woman left a suitcase containing 13 kg ( 29 lb ) of heroin in a taxi in Barcelona . The taxidriver alerted police who arrested a 33-year-old Turkish man when he came to pick up the suitcase at a lost luggage office . The woman was later arrested in Belgium . She and the Turkish man smuggled heroin from Turkey to Antwerp from where it was taken to Spain , France and Germany by others , the spokesman said . He said 14 people were arrested in Belgium and 16 others in other European nations after an investigation lasting nearly a year . ( $ 1=32.14 Belgian Franc ) +Port conditions update - Lloyds Shipping . GREECE , Dec 5 - Greek port workers called off a strike which had kept the country 's ports closed , giving the government until Feb 1 to introduce a promised bonus scheme . +German Jan-August coffee imports detailed . HAMBURG 1996-12-06 German net green coffee imports from outside the EU totalled 7.73 million bags in January-August compared with 7.66 million in the year-ago period , the DKV coffee association said . Imports of 1.04 million bags in August were down from 1.08 million in August 1995 but up from 992,860 bags in July 1996 . Colombia shipped 198,226 bags in August after 164,185 in July , El Salvador 160,553 ( 129,184 ) , Indonesia 72,218 ( 78,959 ) , Ethiopia 69,252 ( 60,456 ) and Kenya 63,969 ( 60,043 ) . Brazil was in seventh position with 54,333 bags ( 29,055 ) . -- Hamburg newsroom +49-40-41903275 +Munich Re says to split stock . MUNICH , Germany 1996-12-06 Muenchener Rueckversicherungs AG , the world 's largest reinsurer , said on Friday it expected to switch its shares to a lower par value by September 1997 at the earliest . The group , known as Munich Re , plans to seek approval for the move at its shareholders ' meeting today . The company said the switch would probably become effective in September . The planned 10-for-one stock split would reduce the par value of Munich Re 's shares to five marks from 50 , causing their price to drop to around one tenth of the present value . Munich Re 's registered shares , part of the blue-chip DAX index , were trading at 3,710 marks on Friday . -- Frankfurt Newsroom , +49 69 756525 +EU experts postpone talks on rice area aid . BRUSSELS 1996-12-06 European Union rice experts on Thursday postponed discussion on area aid payments to rice producers because the documents were not available in all the EU languages , an EU offcial said on Friday . " The discussion in the experts group had to be postponed because the documents needed to be translated into the official languages and the item will be on next week 's agenda , " the offcial said . European rice producers are due to get compensatory area aid payments similar to those paid to cereal producers because of cuts in intervention prices . -- Brussels Newsroom 32 2 287 6800 +Frankfurt dollar fix 1.5338 marks . FRANKFURT 1996-12-06 The dollar was fixed at 1.5338 marks in Frankfurt on Friday , after 1.5607 marks on Thursday . There was no Bundesbank intervention . +John Lewis UK store sales up 4.5 % in week . LONDON 1996-12-06 The John Lewis Partnership said its UK department store sales rose 4.5 percent in the week to November 30 compared with the same week a year earlier . In the 18 weeks to November 30 , sales were up 13.6 percent year-on-year . Total sales , including the Waitrose supermarket chain , rose 5.8 percent in the week and were up 11.4 percent in the 18-week period . -- Rosemary Bennett , London Newsroom 44 171 542 2774 +Timah at 15.625 in London at 0931 GMT . LONDON 1996-12-06 PT Tambang Timah was traded at $ 15.625 per GDR in London on Friday at around 0931 GMT . It recorded a low of $ 15.625 and a high of $ 15.725 . Its previous close on Thursday was $ 15.80 . One Global Depository Receipt represents 10 common shares . -- Jakarta newsroom +6221 384-6364 +British " Euro-sceptic " says Clarke should resign . LONDON 1996-12-06 A " Euro-sceptic " member of the ruling Conservative party said on Thursday British finance minister Kenneth Clarke had to resign to prevent the party disintegrating over the issue of a single European currency . Member of Parliament Tony Marlow said the resignation of the chancellor of the exchequer was the only way to make the Conservatives electable in a general election which must take place by May next year . " We have a divided and split Cabinet . This cannot endure , " Marlow told BBC television 's Newsnight programme on Thursday . " It is not sustainable . Kenneth Clarke has to go . If he does n't resign , the prime minister has got to fire him . " Marlow 's comment come on the heels of speculation that Clarke had threatened to resign if the government changed its " wait and see " policy on a single currency and declared it would not sign up for the currency in the next Parliament . Clarke denied on Thursday he had threatened to resign and said his position on the single currency was in tune with that of Prime Minister John Major . Major told parliament on Thursday he would keep his options open on single-currency membership . His statement was interpreted as a significant victory for Clarke and fellow pro-European Michael Heseltine , deputy prime minister . Pro-European Conservative MP Edwina Currie told the BBC that if Clarke resigned , other ministers would go with him . +Court ejects head of Australian child-sex inquiry . CANBERRA 1996-12-06 The Australian opposition on Friday demanded a high-powered investigation into paedophilia in the Australian diplomatic service after the federal court forced the head of the existing inquiry to stand aside . The court said inquiry head Chris Hunt might be biased , since he privately told a newspaper he had turned up no major evidence of paedophile activity , even though he still had months ' of investigation before him . " Today we are left with a ruinous wreck beyond salvage and a continuing pall of doubt and suspicion hanging over our diplomatic service , " opposition foreign affairs spokesman Laurie Brereton said . But the government responded by pressing ahead with the original inquiry , established in May , appointing a new head to lead it . Critics say that if there were many paedophiles in senior posts in the Foreign Affairs Department then a secret inquiry would be open to internal influence and would become a public service whitewash . Accordingly , they demand an open investigation . A spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer said the appointment of a new inquiry head , administrative law expert Pamela O'Neil , showed the government 's commitment to pursue the matter . A report is due in May next year . One Australian diplomat has been prosecuted this year for having sex with a Cambodian boy under 16 but was acquitted . Police have investigated others . A newspaper reported allegations in April that diplomats had directed Australian government aid to certain foreign orphanages to secure sex with children . +Australian hitman killed wrong victim . SYDNEY 1996-12-06 An Australian hitman who went to the wrong house and killed the wrong man was sentenced to 20 years jail on Friday . Paul Crofts , 33 , and an accomplice were contracted to shoot a man , identified only as Tony , in the leg to punish him for his misconduct with a female friend of the contractor , the New South Wales Supreme Court was told . But in February 1993 Leszic Betcher , was shot and killed after answering a knock at the door of his Sydney home . " The inference from all the material is that the marauders had come to the wrong house , " Judge Michael Grove said . In sentencing Crofts , who pleaded guilty , Grove took into account his " mildly retarded " intellectual state , which placed him in the lowest two percent of the population . Grove said Betcher was " not only the victim of a horrendous crime , but his death was brought about in circumstances of an equally ghastly error on the part of the prisoner and his accomplices " . The unnamed accomplice was earlier sentenced to 20 years in prison . +NZ 's Bolger says Nats to meet NZ First on Sunday . WELLINGTON 1996-12-06 New Zealand Prime Minister Jim Bolger , emerging from coalition talks with the nationalist New Zealand First party on Friday afternoon , said National and NZ First would meet again on Sunday . Bolger said he expected a government to be formed by Thursday . +NZ 's Peters says Nat , Lab talks at similar stage . WELLINGTON 1996-12-06 New Zealand First leader Winston Peters on Friday said coalition talks with the National and Labour parties were at a similar level of completion . Peters left a meeting between NZ First and National negotiators to spend 20 minutes speaking to Labour leader Helen Clark . He told Reuters he had needed to speak to her before she left Wellington later on Friday . Peters said the talks with Labour and National had reached " about the same level of completion , and that 's good " . +RTRS - Australian MP John Langmore formally resigns . CANBERRA 1996-12-06 Australian parliamentarian John Langmore has formally resigned from his lower house seat , the office of House of Representatives speaker Bob Halverson said on Friday . " Halverson announced that he had received today from Mr John Vance Langmore , a letter resigning his place as member of the House of Representatives for the electoral division of Fraser in the Australian Capital Territory , " his office said in a statement . Halverson was considering possible dates for the by-election , his office said . Langmore , 57 , announced in November that he intended to resign from parliament to take up a position as Australia 's senior representative at the United Nations headquarters in New York . He played an active role at the U.N. social development conference in Copenhagen last year and has co-authored articles with U.N. development programme officer Inge Kaul . Langmore , a persistent campaigner for interventionist economic policy , has been Labor member for Fraser since 1984 . He was senior private secretary to the employment and industrial relations minister from 1983 to 1984 and was economic advisor to then treasurer Paul Keating in 1983 . His previous posts include assistant director of the national planning office of Papua New Guinea from 1969 to 1973 . -- Canberra Bureau 61-6 273-2730 +Burmese students march out of campus again . RANGOON 1996-12-06 A group of Burmese students on Friday marched out of the Yangon Institute of Technology ( YIT ) in the northern outskirts of Rangoon and moved toward the University of Yangon about six km ( four miles ) away , witnesses said . The witnesses could not give exact numbers of those taking part in the march or any other details immediately . On Monday and Tuesday , students from the YIT and the university launched street protests against what they called unfair handling by police of a brawl between some of their colleagues and restaurant owners in October . The protests culminated at dawn on Tuesday with several hundred of the student protesters being detained briefly by police near the central Shwe Dagon pagoda in Rangoon . They were later released . On Friday , some students told Reuters that they were still dissatisfied with the ruling State Law and Order Restoration Council 's ( SLORC ) handling of their demands . They said they wanted to organise independent unions on university campuses and demanded that details of the punishment of policemen who allegedly manhandled some students at the October brawl be published in newspapers . +Thai rice vessels loading and movements at Dec 06 . BANGKOK 1996-11-29 The Thai Commerce Ministry detailed rice loading at Thai ports as follows ( in tonnes ) : Vessel Date of Arrival Quantity Destination Iran Sabr 19/11/96 9,000 Iran Princess of Loine 19/11/96 10,000 Philippines Deligst 20/11/96 5,500 Indonesia Seagramd ace 20/11/96 5,000 Japan Lucky Emdldm 20/11/96 5,000 Japan Algoa Day 21/11/96 6,000 Africa Sangthai Glory 22/11/96 3,000 Singapore Myos Yang 5 22/11/96 4,000 Indonesia Budisuryana 22/11/96 3,800 Malaysia King Ace 22/11/96 5,000 Japan Tong Shun 25/11/96 3,000 Vietnam But 2 27/11/96 5,000 Burma -- Bangkok newsroom ( 662 ) 652-0642 +Chinese girl nearly dies from cigarette smoke . SHANGHAI 1996-12-06 A five-year-old girl in the east China city of Tianjin choked and almost died from cigarette smoke at her grandfather 's birthday with relatives smoking for hours in a small room , the Wen Hui Bao newspaper said on Friday . The newspaper said the girl was rushed to hospital and found to be having extreme difficulty breathing . It said eight of the people at the party , including the girl 's father , immediately announced they would give up smoking . +South Korean won closes down on import settlements . SEOUL 1996-12-06 The won slid against the U.S. unit on Friday as players prepared for Monday 's import settlement needs , traders said . The won ended at 831.00 , slightly down from an opening of 830.60 . It ranged between 830.20 and 831.40 . " A sale of about $ 60 million by Hyundai Heavy pushed the dollar down earlier in the day , but Monday 's import needs helped it recover , " said a Koram Bank dealer . Dealers said the dollar / yen 's movement on the world market would continue to set the trend for the dollar / won next week . +Foreign planes to land in China 's popular Guilin . BEIJING 1996-12-06 China 's tourist spot of Guilin in the southern region of Guangxi will open its airport to foreign aircraft , the Xinhua news agency said on Friday . An assessment group made up of the State Council 's Port Office , the Civil Aviation Administration of China , the General Administration of Customs and other authorities had granted the airport permission to handle foreign aircraft , Xinhua said . " The move is expected to give a shot in the arm to the economic expansion of Guangxi and southwest China as a whole , " the agency said but gave no further details . Guilin is well known for its mountain and river scenery and is one of China 's most popular tourist destinations . +EPA says economic assessment unchanged by GDP data . TOKYO 1996-12-06 Japan 's Economic Planning Agency has not changed its view that the economy is gradually recovering , despite relatively weak gross domestic product figures released on Tuesday , EPA Vice Minister Shimpei Nukaya told reporters on Friday . He said the GDP growth was weak but that this reflected the economy between July and September and did not take into account more recent data . When asked about the outlook for the fiscal year beginning in April , Nukaya said the economy may slow down in the early part of the fiscal year due to a planned consumption tax hike , but that would be only temporary . The consumption tax will be raised to five percent from three percent from April 1 . +Sangetsu - 96/97 parent forecast . TOKYO 1996-12-06 Year to March 31 , 1997 ( in billions of yen unless specified ) LATEST ACTUAL ( Parent ) FORECAST YEAR-AGO Sales 128.00 117.56 Current 12.00 9.94 Net 6.20 5.36 EPS 143.56 yen 127.64 yen Ord div 30.00 yen 30.00 yen NOTE - Sangetsu Co Ltd is a trader specialising in interiors . +Bre-X , Barrick said to continue Busang talks . K.T. Arasu JAKARTA 1996-12-06 Canada 's Bre-X Minerals Ltd and Barrick Gold Corp are to continue negotiations to hammer out a partnership agreement to develop the spectacular Busang gold find in Indonesia , sources close to the talks said on Friday . " The negotiations will be held both in Toronto and in Jakarta , " one source , speaking on condition of anonymity , told Reuters . Another source said most of the key negotiators from both Bre-X and Barrick had returned to Toronto , but declined to say if there had been any progress in their negotiations . Both sources said Bre-X and Barrick did not hold talks on Thursday with Mines and Energy Ministry Secretary-General Umar Said , who is coordinating the negotiations over the Busang find in East Kalimantan . The first source also said Bre-X had until December 21 to submit to the Indonesian Mines and Energy Ministry a feasibility study on the central region of the Busang property , estimated to contain 2.6 million ounces of gold . The richest parts of the property to the north and south of the central region have been estimated by Bre-X to contain 57 million ounces of gold . " Bre-X is expected to complete the feasibility report by December 16 and submit it to the government before the December 21 deadline , " the source said . He said Bre-X would then formally seek the permission of the Indonesian government to begin construction to develop Busang 's central region , which might take up to two years . The source declined to say if there had been any progress in the talks between Bre-X and Barrick . " This is a huge project ... we are not selling furniture , and Bre-X has 13,000 shareholders to answer to , " the source said . " While there has been some agreement in principle on some issues , there are still others such as procedures and mechanisms that needed to be sorted out , " he added . The source said no new deadline had been set by the Mines and Energy Ministry for Bre-X and Barrick to strike a deal . The Ministry had given the companies until December 4 to complete a partnership deal , and advised Bre-X to take a 25 percent stake and Barrick 75 percent to develop the property . " As far as I am aware , there 's been no new deadline , " the source said . The Ministry 's Umar said on Thursday that both Bre-X and Barrick had responded positively to a government letter recommending a 25-75 split in the Busang gold property . The government also wants 10 percent of the property . Umar said the government had yet to receive a formal reply from the companies . He had said earlier that if the two companies failed to reach a partnership agreement , the government would explore other ways to expedite development of the Busang find . Bre-X has a partnership deal with PT Panutan Duta of the Panutan Group run by President Suharto 's eldest son , Sigit Harjojudanto , under which Panutan would receive $ 40 million over 40 months plus a 10 percent stake Busang 's richest parts . Barrick has teamed up with a construction company in the Citra Group of Suharto 's eldest daughter , Siti Hardianti Rukmana , in what Barrick had said was a partnership " to prepare us for a potential mining development project " . +Honda RV exceeds sales target . TOKYO 1996-12-06 Honda Motor Co Ltd said on Friday that it had received 15,000 domestic orders for its S-MX recreational vehicle in the first two weeks after its launch . Honda launched the S-MX light minivan , featuring cubic body styling , on November 22 with a monthly sales target of 5,000 units . A version with lower road clearance and front and rear spoilers accounted for two-thirds of the sales . +FEATURE - Singapore sees prestige in hosting WTO . Ramthan Hussain SINGAPORE 1996-12-06 Singapore 's winning campaign to host the World Trade Organisation ( WTO ) 's first ministerial meeting reflected its ambition to play a key role in shaping global free trade , the lifeblood of its economy , analysts said . " As one of the world 's most externally oriented economies , Singapore has a disproportionately large stake in the WTO , " said Desmond Supple , economist at research house I.D.E.A . " Singapore stands to benefit more than most from continued global trade liberalisation as trade is the engine of its growth , accounting for nearly three times its gross domestic product . " The city-state met U.S. opposition two years ago in its bid to host the meeting , expected to gather 4,000 officials from 160 countries from December 9 to 13 . In a stand some analysts linked to controversy over Singapore 's caning of an American teenager for vandalism , then-U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor had said the meeting ought to be held where the WTO was going to be headquartered . That would have meant Geneva . But Singapore had the support of other WTO members . Derek da Cunha , senior fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies ( ISEAS ) , said Singapore 's hosting of the conference " carries a great deal of symbolism for the city-state , underscoring its commitment to free trade and its trading links across the globe . " There is the international prestige Singapore would enjoy , but " more importantly there is a genuine national interest in fostering better global free trade and an open market " , said Tan Kong Yam , head of Business Policy at the National University of Singapore . At the ministerial meeting , trade ministers will review the work of the WTO and the implementation of the Uruguay Round free trade commitments under its predecessor the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade ( GATT ) . In June , the WTO hailed Singapore for its open market policies but the European Union and other trading powers called on Singapore to speed up the opening of its services sector . Supple said the struggle that Singapore had to wage in vying to host the meeting would be repeated during the talks . " There is tension at every step of the way , " since a battle line between the West and developing countries has been drawn over the issue of linking trade liberalisation with labour rights , he said . Supple said hosting the meeting carried prestige for Singapore , " however , this is quite intangible as the prestige factor may not necessarily lead to any additional investment and trade flows to this region . " From a commercial point of view , the meeting would be good for Singapore 's tourism industry , Tan said . A large part of Singapore 's workforce would be mobilised to ensure the meeting would run without a glitch but the average Singaporean " would probably not be too concerned about some of the issues , " Tan said . " But the more educated public will realise that these kind of things are important for Singapore as a small economy . " Supple said any political gains the Singapore government would get from the WTO meeting -- ahead of a general election due by April 1997 -- would depend on how successful it was in pushing its economic agenda . " If there are any movements toward freer trade , then Singapore 's economy and the electorate would gain , " he said . " But I do n't think it would be wise to play up the political aspect of this . I think political issues will take secondary importance to all these economic issues that will be displayed . " +Japan NTT says hopes to start int'l business soon . TOKYO 1996-12-06 Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp ( NTT ) said on Friday that it hopes to move into the international telecommunications business as soon as possible following the government 's decision to split NTT into three firms under a holding company . " We hope to start international telephone business as soon as possible , " a company official told Reuters . The official said the latest government decision to split the company under a holding company would allow flexibility in NTT 's international phone business . Earlier , Posts and Telecommunications Minister Hisao Horinouchi told a news conference the government plans to split NTT into three firms under a holding company , but did not specify when the restructuring would likely take effect . One of the three new companies will be a long-distance operator and the other two will be local-call operators , Horinouchi said . One of the local firms will operate in west Japan and the other in east Japan , he added . The long-distance operator will offer international services , Horinouchi said . The NTT official said the timing of the planned split-up was uncertain because more discussions by government officials were required . +Ahold launches Asian food discount stores . ZAANDAM , Netherlands 1996-12-06 Dutch supermarkets group Ahold NV said on Friday it had launched a second food store format for Asian consumers today , opening 16 BILO food discount stores in Malaysia . The BILO stores are located in Malysia 's capital Kuala Lumpur and in the country 's second city Johor Bahru . The discount price format store BILO is to complement Ahold 's full service supermarket TOPS , recently launched in Asia . " In the coming five to ten years , Ahold plans to open many more stores of both formats , making TOPS and BILO household names in the region , " Ahold said in a statement . As well as its activities in Asia , Dutch retail group Ahold has a strong presence in Europe , in the U.S. and the company recently announced a joint venture agreement in Brazil . Ahold has annualised sales of approximately US$ 24 billion , and employs 180,000 people worldwide . -- Amsterdam newsroom +31 20 504 5000 , Fax +31 20 504 504 +ALPINE SKIING-WOMEN 'S WORLD CUP SUPER G WINNER PROFILE . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Profile of the winner of Saturday 's women 's World Cup super G race : Name : Svetlana Gladishiva Age : 25 Nation : Russia Previous World Cup victories : None Other Facts : Gladishiva won a silver medal in super G at the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics and a bronze medal in downhill at the 1991 World Championships . +ALPINE SKIING-WOMEN 'S WORLD CUP SUPER G RESULTS . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Provisional results from Saturday 's women 's World Cup super G race : 1. Svetlana Gladishiva ( Russia ) one minute 17.76 seconds 2. Pernila Wiberg ( Sweden ) 1:17.97 3. Carole Montillet ( France ) 1:18.11 4. Hilde Gerg ( Germany ) 1:18.15 5. Isolde Kostner ( Italy ) 1:18.19 6. Warwara Zelenskaja ( Russia ) 1:18.21 7. Madlen Brigger-Summermatter ( Switzerland ) 1:18.23 8. Florence Masnada ( France ) 1:18.31 9. Katja Seizinger ( Germany ) 1:18.32 10= Martina Ertl ( Germany ) 1:18.48 10= Stefanie Schuster ( Austria ) 1:18.48 12. Bibiana Perez ( Italy ) 1:18.52 13. Barbara Merlin ( Italy ) 1:18.67 14. Sybille Brauner ( Germany ) 1:18.81 15. Katharina Gutensohn ( Germany ) 1:18.92 16. Leatitia Dalloz ( France ) 1:18.96 17. Renate Goetschl ( Austria ) 1:18.98 18. Marianne Brechu ( France ) 1:19.02 19. Heidi Zurbriggen ( Switzerland ) 1:19.03 20. Spela Bracun ( Slovenia ) 1:19.07 21. Shannon Nobis ( U.S. ) 1:19.08 22= Regine Cavagnoud ( France ) 1:19.21 22= Anita Wachter ( Austria ) 1:19.21 24. Megan Gerety ( U.S. ) 1:19.39 25. Hilary Lindh ( U.S. ) 1:19.41 26= Catherine Borghi ( Switzerland ) 1:19.44 26= Michaela Dorfmeister ( Austria ) 1:19.44 28. Alexandra Meissnitzer ( Austria ) 1:19.53 29. Ingeborg Helen Marken ( Norway ) 1:19.54 30. Monika Tschirky ( Switzerland ) 1:19.60 The results were declared official . +ALPINE SKIING-GLADISHIVA WINS WORLD CUP SUPER G . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Svetlana Gladishiva of Russia won the women 's World Cup Super G race on Saturday . Pernilla Wiberg of Sweden finished second and Carole Montillet of France came in third , according to provisional results . +GOLF - THIRD ROUND OF JCPENNEY CLASSIC WASHED OUT . TARPON SPRINGS , Florida 1996-12-07 Heavy rains on Saturday washed out the third round of the $ 1.5 million JCPenney Classic at the Innisbrook Hilton Resort . Officials said the tournament would be reduced to 54 holes for the first time in its 37-year history . The final round of the special event , which pairs players from the PGA and LPGA Tours , will be played in the alternate shot format on Sunday . The duo of Pat Hurst and Scott McCarron were tied for the lead with the team of Donna Andrews and Mike Hulbert at 13-under-par 129 through 36 holes . The tandem of reigning U.S. Amateur champions Kelli Kuehne and Tiger Woods were another shot back at 12-under 130 . Defending champions Beth Daniel and Davis Love will start the final round six shots off the pace . +ALPINE SKIING-WOMEN 'S DOWNHILL WINNER PROFILE . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Profile of the winner of Saturday 's women 's World Cup downhill race : Name : Renate Goetschl Age : 20 Nation : Austria Previous victories ( two ) : slalom , Lillehammer Norway , 1993 ; super G , Flachau , Austria , 1995 . Other facts : As a qualifier for the 1993 World Cup finals through Europa Cup results , 16-year-old Goetschl won the slalom to become history 's youngest World Cup victor . +ALPINE SKIING-WOMEN 'S WORLD CUP STANDINGS . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Women 's World Cup standings after Saturday 's downhill race : Downhill Standings 1. Katja Seizinger ( Germany ) 180 points 2. Renate Goetschl ( Austria ) 132 3. Carole Montillet ( France ) 86 4. Pernilla Wiberg ( Sweden ) 75 5. Heidi Zurbriggen ( Switzerland ) 69 6. Regina Haeusl ( Germany ) 66 7. Alexandra Meissnitzer ( Austria ) 65 8. Isolde Kostner ( Italy ) 60 9. Ingeborg Helen Markein ( Norway ) 58 10= Megan Gerety ( U.S. ) 51 10= Warwara Zelenskaja ( Russia ) 51 10= Florence Masnada ( France ) 51 13= Picabo Street ( U.S. ) 50 13= Stefanie Schuster ( Austria ) 50 15. Miriam Vogt ( Germany ) 47 16. Bibiana Perez ( Italy ) 45 17. Hilde Gerg ( Germany ) 42 18. Barbara Merlin ( Germany ) 38 19= Kate Pace Lindsay ( Canada ) 23 19= Svetlana Gladishiva ( Russia ) 23 19= Regine Cavagnoud ( France ) 23 Overall women 's World Cup standings leaders after Saturday 's downhill and super G races : 1. Katja Seizinger ( Germany ) 414 points 2. Pernilla Wiberg ( Sweden ) 353 3. Hide Gerg ( Germany ) 276 4. Anita Wachter ( Austria ) 180 5. Isolde Kostner ( Italy ) 157 6. Heidi Zurbriggen ( Switzerland ) 153 7. Warwara Zelenskaja ( Russia ) 151 8= Renate Goetschl ( Austria ) 146 8= Carole Montillet ( France ) 146 10. Svetlana Gladishiva ( Russia ) 137 11. Florence Masnada ( France ) 133 12. Deborah Compagnoni ( Italy ) 120 13. Martina Ertl ( Germany ) 119 14. Alexandra Meissnitzer ( Austria)118 15. Urska Horvat ( Slovenia ) 108 16= Claudia Riegler ( New Zealand ) 100 16= Sabina Panzanini ( Italy ) 100 18. Barbara Merlin ( Italy ) 92 19. Stefanie Schuster ( Austria ) 89 20. Miriam Vogt ( Germany ) 76 Super G standings : 1. Pernilla Wiberg ( Sweden ) 180 2. Hilde Gerg ( Germany ) 130 3. Svetland Gladishiva ( Russia ) 114 4. Warwara Zelenskaja ( Russia ) 100 5. Florence Masnada ( France ) 82 6. Katja Seizinger ( Germany ) 74 7. Isolde Kostner ( Italy ) 65 8. Carole Montillet ( France ) 60 9. Martina Ertl ( Germany ) 58 10. Anita Wachter ( Austria ) 49 11. Heidi Zurbriggen ( Switzerland ) 43 12= Madlen Brigger-Summermatter ( Switzerland ) 42 12= Barbara Merlin ( Italy ) 42 12= Katharina Gutensohn ( Germany ) 42 15. Stefanie Schuster ( Austria ) 39 16. Leatitia Dalloz ( France ) 33 17. Bibiana Perez ( Italy ) 30 18= Miriam Vogt ( Germany ) 29 18= Marianne Brechu ( France ) 29 20. Alexandra Meissnitzer ( Austria ) 27 Nation 's Cup standings : 1. Austria 1,973 points 2. Germany 1,135 3. Switzerland 972 4. Italy 887 5. France 853 6. Norway 746 7. Sweden 673 8. Slovenia 432 9. Russia 288 10. United States 164 +ALPINE SKIING-WOMEN 'S WORLD CUP DOWNHILL RESULTS . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Provisional results from Saturday 's women 's World Cup downhill race : 1. Renate Goetschl ( Austria ) one minute 47.71 seconds 2. Katja Seizinger ( Germany ) 1:48.53 3. Isolde Kostner ( Italy ) 1:48.91 4. Alexandra Meissnitzer ( Austria ) 1:49.13 5. Megan Gerety ( U.S. ) 1:49.26 6. Miriam Vogt ( Germany ) 1:49.28 7. Stefanie Schuster ( Austria ) 1:49.38 8. Ingeborg Helen Marken ( Norway ) 1:49.41 9. Florence Masnada ( France ) 1:49.51 10. Regina Haeusl ( Germany ) 1:49.53 11. Heidi Zurbriggen ( Switzerland ) 1:49.65 12. Warwara Zelenskaja ( Russia ) 1:49.66 13. Barbara Merlin ( Italy ) 1:49.76 14. Hilde Gerg ( Germany ) 1:49.84 15. Martina Ertl ( Germany ) 1:49.85 16. Pernilla Wiberg ( Sweden ) 1:49.88 17. Svetlana Gladishiva ( Russia ) 1:50.03 18. Anita Wachter ( Austria ) 1:50.10 19. Spela Bracun ( Slovenia ) 1:50.40 20. Regine Cavagnoud ( France ) 1:50.51 21. Kate Pace Lindsay ( Canada ) 1:50.54 22. Bibiana Perez ( Italy ) 1:50.65 23. Hilary Lindh ( United States ) 1:50.69 24. Catherine Borghi ( Switzerland ) 1:50.72 25. Carole Montillet ( France ) 1:50.91 26. Brigitte Obermoser ( Austria ) 1:50.99 27. Sybille Brauner ( Germay ) 1:51.04 28. Grete Stroem ( Norway ) 1:51.07 29. Patrizia Bassis ( Italy ) 1:51.13 30. Alessandra Merlin ( Italy ) 1:51.16 The results were declared official . +NORDIC SKIING-WORLD CUP BIATHLON RESULTS . OESTERSUND , Sweden 1996-12-07 Results of Saturday 's World Cup biathlon races : Men 's 10 kms 1. Vadim Sashurin ( Belarus ) 26 minutes 17.2 seconds ( no penalty rounds ) 2. Frode Andresen ( Norway ) 26:17.8 ( 2 ) 3. Ole Einar Bjorndalen ( Norway ) 26:24.9 ( 2 ) 4. Sven Fischer ( Germany ) 26:28.2 ( 1 ) 5. Ricco Gross ( Germany ) 26:33.0 ( 1 ) World Cup standings 1. Fischer ( Germany ) 82 points 2. Pavel Muslimov ( Russia ) 82 3. Sashurin 68 . Women 's 7.5 kms 1. Olga Melnik ( Russia ) 23:13.3 ( 0 ) 2. Svetlana Paramygina ( Belorus ) 23:58.6 ( 0 ) 3. Gunn Margit Andreassen ( Norway ) 24:00.4 ( 0 ) 4. Simone Greiner-Petter-Memm ( Germany ) 24:09.5 ( 1 ) 5. Petra Behle ( Germany ) 24:15.4 ( 2 ) World Cup standings 1. Behle 89 2. Paramygina 79 3. Greiner-Petter-Memm 78 +ALPINE SKIING-GOETCHL WINS WORLD CUP DOWNHILL . VAIL , Colorado 1996-12-07 Renate Goetschl of Austria won the women 's World Cup downhill race on Saturday , according to provisional results . Katja Seizinger of Germany finished second and Islode Kostner of Italy took third . +BOBSLEIGH-SHIMER PILOTS USA III TO SURPRISE WIN . IGLS , Austria 1996-12-07 Brian Shimer piloted USA III to a surprise victory in a World Cup two-man bobsleigh race on Saturday . Lying fifth after the first run , Shimer and breakman Randy Jones delivered a near-perfect second trip down the 1976 Olympic course for an aggregate time of one minute 45.91 seconds . First run leaders Guenther Huber and breakman Antonio Tartaglia in the Italy I sleigh finished second two-hundredths of a second behind the Americans . Canada I , represented by Pierre Lueders and breakman Dave MacEachern , completed the third World cup event of the winter a further one-hundredth of a second behind the Italians . The Canadians , winners of the opening two events in Altenberg , Germany , and La Plagne , France , increased their lead in the World Cup standings . They have 104 points , 15 ahead of USA I 's Jim Herberich and breakman Garrett Hines who managed only 10th place on Saturday . +SKIING-CHINESE MAKE PROMISING FREESTYLE SKIING DEBUT . TIGNES , France 1996-12-07 China made a promising debut on the freestyle skiing world cup circuit in an aerials event in the French resort of Tignes on Saturday . While the Chinese failed to gain a place in the men 's final , they had two in the top 10 of the women 's competition , Cuo Dan finishing a respectable seventh and Xu Nannan ninth . But overall , it was France and Canada who dominated the day . Alexis Blanc and Sebastien Foucras gave France a one-two finish in the first aerials competition of the season . Blanc collected his seventh career World Cup win with a two jump combined score of 238.36 points , easily beating Foucras , the overall World Cup aerials champion , who was a distant second with 223.60 . Canada 's Jeff Bean , who had never finished higher than ninth in a World Cup event , made his first trip to the podium taking third place with a mark of 209.96 . Veronica Brenner of Canada , who picked up her first career victory at Tignes last year , made it two wins in a row at the French resort taking first in the women 's competition with a score of 170.42 . Swiss skiers occupied the other two places on the podium , Karin Kuster taking second with 160.55 narrowly ahead of Evelyne Leu with 160.36 . +BOBSLEIGH-WORLD CUP TWO-MAN RESULTS . IGLS , Austria 1996-12-07 Results of a World Cup two-man bobsleigh event on Saturday : 1. United States III ( Brian Shimer , Randy Jones ) one minute 45.91 seconds ( 52.90 / 53.01 ) 2. Italy I ( Guenther Huber , Antonio Tartaglia ) 1:45.93 ( 52.74 / 53.19 ) 3. Canada I ( Pierre Lueders , Dave MacEachern ) 1:45.94 ( 52.76 / 53.18 ) 4. German I ( Sepp Dostthaler , Thomas Lebsa ) 1:45.95 ( 52.82 / 53.13 ) 5. Switzerland I ( Reto Goetschi , Guido Acklin ) 1:45.98 ( 52.91 / 53.07 ) 6. Germany III ( Dirk Wiese , Jakobs Marco ) 1:46.02 ( 52.89 / 53.13 ) 7. Czech Republic I ( Jiri Dzmura , Pavel Polomsky ) 1:46.06 ( 53.01 / 53.05 ) 8. Austria I ( Hubert Schoesser , Erwin Arnold ) 1:46.13 ( 52.92 / 53.21 ) 9. Britain I ( Sean Olsson , Dean Ward ) 1:46.26 ( 52.97/ 53.29 ) 10 equal . United States I ( Jim Herberich , Garrett Hines ) 1:46.34 ( 53.14 / 53.20 ) and Austria III ( Hannes Conti , Georg Kuttner ) 1:46.34 ( 53.30/ 53.04). +CRICKET - WOOLMER MAKES SENTIMENTAL RETURN TO KANPUR . KANPUR , India 1996-12-07 South Africa 's trip to Kanpur for the third test against India has given former England test cricketer Bob Woolmer the chance of a sentimental return to his birthplace . Woolmer was born in the northern city of Kanpur when his father worked there for an insurance compnay and was himself an active cricketer . " It 's been a sentimental journey ... A visit to India is always an intriguing experience , " Woolmer , now the South African coach , said on Saturday . Woolmer , 48 , played 19 tests for England between 1975 and 1981 . His first cricketing sojurn to India was as a member of Tony Greig 's England side in 1976-77 . His father Clarence Woolmer represented United Province , now renamed Uttar Pradesh , in India 's Ranji Trophy national championship and captained the state during 1949 . Now aged 86 , Woolmer senior lives with his son in Cape Town . Woolmer 's memories of Kanpur are few and blurred . " I do n't remember much of the place , " he said . " I came here on zero and left at three ( aged three ) when my father was transferred to Calcutta where I spent another four and half years . " But I do remember we had a cobra snake in the basement of our house . Also that my father bought a bicycle and when we rode over a hose pipe it broke into two . " Woolmer said the hospital where he was born is close to the stadium where the India-South Africa test will be played . +FREESTYLE SKIING-WORLD CUP AERIALS RESULTS . TIGNES , France 1996-12-07 Results of the World Cup freestyle skiing aerials competition on Saturday : Men : 1. Alexis Blanc ( France ) 238.36 points 2. Sebastien Foucras ( France ) 223.60 3. Jeff Bean ( Canada ) 209.96 4. Eric Bergoust ( U.S ) 207.15 5. Christian Rijavec ( Austria ) 204.17 6. Alexandre Mikhailov ( Russia ) 202.59 7. Ales Valenta ( Czech Republic ) 194.02 8. Andy Capicik ( Canada ) 193.82 9. Trace Worthington ( U.S. ) 192.36 10. Dmitri Dashinski Belarus ) 190.70 Women : 1. Veronica Brenner ( Canada ) 170.42 2. Karin Kuster ( Switzerland ) 160.55 3. Evelyne Leu ( Switzerland ) 160.36 4. Caroline Olivier ( Canada ) 157.10 5. Jacqui Cooper ( Australia ) 156.52 6. Marie Lindgren ( Sweden ) 154.82 7. Dan Cuo ( China ) 154.61 8. Kristie Marshall ( Australia ) 154.60 9. Xu Nannan ( China ) 152.08 10. Hilde Synnove Lid ( Norway ) 148.20 +SKI JUMPING-LEADING WORLD CUP RESULTS / STANDINGS . KUUSAMO , Finland 1996-12-07 Leading results in a World Cup high hill ( 120-metre ) ski jumping event on Saturday : 1. Takanobu Okabe ( Japan ) 303.4 points ( first jump 145.4 / second jump 158 ) 2. Kazuyoshi Funaki ( Japan ) 295.4 ( 151.5 / 143.9 ) 3. Andreas Goldberger ( Austria ) 274.4 ( 144.4 / 130 ) 4. Dieter Thoma ( Germany ) 267 ( 141.6 / 124.4 ) 5. Ari-Pekka Nikkola ( Finland ) 256.4 ( 126 / 130.4 ) 6. Reinhard Schwarzenberger ( Austria ) 252.6 ( 119.7 / 132.9 ) 7. Noriaki Kasai ( Japan ) 242 ( 124.2 / 117.8 ) 8. Hiroya Saitoh ( Japan ) 234.7 ( 124.6 / 110.1 ) 9. Jani Soininen ( Finland ) 231.5 ( 115 / 116.5 ) 10. Kristian Brenden ( Norway ) 228.1 ( 129.4 / 98.7 ) Leading World Cup standings ( after three events ) : 1. Thoma 210 points 2. Brenden 206 3. Goldberger 160 4. Okabe 146 5. Funaki 143 6. Saitoh 121 7. Espen Bredesen ( Norway ) 112 8. Nikkola 101 9. Soininen 85 10. Primoz Peterka ( Slovakia ) 76 +BADMINTON - WORLD GRAND PRIX SEMIFINAL RESULTS . TEMBAU DENPASAR , Bali 1996-12-07 Results of semifinals at the World Grand Prix finals on Saturday : Men 's singles Fung Permadi ( Taiwan ) beat Indra Wijaya ( Indonesia ) 15-6 15-8 Sun Jun ( China ) beat Allan Budi Kusuma ( Indonesia ) 15-9 15-10 Women 's singles Susi Susanti ( Indonesia ) beat Camilla Martin ( Denmark ) 11-1 11-3 Ye Zhaoying ( China ) beat Gong Zhichao ( China ) 11-8 11-3 +SPEED SKATING-RESULTS OF WORLD CUP SPEED SKATING RACES . CHONJU , South Korea 1996-12-07 Results on the first day of the World Cup speed skating races here on Saturday . Men 's 500 metres first round : 1 . Horii Manabu ( Japan ) 37.23 seconds ; 2 . Jaegal Sung-Yeol ( South Korea ) 37.46 ; 3 . Grunde Njos ( Norway ) 37.49 ; 4 . Shimizu Hiroyasu ( Japan ) 37.68 ; 5 . Sergey Klevchenya ( Russia ) 37.86 ; 6 . Yamakage Hiroaki ( Japan ) 37.93 ; 7 . Casey Fitzrandolph ( US ) 37.97 ; 8 . Sylvain Bouchard ( Canada ) 38.00 ; 9 . Kim Yoon-man ( South Korea ) 38.05 ; 10 . Inoue Junichi ( Japan ) 38.08 . Women 's 500 metres first round : 1 . Xuc Rulhong ( China ) 40.78 ; 2 . Svetlana Jhurova ( Russia ) 41.08 ; 3 . Franziska Schenk ( Germany ) 41.13 ; 4 . Okazaki Tomomi ( Japan ) 41.19 ; 5 . Shimazaki Kyoko ( Japan ) 41.45 ; 6 . Marianne Timmer ( Netherlands ) 41.58 ; 7 . Jin Hua ( China ) 41.59 ; 8 . Alena Koroleva ( Russia ) 41.64 ; 9 . Chris Witty ( US ) 41.75 ; 10 . Anke Baler ( Germany ) 41.76 . Men 's 1,000 metres first round : 1. Sylvain Bouchard ( Canada ) 1 minute 16.24 seconds 2. Sergey Klevchenya ( Russia ) 1:16.31 3. Jan Bos ( Netherlands ) 1:16.38 4. Grunde Njos ( Norway ) 1:16.44 5. Lee Kyou-hyuk ( South Korea ) 1:16.47 6. Inoue Junichi ( Japan ) 1:16.61 7. Gerard Van Velde ( Netherlands ) 1:16.63 8. Kim Yoon-man ( South Korea ) 1:16.75 9. Jeremy Wotherspoon ( Canada ) 1:16.75 10. Miyabe Yasunori ( Japan ) 1:16.86 Women 's 1,000 metres first round : 1. Franziska Schenk ( Germany ) 1:23.17 2. Kusunose Shiho ( Japan ) 1:24.77 3. Marianne Timmer ( Netherlands ) 1:24.86 4. Anka Baier ( Germany ) 1:25.16 5. Becky Sundstrom ( U.S. ) 1:25.39 6. Shimazaki Kyoko ( Japan ) 1:25.51 7. Oksana Ravllova ( Russia ) 1:25.55 8. Sammiya Eriko ( Japan ) 1:25.79 9. Chris Witty ( U.S. ) 1:25.85 10. Xue Rulhong ( China ) 1:25.89 +ALPINE SKIING-OFFICIALS HOPE TO SALVAGE WORLD CUP WEEKEND . WHISTLER , British Columbia 1996-12-06 World Cup ski officials hope to be able to get in at least one men 's downhill training run on Saturday in an effort to salvage the weekend racing programme . For the third consecutive day , Friday 's scheduled training runs were cancelled due to heavy wet snow and fog on Whistler Mountain , leaving the scheduled World Cup events in jeopardy . Rules call for at least one training run to be completed before a World Cup downhill race can be staged . Organisers hope to get that run in on Saturday morning , conditions permitting , and stage the race later in the day or on Sunday . " There was no possibility today to make a training run , " said Bernd Zobel , the Canadian men 's national coach , citing too much new snow and poor visibility . If organisers are forced to run the downhill on Sunday , the super-giant slalom originally scheduled for Sunday would likely be abandoned . +SOCCER - LEADING SCOTTISH PREMIER DIVISION SCORERS . GLASGOW 1996-12-07 Leading goalscorers in the Scottish premier division after Saturday 's matches : 10 - Billy Dodds ( Aberdeen ) , Pierre Van Hooydonk ( Celtic ) 9 - Paul Gascoigne ( Rangers ) 7 - Paul Wright ( Kilmarnock ) , Ally McCoist ( Rangers ) 6 - Andreas Thom ( Celtic ) , Dean Windass ( Aberdeen ) , Brian Laudrup ( Rangers ) , Darren Jackson ( Hibernian ) 5 - Peter van Vossen ( Rangers ) , Gerry Britton ( Dunfermline ) , Colin Cameron ( Hearts ) , Robert Winters ( Dundee United ) , Paolo Di Canio ( Celtic ) . +SOCCER - LEADING ENGLISH GOALSCORERS . LONDON 1996-12-07 Leading goalscorers in the English premier league after Saturday 's matches : 13 - Ian Wright ( Arsenal ) 9 - Fabrizio Ravanelli ( Middlesbrough ) , Alan Shearer ( Newcastle ) 8 - Matthew Le Tissier ( Southampton ) , Dwight Yorke ( Aston Villa ) , Les Ferdinand ( Newcastle ) , Efan Ekoku ( Wimbledon ) , Gianluca Vialli ( Chelsea ) 7 - Robbie Earle ( Wimbledon ) , Les Ferdinand ( Newcastle ) 6 - Marcus Gayle ( Wimbledon ) , Gary Speed ( Everton ) , Chris Sutton ( Blackburn ) 5 - Robbie Fowler ( Liverpool ) , Steve McManaman ( Liverpool ) 4 - Peter Beardsley ( Newcastle ) . +SOCCER - NORTHERN IRELAND PREMIER DIVISION RESULTS / STANDINGS . LONDON 1996-12-07 Results of Northern Ireland premier division matches on Saturday : Ards 0 Crusaders 0 Cliftonville 1 Portadown 1 Glenavon 2 Linfield 1 Glentoran 1 Coleraine 0 Standings ( tabulated - played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Coleraine 10 7 1 2 18 11 22 Linfield 10 4 3 3 13 10 15 Crusaders 10 3 4 3 11 9 13 Glenavon 10 3 4 3 15 14 13 Glentoran 10 3 3 4 18 18 12 Portadown 9 3 3 3 11 12 12 Ards 10 3 2 5 12 17 11 Cliftonville 9 1 4 4 5 12 7 +RUGBY UNION - BRITISH RESULTS . LONDON 1996-12-07 Results of British rugby union matches on Saturday : Pilkington Cup fourth round Reading 50 Widnes 3 English division one Bath 35 Harlequins 20 Gloucester 29 London Irish 19 Orrell 22 West Hartlepool 15 Wasps 15 Bristol 13 Welsh division one Caerphilly 20 Cardiff 34 Llanelli 97 Newbridge 10 Newport 45 Dunvant 22 Pontypridd 53 Bridgend 9 Swansea 49 Neath 10 Treorchy 13 Ebbw Vale 17 Scottish division one Boroughmuir 31 Watsonians 35 +SOCCER - SCOTTISH PREMIER DIVISION SUMMARIES . GLASGOW 1996-12-07 Summaries of Scottish premier division matches played on Saturday : Dunfermline 2 ( Millar 43 , 46 penalty ) Aberdeen 3 ( Miller 10 , Rowson 55 , Windass 78 ) . Halftime 1-1 . Attendance : 5,465 Hearts 0 Raith 0 . 10,719 Kilmarnock 0 Dundee United 2 ( Olafsson 22 , 51 ) . 0-1 . 5,812 Motherwell 2 ( Davies 39 , Ross 89 ) Celtic 1 ( Hay 83 ) . 1-0 . 11,589 Rangers 4 ( Ferguson 34 , McCoist 71 74 , Laudrup 83 ) Hibernian 3 ( Wright 21 , Jackson 41 , McGinlay 86 ) . 1-2 . 48,053 . +RUGBY UNION - RETIRING CAMPESE WEIGHS UP OPTIONS . LONDON 1996-12-07 David Campese will consider offers to play club rugby in England but looks more likely to spend the next year chasing business opportunities in Australia . The 34-year-old winger played his final game in a Wallaby jersey on Saturday but is currently a target for clubs eager to match London side Saracens who have already snapped up Francois Pienaar , Michael Lynagh and Philippe Sella . " If the opportunity is there I 'd obviously think about it but the thing that holds me back is business , " said Campese . " I 'd like to come over but there are a lot of things happening at home . I 've also got a contract to play for New South Wales in the Super 12 next year . " Former Wallaby captain Nick Farr-Jones believes Campese may yet be tempted to England . " I 'm sure there are a few people in England who 'd be delighted to have David Campese in their club 's jersey , " he said . +SOCCER - ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE SUMMARIES . LONDON 1996-12-07 Summaries of English premier lealgue matches on Saturday : Arsenal 2 ( Adams 45 , Vieira 90 ) Derby 2 ( Sturridge 62 , Powell 71 ) . Halftime 1-0 . Attendance : 38,018 Chelsea 2 ( Zola 12 , Vialli 55 ) Everton 2 ( Branch 17 , Kanchelskis 28 ) . 1-2 . 28,418 Coventry 1 ( Whelan 60 ) Tottenham 2 ( Sheringham 27 , Sinton 75 ) . 0-1 . 19,675 Leicester 1 ( Marshall 78 ) Blackburn 1 ( Sutton 34 ) . 0-1 . 19,306 Liverpool 0 Sheffield Wednesday 1 ( Whittingham 22 ) . 0-1 . 39,507 Middlesbrough 0 Leeds 0 . 30,018 Southampton 0 Aston Villa 1 ( Townsend 34 ) . 0-1 . 15,232 Sunderland 1 ( Melville 83 ) Wimbledon 3 ( Ekoku 8 , 29 , Holdsworth 89 ) . 0-2 . 19,672 . +SOCCER - SCOTTISH LEAGUE STANDINGS . GLASGOW 1996-12-07 Scottish league standings after Saturday 's matches ( tabulated - played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Premier division Rangers 14 11 2 1 35 12 35 Celtic 14 8 3 3 32 15 27 Aberdeen 15 7 4 4 28 19 25 Hearts 15 5 6 4 18 19 21 Hibernian 15 5 3 7 16 25 18 Dundee United 15 4 5 6 17 17 17 Motherwell 15 4 5 6 17 23 17 Dunfermline 14 4 5 5 19 27 17 Raith 15 3 3 9 14 27 12 Kilmarnock 14 3 2 9 17 29 11 Division One St Johnstone 17 12 2 3 36 8 38 Falkirk 17 9 2 6 18 15 29 Airdrieonians 16 6 8 2 26 16 26 Dundee 16 7 5 4 12 8 26 Partick 16 6 6 4 23 16 24 St Mirren 16 7 2 7 22 21 23 Greenock Morton 16 6 4 6 17 16 22 Clydebank 16 4 2 10 11 25 14 Stirling 16 3 3 10 18 33 12 East Fife 14 1 4 9 10 35 7 Division Two Ayr 16 11 2 3 30 18 35 Livingston 16 10 4 2 27 13 34 Hamilton 15 9 4 2 31 11 31 Clyde 15 6 4 5 21 20 22 Queen of South 16 6 4 6 24 27 22 Stenhousemuir 15 4 5 6 18 12 17 Stranraer 15 5 2 8 13 21 17 Dumbarton 16 4 4 8 18 29 16 Brechin 16 3 6 7 14 20 15 Berwick 16 1 3 12 16 41 6 Division Three Montrose 17 9 3 5 30 25 30 Inverness Thistle 16 8 5 3 28 20 29 Ross County 17 8 3 6 27 23 27 Alloa 16 7 4 5 24 21 25 Cowdenbeath 15 7 3 5 22 16 24 Albion 16 6 6 4 21 17 24 Forfar 15 6 4 5 26 24 22 Queen 's Park 16 3 5 8 20 30 14 Arbroath 16 2 6 8 12 23 12 East Stirling 16 2 5 9 14 25 11 +SOCCER - ENGLISH LEAGUE STANDINGS . LONDON 1996-12-07 Standings in English league soccer after Saturday 's matches ( tabulated - played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , goals against , points ) : Premier league Arsenal 17 10 5 2 34 16 35 Wimbledon 16 9 4 3 29 17 31 Liverpool 16 9 4 3 26 14 31 Aston Villa 17 9 3 5 22 15 30 Newcastle 15 9 2 4 26 17 29 Manchester United 15 7 5 3 29 22 26 Chelsea 16 6 7 3 25 23 25 Everton 16 6 6 4 25 20 24 Sheffield Wednesday 16 6 6 4 17 18 24 Tottenham 16 7 2 7 17 17 23 Derby 16 5 7 4 19 19 22 Leicester 17 6 3 8 17 22 21 Leeds 16 6 2 8 15 20 20 Sunderland 16 4 5 7 14 21 17 West Ham 16 4 5 7 13 20 17 Middlesbrough 17 3 6 8 20 28 15 Blackburn 16 2 7 7 16 21 13 Southampton 17 3 4 10 24 32 13 Coventry 16 1 7 8 10 23 10 Nottingham Forest 15 1 6 8 12 25 9 Division One Bolton 21 11 8 2 43 28 41 Sheffield United 21 11 6 4 38 20 39 Barnsley 21 10 8 3 38 26 38 Crystal Palace 21 9 8 4 46 22 35 Wolverhampton 21 9 6 6 29 21 33 Tranmere 22 9 5 8 31 26 32 Norwich 20 9 5 6 27 21 32 Birmingham 22 8 8 6 23 21 32 Oxford 22 8 6 8 27 21 30 Stoke 20 8 6 6 27 30 30 Swindon 22 9 2 11 32 28 29 Charlton 21 9 2 10 23 29 29 Huddersfield 22 7 7 8 25 28 28 Queens Park Rangers 22 7 7 8 25 28 28 Port Vale 22 6 10 6 19 22 28 Ipswich 22 6 8 8 27 32 26 Manchester City 22 8 2 12 26 35 26 Portsmouth 22 7 5 10 25 29 26 Reading 22 7 5 10 25 33 26 West Bromwich 20 5 9 6 26 31 24 Southend 22 5 9 8 23 36 24 Grimsby 22 5 6 11 24 41 21 Bradford 22 5 6 11 21 37 21 Oldham 22 4 8 10 23 28 20 Division Two Brentford 22 11 7 4 35 23 40 Millwall 22 11 7 4 32 22 40 Bury 21 11 6 4 33 20 39 Luton 21 11 4 6 34 25 37 Burnley 22 11 4 7 30 22 37 Chesterfield 21 11 4 6 22 16 37 Stockport 22 10 6 6 29 25 36 Watford 21 9 9 3 24 18 36 Wrexham 20 9 8 3 27 22 35 Crewe 21 11 1 9 29 21 34 Bristol City 21 9 6 6 36 23 33 Bristol Rovers 22 7 7 8 22 23 28 Shrewsbury 22 7 6 9 26 33 27 York 21 7 5 9 23 29 26 Blackpool 22 5 10 7 22 24 25 Walsall 21 7 4 10 21 25 25 Gillingham 22 7 4 11 21 27 25 Preston 22 7 4 11 21 27 25 Bournemouth 22 7 4 11 20 27 25 Plymouth 22 5 8 9 24 31 23 Peterborough 22 4 8 10 32 41 20 Notts County 21 5 5 11 15 23 20 Wycombe 22 4 5 13 17 33 17 Rotherham 21 3 6 12 18 33 15 Division Three Fulham 22 15 3 4 36 16 48 Cambridge 22 13 3 6 33 27 42 Wigan 21 12 4 5 39 24 40 Carlisle 22 11 7 4 32 20 40 Cardiff 21 10 4 7 25 22 34 Swansea 22 9 5 8 25 25 32 Barnet 22 8 8 6 23 17 32 Colchester 22 7 10 5 32 26 31 Scunthorpe 22 9 4 9 28 30 31 Northampton 22 8 6 8 31 26 30 Scarborough 21 7 9 5 30 27 30 Lincoln 22 8 6 8 28 33 30 Chester 21 8 6 7 23 23 30 Hull 22 6 11 5 20 22 29 Torquay 22 8 4 10 22 24 28 Rochdale 21 6 8 7 27 26 26 Exeter 22 7 5 10 21 28 26 Doncaster 22 7 3 12 24 33 24 Mansfield 21 5 9 7 21 22 24 Leyton Orient 21 6 6 9 16 19 24 Hereford 22 6 5 11 23 31 23 Darlington 22 6 4 12 30 39 22 Hartlepool 21 6 4 11 23 28 22 Brighton 22 3 4 15 18 42 13 +SOCCER - VIEIRA SAVES ARSENAL WITH LAST-MINUTE EQUALISER . LONDON 1996-12-07 Frenchman Patrick Vieira blasted a last-minute goal to salvage a 2-2 draw for English premier league leaders Arsenal at home to Derby on Saturday . The London club had been rocked by a two-goal burst from forwards Dean Sturridge and Darryl Powell in the 62nd and 71st minutes which overturned Arsenal 's 1-0 lead from a diving header by captain Tony Adams on the stroke of halftime . Liverpool suffered an upset first home league defeat of the season , beaten 1-0 by a Guy Whittingham goal for Sheffield Wednesday . Wimbledon leap-frogged over Liverpool into second place by winning 3-1 at Sunderland to extend their unbeaten league and cup run to 18 games . Two strikes by Efan Ekoku in the first half and a late goal from fellow forward Dean Holdsworth secured victory for Wimbledon , who trail pacemakers Arsenal by four points . +SOCCER - SCOTTISH LEAGUE AND CUP RESULTS . GLASGOW 1996-12-07 Results of Scottish league and cup matches played on Saturday : Premier division Dunfermline 2 Aberdeen 3 Hearts 0 Raith 0 Kilmarnock 0 Dundee United 2 Motherwell 2 Celtic 1 Rangers 4 Hibernian 3 Division one Dundee 2 Falkirk 0 Greenock Morton 0 St Johnstone 2 Postponed : Airdrieonians v Clydebank ( to Wednesday ) , East Fife v Partick , Stirling v St Mirren ( to Tuesday ) Division two Livingston 2 Stenhousemuir 1 Stranraer 0 Brechin 1 Division three Ross County 4 Montrose 4 Postponed : Forfar v Alloa , Inverness Thistle v Queen 's Park Scottish Cup first round Alloa 3 Hawick 1 Elgin City 0 Whitehill 3 Postponed : Albion v Forfar , Huntly v Clyde ( both now play on December 14 ) +SOCCER - ENGLISH LEAGUE AND CUP RESULTS . LONDON 1996-12-07 Results of English league and cup matches on Saturday : Premier league Arsenal 2 Derby 2 Chelsea 2 Everton 2 Coventry 1 Tottenham 2 Leicester 1 Blackburn 1 Liverpool 0 Sheffield Wednesday 1 Middlesbrough 0 Leeds 0 Southampton 0 Aston Villa 1 Sunderland 1 Wimbledon 3 Division one Barnsley 3 Southend 0 Birmingham 0 Grimsby 0 Charlton 2 Swindon 0 Crystal Palace 2 Oxford 2 Huddersfield 2 Norwich 0 Ipswich 0 Wolverhampton 0 Manchester City 3 Bradford 2 Oldham 0 Queens Park Rangers 2 Reading 0 Port Vale 1 Sheffield United 1 Portsmouth 0 Stoke 2 Tranmere 0 Playing Sunday : West Bromwich v Bolton F.A. Challenge Cup second round Barnet 3 Wycombe 3 Blackpool 0 Hednesford 1 Bristol City 9 St Albans 2 Cambridge United 0 Woking 2 Carlisle 1 Darlington 0 Chester 1 Boston 0 Chesterfield 2 Scarborough 0 Enfield 1 Peterborough 1 Hull 1 Crewe 5 Leyton Orient 1 Stevenage 2 Luton 2 Boreham Wood 1 Mansfield 0 Stockport 3 Notts County 3 Rochdale 1 Preston 2 York 3 Sudbury Town 1 Brentford 3 Walsall 1 Burnley 1 Watford 5 Ashford Town 0 Wrexham 2 Scunthorpe 2 Cardiff 0 Gillingham 2 +RUGBY UNION - CAMPESE SIGNS OFF WITH TRY IN WALLABY ROMP . LONDON 1996-12-07 Australia bade farewell to David Campese in spectacular fashion by overwhelming the Barbarians 39-12 in the final match of their European tour at Twickenham on Saturday . The Wallabies ran in five tries with Campese , who has retired from test rugby after collecting 101 caps and a world record 64 tries , adding one last touchdown in a Wallaby jersey before departing the international game . The Barbarians included 14 internationals but , with only two pre-match practice sessions behind them , proved no real match for a Wallaby side determined to finish their 12-match tour unbeaten . The touring team were 27-0 ahead by half-time before easing up in the second-half . Full-back Matthew Burke finished with a personal haul of 24 points to take his tour aggregate to 136 . +RUGBY UNION - AUSTRALIA BEAT BARBARIANS 39-12 . LONDON 1996-12-07 Australia beat the Barbarians 39-12 ( halftime 27-0 ) in the final match of their European tour on Saturday : Scorers : Australia - Tries : Matthew Burke ( 2 ) , Joe Roff , David Campese , Tim Horan . Penalties : Burke ( 2 ) . Conversions : Burke ( 4 ) . Barbarians - Tries : Alan Bateman , Scott Quinnell . Conversion : Rob Andrew . +GOLF - ZIMBABWE OPEN THIRD ROUND SCORES . HARARE 1996-12-07 Leading third round scores in the Zimbabwe Open on Saturday ( South African unless stated ) : 201 Mark McNulty ( Zimbabwe ) 72 61 68 205 Des Terblanche 65 67 73 206 Nick Price ( Zimbabwe ) 68 68 70 207 Clinton Whitelaw 70 70 67 , Mark Cayeux ( Zimbabwe ) 69 69 69 , Justin Hobday 71 65 71 209 Steve van Vuuren 65 69 75 210 Brett Liddle 75 65 70 211 Hugh Baiocchi 73 67 71 , Greg Reid 72 68 71 , Mark Murless 71 67 73 212 Trevor Dodds ( Namibia ) 72 69 71 , Schalk van der Merwe ( Namibia ) 67 73 72 , Hennie Swart 75 64 73 , Andrew Pitts ( U.S. ) 69 67 76 213 Sean Farrell ( Zimbabwe ) 77 68 68 , Glen Cayeux ( Zimbabwe ) 75 68 70 , Nic Henning 73 70 70 , Dion Fourie 69 73 71 214 Steven Waltman 72 70 72 , Bradford Vaughan 72 71 71 , Andrew Park 72 67 75 , Desvonde Botes 72 68 74 . +SOCCER - REINSTATED ALBANIA NAMES SQUAD TO PLAY N.IRELAND . TIRANA 1996-12-07 Albanian coach Astrit Hafizi said on Saturday it was important that his players brush aside the country 's short ban by FIFA in order to concentrate on next Saturday'sWorld Cup group nine qualifier against Northern Ireland . World soccer 's governing body reinstated Albania last Tuesday after the Balkan country 's government lifted suspensions on various soccer officials . FIFA had banned Albania indefinitely after its sports ministry had ordered the suspension of Albanian Football Association general secretary Eduard Dervishi and dissolved the executive committee . " We would be very happy with a draw in Belfast , " said Hafizi . " Especially if one takes into consideration our difficult post-suspension situation and the fact Northern Ireland is very keen to win . " Regular defender Artur Lekbello , who is injured , was missing from Hafizi 's squad named on Saturday for the Belfast match . Squad : Goalkeepers - Blendi Nallbani , Armir Grima Defenders - Rudi Vata , Saimir Malko , Arjan Xhumba , Ilir Shulku , Afrim Tole , Nevil Dede , Arjan Bellai Midfielders - Bledar Kola , Altin Haxhi , Sokol Prenga , Ervin Fakaj Forwards - Altin Rraklli , Viktor Paco , Fatmir Vata , Erjon Bogdani . +CRICKET - JONES HITS CENTURY AS VICTORIA FIGHT BACK . HOBART , Australia 1996-12-07 Former Australia test batsman Dean Jones hit an unbeaten 130 to lead Victoria 's fightback in their Sheffield Shield match against Tasmania on Saturday . Replying to the home side 's first innings 481 for eight declared , Victoria reached 220 for three at close of play on the second day of the four-day match at Hobart 's Bellerive Oval . Jones became the fourth century-maker of the match , equalling the feats of Tasmanian trio David Boon , Shaun Young and Michael DiVenuto . Jones , who took over as captain for the match in the absence of Australia test leg-spinner Shane Warne , added 195 runs for the third wicket with left-hander Laurie Harper . Harper was eventually dismissed for 77 after the pair joined forces with their side reeling on nine for two . Earlier , former Australia test batsman David Boon scored 118 and all-rounder Shaun Young hit 113 . The pair hammered 36 boundaries between them . Pace bowler Ian Harvey claimed three for 81 for Victoria . +CRICKET - SHEFFIELD SHIELD SCORE . HOBART , Australia 1996-12-07 Close of play score on the second day of the four-day Sheffield Shield cricket match between Tasmania and Victoria at Bellerive Oval on Saturday : Tasmania 481 for eight declared ( Michael DiVenuto 119 , David Boon 118 , Shaun Young 113 ) ; Victoria 220 for three ( Dean Jones 130 not out ) . +SOCCER - SOUTH KOREA MOVE CLOSE TO QUARTER-FINAL BERTH . ABU DHABI 1996-12-07 South Korea made virtually certain of an Asian Cup quarter-final spot with a 4-2 win over Indonesia in a Group A match on Saturday . After going four up in the first 55 minutes South Korea allowed Indonesia , newcomers to Asian Cup finals , back into the match , conceding two goals from rare counter attacks . Kim Do Hoon opened the scoring for South Korea in only the fifth minute , turning unmarked on the penalty spot to fire a shot into the top corner . It looked like turning into a rout as Hwang Sun Hong rapidly added two more in the seventh and 15th minutes but although the Koreans continued to dominate they failed to add to the score before the interval . But they started the second half where they had left off and it was not long before they went four up , Ko Jeong Woon heading in from a free kick in the 55th minute . The Koreans then appeared to relax , allowing the Indonesians to get back into the match . Ronny Wabia scored for Indonesia three minutes later direct from a a corner kick that Korean goalkeeper Kim Byung reached with one hand but failed to keep out . With 65 minutes gone Indonesia 's Widodo Putra , who scored a spectacular goal against Kuwait on Wednesday , was again on target , breaking through the Korean defence to beat the keeper with a low shot . Indonesian keeper Hendro Kartiko produced a string of fine saves to prevent the Koreans increasing their lead . Teams : Indonesia : 20 - Hendro Kartiko ; 2 - Agung Setyabudi ; 3 - Suwandi Siswoyo ; 4 - Yeyen Tumera ; 5 - Aples Tecuari ; 6 - Sudiriman ; 7 - Widodo Gahyo Purta ; 8 - Ronny Wabia ; 11 - Bima Sakti ; 12 - Chris Yarangga ( 15 - Francis Wewengken 36 ) ; 16 - Marzuki Badriawan . South Korea : 1 - Kim Byung Ji ; 2 - Kim Pan Keun ; 5 - Huh Ki Tae ; 8 - Roh Sang Rae ( 7 - Sin Tae Yong 33 ) ; 9 - Kim Do Hoon ; 11 - Ko Jeong Woon ; 17 - Ha Seok Ju ; 18 - Hwang Sun Hong ; 22 - Lee Young Jin ; 23 - Yoo Sang Chul ; 24 - Kim Joo Sung . +SOCCER - ISRAELI FIRST DIVISION RESULTS / STANDINGS . JERUSALEM 1996-12-07 Results of first division soccer matches played over the weekend : Zafririm Holon 1 Hapoel Petah Tikva 1 Maccabi Haifa 1 Hapoel Taibe 1 Hapoel Kfar Sava 1 Bnei Yehuda 0 Hapoel Tel Aviv 1 Betar Jerusalem 4 Hapoel Jerusalem 0 Maccabi Tel Aviv 4 Ironi Rishon Lezion 1 Maccabi Herzliya 0 Hapoel Beit She'an 2 Hapoel Beersheba 1 Maccabi Petah Tikva 0 Hapoel Haifa 2 Standings ( tabulate under played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , against , points ) : Betar Jerusalem 12 10 2 0 28 7 32 Hapoel Petah Tikva 12 9 2 1 27 13 29 Hapoel Beersheba 12 8 0 4 18 9 24 Maccabi Tel Aviv 12 6 4 2 21 14 22 Maccabi Petah Tikva 12 6 2 4 14 12 20 Bnei Yehuda 12 6 2 4 15 15 20 Hapoel Haifa 12 6 1 5 21 16 19 Maccabi Haifa 12 4 4 4 14 15 16 Hapoel Kfar Sava 12 5 1 6 10 11 16 Hapoel Jerusalem 12 4 1 7 10 18 13 Ironi Rishon Lezion 12 4 1 7 13 24 13 Zafririm Holon 12 2 4 6 8 14 10 Maccabi Herzliya 12 3 1 8 5 12 10 Hapoel Taiba 12 3 1 8 10 21 10 Hapoel Beit She'an 12 2 3 7 9 13 9 Hapoel Tel Aviv 12 2 3 7 7 16 9 +SOCCER - ASIAN CUP RESULTS . ABU DHABI 1996-12-07 Results of Asian Cup group A matches on Saturday : United Arab Emirates 3 Kuwait 2 ( halftime 0-2 ) Scorers : UAE - Hassan Ahmed 53 , Adnan Al Talyani 55 , Bakhit Saad 80 Kuwait - Jassem Al-Huwaidi 9 , 44 Attendance : 15,000 South Korea 4 Indonesia 2 ( 3-0 ) Scorers : South Korea - Kim Do Hoon 5 , Hwang Sun Hong 7 and 15 , Koo Jeon Woon 55 Indonesia - Ronny Wabia 58 , Widodo Putra 65 Attendance : 2,000 Group A standings ( tabulate under : played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , against , points ) : South Korea 2 1 1 0 5 3 4 UAE 2 1 1 0 4 3 4 Kuwait 2 0 1 1 4 5 1 Indonesia 2 0 1 1 4 6 1 +NBA BASKETBALL - STANDINGS AFTER FRIDAY 'S GAMES . NEW YORK 1996-12-07 Standings of National Basketball Association teams after games played on Friday ( tabulate under won , lost , percentage , games behind ) : EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L PCT GB MIAMI 14 5 .737 - NEW YORK 11 6 .647 2 ORLANDO 8 7 .533 4 WASHINGTON 7 9 .438 5 1/2 PHILADELPHIA 7 10 .412 6 NEW JERSEY 4 10 .286 7 1/2 BOSTON 4 13 .235 9 CENTRAL DIVISION W L PCT GB CHICAGO 17 1 .944 - DETROIT 14 3 .824 2 1/2 CLEVELAND 11 6 .647 5 1/2 ATLANTA 10 8 .556 7 MILWAUKEE 8 8 .500 8 INDIANA 8 8 .500 8 CHARLOTTE 8 9 .471 8 1/2 TORONTO 6 11 .353 10 1/2 WESTERN CONFERENCE MIDWEST DIVISION W L PCT GB HOUSTON 16 2 .889 - UTAH 15 2 .882 1/2 MINNESOTA 7 11 .389 9 DALLAS 6 11 .353 9 1/2 DENVER 5 14 .263 11 1/2 SAN ANTONIO 3 14 .176 12 1/2 VANCOUVER 3 16 .158 13 1/2 PACIFIC DIVISION W L PCT GB SEATTLE 15 5 .750 - LA LAKERS 14 7 .667 1 1/2 PORTLAND 12 8 .600 3 LA CLIPPERS 7 11 .389 7 GOLDEN STATE 6 13 .316 8 1/2 SACRAMENTO 6 13 .316 8 1/2 PHOENIX 3 14 .176 10 1/2 SATURDAY , DECEMBER 7 SCHEDULE TORONTO AT ATLANTA LA CLIPPERS AT NEW YORK MILWAUKEE AT WASHINGTON DETROIT AT NEW JERSEY MIAMI AT CHICAGO VANCOUVER AT DALLAS PHILADELPHIA AT HOUSTON UTAH AT DENVER CHARLOTTE AT SEATTLE +NBA BASKETBALL - FRIDAY 'S RESULTS . NEW YORK 1996-12-07 Results of National Basketball Association games on Friday ( home team in CAPS ) : New Jersey 110 BOSTON 108 ( OT ) DETROIT 93 Cleveland 81 New York 103 MIAMI 85 Phoenix 101 SACRAMENTO 95 Vancouver 105 SAN ANTONIO 89 UTAH 106 Minnesota 95 PORTLAND 97 Charlotte 93 Indiana 86 GOLDEN STATE 71 LA LAKERS 92 Orlando 81 +NHL ICE HOCKEY - STANDINGS AFTER FRIDAY 'S GAMES . NEW YORK 1996-12-07 Standings of National Hockey League teams after games played on Friday ( tabulate under won , lost , tied , goals for , goals against , points ) : EASTERN CONFERENCE NORTHEAST DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS HARTFORD 12 7 6 77 76 30 BUFFALO 13 12 2 78 77 28 MONTREAL 11 14 4 99 104 26 BOSTON 10 11 4 74 84 24 PITTSBURGH 10 13 3 86 94 23 OTTAWA 7 12 6 64 77 20 ATLANTIC DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS FLORIDA 17 4 6 83 53 40 PHILADELPHIA 15 12 2 81 78 32 NEW JERSEY 14 10 1 61 61 29 WASHINGTON 13 13 1 72 71 27 NY RANGERS 11 13 5 97 86 27 NY ISLANDERS 7 11 8 65 72 22 TAMPA BAY 8 15 2 69 81 18 WESTERN CONFERENCE CENTRAL DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS DETROIT 15 9 4 81 53 34 DALLAS 16 10 1 77 66 33 ST LOUIS 14 14 0 82 84 28 CHICAGO 12 13 3 72 70 27 TORONTO 11 16 0 81 95 22 PHOENIX 9 13 4 61 74 22 PACIFIC DIVISION W L T GF GA PTS COLORADO 17 7 4 100 60 38 VANCOUVER 14 11 1 84 83 29 EDMONTON 14 14 1 99 90 29 LOS ANGELES 11 13 3 72 83 25 SAN JOSE 10 13 4 69 87 24 ANAHEIM 9 14 5 74 87 23 CALGARY 10 16 2 65 77 22 SATURDAY , DECEMBER 7 SCHEDULE PHOENIX AT NEW JERSEY CALGARY AT BOSTON BUFFALO AT HARTFORD WASHINGTON AT NY ISLANDERS CHICAGO AT MONTREAL NY RANGERS AT TORONTO ANAHEIM AT PITTSBURGH COLORADO AT LOS ANGELES TAMPA BAY AT SAN JOSE OTTAWA AT VANCOUVER +NHL ICE HOCKEY - FRIDAY 'S RESULTS . NEW YORK 1996-12-07 Results of National Hockey League games on Friday ( home team in CAPS ) : NY RANGERS 6 Toronto 5 BUFFALO 1 Anaheim 1 ( OT ) Pittsburgh 5 WASHINGTON 3 Montreal 3 CHICAGO 1 Philadelphia 6 DALLAS 3 St Louis 4 COLORADO 3 EDMONTON 5 Ottawa 2 +NHL ICE HOCKEY - CANUCKS RW BURE SUSPENDED FOR ONE GAME . NEW YORK 1996-12-06 Vancouver Canucks star right wing Pavel Bure was suspended for one game by the National Hockey League and fined $ 1,000 Friday for his hit on Buffalo Sabres defenceman Garry Galley on Wednesday . Bure received a double-minor penalty for high-sticking with 2:22 left in the first period of Wednesday 's 7-6 overtime win by Vancouver after colliding with Galley in Buffalo zone . Galley suffered a concussion and did not return to the game . " Mr Bure left his feet to deliver a forearm blow to Mr Galley as he was about to be checked legally by his opponent , " said NHL discipline chief Brian Burke in handing out the suspension . " Although it is clear from the videotape that Mr Bure 's actions were a reaction to the impending hit and there was no intent to injure his opponent , there can be no excuse for this type of conduct , " Burke said . Bure , who is struggling with only nine goals and 12 assists in 26 games , will miss Saturday 's home game against Ottawa . +BOXING - SCHULZ DEFEATS RIBALTA IN IBF HEAVYWEIGHT FIGHT . VIENNA 1996-12-07 German Axel Schulz outpointed Cuba 's Jose Ribalta in their International Boxing Federation non-title 10-round heavyweight fight on Saturday . +SOCCER - SPANISH FIRST DIVISION SUMMARY . MADRID 1996-12-07 Summary of Saturday 's Spanish first division match : Real Madrid 2 ( Davor Suker 24 , Predrag Mijatovic 48 ) Barcelona 0 . Halftime 1-0 . Attendance 106,000 . +SOCCER - BALKAN STRIKE FORCE WIN OLD FIRM GAME FOR REAL . MADRID 1996-12-07 Real Madrid 's Balkan strike force of Davor Suker and Predrag Mijatovic shot their side to a 2-0 win over Barcelona in Spain 's old firm game on Saturday . The result leaves Real on 38 points after 16 games , four ahead of Barcelona . With just one league match scheduled before the New Year break , Real are also assured of spending Christmas ahead of their arch-rivals . A mix-up in the Barcelona defence let Croatian international Suker in midway through the first half , and Montenegrin striker Mijatovic made it 2-0 after fine work by Clarence Seedorf just after the break . Barcelona fought back strongly but were twice denied by the woodwork on an unusually quiet night for Brazilian striker Ronaldo . +SOCCER - PSV HIT VOLENDAM FOR SIX . AMSTERDAM 1996-12-07 Brazilian striker Marcelo and Yugoslav midfielder Zeljko Petrovic each scored twice as Dutch first division leaders PSV Eindhoven romped to a 6-0 win over Volendam on Saturday . Their other marksmen were Brazilian defender Vampeta and Belgian striker Luc Nilis , his 14th of the season . PSV , well on the way to their 14th league title , outgunned Volendam in every department of the game . They boast a nine-point lead over Feyenoord , who have two games in hand , and are 16 points clear of champions Ajax Amsterdam , who have played 18 matches compared to PSV 's 19 . Ajax face AZ Alkmaar away on Sunday and Feyenoord , eliminated from the UEFA Cup after losing 4-2 on aggregate to Tenerife on Tuesday , travel to De Graafschap Doetinchem . The Doetinchem side , dubbed " The Super Peasants " , are one of the surprise packages of the season . They are fourth in the table . +SOCCER - SPANISH FIRST DIVISION RESULT / STANDINGS . MADRID 1996-12-07 Result of Saturday 's only Spanish first division match : Real Madrid 2 Barcelona 0 Standings ( tabulate under games played , won , drawn , lost , goals for , against , points ) : Real Madrid 16 11 5 0 32 12 38 Barcelona 16 10 4 2 46 21 34 Deportivo Coruna 15 9 6 0 23 7 33 Real Betis 15 8 5 2 28 13 29 Atletico Madrid 15 8 3 4 26 17 27 Athletic Bilbao 15 7 4 4 28 22 25 Real Sociedad 15 7 3 5 20 18 24 Valladolid 15 7 3 5 19 18 24 Racing Santander 15 5 7 3 15 15 22 Rayo Vallecano 15 5 5 5 21 19 20 Valencia 15 6 2 7 23 22 20 Celta Vigo 15 5 5 5 17 17 20 Tenerife 15 5 4 6 23 17 19 Espanyol 15 4 4 7 17 20 16 Oviedo 15 4 4 7 17 21 16 Sporting Gijon 15 4 4 7 15 22 16 Logrones 15 4 3 8 11 33 15 Zaragoza 15 2 8 5 18 23 14 Sevilla 15 4 2 9 13 20 14 Compostela 15 3 4 8 13 28 13 Hercules 15 2 2 11 11 29 8 Extremadura 15 1 3 11 8 30 6 diff --git a/train/train.tsv.xz b/train/train.tsv.xz new file mode 100644 index 0000000..98f065d Binary files /dev/null and b/train/train.tsv.xz differ