Page 6 • Wednesday, July 7, 1999 News New Russian troops stationed in Kosovo Albanians await news of missing DJAKOVICA, Yugoslavia (AP) — His family clings to hope. But there is little reason to believe Kastriot Zherka was not shot down by Serb police like so many others, then dumped in a mass grave or a river, or burned to unidentifiable ash. Zherka’s wife, daughters, parents and sisters have no body to bury, and they are not alone. Community leaders say at least 1,200 men, women and children are missing from Djakovica, more than has been re ported from any other part of Kosovo. This city on the Albanian border has been a well- spring of Albanian nationalism, and was brutally tar geted during the Serb crackdown on Kosovo Albani ans. “We really need to know, if only to bury him Zher- ka’s sister Arta said. Many are likely dead, but some of the missing may be in Yugoslav prisons. Daloni Carlisle, the Red Cross spokesperson in Kosovo, said at least 2,000 “security detainees” from the Kosovo war are being l^eld, ac cording to lists Yugoslav federal justice authorities re portedly shared with local officials. Those lists have not been given to the Red Cross, and few Albanians have been able to approach offi- PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP) — The first plane load of new Russian peacekeepers landed in Koso vo’s capital today, a day after NATO brokered an agreement with Moscow on their deployment. Their presence is seen as a way to help ease the fears of Kosovo’s minority Serbs, who have come under attack from vengeful ethnic Albanians. With the ranks of the peacekeepers in Kosovo filling out, the head of the U.N. refugee agency warned that her agency was running short of funds to help hundreds of thousands of returning refugees. The Russian 11-76 transport plane left from the southern Russian town of Ivanovo this morning for the flight to Pristina. It was to be followed by three more planes today, Russia’s Interfax news agency said. cials in Serb-dominated Yugoslavia for information about their missing loved ones. Last month, Yugoslavia released 166 prisoners to the Red Cross, and this week it passed on the names of 481 others that Red Cross officials will be able to visit and put in contact with their families. The organization also has received complaints that nearly 300 Serbs were ab ducted by the Albanian separatist Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), which denies holding anyone. The Red Cross has called on both sides to negoti ate prisoner releases, an issue that was overlooked in the U.N. resolution that ended Kosovo’s war. Carlisle said that could be a lengthy process, noting 19,000 people still remain missing from unrest in the former Yugoslav republic of Bosnia. Deadline for nuclear ban nears WASHINGTON (AP) — It has been three years since President Clin ton became the first world leader to sign a treaty call ing for a global ban on nuclear test explosions. The U.S. Senate has yet to hold a hearing on it. The Senate is not alone: So far, only 18 of the 44 nations with nuclear capabilities that must ratify the wide-ranging Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty have taken action. Now, with a September ratification deadline ap proaching, treaty activists are step ping up their campaign to bring the measure to the Senate floor. In Washington, the treaty remains bottled up in the Senate Foreign Re lations Committee, whose chair. Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., is locked in a dispute with the Clinton administra tion over two other treaties. “The Senate is dragging its feet on this issue, and it’s unforgiv able,” Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., a leader in the effort to bring the treaty to a vote, said. He said he and other test-ban supporters will get “more aggressive” in the com ing weeks. Dorgan declined to say what that meant, but there is no question a handful of determined senators can bring havoc to the Senate’s schedule. “Russia is waiting for us; China is waiting for Russia,” Thomas Gra ham, president of the Lawyers Al liance for World Security and a for mer director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, said. “The [reason for the] delay in ratification is exclusively that there haven’t been hearings. There is no other reason. ” The 1996 pact includes a pledge against all testing of nuclear de vices and sets up a global system of sensors to monitor compliance. It was signed by 152 nations, but ratification is moving slowly. HELMS our luxury accommodation nd mealplan starts as low is $650 per installment {Based on 10 installment plan for two-bedroom double-occupancy accommodation. Advanced payment for the academic year begins at $5,999.) "Rest easy. Mom ... We'll do it all/ PEACE OF MIND Private Bedrooms Available Courtesy Patrol Limited Access Entry Professional On-Site Res. Life Staff DO APPLY TODAY WHILE NOT MISS THERE' S ST IL L S PAC E! OUT! CALLAWAY SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS CALLAWAY HOUSE 301 George Bush Drive West College Station, TX 77840 409.260.7700 www.callawayhouse.com COMMUNITY • 40-Seat DVD Mini- Theatre with THX Surround Sound • Indoor Recreation Center • Pool & Sundeck • Fitness Center HlK AMERICAN CAMPUS Luxury student community co-developed by Callaway Development Co., San Antonio, and American Campus Communities, Austin, Texas © 1999. Barak Cabinet choi puzzle many Israel^ JERUSALEM (AP) — A foreign minister who speaks little English, a police minister who quotes de Toc- queville, a justice minister who nev er studied law, a rabbi to plan roads and a finance minister whose ap pointment sent stocks plummeting. Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s new government, sworn in Tbesday, is a puzzlement to many Israelis, who wonder whether it has what it takes to make the hard choices Israel faces in its negotiations with the Arabs. Others said the ex-military chief’s selections reflect his determination to make fateful decisions alone. “Judging by the composition of his government, it seems he expects to carry out all these tasks alone, with a commando knife between his teeth,” analyst Nahum Barnea said. Presenting his government to parliament on Tbesday, Barak promised sweeping changes: a re vival of peace talks frozen by the hard-line government he ousted, the creation of 300,000 jobs, the rescue of Israel’s ailing education system. 'Judging by the composition of his government, it seems he expects to carry out all these tasks alone. ,, — Nahum Barnea Political analyst “Today, a new government sets out on its way,’.’ he said. “This day, I believe, will be marked as a mo ment of change, a momel onciliation, a moment oil hood, a moment of peace | Still, “brotherhood” ill word many legislators oil One Israel Party used to del 18-member Cabinet. Of the nine Cabinet sii ted to Barak’s One Israfl the most powerful were;! to his loyalists. Rivalsi nored or shunted to pel seemed inappropriate, f Shimon Peres, foreign! when Israel negotiated tlit, through peace accords»{ Palestinians, got a newly era defined airti un-budgeted of Regional Development." ■ Shlomo Ben-Ami, an arl multilingual historian support among Israelis was named police minister,! he has no security backgroi Agent: Killer got guns i CHICAGO (AP) — Benjamin Nathaniel Smith bought the guns he used in his racist shooting spree from an illegal street dealer after he was turned away by a gun shop that did the required a background check, investigators said Tbesday. The background check showed that an ex-girlfriend of Smith’s had taken out a protective order against him because of abuse. Gun control activists said the case demonstrates the inadequacy of the nation's gun laws, while the gun lob by said the problem is lax enforcement. Smith, 21, killed himself during a struggle with po lice Sunday night after a series of drive-by shootings of Jews, blacks and Asians in Illinois and Indiana that left two people dead and nine wounded. The white supremacist had tried to buy two 9 mm handguns and a shotgun on June 23 at a licensed gun shop in Peoria Heights, Jerry Singer, an agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, said. After being rejected. Smith bought a Bryco .380-cal iber semiautomatic handgun on June 26 anci ,22-cal- iber pistol on June 29 from an illegal dealeni ready was being investigated by the ATF, Singe: Both guns were found with Smith's body rj killed himself near the southern Illinois towm Tests showed that weapons of those calibers we: in the spree. The name of the unlicensed dealer who sold: the guns has been turned over to prosecutorsfal sible charges, Singer said. The dealer’s name, er information about the purchases were not db Tony Schneider, owner of the Heights Hunter Supplies shop in Peoria Heights, confid an interview that Smith had been at his store,H;1 Smith was calm when told he could not havetliej and several boxes of ammunition. “He just said he’d check it out and left,"lies The denial was based on a two-year order feu tection filed by former girlfriend Elizabeth Salt] took effect in April 1998. Sahr had accusedhw verely beating her and said she feared for he/ cause of his white supremacist connections. Pei hr, Start Your Future now Th Work Part-Time Now. Apply for a full-timi| opportunity when you graduate! 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