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Show 4 1II I. Y III K l I). 1'i.n,.. I i.ih llmiMl.n. Nichols cries as former wife testifies in bombing trial NATIONAL BRIEFING B Aggressive bears killed YOSKMITK NATIONAL PARK. Calif AP Four hlaek lienrs.- including a mother and her two iuhs. had to he i hecae destroyed they repeat- edly hrok.' into cars and threatened pmple, a park spokesman said WVdnesdav. lirasionally same hears get so habitually ued to people, they would hreak into cars whet her there's iood or not." spokesman Keiidell Thoinpson "They lose their natural K ai of people and they have to he de- -t roved." hon.pM,n said the two cuhs had to he killed along with their mot her mi .Monday hecause the hears often teach their young new hahits like freaking into ( ars I. iknci lor iood. rapping ai d moving t hear- - to another location doesn't w( rk hecause they either find their wav hack s proh- "f heroine eineiine leu; 'I li..';:.s, aid I -- -- Denver's tanks empty s.w fh'.wnsro (.!'i lio one of c mses for the .i. t hat killed singer ml out oi ga- - is er -e j.i..;... iohi, tin- spokesman for lonal Trai ion a it . Hoard Sah-l- Ti a !i hi i. sail Wednesday. -- talion KR( ). that an i:est igator said leave ca.-hewhile trying to Hi h from one fuel tank to allot her. Hot h tanks were empty, the reported. It couiil he as simple as pot :ed Wednesday M S d i thai." ( leoi L'.e I'etterson. the N'TS i s lead invest igator in the ,i.-- e. sai, ,, the KROX st or in a ril ten statement released U I'dnesday. lint t lie statement added 'hat run inn; out of gas is only one under investigation. ( Mhcial.- - also are invest iuli leaver's t raining and perlorinance as a pilot, as well as the con-- l I'ucl ion of the pri- itelv huih Lung V.7. aircraft lie wa- - il ing" Wendy's salad bars out I cnfrMliloiiioiAPj he .dad dir. - are over at -- Well,!'-- . The fir.- -l chain to offer bar- - iii self-serv- e - !(","! - the salad interest in them has waited and it plans to eliminate most of them by -- pi ing. SANDY SHORE lie XsMKi.ik'd Press PKNYER Tears streamed down Terry Nichols' face Wednesday as his former wife testified about a sealed letter he gave her nearly a year and a half before the Oklahoma City bombing telling her how to distribute his belongings in the event of his death. In the November 1994 letter, Nichols asked Lana Padilla to clean nut a storage locker and divide his assets including a life insurance policy between their son. Josh, and his new wife and daughter in the Philippines. "I was very concerned, real concerned." Padilla testified. "I cared about Terry and I was concerned that there was something awful, that he was not coming hack." Records gone; Naval science suffers setback WASHINGTON r.Rll.l .ION Wis. A I A girl duit in a dog cage in a cold, dark basement o va cied w hen her 1 ear-ol- di-c- hrolher. nialross and barefoot we to a police station lor help, authorities said.. Neither the girl. vbo appeared vei Inn. rior any of the other children in the home, aged (i. (i and In months, were hospitalied. .ad ( 'alumont b- -i n At tornev Ken ( hi nt Krai All v. en- pku ed w it h relat ives. The cluldi en - parents, both JS. were taken inio custody and will likely luce li'lony child abuse ( hinges. Kiat. said Tuesday. . -- I i Films make registry WASHINGTON iAI'i Films by .Martin Scorsese and Alfred lilchcock are among H5 motion pictures that the Library of Congress has added to its National Film Registry for their contributions to the American cinema. The l egist it. now at 225 movies, designates films considered irreplaceable parts of the nation's cinematic herI itage. Among films chosen this year: Scorsese's raw 1973 urban drama, ".Mean Streets;" Hitchcock's Dad "thriller. "Rear Window;" and the war epic. "The Bridge on the River Kwai. e, saying, "You're on your own, go for it." He closed by writing: "This letter would be for the purpose of my death." PAT Emotional trial: I.OPKZThe AssiK'iptcil Press artist's drawing shows Oklahoma City bombing suspect Terry Nichols, right, with defense attorney Ron Woods. An is your style ook style is as comfortable as your favorite fabrics. Reg. $28 Get casual comfort in these shirts with corduroy collars; Ferruche thermal henleys Reg. $26 In natural, olive, charcoal, black, white, oatmeal, moss, teal, hunter and navy; full-zi- p Sale 15.99 Sale 15.99 Sleeve-stripe- d corduroy pants in khaki, Reg. $42 Urban eight-wal- e 29-3Sale 24.99 olive and black; waist sizes knits 8. Reg. $35 Get a sleeve up on style with these knit shirts. and They were "pulped beyond recognition," the archives said Wednesday. The archives and the Navy blamed each other. Fed into the pulper sometime last summer were 4,200 scientific notebooks and 600 boxes of correspondence and technical memos. "The historical record of our nation's scientific and technological heritage has suffered a serious and irreparable loss," Rear Acini. Paul G. Gaffney II, chief of Naval Research, wrote National Archivist John Carlin, protesting the destruction of the records. Among the lost records, Gaffney said, were the correspondence of American pioneers in high frequency radio, work of the inventors of radar "and the war records of the applicat ion of these technologies in the cam paigns against Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan." Also lost were records of crew- - Yaga sweatshirts Reg. $42 Don't sweat it! Get comfortable in these crewneck sweats; Sale 29.99 Reg. $54 Yaga corduroy pants in khaki, brown, olive, navy and charcoal; waist sizes 29-3Sale 29.99 acoustic and research" and oceanographic materials tracing the early history of the American space proand Yiking rockgram with ets, records of Vanguard, the first U.S. satellite program g accordance with established procedure" it had sent the 7- - ecutors have said contained for the bomb, ingredients Padilla testified. Nichols, in his letter to McVeigh, suggested that his old Army buddy call his Relax! Research Laboratory records that "chronicle some of the most significant technical achievements in the 20th century" were inadvertently destroyed by the National Archives. Girl found in dog cage f'rnn-ehi-ee- s. was concerned," she said. The next day, she opened the package and found the letter to her, and a second envelope addressed to Jennifer McVeigh, sister. Timothy McVeigh's There also was a life insurance policy, some keys, a list of emergency numbers and a list of precious metals. The envelope addressed to Ms. McVeigh contained a second letter addressed to her brother, instructing him to clear out two storage sheds that pros- Flannel shirts "and much more," Gaffney said. The papers, dating from the 19:30s through the 1980s, were destroyed at the archives' facilities in Suitland, Md., and the remaining pulp was sent out for recycling, the agency said. The archives said that "in I Z-Outl- Naval poki'sman Denny Lynch -- aid Tuesday the company made the decision hecaii-- e el he grow lllg popularity o! it - prejiacktiged salads and jnla sandwiches, v. I.ich contain vegetables. a nch said 'it was up to whii h operate hout half of lie company's 5.100 worldwide, to decide whet her to keep the salad bar-- , lie didn't know how many cont imie to oiler them. -- Defense attorney Michael Tigar put an arm around Nichols. At least two jurors and several bombing victims' relatives also cried. The courtroom was hushed as Padilla recalled her marriage to Nichols in 1981 and detailed their divorce eight years later. Several times, she stopped to sip water and regain her composure. The letter was one of several items in a sealed brown paper bag that Nichols left with Padilla when he left for the Philippines on Nov. 22. 1994. Nichols instructed her to open the bag if he failed to return to the United States by Jan. 25, 1995. When Padilla and Josh took Nichols to the airport. Josh said "I'll never see my father again," and began crying in the car. "Mv antennae went out and I The Associated Press "path-breakin- Wends'- - W7 V.u-mlv- V-- 2 Office of Naval Research notice that the records would be routinely destroyed 90 days later unless it heard otherwise. "Though the Navy responded to other notices that came with this one. it raised no objection to carrying out the scheduled disposal of the laboratory , 4 i ? A' ' v 4' I! material," the archives said. Dick Thompson, a Navy lab spokesman, said the laboratory did not receive the notice and did not know of the records destruction until last July. Carlin said he ordered an immediate investigation and put his deputy. Lewis Bellardo, a veteran archivist, in charge. an Gaffney asked for more independent advisory board to evaluate the archives"'disposal policies and processes." The government generates billions of records in the course of a year. The government permanently stores only about 2 percent, saving others for a 10, 20 or stipulated period 50 years or such. "If the process is flawed, or the evaluation criteria (for determining what to keep) are inadequate, then obviously the situation must be fixed," Carlin said. "I will be grateful for the Navy's cooperation in determining where the problem lies so that together we can take appropriate action. And I will report publicly on the outcome of the investigation." i! j j I : 1 V . a;,. i! 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