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Show CheSalt Lake Cribune MONDAY ME 249 NUMBER 2 TODAY'S READERSHIP: 33) SALT LAKE CITY Democracy PATIENT POWER Doctors Learn How To Have a Heart As Well as to Heal Chechnya her studentstradesto oftheir first days working in the hostals. She sat silent as Yeltsin’s Reformist Allies Desert Him Over Warfare Les! immediately irsawing the uding that of the stu dedoff in the ve a story totell you President Boris Y He said if she was not time “I'd be too sick t I'd consider that as an exa not to handlethat situation. over in the 36 months since the munist rule her have the fragile old physician and cancer pati ent told her Harvard Medical Schoolstudents. Ina oursedesignedto enco ge com n future doctors, Yeltsin's human-rights commissior ing Yeltsin in her resignation letter Chechen war is a clearly marked mile is third-year medical students sia’s return to totalitarianism segin working in hospitals. The Two other democratic giants have with Yeltsin in recent days as images of the ones about patients discharged quick ly after major su ry because their in ing a patient sheis dying “We wouldnt [about] what ause Heafitz, who has ova beenre told she could nolonger see patients in Doctors arecontrollers. A lot of us go into medicine hoping to contro! disease said Heafitz. “We as physicians don't ask questions about the alternatives We don't say [topatients]: ‘What elseare you doing for this illness? Are you meditat ing? Are youtrying holistic medicine? Heafitz began to change her outlook after she was diagnosed with cancer in the summerof 1991 She went one dayto the homeof a man she calls her “healer,” an acting teacher known for coaching people in relaxation techniques. Hehad her lie on a mat on the floor amidcrystals and listen to soothing music. She remembers thinking: “What the hell am I doing with this kind of stuff? But sessions of “guided visualizations with the healer produced not only what her doctor calls an “improvedquality of but also a series of poems. pub: lished this summerin a collection entitled that spiritual strength influences physical health does not jibe with most “sensitivity train- But most seem thankful for her per- THE i The FBI is gearing up to hire nearly 2.000 special agents during the next three years. its biggest recruitment push in two decades. And the agency makes nosecret that many of those jobs will go to women and minorities White males mayhave to have a law or accounting de gree, speak an Asian language or be able to pil planeto e hired The way you've been very upfront geous.” v RVICE BOSTON — As the right to abortion abortion nents believetrigger violence unstable to begin with,” into their own hands if they arebasically Rodriguez said ‘Theescalationof the rhetoric and the vilifying of the health-care workersby Two people were killed and five woundedin shootings Friday at two sub- leaders of these movements has served to urban Bostonabortion clinics. A Norfolk inflame the passions of the fringeele- Va., ments.” Pablo Rodriguez, medical director of Planned Parenthood RhodeIs land next he t a letter that said: “You He said he was sofearful he s ypped go clinic was shot at Saturday, Andrew Cabot, a frequently arrested tests in the Boston area. but he was protester in New Hampshire saidif Salvi is the shooter, “he's a hero.” This is goingto be, hopefully the besinning of the war, and we'll win b because We're right. and we'll once agai n have sodly laws in our land,” Cabot said Salvi was jailedin Norfolk without bail pending the court appearance anti-aborTuesday jall Sunday, Outside tion ac is knelt to prey, some carrying pie Chote (ones, One dan read John Salvi — Prisoner of War fetus on his pickup anda penchant for Several people recog quoting scrip anti-abortion pr¢ nized himfrom a fe Thank you for what you did not Donald e¢ ABORTION, Pa ge A-8 a ron nr Coe eo Trade Pacts Connect Nations As Violence Divides People Slowly, steadily. n gether in the year just ended ve n towns and villages across the map t 005 often drew further apart. sometimes in merciless bouts of shocking bloodshed In theyear just begi ing, what new opportunities arise for peace anc 1 prosperity. for war and etn 1504 ; 2 i 3 en ts signed a global treaty sign ¢ ie Bb a sealing dox ee varriers. discusset ee oe free-trade zones for the} SsPacific osRim and the ee Western Hemisphere. prepared to enlarge the n Union andThey Atlantic alliance. In Is- from which students must take rael and the way doctors interact with them And Heafitz says: “I had noidea what land. p took giant steps forward. Andsevennations. by one count joined the ranks of democraci¢ healing meant before this, I didn’t under But 1994also wa. stand the power that the patient has neighbor fell upon neig genocidethat stupefied of countless other slau: INDEX of Rwanda. ir where wernight rid, and the year from Afghanistan to Liberia to Yugoslavia The Associated Press asked correspondents Rollyand Wells. aroundthe worldto assess the new year's pros Aé B-4 0-4 pects. Hereare their LATIN AMERICA D-4 CA D-7 B-7 B4 4 30s Details: C-6 POOR COPY Ruth Nichols is the mother of mur dered receptionist Leanne Nichols. A World View of Prospects for 1995 The world ahead ‘. the public was clearlydissatisfied with north, 40s south but no body was hurt The man chargedinthe shootings 2-year-old JohnSalvi — had a picture of medicineat USC. She said the “heal cur- D-5 said @ See YELTSIN, Page A-4 not too far for someone to take the | aw for a holy war. using words their oppo- courses every year. was started because Comics. B-6 Sports. Crossword D-6 Star Gazer DayBreak B-4 Television Editorials A6 Time & Money For The Record. 0-2 Utah News WEATHER: Partly sunny: highs in capital Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev years. abortion foes have escalated calls assistant professor of of D-5 with gun firein the second day of clashes in the known to be an active member of any par ticular organization er and a baby killer fromthe pulpit, it’s We go overliterally, what words should comeout of your mouth.” said Classifieds pounded raking neighborhoods with rockets and machine ing to his Catholic church Whenyou are being called a murder- has been shored up in court ir recent patients orcloserelatives of terminally ill patients Letters to Ed Movies Obituaries ag Can Words Hurt in Abortion ‘Holy War’? “It is a dra Ann Landers Asimov Quiz Births and aircraft including its residential disti heavy shells and bombs. Russian soldiers and Che: chen guerrillas fought from building to building @ Sce FBI, Page A-4 Southern California School of Medicine students work with actors trained to be riculum.” Russian artillery Grozny, ear hiring freeze has been lifted, partly because an aging matic testimony to you as a teacher. Courses like the one Heafitz teaches are not uncommon at medical schools around the country. At the University of Leslie Blackhall, ace work force has resulted in an unprecedented number of Robert Gilardetti told her at the closeof a recent class period. thecity, and Russia claimedits forces had seized th 1 specialty The push for new agents comes partly because a two spective about your illness is immensely coura- and Chechen rebels fought fiercely for control of Wewant a more culturally diverse workplace to mirror popula’ said J. Robert Shay, the FBI's recruiter r the N orfolk- Virginia Beach, Va., area. “It's going to be more difficult for white males. It will be better if they have approaches emphasized in medical school, leaving some students to snidely refer to her class as ing In Grozny on Sunday. thousands of Russian troops rebel headquarters in Chechnya’s presidential pa By Lynn Waltz guard were killed in July, Rodriguez said Powerofthe Spirit: Heafitz’s conv top arm: journalists and manyordinary Russians Wanted esthe FBI: Women, Minorities After a Florida doctor and his body- In Darkness and in Light. De of deserters that includes intellec bers of Yeltsin's governm: self a healer. Then she decided she had tion the bloes that fought forseats in the toll things to teach. So she returned to her alma mater to tell students about what she found was largely missing from medicine carnage in Choice party could be counted as solid sin. Now that too is gone, the iate cancer. had her pediatr ics practice. She spent months reconsidering what it meant to call her. to parliamentary elections, only Gaidar’s Russia's Fireworks punctuate the finale of 1994 and herald an infant 1995 at Gallivan Utah Center Plaza as anestimated 40,000 revelers converge on downtown Salt Lake City, d or battle with thedisease longbefore ie dobtne a0 otdls gave her the death sentence kened by chemotherapy, she was life.” nya a “fatal mistake,” was a partic FIRST NIGHT WORKS nm mor: treme pai S hope Chechnya flash across Russiantelevisio: former Acting Prime Minister Yegor ( the president's free-market guru. an nance Minister Boris Fyodorov, a key st the early drive for economic reform The loss of Gaidar, who called the surance would not longer stays — and act out tough encounters. such as te Lesley wa e. said Jim McDonald another Heafitz student Do not fool the people xchangehorror stories — like Real-Life Learning: seemed so r of the fabled Soviet dissident Andr testimony that harts and statistics never could lasseaten Doctor-Patient,” for reform and civil society never be sin appeared to have Human-rights ch ey errs Soesoars Heafitz and her life provide AH &4 By MEXICO CI for the new year Susana Hayward The goal in Latin America to start creating a huge trad. ing bloe secondonly to Asia The Associated Press. It is an old dream. But guerrillas. dictators. foreign debts, nuclear bombs and bickering got in the way, The recent Summit of the Americas raised hopes trade will change that. Latin leaders agreed to tumble trade barriers by 2005, creat ing the world’s largest market worth$13 trillion in goods and360billion consumers. It will not be easy, despite words like “magic times” and “renaissance,” which U.S. officials used to describe Latin America’s economic re forms As 1994 drew to a close, Mexico's pe: plunged amid worries about a smoldering indian rebellion. That sharply cut into the buying power o£ Mexicans andunsettledforeigninvestments in emerging markets throughout Latin America ; also are active in Peru and Guate. : Guerrilias : widenedthe gap between rich mala.aPoverty has andpoor in Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela and SPF e Pertea among others.ee The *World Bank: says the richest 20 percent of the people control two-thirds of Latin America’s wealth Last year brought Mexicotwo political assassinations, kidnappings and an Indian uprising in the south. The opposition continues to demand electoral reformsin a nation ruledby the Institu tional RevolutionaryParty for 65 years Drug trafficking and corruption are rampant in Colombia, Bolivia, Mexico, Peru and Para guay. But trade fever grows with the North American Trade Agreement, which begana year ago by linking Mexico's economy with the United States and Canadaina free-trade zone With some exceptions, Latin America has a new generation of mostly U.S.-educated econo: mists that see open markets rather than state controls and protectionism as the way to go M™ See PROSPECTS, Page A-4 |