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Show Page 5 Wednesday, October 4,2006 AH stories and photos from The Associated Press -DAY WEATHER OUTLOOK Today 70/56 Showers Thursday Scattered Showers 69/53 Friday Isolated Showers 61/49 Saturday Partly Cloudy 60/45 Sunday S u n n y 6 6 / 4 7 WWW.WEATHER.COM At the u Today • Blood Drive: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. @ Huntsman Cancer Institute, 6th Fioor Conference Room • Meteorology Graduate Seminar: Marriott Library For Meteorologists...and , other College of Mines types: 2 p j n t o ; ; 330pja@INSCC,RoomllO " .• The Nora Eccles Harrison Distinguished Lecture Series: Mechanisms of Ventricular Fibrillation Maintenance ; and Defibrillation: 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. @ >'{ Richard A. Harrison Conference Room, Bldg. 500, Room 152 • "Chicago": 7:30 p.m. @ Pioneer J v Memorial Theatre . ., Thursday • Pall Break: No Cjass • Soccer vs. UNLV: 3 p.m. @ Ute Soccer Field « Football vs. TCU: 7 p.m. @ Rice-Eccles Stadium • "Chicago": 7:30 p.m. @ Pioneer Memorial Theatre Foley says he was abused by a clergyman WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. —Disgraced former Rep. Mark Foley said through his lawyer Tuesday that he was sexually abused by a clergyman as a teenager, but accepts full responsibility for sending salacious computer messages to teenage male pages. Attorney David Roth said Foley was molested between ages 13 and 15. He declined to identify the clergyman or the church, but Foley is Roman Catholic. He also acknowledged for the first time that the former congressman is gay, saying the disclosure was part of his client's "recovery." "Mark Foley wants you to know he is a gay man," Roth told reporters as Republicans struggled with fallout from Foley's resignation. Foley "does not blame the trauma he sustained as a young adolescent for his totally inappropriate e-mails" and instant messages, Roth said. "He continues to offer ho excuse whatsoever for his conduct." Foley, who is 52 and sin- North Korea to conduct nuclear test SEOUL, South Korea—North Korea triggered global alarm on Tuesday by saying it will conduct a nuclear test, a key step in the manufacture of atomic bombs that it views as a deterrent against any U.S. attack. But the North also said it was committed to nuclear disarmament, suggesting a willingness to negotiate. The contradictory statement fits a North Korean pattern of ratcheting up tension on the Korean Peninsula, a Cold War-era flashpoint, in an attempt to win concessions such as economic aid. The strategy has had mixed results in recent years as the totalitarian regime sinks deeper into isolation and poverty, with China serving as its lifeline for food and fuel. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called the announcement "a very provocative act" and urged Asian nations to rethink their relationships with North Korea. The North's announcement came as the standoff deepened over Iran's nuclear program, with senior U.N. diplomats saying six world powers would begin negotiations Friday in London on possibly imposing sanctions against Tehran for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment. It was the first time the North Violence in Iraq leaves at least 52 dead Friday •Fall Break: No Class | • Once on this Island (Youth Theatre at r BAGHDAD, Iraq—A the U): 7 p.m. @ Kingsbury Hall ; suicide bomber un• Volleyball vs. New Mexico: 7 p.nt (S> . - j Crimson Court •.- , | leashed a blast in a • "Chicago": 730 p.m, @ Pioneer Memo- \ Baghdad fish market Tuesday and two Shirial Theatre ite families were found slain north of the capital as violence across Iraq claimed at least 52 lives. Saturday The U.S. military, meanwhile, an•Soccer vs. BYU: 1 p.m. @ Ute Soccer nounced the deaths of Field nine soldiers and two • Volleyball vs. TCU: 7 p.m. @ Crimson Marines in what has Court been a deadly period • Lily Tomlin: 7:30 p.m. @ Kingsbury Hall for American forces in • "Chicago": 8 p.m. @ Pioneer Memorial Iraq. Theatre The announcement brought to at least 15 the number of service members killed in fighting since Saturday. Sunday Four of the soldiers were killed in Baghdad on Monday in separate • Ancient Microworids: Fossils Up Close: 930 a m to 530 p.m. @ Utah Museum of '; small-arms fire attacks, Natural History . , .. . . . v j the military said. Another four were killed the same day in a roadside bomb at- South Koreans watch a television broadcasting North Korea's statement about its possible nuclear test at a railway station in Seoul, Wednesday. South Korea urged North Korea to renounce its nuclear test plan and return to international disarmament talks, saying Seoul won't tolerate the North's possession of nuclear weapons. Gunman said he molested girls long ago tack on their patrol northwest of Baghdad. The ninth died Sunday when his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb west of the capital. Sunni politicians expressed worries over a new government plan to stop sectarian violence. The plan, announced a day earlier by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, won some praise in parliament Tuesday. But Shiite and Sunni leaders delayed potentially contentious talks to work out its details. The four-point plan calls for creating neighborhood ShiiteSunni committees to monitor efforts against sectarian violence. The aim is to overcome the deep mistrust between Sunnis and Shiites. QUARRYVILLE, Pa.—The gunman who killed five girls in an Amish schoolroom confided to his wife during the siege that he molested two relatives 20 years ago when he was a boy and was tormented by dreams of doing it again, authorities said Tuesday. Investigators also said that Charles Carl Roberts IV, 32, plotted his takeover of the school for nearly a week and that the items he brought—including flexible plastic ties, eyebolts and lubricating jelly—suggest he 8 ork State? Crossword ACROSS 1 Like farmland 68 7 Mandela's org. 69 Says W lo DOWN 10 "The Naked Maja" artist 14 "On a similar note" and the All events located on campus. 3 ' 5 6 8 Corrections 4 2 8 and Clarifications The policy of The Daily Utah Chronicle is to correct any error made as soon as possible. If you find something you would like clarified or find unfair, please contact the editor at 801-581-8317. 5 2 3 4 like 6 7 9 5 2 9 6 1 2 3 4 16 Mathematician Niels Henrik 17 Oscar-winning Jodie Foster • 6 _____p 8 9 11 12 24 2J> 26 _B_Tio~~ 1•_ _ ^•15 19 17" 13 | & 3 Pro's opposite 4 Beachgoer's woe TT Oahu ii role 20 They can bo a handful 5 • _ __, _ 28 32 keepsakes 21 Kind oi number 6 Upper-left 22 Suffix wilh Euclid ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H key 23 Posthumous Best Actor 7 winner oi 1976 Balance ^ ^ ^ 41 40 ^ | 42 vr~ _ sheet entry 27 Suppose 8 . 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Seuss's "And to Think 19 Marooned sailor's Largo, James Bond villain HL _ _ ^Joled U.S. dance grp, Dial 46 5i~ _ ^ _ 54^ _ 55 H ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H 61 _•_• B 4 ^ 45 53^ 11 Sash with a 50 •_• a- __ _37 • • _^_B 39 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H •|ir1 52 bo-* 33 1 5B Danes 10 French hint lo 17-, 23-, 52-and 60 57 5 _ Advertising 801 581.7041 DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE Edited by Will Shortz 14 theaters 15 Fa follower founding member of the 1 i 1 Really funny 51 Slick do ku 9 9 _____ SU 4 3! © Puzz es by Pap pocom 5 1 Rep.'s counterpart may have been planning to sexually assault the Amish girls before police closed in. "It's very possible that he intended to victimize these children in many ways prior to executing them and killing himself," State Police Commissioner Jeffrey B. Miller said. But Roberts "became disorganized when we arrived," and shot himself in the head. Miller also suggested that Roberts was haunted by the death of his prematurely born daughter in 1997. 2 Put in Across _4 the North's Foreign Ministry and carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency. DPRK stands for Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the North's official name. Yet it said it wanted to "settle hostile relations" between the North and the United States, and that it "will do its utmost to realize the denuclearization of the peninsula." had publicly announced its intent to conduct a nuclear test. Previously, it had warned that it might conduct a test, depending on U.S. actions. "The U.S. extreme threat of a nuclear war and sanctions and pressure compel the DPRK to conduct a nuclear test, an essential process for bolstering nuclear deterrent, as a self-defense measure in response," said a statement by 63 Grade A item News 801 581.NEWS Fax 801 581.FAXX Editor in Chief Danyelle White d.white@chronicle.utah.edu Asst. 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