Subject: YDS 9/1 From: ddc@nyquist.bellcore.com (D.D. Chukurov) 01. SEPTEMBER 1995. YUGOSLAV DAILY SURVEY C O N T E N T S : FROM THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA - SERBIAN PRESIDENT, U.S. NEGOTIATORS HOLD ANOTHER ROUND OF TALKS - U.S. ENVOY SAYS REAL NEGOTIATIONS BEGIN IN FORMER YUGOSLAVIA - SERBIAN PRESIDENT RECEIVES ATHENS MAYOR - YUGOSLAV FOREIGN MINISTER CONFERS WITH U.S. CONGRESS DELEGATION - MONTENEGRIN PREMIER: PREVLAKA DISPUTE NEEDS TRIPARTITE LAND EXCHANGE - YUGOSLAV OFFICIALS SAVOVIC, MORINA CONFER WITH LI ZHAIXING FROM FORMER BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA - KARADZIC: BELGRADE-PALE AGREEMENT IS FAIR AND CORRECT - BOSNIAN SERB INFORMATION MINISTER: E.U. MONITORS ALIVE NEW NATO AIR STRIKES ON THE SERBS IN BOSNIA - BOSNIAN SERB ARMY REPORTS ANOTHER NATO AIR STRIKE ON PALE - NATO BOMBS BOSNIAN SERB VILLAGES ON MOUNT OZREN - NATO AGAIN RAIDS BOSNIAN SERB POSITIONS REACTION ON NATO AND RRF OPERATIONS IN BOSNIA - MOSCOW OFFICIALLY REQUESTS HALT OF NATO BOSNIA OPERATION - NATO AIR STRIKES RUIN U.N. IMPARTIALITY - LAVROV: RUSSIA SEEKS URGENT END TO NATO OPERATION IN BOSNIA - RUSSIAN ENVOY: NATO RAIDS WILL STRENGTHEN BOSNIAN SERBS' RESISTANCE C O M M E N T A R Y - BELGRADE PEACE POLICY SCORES VICTORY: DISSOCIATION FROM WAR OPTION, by diplomatic editor Zoran Jevdjovic CRIMES OF CROATIAN ARMY IN KRAJINA - U.N. UNCOVERS MORE CRIMES OF CROATIAN ARMY IN KRAJINA FROM FOREIGN PRESS - CATHOLIC PRIEST BAKOVIC: SERBS SHOULD BE RUN OUT OF ZAGREB - CROATIAN SOLDIERS USED NARCOTICS IN ATTACKS AGAINST SERBS FROM THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA SERBIAN PRESIDENT, U.S. NEGOTIATORS HOLD ANOTHER ROUND OF TALKS B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic ended another round of talks in Belgrade late on Thursday with a U.S. negotiating team led by special Presidential Envoy Roberts Owen. After the Thursday round, which lasted somewhat less than four hours, U.S. Charge d'affaires in Belgrade Rudolf Perina told reporters briefly that talks were continuing. The officials discussed ways and means of reaching a peace settlement for Bosnia on the basis of the U.S.' plan which envisages, among other things, for holding a new peace conference. The Head negotiator, Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke, is in Zagreb on Thursday, where he has met with Croatian and Bosnian Muslim officials. They discussed the details of the U.S. plan for ending the crisis, which Holbrooke had discussed with president Milosevic in Belgrade on Wednesday. U.S. ENVOY SAYS REAL NEGOTIATIONS BEGIN IN FORMER YUGOSLAVIA B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - U.S. chief negotiator for former Yugoslavia Richard Holbrooke said late on Thursday that the Bosnian Serbs' agreement to form a joint negotiating team with Yugoslavia paved the way for the first real Bosnia peace talks in 16 months. Speaking for CNN Television, Assistant Secretary of State Holbrooke said this was an 'immensely important procedural breakthrough' in the talks to bring peace to Bosnia after nearly four years of war, news agencies reported from Washington. He said he had been informed about the agreement by Milosevic in their meeting in Belgrade late on Wednesday. SERBIAN PRESIDENT RECEIVES ATHENS MAYOR B e l g r a d e, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - High solidarity of the Greek people with the Serb people was noted with mutual satisfaction as Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic Thursday received Athens Mayor Dimitrios Avramopoulos. Many aspects of this solidarity represented not only an expression of strong support to Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia but was also seen in the concrete material help to the families from the war-affected areas in the former Yugoslavia whose children enjoyed hospitality in the homes of Greek families, as set out. Avramopoulos and his host, Belgrade Mayor Nebojsa Covic, informed President Milosevic about the plans for cooperation between the two capital cities. This cooperation was being constantly expanded with new activities contributing in the best way to strenghtening friendly relations between the peoples of the two countries and comprehensive ties Greece and Yugoslavia maintained, it was said. It was said that Belgrade and Athens would continue to exchange experience pertaining to dealing with the most important issues facing large cities. The talk was also attended by Federal Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic. YUGOSLAV FOREIGN MINISTER CONFERS WITH U.S. CONGRESS DELEGATION B e l g r a d e, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - Yugoslav Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic here on Thursday told a delegation of the U.S. Congress that Yugoslavia was remaining consistent to its policy of peaceful and just resolution of the crisis in the former Yugoslavia and was investing great efforts in the current peace initiative to succeed. The delegation to the talks comprised Skoti Besler, a democrat from Kentucky, Mark Newman, a republican from Wisconsin, and Bredford Miko and Dr. Roberts Woods, representatives of the U.S. Foundation for the Security Council currently visiting Yugoslavia. The visitors expressed special interest in Yugoslavia's stands related to the current situation in the region and prospects for a peaceful political settlement of the crisis. The talks focused on the latest U.S. initiative which, as was mutually assessed, was opening possibilities to reach peace while respecting equal interests of the parties to the conflict. MONTENEGRIN PREMIER: PREVLAKA DISPUTE NEEDS TRIPARTITE LAND EXCHAN GE B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - The Montenegrin Premier said late on Thursday that the only rational solution for the Adriatic peninsula of Prevlaka disputed by Yugoslavia and Croatia would be a tripartite exchange of territories that would involve the Bosnian Serb Republic. Milo Djukanovic, Premier of the Yugoslav Republic of Montenegro, told Belgrade Politika Television station that this had already been discussed. The Prevlaka peninsula, located in a triangle bordered by Dubrovnik (Croatia), Herceg-Novi (Montenegro) and Trebinje (Bosnian Serb Republic), has been under U.N. protection since the summer of 1992. Prevlaka controls access to the biggest Yugoslav gulf in the Adriatic sea - the Bay of Kotor. Djukanovic said that Yugoslavia was concerned about stalled talks on the issue and that it was very important for strategic, security and economic reasons how the border with Croatia should be traced. He said that the past four years of talks with Croatia had often been stalled because of Zagreb's inconsistent policy on questions of importance for regulating relations with Belgrade. Djukanovic further said that the matter was greatly complicated by a straining of relations between the Bosnian Serb Republic and Croatia in the Dubrovnik hinterland adjacent to the peninsula and that it was vital to prevent an escalation of fighting there. YUGOSLAV OFFICIALS SAVOVIC, MORINA CONFER WITH LI ZHAIXING B e i j i n g, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing said Thursday his country was following with great concern the latest developments in Bosnia and was firm in its consistentst and that no international problem could be resolved by means of force. Li received President of the Federation of Women of Yugoslavia Bratislava Morina and Yugoslav Minister without portfolio Margit Savovic, who are participating in the U.N. World Conference on Women in the Chinese capital. The Chinese official urged all parties to return to the negotiating table and renounce the use of force. He reiterated that China was for the lifting of the U.N. sanctions against the Yugoslav Federation of Serbia and Monteegro, which he said were not in the interest of a peaceful solution to the crisis in the former Yugoslavia. Savovic informed Li about the stands of the Yugoslav Government and its sharp condemnation of the use of NATO air power against Bosnian Serbs. The Yugoslav Minister also informed the Chinese diplomat about Yugoslavia's policy in the domain of human and minority rights. She said allegations of human and minority rights' violations were frequently used by individual members of the international community as a pretext for inteference in the internal affairs of other countries or as a method of political pressure on them. Morina informed Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister about the difficult humanitarian situation in Yugoslavia and paid recognition to the Chinese Government for the understanding shown and the aid sent to Yugoslavia. FROM FORMER BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA KARADZIC: BELGRADE-PALE AGREEMENT IS FAIR AND CORRECT B a n j a l u k a, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - Bosnian Serb President Radovan Karadzic said on Thursday that the agreement signed with the Yugoslav Federation of Serbia and Montenegro was fair and correct and represented an attempt to present an all-Serbian front. Karadzic told Bosnian Serb Television that peace in Bosnia was within reach and that the Serbs' joint appearance before the international community would be a first step towards creating a confederation between the Bosnian Serb Republic and Yugoslavia. He said that many matters might be clarified in the first half of September, because there would be held important meetings as part of the peace process. Karadzic said that NATO's air strikes were jeopardising the peaceprocess, that they had been massive and powerful but had not attained their primary objective - to move the Bosnian Serb Army's defence lines. They wanted to create chaos among the people, to force them to leave, but did not succeed, he said. Bosnian Serb Television carried Karadzic's letter to U.N. Special Envoy for former Yugoslavia Yasushi Akashi which said that there had been no reason for the brutal air strikes which had caused untold damage. The letter said that there was no reason to continue this kind of violence and that the Bosnian Serb Army had not and would not use artillery against the U.N.-designated 'safe areas', but the U.N. should make sure the Serbs were not attacked from the areas. BOSNIAN SERB INFORMATION MINISTER: E.U. MONITORS ALIVE B a n j a l u k a, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - E.U. monitors, who were claimed Wednesday to have been killed during NATO air strikes, were alive, Bosnian Serb Information Minister Miroslav Toholj said Thursday. In a statement to Bosnian Serb Republic Radio, Toholj said the E.U. monitors were unhurt and have safely left the territory of the Bosnian Serb Republic Thursday. Toholj explained there were 'security reasons' for the five monitors to be 'protected from the revolt of the people and danger caused by an all-out attack of ground and air forces of NATO against the military and civilian targets in the Bosnian Serb Republic.' 'Now they are out of this danger and returning to their work and families,' added Toholj. Members of the E.U. monitoring team who Thursday left the Bosnian Serb Republic are Fernando Sanchez Rau, Jose Garcia Esponera and Luis Zenon Quintana, all from Spain, James Fitzgibbon, from Great Britain and Pieter Schoonenwolf of the Netherlands. The E.U. Office in Podgorica announced Wednesdsay afternoon that the five-men monitoring team was killed at Pale at the time of NATO air attack on the positions of Bosnian Serbs. NEW NATO AIR STRIKES ON THE SERBS IN BOSNIA BOSNIAN SERB ARMY REPORTS ANOTHER NATO AIR STRIKE ON PALE B a n j a l u k a, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - NATO warplanes launched another air strike on pale at 09:10 hrs local time (0710 gmt) on Thursday, the Bosnian Serb Radio said and the Bosnian Serb Army Geneneral Staff Press Office confirmed. No details about the attack have been released as yet. NATO warplanes on Wednesday more than once bombed the area of Pale. The Bosnian Serb Radio quoted the SKY Television network as saying that 12 different Bosnian Serb targets could come under NATO air strikes on Thursday. It said these targets could be anti-aircraft defense facilities, mobile and immobile missile systems and even hand grenade launchers in case they were fired at NATO planes. NATO BOMBS BOSNIAN SERB VILLAGES ON MOUNT OZREN B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - Several civilians were killed on Thursday in a NATO air raid on the Bosnian Serb villages of Kalauzovici and Komar, near the Mt.Ozren, the Bosnian Serb Radio said. The NATO aircraft bombed the villages on two occasions although there are no military or industrial facilities in that area, the Bosnian Serb Radio said and added that extensive material damage had been caused. French and British troops with the Rapid Reaction Force on Mt.Igman shelled all day Serb civilian and military targets in all parts of Serb-held Sarajevo, the Bosnian Serb news agency SRNA said. The RRF shelled Lukavica, Serb suburbs at the foot of Mt.Igman and the suburb of Vogosca. Immediately after the shelling of serb targets by the RRF, Muslims opened heavy artillery fire on civilian targets in Ilidza. NATO AGAIN RAIDS BOSNIAN SERB POSITIONS B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - NATO planes on Thursday afternoon resumed their raids on Bosnian Serb positions, NATO Command in Brussels said. The AFP quotes NATO Spokesman Jamie Shea as saying that air strikes were in progress, but without specifying their targets. NATO Spokesman in Naples Jim Mitchell, too, refused to identify the strikes' targets and their locations, and confirmed only that there had been 'some air strikes today,' according to Reuters. 'The bombing will continue... These operations include airstrikes, air cover, reconnaissance, and of course search and rescue operations are continuing for the two French pilots (shot down over Pale on Wednesday),' Reuters quotes him as saying. NATO planes carried out on Wednesday four massive raids on Bosnian Serb positions in the Sarajevo area, wide around the town of Gorazde and on Mt Majevica in the northeast, as well as in the Cajnice area in the southeast. NATO Southern Commander Admiral Leighton Smith said in Naples on Thursday that the air strikes were a brilliant piece of work and had achieved significant successes. Admiral Smith said that not a single civilian target had been hit in the 36 hours of NATO's operation deliberate force, during which the air force had flown about 300 sorties. REACTION ON NATO AND RRF OPERATIONS IN BOSNIA MOSCOW OFFICIALLY REQUESTS HALT OF NATO BOSNIA OPERATION B e l g r a d e, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - Russia Thursday officially requested nato to halt action against the Serbs in Bosnia assessing that it had exceeded the authority given it by the U.N. The NATO military operation must be stopped, said a Russian Foreign Ministry statement, carried by the Interfaks news agency. This action has exceeded the U.N. Security Council resolution provisions and threatened to cancel the indications of positive movement towards a political solution, the Statement said. The same statement, as carried by Reuters, called on Bosnian Serbs to withdraw heavy weapons from around Sarajevo in return for a promise by the Muslim side that they would not use this city for attacks on Serb positions. The Ministry assessed that this could be the first step towards a peaceful solution to the Bosnian crisis. The statement also noted that the RRF, also active with artillery in attacking Serb positions around Sarajevo, Tuzla and Gorazde, 'instead of carrying out their mandate of protecting U.N. personnel in Bosnia have brought into jeopardy the safety of the peacekeepers.' NATO AIR STRIKES RUIN U.N. IMPARTIALITY B e l g r a d e, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - Moscow on Thursday condemned NATO air strikes against Bosnian Serb positions, assessing that this action placed into question the U.N. impartiality. Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Grigory Karasin was quoted by foreign news agencies as saying that the NATO operation, for its large proportions, appeared to be something more than a punitive action because it was directed towards military as well as infrastructural targets and buildings. Karasin noted that the role of the international community was to help people in the pursuit of a peaceful settlement. Karasin also made known that the NATO operation had been carried out without previous accord with Moscow. He said no military action had been discussed within the Contact Group and the other four members - the U.S., Great Britain, France, Germany - had left an impression they were continuing political efforts. Karasin noted that the situation was critical, assessing, however, that all peace initiatives were still open. LAVROV: RUSSIA SEEKS URGENT END TO NATO OPERATION IN BOSNIA B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - Russia demands an urgent end to be put to military operations against the Serbs in Bosnia, Russian U.N. Ambassador Sergei Lavrov said on Thursday. In presenting Moscow's official stand, Lavrov told the Russian Itar-Tass news agency that the joint action of NATO and the RRF against Bosnian Serbs on Wednesday was overstepping the mandate this force had received from the U.N. Security Council. Lavrov explained that the termination of these operations was urged by the Russian delegation also at the Security Council's closed-door consultations on Wednesday. He said the russian delegation at this meeting reiterated President Boris Yeltsin's proposal to have a peace conference convened for representatives of all the warring sides in former Yugoslavia and all mediator countries to participate. Yeltsin proposed on Wednesday that this conference be held somewhere in Europe in October to allow time for preparations. Having recalled that the NATO and RRF strike was the response to a mortar attack in sarajevo - which killed tens of civilians and for which the Bosnian Serbs were blamed by the U.N. - Lavrov said Russia had demanded an inquiry which would unequivocally determine whether the guilt for this attack could be attributed to Bosnian Serbs. In assessing as profoundly disturbing the strength of the response, Lavrov said that Moscow was upset in the first place by the fact that taking part in this response were not only NATO aircraft, as foreseen by U.N. resolutions, but also the RRF, which was set up to protect U.N. peacekeepers and act within the UNPROFOR's mandate. The UNPROFOR's mandate does not provide for the destruction of the military potential of one of the parties to the conflict, Lavrov said. Lavrov said Russia did not want the situation developed so that an impression be gained that not only NATO, but also the U.N. - in the service of which NATO is - had sided with one of the parties to the conflict. Lavrov said Russia sought strict security for U.N peacekeepers, especially for the Russian battalion as the only U.N. peacekeeping unit deployed in the Bosnian Serb-controlled part of Sarajevo. Lavrov said he believed the arguments he presented would be effective. RUSSIAN ENVOY: NATO RAIDS WILL STRENGTHEN BOSNIAN SERBS' RESISTANC E B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - Russian Presidential Envoy Alexander Zotov on Thursday denounced NATO's air strikes in Bosnia as inappropriate and said that pressure on the Bosnian Serbs would only strengthen their resistance. Interfax news agency quotes Zotov as saying that those who believe that the greater the number of air strikes, the easier it will be to bring the Bosnian Serbs to the conference table, know neither the local conditions nor the psychology of the Serbs. The tighter and firmer the line taken with them, the less chance will there be for them to face the prospect of peace, and the more determined their resistance, Zotov said. He said that certain politicians had bellicose intentions and that inherent anti-Serb sentiments prevalent with certain politicians were not what was required by the political spirit of the day. C O M M E N T A R Y BELGRADE PEACE POLICY SCORES VICTORY: DISSOCIATION FROM WAR OPTION by diplomatic editor Zoran Jevdjovic B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - In their first reactions, diplomatic circles in Belgrade see a decision by the Bosnian Serb leadership to coordinate its stand on the peace process with the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia as a victory of Belgrade's peace policy and dissociation from the unrealistic war option and voluntarism, which caused unnecessary deaths and continued suffering and destructions. The agreement signed in Belgrade on Tuesday by the highest Yugoslav and Bosnian Serb officials shows that Pale, the administrative centre of the Bosnian Serb Republic, has come to sensible conclusions about the current crucial interest of the entire Serb people and the Serb people in Bosnia in particular. After one year of refusals, the Bosnian Serb leadership has complied with demands and advice coming from Belgrade, finally realizing the possible consequences of pursuing the current policy and having in mind doubtless political defeats in the long run and recent military defeats. Unfortunately, thirteen months have been lost in futile tugging and pointless swaggering which sapped the strategic position of the Serb people in the former Yugoslavia, and in refusing to implement a policy which has been gradually shaped for several years through diplomatic efforts by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic. From hindsight it is obvious that the position of the Bosnian Serb Republic could have been different and that the genocidal action of the Croatian Army and the tragic exodus of the Serbs could have been avoided. It is necessary to point out that the agreement includes provisions which prevent personal interests and malevolent obstruction of the talks from blocking the peace process and deteriorating the situation. One can only hope that the time of unrealistic expectations and unreasonable actions is left behind and that time has finally come for an agreement with the international community and a peaceful settlement of the crisis. The joint Belgrade-Pale delegation, coordinated with Belgrade's peace efforts, paves the way for an international conference with big powers which could shortly bring about results and resolve the crisis in the former Yugoslavia. CRIMES OF CROATIAN ARMY IN KRAJINA U.N. UNCOVERS MORE CRIMES OF CROATIAN ARMY IN KRAJINA B e l g r a d e, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - U.N. representatives have been discovering more traces of the Croatian army's crimes in Krajina three weeks after 'operation storm' ended. Early august the Croatian army occupied Krajina in its 'operation storm' when around 250,000 Krajina Serbs left their homes. U.N. Zagreb Spokesman Christopher Gunnes told newsmen Thursday that U.N. monitors had found the remains of five killed people in the village of Golubic outside Knin. The French AFP agency quoted Gunnes as saying that in the village of Radasnica the bodies of two men were recovered, and the head of one of the victims was found some fifty metres away. Gunnes said the Croatian army was still torching and looting Serb homes in the territory (Sectors South and North) taken during 'operation storm'. Gunnes said that in the village of Vrace, U.N. civilian police saw on Wednesday four houses on fire and firemen standing there, watching the scene and doing nothing. In the village of Golubici, Gunnes said, two houses were burning while one Croatioan soldier was sighted plundering a Serb house. Gunnes said that the Croatian authorities were all the time kept informed about these cases but, he said, unfortunately no efficient order has been issued to end such practice. The AFP said that since the Croatian operation against Krajina ended, the U.N. had reported to the Zagreb authorities several hundred cases of Serb houses burned down or looted by Croatian soldiers. The Croatian Helsinki Committee (HHO) said that about 80 and 70 per cent of all Serb houses were burned or destroyed in the Knin and Donji Lapac regions. HHO representatives, on their tour of Krajina last week, registered a large number of killings of Serb civilians and voiced reasonable suspicion that mass graves did exist. FROM FOREIGN PRESS CATHOLIC PRIEST BAKOVIC: SERBS SHOULD BE RUN OUT OF ZAGREB Z a g r e b, Aug. 31 (Tanjug) - President of the Croatian populational movement Ante Bakovic demands expulsion of Serbs also From Zagreb if arrival of Croatian refugees continued from Banjaluka and Vojvodina. Zagreb weekly Globus wrote Thursday that this demand was put forth by a catholic priest, who dwells on not only demographic renewal but also 'spiritual renewal' of the Croatian people. In this way Bakovic in fact wanted to pick up on what had been happening in the 1991-1993 period, when under various pressures, about 350,000 Serbs were forced to leave the parts of the country that were under Croatian control. Bakovic, who initiated departure of Croats from Serbia's Kosovo and Metohija Province and their settling in the houses of the expelled Serbs from western Slavonia in 1991, continued to urge departure of Croat families from Kosovo and Metohija, from other parts of Serbia and Macedonia saying that the Croats had 'no future'there. Also, he set out that Croatian politicians should demand that Boutros Boutros-Ghali and Yasushi Akashi be tried for 'ethnic cleansing', that is, for 'direct participation in these war crimes.' Assessing that Croatia's borders in the former Yugoslavia were a 'reality and political necessity', Bakovic set out that this did not mean that the Croats must 'give up on parts of historical Croatia'. He criticized Croatian diplomats for 'not telling the great powers that Bosnia had throughout history been Croatian land.' Bakovic had in the first multi-party elections in Croatia beenin separable from current Croatian President Franjo Tudjman at each of his election rallies. CROATIAN SOLDIERS USED NARCOTICS IN ATTACKS AGAINST SERBS L o n d o n, Aug 31 (Tanjug) - Croatian officers and military physicians regularly administered narcotics to soldiers, before armed actions against Serbs, to allay their fears and stimulate them for fighting, the London Guardian said on Thursday. The paper quoted a testimony by a Croatian soldier who is being treated from drug addiction at the largest European Centre for Drug Addicts in the Italian town of San Patrignano. Davor, 29, said that he had received drugs twice a day from his military physician and that it was a routine so as to prepare soldiers for committing atrocities demanded by officers. Davor said he had not had any contact with narcotics before his four years in the Croatian Army. Four Croatian soldiers are being treated in the Italian Centre, and they have all confirmed Davor's words. One of them, Toni, 23, said that the drugged soldiers were the most zealous in perpetrating atrocities, torching Serb houses and property. They even searched killed Serbs for money to buy additional doses of heroin, he said. The Croatian Government has intentionally recruited registered drug-addicts for the army, Toni said. =============================================================== -- I speak for no one and no one speaks for me -- D. D. Chukurov ddc@nyquist.bellcore.com ===============================================================