Six believed killed prior to Harlem blaze NATIONAL NEW YORK (API — Firefighters answering a coll for a small fire made a gruesome discovery: six Inidie* lying in a blood-soaked apartment Three were chil dren, including an 18-month-old found in her crib Firefighter* battling Monday morning'* blaze at I ho Jefferson Housing project in Manhattan's East Harlem first thought thu victims had succumbed to smoke But a* they carried the bod ies out. a different picture emerged "There was blood everywhere," said l ire El. Ken Schermer horn But firefighters didn't immediately know that because smoke had filled the second-floor apartment. It wasn't until someone broke a window and the smoke cleared that the crime liecnme evident. "1 thought I had been walking in water." Schermerhom said of the bloody floor Ho called it the worst scene he'd ever encountered in his 20 years of firefighting Killed were identified Maria Rodriguez, 27; her three chil dren: Hill Cetz. 11. Jennifer l.etz. 5. and 18-month-old Linda lavinr; Rodriguez’s mother, Bienvonide Rodriguez, in her ri()s. and the older Rodriguez's boyfriend. Rafino I,opez. also in his 50s. The three adults and the 11-year-old were found on the bed in the master bed room. the 5-vear-old and 18-month-old wore hi separate liedrooms "The little one was in her i rill." Seller merhorn said The fires, in a couch and a tied. appeared to hove been set to • over up the crime, said Sgt. Kdtilie James, a pole e spokes woman. Polii e said there were numerous ( lit and slash marks on some of the bodies and signs of strangulation on several vic tims The medical examiner's office will try to determine the cause of death No weapon was re< ovured. but investigators theorized it may have been a cleaver or machete. There was no sign of forced entry and the apartment hadn t liecn ransacked Maria Rodriguez and her children had just mover) into the eight-building complex in January, said Housing Authority spokeswoman Amanita Duga-Carroll Her mother recently joined her after being burned out of her apartment The family "had no reputation of involvement with drugs." Duga-Carroll said Serb peace deters U.S. military WASHINGTON (AH) — The Serbs came up with the best defense against President Clinton's deci sion to apply military pressure to hall the fighting in Bosnia. They started talking peace. "So long as there is an active possibility for p«a< q, the case for military action is weakened." said Rep. Lee Hamilton. D-Ind., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The sudden shift in Serbian strategy pointed to how complicated a task it is to put together the domestic and international support needed for military action At home. Clinton has yet to spell out for the American people why U S. troops should he placed ai risn in me Balkan* A CNN-USA Today poll in late April found 62 percent of Americans opposed to air strikes "He has to make out the case for it, and he hasn't done that yet Hamilton said of the president And now an already skeptical American public hears that Serb leader Radovan Karadzic has signed a pence plan that provides lor on end to the fighting in Bosnia and division of the former Yugoslav republic into 10 can tons Karadzic '* timing appeared designed to undermine Se< rvtiirv o! Male Warren Christopher's mission to win allied support for using military fort e. in all likelihood limited to air strikes. Christopher's first stop was London and the ret option from Prime Minister John Major and his government was distinctly cool. Clinton and Christopher voiced skepticism about Karadr.it s sudden support for a peaceful solution to the civil war. "Wo are not going to be thrown off stride." said Christopher, pressing on with his search Hut. as Hamilton put it. the signing of a peace agreement "dearly complicates Christopher’s mis sion.” Reflecting domestic skepticism, many members of Congress have urged the president to stay out of the Yugoslav conflict But many who support his position say he hasn't gone far enough. Clinton called Sen Richard Lugar on Friday and a source familiar with the conversation said the Indiana Republican, an influential member of the Foreign Relations Committee, urged the president to stop saying he has ruled out using U S. ground troops In Bosnia. Lugar argued that Clinton shouldn't rule out any military option When Clinton answered reporters' questions Monday there was a slight shift in emphasis on the matter of ground troops. The president said he was "not interested in sending our soldiers in there into combat, into a ‘So long as theta is an active possibility for peace, the case for military action is weakened.’ — Rep Lee Hamilton, Foreign At tairs Committee chairman naming situation. nui utj iuu pied that with a reminder (hat he has expressed willingness to join an international peacekeeping force. Such a force would not go into Bosnia until all sides had agreed to stop fighting. In theory, a peacekeeping force operates in a non-combat situation. Its pres ence is enough to deter fighting between local combatants. But in reality, an international peacekeeping force would have to enter Bosnia with an under standing of how aggressively it would keen the peace. Would it lx* limited to sell-defense? Or would it have a man date to engage and disarm troops who threaten to disrupt a cease-fire agreement? The answers to those questions won't come eas ily within a NATO alliance already reluctant to tx'come involved militarily in Bosnia. That reluctance has made it difficult for Clin ton to get the attention of combatants in Bosnia when he talked about the need to take stronger action "For a long period of time, the threat of military force has not l>eun credible." said Hamilton. f’erhaps the past week has changed that. Clinton may finally have convinced the Serbs that he is prepared to commit U S air power and political influence to ending the fighting. They also may have realized that by talking peace they encourage the obvious Western reluc tance to intervene. Charges of espionage filed against American employee WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI accused an American employee of the U.S. Embassy in Athens of spying Monday but did not disclose details of the charges. The employee. Steven Lalas, 40, of Dover, N.H., was held without bail after a brief federal court hearing in Alexandria. Va. He was advised of his rights by U.S. Magistrate Barry Poretz, who will have another hearing Wednesday to determine whether there is probable cause lo continue to hold l,alas with out bond The contents of an affidavit detailing the charges against him have not been made public. The FBI arrested him Friday in northern Virginia just outside of Washington, D.C. Slate Department officials who requested anonymity said Lalas, a communications officer, had top secret clearance with access to cables assessing U S. policy toward Greece The FBI is trying to determine whether Lalas began his espi onage activity in Greece or had already started while in Turkey on a previous tour, said an offi cial who spoke only on condi tion of anonymity. Among the material he would have had access to at both post ings is cable traffic relating to NATO, in which both Turkey and Greece are members, said the official. While both are U.S. allies. Greece and Turkey are historic rivals. New York Newsday reported that Lalas also had access to voluminous cable traffic con cerning the situation in Bosnia and other parts of the former Yugoslavia. The FBI refused to say whether Lalas is accused of passing secret information to the Greek government or Greek intelligence officials. In Athens, Greek government spokesman Vassilis Magginas said. "The Greek government is totally unaware of the matter." Lalas has worked for the State Department since 1983 and was stationed in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and in Istanbul, Turkey, before he was assigned in Decembei 1990 to the U.S. Embassy in Athens. The State Department said Lalas has been suspended from his $38.000-a-year job. iii-i.u .sin UNIVERSITY OF ORECON BOOKSTORE 1JTM Ci KINCAID M-F 7:4J-C, SAT 10-5 WHIM turnilt l A » T Walsh still * has questions for Bush WASHINGTON (AP) — Iran Contra investigator Lawrence Walsh and attorneys for George Bush apparently have reached an impasse over fresh efforts to question the former president, according to T/ie Washington Post. The impasse could mean Walsh will close out his 6 1/2 year inquiry into the scandal without ever asking Bush about his withholding of a secret diary from investigators, the newspa per reported in Tuesday edi tions. Iran-Contra investigators did question Bush about the contro versy while he was still vice president. But since then the White House has disclosed that Bush kept a diary at the time the Iran-Contra events were unfold ing