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Two days earlier, a group of dis sident generals assassinated Diem, and the United States became in creasingly drawn into the civil war there. Kennedy also questioned what the outcome of the coup and assas sination would be. “The question is now whether the generals can stay together and build a stable government or whether public opinion will turn on Saigon.” The recording was among 37 hours of tapes released by the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum. Four hours of the tapes had been in the possession of Kennedy’s personal secretary, Evelyn Norton Lincoln, who died in 1995 and left them to Robert L. White, a collec tor of Kennedy memorabilia. White gave the tapes to the library earlier this year. In the tapes, Kennedy expressed regret over sending a cable that preceded the Diem overthrow. Stephanie Fawcett, former senior foreign policy archivist for the JFK library, said the wire gave indirect support of the coup. Early screening for diabetes advised 2 CHICAGO — People should be considered for diabetes testing beginning at age 25 — 20 years earlier than now recom mended — to save them from blindness, kidney failure and am putations, government re searchers say. Earlier screening likely would mean earlier diagnoses and treat ment to avoid the debilitating complications of the disease, said the researchers, led by Dr. Michael M. Engelgau of the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. Their report was published in Wednesday’s Journal of the Amer ican Medical Association. Diabetes afflicts 16 million Americans, and at least a third of them are unaware they have the illness, experts estimate. It is the leading U.S. cause of blindness, kidney failure and amputations and kills 180,000 a year. Dr. Gerald Bernstein, president of the American Diabetes Associa tion, agrees with the study’s con clusions, even though his group recommended last year that rou tine screening begin at age 45 among the general population. The ADA also recommends that testing be considered earlier than age 45 among people in high-risk groups, such as non-Caucasians, the obese and people with a family history of diabetes. Bernstein said in a telephone in terview Tuesday that even though the CDC report differs from the guidelines, it is consistent with their intent and approach. “What we are learning, unfortu nately, is this is now a disease of children,” said Bernstein, director of diabetes management programs at Beth Israel Health Care Systems in New York. One-fourth of new diabetes cases among people un der age 20 are now type 2, he said. Formerly called adult-onset or insulin-independent diabetes, type 2 diabetes generally develops after age 40 and is treated only with dietary changes and pills, though many type 2 patients now take insulin shots. Type 2 is making alarming gains among youth because of rising childhood obesity and the preva lence of sedentary lifestyles, said Bernstein, who was not involved in the new study. New Lebanese leader takes oath of office 3 BEIRUT, Lebanon — Com pleting the first smooth transi tion of power in a peaceful Lebanon in nearly 30 years, the nation’s new leader took the oath of office Tues day and promised to clean up a graft-riddled government. In a speech repeatedly interrupt ed by applause, President Emile La houd told lawmakers that taxpay ers want a transparent civil service where nobody is above the law. “It is the people’s right, before anything else, that they see how the decent are rewarded and how a thief s hand is chopped off, who ever that may be,” he said. On foreign policy, Lahoud is ex pected to change little. In his speech, he pledged to continue close relations with Syria, without whose approval he would not have been elected. Syria stations 30,000 troops in Lebanon and is the main power broker. Lahoud said Lebanon would continue to ally itself with Syria in any peace negotiations with Israel. Beirut has long rejected Israel’s at tempts to negotiate a separate peace that would involve Israeli troops withdrawing from the buffer zone they occupy in south ern Lebanon. The choice of Lahoud, a Ma ronite Catholic, respects the reli gious divisions that dominate the politics of this nation of 3.2 mil lion: The president is a Maronite Christian, the prime minister is a Sunni Muslim and the parliamen tary speaker is a Shiite Muslim. The assembly is divided equally between Muslims and Christians. Lahoud is the 11th president since independence from France 55 years ago. Two previous presi dents took over after assassina tions in Lebanon, which ended a 15-year-civil war in 1990. Lahoud, a 62-year-old British trained general, was elected by Parliament on Oct. 25 amid hopes that he would rebuild the admin istration as he had done the army: taking an organization fractured by the 1975-90 civil war and weld ing it into a coherent body free of sectarian tension. ‘Nappy Hair’ book causes furor in school 4 NEW YORK — A white Brooklyn teacher who gave an acclaimed children’s book called “Nappy Hair” to her mostly black and Hispanic third-graders was removed from her classroom after parents complained and threatened her. Ruth Sherman, 27, was trans ferred out on Tuesday after a tense school meeting Monday night. “The term ‘nappy’ is generally derogatory and not every parent felt that using a book like ‘Nappy Hair’ in a classroom setting, al though the author was black, was a wise way to go,” said Board of Education spokesman J.D. LaRock. LaRock said that despite some “provocative passages,” the book has a positive message. Told in a gospel-like, call-and response style, the book is about a little girl with the “nappiest, fuzzi est, the most screwed up, squeezed up, knotted up” hair. It received rave reviews, including one from The New York Times. “The idea that it is a racist book is ridiculous,” said the author, Carolivia Herron, who believes the book should be used to teach racial diversity. “This book is a wonderful celebration of nappy, African-American hair.” The district superintendent told Sherman to report to district head quarters instead of her classroom, pending further investigation, ac cording to Ron Davis, a spokesman for the teachers union. Sherman, who began teaching full-time this fall, could face trans fer or disciplinary action. She did not return calls Tuesday. Davis said several parents at the meeting stood up and threatened Sherman. — The Associated Press