i fi| ,' - - \ *■ ; o - v , S.C. Legislature to move flag from Statehouse dome 1 COLUMBIA, S.C. — Ending months of fierce debate, the South Carolina Legislature ap proved a compromise plan Thurs day to take the Confederate flag down from the Statehouse dome and move it to a monument on the grounds. The bill goes to Democratic Gov. Jim Hodges, who indicated he will sign it. If he approves, the flag will come down July 1. “I hope this represents the last battle of the Civil War,” said De mocratic state Sen. Dick Elliott. South Carolina is the only state that still flies the flag, with its blue cross with white stars on a red background, above its State house. It was hoisted in 1962 to com memorate the Civil War centenni al, though critics say it was a ges ture of defiance toward the civil rights movement. In 1995, the Legislature gave itself sole power to take the flag down. The agreement that passed Thursday came after months of debate, marches and demonstra tions that attracted thousands of flag supporters and opponents to the Statehouse. Supporters say it is an important part of the state’s heritage; opponents say it repre sents slavery and racism. N.H. Legislature votes to repeal death penalty 2 CONCORD, N.H. — New Hampshire lawmakers ignored a veto threat from the governor and voted to repeal the death penalty Thursday, reflecting r growing doubts about capital punishment around the country. The move is largely symbolic — no one is on death row in New Hampshire, the state had the low est murder rate in the nation in 1998 and Democratic Gov. Jeanne Shaheen has said she won’t let the repeal stand. “There are some murders so heinous that the death penalty is an appropriate punishment, and, accordingly, I will veto this legis lation,” she said after the Senate voted 14-10, endorsing a House vote taken in March. At the same time, the vote adds to the momentum death penalty opponents have built around the country. “The vote today is indicative of what many persons are beginning to realize about the death penalty — that it is unnecessary. There are other ways to ensure safety,” said Steven Hawkins, director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in Washington. Breast cancer deaths slashed by one quarter 3LONDON — Better treatment over the last decade has slashed breast cancer death rates by about a quarter in the United States and Britain and will save the lives of 14,000 women this year in the two countries, new re search shows. Most of the credit goes to the drug tamoxifen, taken by about 1 million women worldwide, said Sir Richard Peto, a professor of epidemiology at Oxford Universi ty who headed the study, pub lished this week in The Lancet medical journal. “This is the first time that im provements in the treatment of any type of cancer have ever pro duced such a rapid fall'in nation al death rates,” Peto said. “They really are remarkable trends.” While “a lot of things con tribute, I think the key one is ta moxifen,” he said, adding that it’s much too sudden a drop to be due to changes in the causes of the disease. Britain and the United States were studied mostly because they had the most current, detailed sta tistical information and because they were among the first to use tamoxifen, Peto said. Israeli forces pound southern Lebanon after attacks 4BEIRUT, Lebanon — Israeli air and ground forces attacked guerrilla bases in southern Lebanon on Thursday, leaving one militant dead and five people wounded, Lebanese security offi cials said. In Jerusalem, a top aide to Prime Minister Ehud Barak ac knowledged Thursday that Is rael’s withdrawal from Lebanon, promised by July 7, is being driv en by public pressure to end Is raeli casualties there. Hezbollah has stepped up at tacks in recent weeks as Israel be gins to dismantle its positions in preparation for a complete with drawal. The attacks have prompt ed harsh Israeli retaliation. Israel announced three Israeli soldiers were injured and a sol dier of the Israeli-allied South Lebanon Army was slightly hurt in strikes overnight and early Thursday by Shiite Muslim guer rillas in south Lebanon. The Shiite Hezbollah group said one of its guerrillas was killed in the fighting near the port of Tyre.. A shell fired by the pro-Israeli South Lebanon Army exploded in the village of Mansouri, wounding a 34-year-old woman, her daughter, 8, and son, 6, Lebanese officials said on condi tion of anonymity. The Associated Press 1 Sluqent Groups. Advertise your upcoming events in the Oregon Daily Emerald. Special student rates. Call 346-3712 UO students drinks when they party 2QQQ Office of Student Life Data taken from 1998 UO Health Center Survey. University Of Oregon