National & World Events
Here is the Associated Press list
of national and foreign events for this week.
Please note that many events, especially court appearances,
are subject to change at the last minute.

Friday, March 28, 1997



ECONOMIC REPORTS

The following economic reports will be issued in Washington (all times EDT):

MONDAY: Commerce Department releases February personal income-spending. 8:30 a.m.

TUESDAY: Commerce releases February construction spending. 10 a.m.

WEDNESDAY: Commerce releases February factory orders. 10 a.m.

THURSDAY: Labor Department releases weekly jobless claims. 8:30 a.m.

FRIDAY: Labor releases March employment. 8:30 a.m.

SUNDAY, March 30:

Easter.

New Delhi, India -- Second national convention dealing with child laborers. Through April 1.

MONDAY, March 31:

Tripoli and Benghazi, Libya -- EgyptAir begins flying Libyan pilgrims to hajj in Saudi Arabia. Through April 11.

Washington -- House of Representatives in recess until April 7.

Washington -- Senate in recess until April 8.

Washington -- Supreme Court issues orders.

Denver -- Jury selection in murder and conspiracy trial of Timothy McVeigh in Oklahoma City bombing of federal building.

Los Angeles -- Winner announced in the 17th Annual International (imitation) Hemingway Competition.

Winston-Salem, N.C. -- Judge holds hearing on tobacco industry's temporary restraining order which barred Liggett Group from turning over sensitive documents.

Madison, Wis. -- Jury selection and trial in federal court of Hooters sexual harassment suit.

TUESDAY, April 1:

Paris -- Court to rule whether to hear Saddam Hussein's defamation suit against leftist magazine Le Nouvel Observateur.

George Town, Cayman Islands -- Extradition hearing set to begin for Peter Krueger, wanted in Switzerland to face charges he swindled creditors of more than $200 million.

France -- Fusion of Air France and its domestic wing, Air France Europe.

Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea -- Sandline International mercenary company chief Tim Spicer to testify in an inquiry into the government's $36 million contract with Sandline to quash nine-year rebellion.

Washington -- Supreme Court in recess until April 14.

Los Angeles -- David Carradine gets star on Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Santa Ana, Calif. -- Insurance fraud trial in federal court of Dr. Sergio Stone, one of three physicians caught up in the fertility scandal at the now-defunct Center for Reproductive Health at UC Irvine.

Beverly Hills, Calif. -- Tommy Lee Jones and Shannon Dougherty appear for municipal court hearings in unrelated disorderly conduct cases.

St. Louis -- Mayoral election, other municipal elections in Missouri and Kansas.

Milwaukee -- General election for head of Department of Public Instruction, Supreme Court justice, three appeals court seats.

Albany, N.Y. -- A new fiscal year begins in New York state, the 13th consecutive in which a permanent state budget will not be in place.

Albany, N.Y. -- Date on which New York state has threatened to begin collecting state taxes on Indian sales to non-Indians of cigarettes and gasoline.

Cleveland -- Cleveland Indians pitcher Jose Mesa goes on trial on rape charges.

Hillsboro, Ore. -- Trial for 12-year-old boy accused of setting an apartment fire that killed eight people.

WEDNESDAY, April 2:

Kingston, Jamaica -- Third trial set to begin for Jamaican Elvis Martin, charged with murdering Chicago scriptwriter Terrence Runte.

Prague, Czech Republic -- French President Jacques Chirac arrives for two-day official visit.

Ankara, Turkey -- Bulgarian Foreign Minister Stoyan Stalev visits. Through April 4.

Huntsville, Texas -- Scheduled execution for David Lee Herman for a 1989 shooting death during a robbery at an Arlington topless club.

THURSDAY, April 3:

Paradise Island, Bahamas -- First Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Investment Conference.

San Juan, Puerto Rico -- Gov. Pedro Rossello to testify before Congressional committee about anti-drug efforts in the U.S. territory.

Huntsville, Texas -- Scheduled execution for David Spence for the 1982 mutilation and stabbing deaths of two teen-agers in Waco.

Cape Canaveral, Fla. -- Space shuttle Columbia scheduled to blast off on a 16-day laboratory-research mission.

Boulder, Colo. -- Weekly news conference in JonBenet Ramsey slaying.

FRIDAY, April 4:

Roanoke, Va. -- Javier Cruz, informant credited with helping U.S. authorities launder $47 million for Colombia's Cali drug cartel, is arraigned on original drug charges in federal court.

Little Rock, Ark. -- Sentencing for county sheriff on money laundering charges.

Memphis, Tenn. -- 29th anniversary of assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Frankfort, Ky. -- Hearing on DLX Inc. suit seeking money for state's refusal to allow mining under one of the state's last old-growth forests.

Los Angeles -- NAACP Non-Violence Day rally.

Raleigh, N.C. -- Scheduled execution of Phillip Edward Wilkinson, a former Fort Bragg soldier, for the murders of a woman, her teen-age daughter and son. ll

SATURDAY, April 5:

Paris -- Park Asterix, theme park outside the capital, inaugurates its new rollercoaster "Tonnerre de Zeus" (Zeus's Thunder), to boost its competition with Disneyland Paris.

Las Vegas -- National Association of Broadcasters convention.

San Diego -- American Planning Association holds national conference.

SUNDAY, April 6:

Port-au-Prince, Haiti -- Key elections for some senate and local council seats.




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