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ABOARD THE SCHOONER JUAN SEBASTIAN de ELCANO - The last great sailing ship of the Spanish Armada entered New York Harbor as No. 22 in the Parade of Sail. As Coney Island rose in the distance, sailors slipped below decks and exchanged soiled seagoing shorts and T-shirts for crisp white bell-bottoms and shirts with a shoulder patch that said "Armada Espa?ola." "All of us have dreamed about this trip," said Lt. Eduardo Arteche, 36, the Elcano's supply officer. "It is something unreal to have so many tall ships together. It makes me feel like it is two centuries ago." As the 370-foot, steel-hulled topsail schooner neared the harbor under sail and engine power, a Coast Guard vessel sped past. "All vessels stay out of the channel!" the Coast Guard boat warned small boats bobbing along the nautical parade route. Like most of the tall ships, the Elcano is a training vessel for naval cadets. Of the crew of 262, 42 are third-year midshipmen in Spain's Naval Academy in Cadiz. Another 180 are sailors, 120 of whom are needed to haul on the lines that control the ship's 20 sails. Built in 1927 in Bilbao, the Elcano is named after the commander of the only galleon that survived Magellan's attempt to circumnavigate the globe in 1522. "We have two objectives," said Lt. Alberto Cartelle, 36. "First to be a sailor, and second the military. You have to learn to be a sailor first, then you can learn to fight at sea." Their mission yesterday was purely peaceful. As the ship slipped past the reviewing stand on the John F. Kennedy, the crew saluted and an eight-man band played Spain's national anthem and then the United States'. Moments later, when the Statue of Liberty appeared on the port side, the sailors turned into tourists, whipping out cameras and video recorders. "It's wonderful seeing them get excited about seeing New York," said Marlene Barardo, 27, a schoolteacher onboard as an OpSail volunteer assigned to play host to the sailors. The crew also includes one British naval officer, Sublieutenant Paul Ashley, 24, who has a four-month long assignment teaching English to the cadets. "With the tall ships, everywhere you go, people are smiling," he said. "They've never seen anything like it." Peter Hammond, a Coast Guard auxiliary officer from Marblehead, Mass., assigned as liaison to the Elcano for OpSail, said he was stunned by the scale of the ship. "This is an unbelievable vessel," he said. "It's a privilege to be aboard, especially since the Spanish were one of the first great oceangoing navies."
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Three people were killed and one was seriously injured when a suspicious fire swept through a small apartment building in Huntington Station, L.I., early yesterday. Fire officials said the blaze was discovered at 3:35 a.m. in a two-story building at 28 West Hills Road, where 33 people lived in five apartments. One of the dead, Luis Cruz, 37, had just returned to Long Island from El Salvador three days earlier to look for work, neighbors said. He lived in a second-floor apartment. The fire also claimed the lives of Maria Chicas, 35, and her 4-year-old daughter, also named Maria Chicas, who were in the other second-floor apartment. The most seriously injured victim, Elvancia Flores, 40, was airlifted to the University Medical Center at Stony Brook, where he was in guarded critical condition. "I knew the woman, Maria. She worked in the Spanish deli on Route 110 near the Dunkin' Donuts," said Jose Ortiz, 32, of 40 West Hills Road. "I know her and her daughter. They were nice people. "And the man, he used to live around here until he moved to El Salvador seven years ago. He moved back into the same house he used to live in." Twelve other people, including two Huntington Manor firefighters, were taken to area hospitals. The firefighters were treated and released, and the injuries of the others were described as non-life-threatening. The blaze was being investigated by Suffolk County police and the Huntington Manor fire chiefs. "We feel it's very suspicious because of the volume of fire on arrival," said Brian O'Shaughnessy of the Huntington Manor Fire Department. "It seemed to be very fast-moving."
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STARKE, Fla.Judy Buenoanodubbed the Black Widow for killing her son, poisoning her husband anding to blow up her boyfriendis set to die on Florida's "Ol' Sparky" electric chair tomorrow. Barring a last-minute stay, she will become the first woman executed in Florida since the times of slavery. Buenoano, 54, also will be the second woman executed this year. But her date with death lacks the public outcry that accompanied the execution of Karla Faye Tucker in February. Tucker was killed with a lethal injection in a Texas prison Feb. 3 for a pickax murder during a break-in and robbery. The execution of Tucker, who became a born-again Christian in prison, spurred a worldwide outcry, with protests from the Pope, Bianca Jagger and televangelist Pat Robertson among others. Buenoano, who insists she is innocent and also has become a devout Christian, says she is not distressed by the lack of defenders. "I would like to clear the record for my grandson," she recently said in a television interview. "I would like for him to know that his grandmother was not a murderer." Otherwise, Buenoano says, she is ready to die. "Maybe Judy's changed today, but she was the coldest killer I ever knew," said Ted Chamberlin, the Pensacola, Fla., police detective who dug into her past and found it littered with bodies. In 1980, she pushed her disabled 19-year-old son out of a canoe, watched him sink with 50 pounds of metal braces on his legs and collected $125,000 in insurance money. Nine years earlier, she had welcomed her husband home from Vietnam with a steady diet of arsenic until he died, then collected $85,000 in insurance. A jury convicted her of those crimes in 1985. In Colorado, police found a boyfriend who had died from arsenic poisoning in 1978 and yet another insurance policy in her name. She was not charged with that crime because she already faced the death penalty. She changed her name from Goodyear to Buenoano, a corrupted Spanish version of her surname, in an attempt to distance herself from the earlier deaths, then tried to blow up another boyfriend, John Gentry, for insurance in 1983. Buenoano's life as a killer emerged when Gentry survived the car bomb, then told police about vitamin pills she had given him that made him sick. They were found to be filled with arsenic, and she was convicted of attempted murder in 1983. Police gradually uncovered the other killings. "Judy just went one murder too far," said Chamberlin. "If she'd just let that last boyfriend alone, she probably could have walked away from the other murders." Tomorrow at 4:30 a.m., after seeing family, lawyers and a religious adviser, Buenoano will be showered and dressed. Her head will be shaved so her hair does not catch fire during the electrocution, as happened to Pedro Medina last year. Then she will be led into the death chamber and strapped into the 75-year-old chair. The procedure, from entrance to declaration of death, usually takes 15 minutes.
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