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Abercrombie
As New Yorkers found the warmth of Christmas on a chilly day with family and friends, around the world the holiday was marked by a Mass for NATO troops in Bosnia-Herzegovina and special messages from Queen Elizabeth and Pope John Paul. The British queen went on TV, radio and the Internet to reveal that the teachings of Jesus were part of the framework of her own life. She said Jesus had inspired many people by his simple but powerful teaching to "treat others as you would like them to treat you." That message resonated with yuletide revelers in New York, where many people volunteered at soup kitchens or took in the reward of a rare Christmas Day solar eclipse. In Bosnia, NATO soldiers from France, Spain, Italy and Portugal shared a special dinner and sang songs from all their nations at a Christmas Mass. At Camp Bondsteel in Yugoslavia's Kosovo Province, members of the 4,500-strong U.S. contingent were lonesome for their loved ones. "I wish I was home for the holidays, but what can you do?" said Capt. Brook Maynelt, 28, of Illinois. "There's a job to be done." At the Vatican,John Paul expressed dismay at the violence in the Middle East and around the world. The frail-looking pontiff insisted in his Christmas Day messagethat good could still win out. Sitting in an armchair on the steps outside St. Peter's Basilica, the 80-year-old Pope lamented the crisis in the Middle East - where "violence continues to stain with blood the difficult path to peace." He talked about "endless streams" of refugees from other conflicts around the world. And he altered his remarks at the last minute to include references to a series of church bombings on Christmas Eve in Indonesia that killed more than a dozen people. "Yet however dense the darkness may appear, our hope for the triumph of the light which appeared on this holy night at Bethlehem is stronger still," the Pope said in expressing optimism for the future. But as he read his traditional Christmas Day message, "Urbi et Orbi" (Latin for "To the City and the World"), his slurred speech made him difficult to understand at times and betrayed his frail health. Only hours earlier, John Paul had celebrated midnight Mass in St. Peter's Square for tens of thousands of tourists and pilgrims gathered in the rain, and he appeared weary from the long ordeal. "We cannot but recall today that shadows of death threaten people's lives at every stage of life, and are especially menacing at its earliest beginning and its natural end," John Paul said on Christmas Day. He also spoke out against abuse and abandonment of children, and rape and exploitation of women. In Belgium, King Albert II warned his country in a holiday message against racism and xenophobia. They are issues that have gained attention in Belgium since the electoral success three months ago of a Flemish nationalist party opposed to immigration. The king also spoke of his recent visit to Belgian peacekeeping troops in the Balkans, saying he was "horrified by the ravages caused in our times and on our continent by extreme nationalism and xenophobia."
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1. AUG. 19, 1991: Violence erupts in Crown Heights after Gavin Cato, a black 7-year-old, is struck and killed by a car in a motorcade escorting the grand rebbe of the Lubavitcher Hasidim. Three hours later, black youths fatally stab Hasidic scholar Yankel Rosenbaum. 2. AUG. 20: Blacks attack Jews Aug. 20. Unrest continues for two more days as Jews begin retaliating. 3. OCTOBER: Lemrick Nelson, 16, is charged in state court with Rosenbaum's murder but a year later he is acquitted. Rosenbaum's brother Norman begins campaign for justice for his brother's murder. He lobbies federal authorities to charge Nelson under federal civil rights laws.4. 1993: A state report criticizes Mayor David Dinkins and Police Commissioner Lee Brown for their handling of the riots. It clears the mayor of deliberately restraining cops but says cops let it go on too long. The report is issued four months before the mayoral election.5. JANUARY 1994: Attorney General Janet Reno, announces that Brooklyn federal prosecutors will investigate Rosenbaum's murder.6. AUG. 11, 1994: Lemrick Nelson is arrested on federal charges that he violated Rosenbaum's civil rights by attacking him because he was Jewish.7. 1996: The discovery of a five-year-old video tape leads to the arrest of a second man, Charles Price, 43. He is charged with inciting blacks to assault Jews in retaliation for Cato's death.8. FEB. 10, 1997: A federal jury finds Nelson and Price guilty.9. MARCH 1998: Giuliani says he will apologize for the way the city handled the riots as part of a settlement of a multi-million dollar civil suit. The mayor's pronouncement sparks a new exchange of bitter verbal fire with Dinkins.10. YESTERDAY: Lemrick Nelson is sentenced to 19 1/2 years in prison.
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When Julius and Pauline Pryor got hitched more than 76 years ago, (Silent) Cal Coolidge was President, Yankee Stadium was in its second season and a subway ride cost a nickel. A lot has changed since then, but one thing has remained steady: their love for each other. The Harlem husband and wife, believed to be the longest-married couple in the New York Archdiocese, were honored yesterday by Archbishop Egan at St. Patrick's Cathedral. The Pryors, both 97, got a standing ovation from parishioners - and a clock from Egan - on the Catholic Church's World Marriage Day. The couple took the occasion to divulge some of their secrets to a successful marriage. "You have to have plenty of patience," said Pauline Pryor. "You have to take the bad days with the good days. Some people just give up on the bad days, and you have to keep going." Julius Pryor, a retired Long Island Rail Road employee, offered some brief advice: "Pray to God!" The Pryors, who live on St. Nicholas Ave., have five living children, 14 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren - many of whom came from near and far for yesterday's Mass. "It's fantastic that they've always been together," said granddaughter Juliette Thomas, 46, of Delaware. "They're monarchs of the family, and they keep all of us in place." The Mass gave some perspective to one of the couple's grandsons, Vincent Bracy, who said he and his wife, Priscilla, will mark their 13th anniversary in May. "We've a long way to go to break their record, but we're up for the challenge," said Bracy, 38, of the Bronx. "They're inspiration for us." The Pryors' love story began in the early 1920s, when 19-year-old Julius moved to the city from South Carolina. He met the New York-born Pauline through his stepmother, who happened to be Pauline's hairdresser. They lived across from each other on W. 99th St. After a nine-month courtship, the two wed on July 28, 1924. "And they've been together ever since," said their daughter, Gertrude Bracy, 66.
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