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TEED OFF. ANNIKA SÖRENSTAM, 32, Swedish female golf pro, at the Bank of America Colonial golf tournament, the first woman in 58 years to compete in a Professional Golf Association Tour event; in Fort Worth, Texas. Sörenstam, who last year won 13 titles, made her fairway debut on Thursday with a one-over-par 71. But despite best wishes from pros, fans and even U.S. President George W. Bush, Sörenstam's 74 on the second day of play wasn't enough for her to make the cut. She ended up tied for 96th place out of 111 players after the two rounds. "I'm glad I did it," Sörenstam said, "but this is way over my head."

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ELECTED. DR. JONG WOOK LEE, 58, South Korean infectious-disease expert, as director general of the World Health Organization; in Geneva. Lee, a 19-year veteran of the WHO, will begin his five-year term in July. After his election at the organization's annual meeting, Lee announced that the WHO would set up a $200 million fund to fight severe acute respiratory syndrome, or sars.

RESIGNED. ARI FLEISCHER, 42, CHRISTIE TODD WHITMAN, 56, and TOMMY FRANKS, 57; from top Bush administration posts; in Washington. Fleischer will step down to work in the private sector after two-and-a-half years as press secretary, serving as the President's relentlessly on-message and sometimes unctuous spokesman on everything from the Enron scandals to the war in Iraq. Whitman, perennially sidelined chief of the Environmental Protection Agency, said she and her husband were tired of having a "commuter" marriage. Franks, the Army general who commanded U.S. forces during the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, is retiring after 36 years in the military. "My wife reminds me frequently of how long I've worn (the uniform)," he said.

SENTENCED. MASAKUNI MURAKAMI, 70, former Japanese labor minister, to 26 months in jail for taking bribes from an insurance company; in Tokyo. The former Liberal Democratic Party kingmaker was fined nearly $624,000, the amount he received for performing favors for the company, including asking questions in the Diet to promote one of the insurer's projects.

ADOPTED. FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON TOBACCO CONTROL, an anti-smoking treaty, the first-ever international public health measure; by 192 members of the World Health Organization; in Geneva. The convention binds its signatories to strict regulations on the advertising and sale of tobacco products within five years in an effort to reduce an annual toll of five million smoking-related deaths.

DIED. IRENE GUT OPDYKE, 81, Polish-born author whose 1999 memoir, In My Hands: Memories of a Holocaust Rescuer, told how she saved the lives of 12 Jews during World War II by becoming the mistress of a 70-year old German officer; in California. Opdyke—a devout Catholic—later said, "It was a small price to pay." In 1982 she was recognized by the Holocaust memorial in Israel as "Righteous Among the Nations," the highest honor awarded to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews.

ACQUITTED. BRIGADIER GENERAL TONO SURATMAN, 51, former commander of the Indonesian military in East Timor during the lead-up to a plebiscite on independence in 1999, of alleged human-rights violations; in Jakarta. Suratman was the 12th accused officer to be set free in a series of highly publicized trials.

Numbers

$8,000 is how much former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney donated to send Toto, an abused circus chimpanzee, to live at a Zambian wildlife refuge

750 signboards depicting bikini-clad supermodel Heidi Klum have been stolen in Germany by souvenir hunters. Ad agency JC Decaux is handing out free versions so fans will stop the Klum-tomania

$3.48 million was the winning bid for the working manuscript of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony at a Sotheby's auction in London

20 million commemorative stamps featuring Prince William will be sold in the U.K. to mark his 21st birthday

70 is the age of Yuichiro Miura of Japan, who this month became the oldest person ever to climb Mount Everest

$680 million is the value of the contract awarded to Bechtel for rebuilding Iraq, most of which the U.S. firm plans to subcontract

Omen

The World Health Organization has warned that summer flooding in China could result in a surge of SARS. Overflowing sewage can spread the virus, which survives for days in human waste

QUOTES OF THE DAY

Open quoteTell the governor he just lost my vote.Close quote

  • CHRISTOPHER EMMETT,
  • right before his death by lethal injection. Emmett argued that Virginia's execution methods were unconstitutional and Gov. Tim Kaine declined to intervene