Daily Nebrsskan Wednesday, September 5, 1984 J3:JPJ 3:3 Pago 2 1 V Jill ilV. ,...c.i,k ""vfT'l SCOO CorniiucUc Mcektr. UsH J FREE3IFTI With This Ad! Aiv V 6-pk. Family Room Set tiV reg. $499.05 Mattress & Box Springs TWIN . . '149 set FULL . . . '179 sat 1 P IS T La 149-179 Ed I I9 ) .157 tufifl ' 1 sw I i ISM kiii uiji Mil MW MM 4' fc? i w r.v - . Lint vi- en. 3) 9. i. 1,1 cVVVi'' tl ft' 1 ' HBi ppif CTxf hit Apj and the Apple Ioro are ffjpaeftd iraJenurteofCompuerhc ' National and international news from the Reuter News Report Canadian police hold U.S. citizen .without bail MONTREAL A 65-year-old American was ordered held without bail Tuesday by officials investigating the deaths of three people in a bomb blast at Montreal's main railroad sta tion yesterday. No charges have been brought against the man, identified as Thomas Jo Brigham, originally of Rochester, N.Y. Pierre Poupart, Brigham's lawyer, said Quebec coroners could order potential witnesses held to assure their presence at subsequent hearings. The man is not an accused. He's a simple vitness," Poupart said. The coroner called a Sept 12 hearing to set a date for a formal inquiry into the explosion, in which at least 25 people were injured. As Brigham entered the coroner's court Tuesday, he was mobbed by reporters, demanding to know if he had planted the bomb. "No, no. I didn't," he said. Earlier, Montreal Homicide Squad detective Andre Menard said Brigham had been under surveil lance by the U.S. Secret Service until last year because he had followed President Reagan. Brigham told a reporter for the Canadian Press news agency that he had written a letter which apparently warned of the blast and seemed to threaten Pope John Paul II, who is to visit Montreal next week. Police said the letter was similar to other notes distributed to local media which included more threats. A spokesman for the groups organizing the papal visit to Montreal said, he hopes that "this tragedy will not create a psychosis for the pope's visit." The explosion occurred at 10:20 a.m. End hurled people and debris up to 200 feet, witnesses said. The Montreal train station was closed again today after an anonymous bomb threat. Conservatives predicted to win OTTAWA Canada's opposition Progressive Conservatives will win a landslide victory in Wednesday's general election, according to television computer predictions Tuesday night. Television forecasts were based on early results from Cana da's Atlantic provinces which pointed to a rout of the Liberals, who have run this country for 20 of the last 21 years. Voter turnout was heavy across Canada, where 16.5 million people are eligible to vote. Early results followed opinion poll forecasts that had con sistently shown the Conservatives under Brian Mulroney easily defeated the Liberals under newly installed Prime Minister John Turner. Judging by these first returns, the 45-year-old Mulroney could be heading for the biggest election victory in Canada since his fellow Conservative John Diefenbaker in 1958. The results came as a stunning contrast to the last election in 1 980 which produced a majority for Pierre Trudeau, who retired this summer. The government-owned Canadian Broadcasting Corporation predicted that the Conservatives would win at least 190 of the 282 seats in the House of Com mons with the Liberals trailing with only 61. The rest were expected to go to the left-leaning New Democratic Party. An equally sweeping victory for the Conservatives was pre dicted by the privately owned Canadian Televison Network. Two-day rioting lolls 29 SHARPEVILLE, South Africa Homes were burned and stores looted in South African black townships Tuesday as the death toll from two days of rioting rose to 29. Police headquar ters in Pretoria said the number of dead had risen with the discovery of more victims of the rioting in Sharpeville and nearby townships, 30 miles south of Johannesburg. Officials put the number of injured at 46, including eight policemen. But press reports said up to 300 people had been hurt after rent increases sparked the explosion of violence. This week's rioting coincides with the introduction of a new South African constitution which gives a limited say in government to Indians and people of mixed race but continues to exclude the country's majority, the 23 million blacks. Police officers, who fired live ammunition at rioters Monday, Tuesday used rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse mote throwing stones, looting and setting fire to buildings. Sharpeville was the center of an international outcry in 1960 when police shot and killed 69 blacks protesting having to carry special identifica tion papers, a cornerstone of South Africa's apartheid system. There was confusion today over whether troops had been sent into the area, with conflicting reports from several government sources and journalists who toured the town ships. There were also conflicting versions of the number of people injured in the rioting. A police spokesman in Pretoria put the figure at 46, but press reports said the number was nearer 300, Sugar protects spineless animals WASHINGTON Biologists Tuesday announced the discov ery of a sugar which enables small spineless animals to survive indefinitely .without water, but they ruled out the survival technique being extended to humans. Dr. Bruce Umminger of the National Science Foundation said a California team had discovered that small invertebrates and many plants survived total dehydration by producing a preservative sugar called 4 trehalose. He said the discovery could be used to preserve food and drugs for human consumption and might be extended to the long-term storage of human cells, tissue and even organs. But asked if it could be extended to preserving humans in a dehydrated state, he said, "I don think it could go that far."