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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1988)
Page M Assorted press Nebraskan 2 X^l Vw I lilted by Bo 1 e soi Thursday, April 28,1988 Editor Mike Rellley Advertising 472-1766 1 ^ tL/ldMVCU I Manager Marcia Miller The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. (except holidays); weekly during the summer session. _ _ ^ ~~ ■ ■■ ' i ■ ——■ ... m GUNNY'S MALL 13th & Que BURGER MANIA Basic Burger b oz. charbroiled gourmet patty, wit h or wit bout cheese, lettuce, onions, pickles, and tomatoes on a kaiser bun. Fries included. $1.99 JoC drafts with burger purchase. (limit 1 per person) Offer guml April 2.'. 28 11 \M 10 I’M 1235 Q 476-3015 11 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT TPTII? T AFT MON.-FRI. A AAAj Aj"^A^ A 1 P.M.-12 MIDNIGHT SAT. Steak and mushroom sandwich $1.90 Classic Pinball & Video-2 plays 25< Also Xenophobe, Joust 2, Sky Shark ALL PERMS ANI) COLORS Offer expires May 13th 245 N 13th St. • Lincoln, NE • 475-5550 IvnCHAEL’S FLOWERS Remember “The Graduates ” & “Mom on her day ” Bouquets, Planters, Silk Corsages 474-0194 13th &Q Taco Bell 49<P Tacos after 10:00 PM and all day Sunday . tr\ 99<t Meximelts 475-3007 13th & Q St. TACO CHESTERFIELD’S & THE BIG RED POOL ROOM The best in live music Thurs,, April 28th — Sidekick Fri. & Sat., April 29th & 30th Rockin’ Billy & The Red Hots July 1 & 2 - The Finnsters Their only Lincoln show this year. The Big Red Pool Room opens at noon 7 days a week. MONDAY-A11 Imports $1.25 TUESDAY-Longnecks 95<t WEDNESDAY-Well and call drinks 95<T THURSDAY—Blue Margaritas $1.25 Coronas $1.25 Nachos $1.76 Two guerrillas killed in second raid JERUSALEM — Palestinian guerrillas crossed Israel’s heavily guarded border from Lebanon for the second day in a row Wednesday and wounded a truck driver before sol diers caught them in a ravine and killed them, the army said. No Israeli army casualties were reported. Israeli officials said the increase in cross-border raids appeared con nected with nearly five months of violence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Documents found on ihc two dead guerrillas showed they planned to take hostages and try to exchange them for Arab prisoners held in Israeli jails, using U.S. Ambassador 1 homas Pickering as a negotiator, Israel radio reported. Settlements in northern Israel were put on alert during a three-hour search for the guerrillas by foot pa trols and helicopters. Roads were closed and men were told to stand guard with guns. Women and chil dren were ordered to stay indoors. On Tuesday, three guerrillas crossed the border at the same spot. They and two soldiers were killed when an army patrol found them. A 14-year-old Palestinian girl died Wednesday of wounds suffered the day before when Israeli soldiers opened fire during a Arab protest in the occupied West Bank, the army and hospital officials said. Her death brought to at least 174 the number of Palestinians killed since a rebellion began Dec. 8 among the 1.5 million Palestinians in the West Bank andGa/a, which Israel has occupied since (he 1%7 war. An Is raeli soldier and a Jewish settler also have been killed. The guerrillas crossed the border unnoticed, and it was the truck driver who alerted troops at ter runn ing a wav from the assailants, said the source speaking on condition of anonymity! While officials say violence in the territories has declined, Maj. Gen Yossi Pelcd said on Israel radio “There is an increased effort on the part of Palestinians to reach northern settlements... and this is certainly a change.” He is chief of Israel’s north ern command, in charge of the border area. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin, apparently blaming Syria, said three fourths of the attacks from Lebanon were “carried out by pro-Syrian PI () groups.” ! Also on Wednesday, an army in quiry said the teen-age Jewish settler who died April 6 in a clash with Palestinians in the West Bank town of Beita w as killed by a bullet fired by an Israeli guarding her hiking party. Trade bill passed with veto threat WASHINGTON — The Senate approved, 63-36, and sent to the White House a sweeping trade bill Wednesday, but supporters fell short of the two-thirds victory margin needed to override a threatened presi dential veto. “The minuses outweigh the pluses,” Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Ulah, said of the bill. He called key plant closing provisions that drew heavy fire from the administration “eco nomic terrorism.” Democrats tried to win over at least 14 Republicans and thus gain a veto-proof margin. They ended up with 11 GOP senators while losing one Democrat, retiring Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., who was con cerned about the bill’s changes in the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The Reagan administration lob bied until the last minute to avoid a recurrence of its defeat last week when the House passed the trade bill by a margin large enough to overrided a veto. One wavering Republican who supported the bill the first time around. Sen. David Karnes, R-Neb., went to the While House and met for 30 minutes with President Reagan and Vice President Bush. He emerged from the session ex pressing concern over the duty-free imports of ethanol from the Carib bean saying “what I needed was the president’sassurancc that the admini stration was going to introduce an other bipartisan bill that could be quickly passed by the Congress and signed.” “And 1 think he has done that,” Karnes said. Reagan renewed his veto threat and promised to work later tor a milder version in a letter Tuesday to Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R Kan. Reagan called on lawmakers to “finish the trade bill process in a way that serves America’s interests — not the special interests.” Sen. Edward R. Kennedy, D Mass., defended the embattled plant closings provision, saying 40,OCX) plants have shut down in this decade of increased foreign competition. “Nearly 2 million people have lost their jobs each year,” Kennedy said. The house passed the bill last Thursday, 312-107, more than enough to override a veto. 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