J—_ _> -1 IfCHARTROOSEll <5§fe> CABOOSE ^77 Eat in I FAMOUS STEAK SANDWICHES. Lin5.oln s °wn or V_ _Famous r arrv Hi it ---- “HOT PHILADELPHIA STEAK SANDWICH" 475-3015 corner of 15th & “O” St. The only Chartroose in Town ; coupon 7 SOeoff i I Half-Fare Sandwich I I with purchase of I i reg. fry and Ig. drink ! L_EXPIRES 4/30/89 J COUPON $1.00 off Round Trip Sandwich i with purchase ot1 .•reg. fry and to. drink | SARTOR HAMANN JEWELERS Bulova Watch Trunk Showing Gateway Location 2 Days Only Saturday, April 22nd & Sunday, April 23rd Trunk Showing For two days only, there will be a represen tative from the Bulova Watch Company with a select sample of the newest styles of men’s and ladies’ watches. Budget Priced There is a Bulova Watch to fit every budget. As an added bonus, Sartor Hamann will match your initial 10% down and another 10%, when you put your Bulova on layaway (interest free). S I k > zyvee y ' ^ .*i •* U!h « O SI. j. Eo*t Pork » { $77-6061 ' 464-827$. ■< ft r I «••••••«•••• »•t• ••«••!•••• t • t * • k t I »«•««••• t • • k MIM J| • . .7 . . .. . . . w . Worker says he killed wife I _ _ .. . . He said Salr.idn u/ruiiH . . MfcXlLU H l Y (Afc) - Kamona Salcido Bojorquez, a California win ery worker arrested Wednesday in the slayings of seven people, told Mexican police he killed his wife and a co-worker because he thought they were having an affair, officials said. “He was arrested before dawn this morning in a surprise roadblock set up by agents fighting the illicit drug trade,” said Vicente Mendoza, a spokesman for the attorney general’s office. Salcido, also suspected of killing two daughters, his mother-in-law and two sisters-in-law in a rampage in Sonoma County, Calif., was picked up just outside Guasave, the spokes man said. The village is near Los Mochis, Salcido’s hometown in Si naloa state about 850 miles northwest ot Mexico *-uy. . • Mendoza said he did not know Salcido’s nationality, and U S. Em bassy spokesman Bill Graves said the embassy was not certain whether he was an American citizen. “He has been arrested at the re quest of U.S. authorities who have asked for his extradition. We are bringing him to Mexico City, Men doza said, adding that Salcido was in the custody of the Federal Judicial Police, a branch of the attorney gen eral’s office. Mexico City for an extradition ££ Salcido told Mexican police k went on the rampage in a fit 0f L, ousy after suspecting that his wS five years was having an affair with one of his co-workers, Tracy Toovpv Coello said. ^ wve^ Salcido was arrested the same da* services were being held in Petalum/ Calif., for someof the six member^ Salcido’s family who were killed Congress: Spill response I was like ‘Keystone Kops’ I u/achimctoN fAP^ - Trans- rritirnl hrtiirc ilv> mill r.._i portation Secretary Samuel Skinner told the Senate Wednesday that in dustry plans for dealing with an Alas kan oil spill had been a “zero.” One senator said the initial response to the March 24 disaster reminded him of “the Keystone Kops.” Most witnesses before the Sen ate’s environmental protection sub committee - from federal officials to Alaska’s governor and industry ex ecutives - said plans for dealing-with a spill of oil from the Alaskan pipe line had not imagined an accident on the magnitude of the 10-million-gal lon spill that soiled pristine Prince William Sound. Skinner, asked to evaluate the plan developed by a consortium of oil companies that ship oil from Alaska’s North slope through the pipeline and Valdez harbor, said the document should not have been ap proved by the state and should have brought warnings from the federal government that the plan was inade quate. wii uic scaic oi one 10 i u, 11 was a zero,” Skinner said of the standby procedures. The secretary told the panel that, before the tanker Exxon Valdez grounded, everyone had ‘‘assumed that this would never happen.” “I don’t think anybody was ready to deal with a spill of this magni tude,” said Skinner, whose depart ment oversees the Coast Guard. The subcommittee’s chairman, Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., com plained that “there has never been a time when this situation was under control.” He said the response to the spill has demonstrated “a complete breakdown” of the procedures that were supposed to have been in effect since the federal government ap proved the Alaskan pipeline 16 years ago. Alaska Gov. Steve Lowper blamed complacency at all levels for the poor preparedness, but also said that there had not been adequate equipment on hand, that channels of authority were unclear, and that a lackol leadership and direc t on in the delayed cleanup efforts. He suggested that Alaskans had trusted the oil industry, which ac counts for 85 percent of the state government’s revenue, to take pre cautions. “We feel like we’ve bin assaulted,’’ he told the senators. “From all accounts, the cleanup crews initially responding to this spill acted more like the Keystone Kops than the well-trained oil spill sponse team described in the indus try’s contingency plan,’’ declared Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I. Skinner said the Bush administra tion’s decision to leave the primary responsibility for the cleanup in Exxon’s hands stemmed from a be lief that the company had committed itself to the cleanup and “had the technical expertise to deal with the problem.” He said he has been “dis appointed” that the giant oil com pany has not been able to assemble resources more effectively to better protect the Alaska coastline. wimam u. Elevens, president ot Exxon Company USA, denied that his company has been slow in re sponding to the crisis, but acknowl edged that the industry’s prepared ness was inadequate. This type of accident was “so highly unlikely that the consequences of it . . . were viewed as acceptable,” he told the subcommittee. Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, said that the effects of the spill will last many years and that the price tag could exceed $1 billion. Suggesting that many Americans still cannot comprehend the extent of damage, he said the area touched by contamina tion is the size of three of the Great Lakes and that if the spill had oc curred in Portland, Maine, the oil today “would be almost down to Washington, D.C.” Some members of the committee complained about President Bush’s reaction, with Majority Leader George Mitchell of Maine saying Bush had been “slow to comprehend the magnitude of this disaster.” I--- - ! ■ I -- Nebraskan Editor Managing Editor Assoc NewsEdiUvs Editorial Page Editor Wire Editor Copy Desk Editor Sports Editor Arts & Entertain ment Editor Diversions Editor Graphics Editor Photo Chief Night News Editors Librarian Art Directors Sower Editor Supplements Editor General Manager Production Manager Advertising Manager V Sales Manager Circulation Manager Publications Board Chairman Professional Adviser Curt Wagner 472- 1766 Jane Hirt Lee Rood Bob Nelson Amy Edwards Diana Johnson Chuck Green Jett Apel Mlckl Haller Joeth Zucco Tim Hartmann Connie Sheehan Victoria Ayott# Chris Carroll Diana Johnson John Bruce Andy Manhart Klrstln Swanson Deanna Nelson Dan Shattll Katherine Pollcky Robert Bates David Thiemann Eric Shanks Tom Macy 475-9666 Don Walton 473- 7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS published by the UNL Publications Boaro."* braska Union 34, 1400 R Si Lincoln, nc, Monday through Friday during the acafl year, weekly during summer session*. 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