2 l\jpTA7’c FIicrpct AssOdatedpress Nebraskan 1^1 vVV d 1 JF 1 CT l¥ S- Edited by Victoria Ayotte Monday, October 30,1989 Trainer jet crashes PENSACOLA, Fla. - A trainer jet crashed Sunday afternoon on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier Lexington in the Gulf of Mexico, killing an unknown number of people and critically injuring five, officials said. The two-seat T-2 Buckeye crashed shortly before 4 p.m. CST while the World War II-era Lexing ton, the Navy’s oldest carrier, was 17 miles south of its home port of Pensacola, officials said. A fire following the crash was put out shortly after the accident, Coast Guard Lt. Mark Kasper said in New Orleans. The Coast Guard sent a jet from Mobile to fly a team of ordnance experts in Panama City to Pensacola, Kasper said. The Navy apparently was concerned that fuel cells aboard the jet might explode after being damaged in the crash. 9 17th A ‘N* St. [f] •j No Appointment Necessary * 3 476-9466 = aSTUDENT SPECIAL WITH I D. H I $70Ootf I I Full Service (HI Change 1 Inow For $ d ages Only I V (Hag. 23.95)1 • We change on, od Mter • We lubricate tie chaaaia ■ I a Wa check and Wfc banawrtMlnn Wuld. ■ brake fluid, battery Nutd, a invar ■tearing fluid, aaahar Kum a Wa chock ak fWar, artpar Made, fir* ■ Ipraaeure, vacuum Interior, amah m ntndowe. Beet Service In | I Just lO Mtnutss I All brands of oil Expires Dec. 31,_■ Guerillas bombard Afghan capital; 4 killed, many injured KABUL, Afghanistan -- Guer rillas bombarded the capital and a missile base for a second day Sun day, killing at least four people, and soldiers said the insurgents tightened their grip on roads lead ing to the capital. • The guerrillas claimed 19 people at a wedding party died when the government shelled a guerrilla-held area of western Afghanistan. " A spokesman for the Soviet backed government accused the U.S.-supported Moslem guerrillas of‘ 'cutting supply lines to impose starvation on the people.” In the laic afternoon, air force planes bombed guerrilla-held ar eas in the Paghman mountains, about IS miles northwest of the city. The guerrillas fire rockets from mountains at a Scud missile base. The government acknowledged firing Soviet-made Scuds at the Salang highway to drive out guer rillas. The route is the main supply road from the Soviet Union to Kabul. At least 13 rockets hit Kabul on Sunday. One hit the grain market in the old section of town, injuring one man. Several other rockets crashed into residential areas, kill ing four people, the government said. At least 13 other peo, >e were injured. 19 die in Algeria quakes ALUitKa, Algeria - Two earth quakes about 15 minutes apart struck northern Algeria Sunday night, kill ing at least 19 people and injuring about 100, the Interior Ministry re ported. Most of the deaths were in the Tipasa region 40 miles west of Algi ers and in the town of Churchell on the Mediterranean coast 60 miles west of the capital, the ministry said in a statement issued early today. It said Prime Minister Mouloud Hamrouche toured the hardest-hit areas with his interior and health ministers. The French government an nounced in Paris that it was offering emergency aid to Algeria, a former French colony. The National Center of Astron omy and Geophysics said the earth quakes, at 8:15 p.m. and 8:27 p.m., were estimated at 6.0 on »hc Richter scale. It said the epicenters appeared to be about 35 miles south of Algiers, a city of 2.4 million people. Soviets: Pact countries can make own choices WASHINGTON - The Kremlin would not object if Hungary chose to leave the Warsaw Pact or East Ger many chose to reunite with West Germany, Soviet officials said Sun day. A senior Bush administration offi cial expressed surprise at the com ments by Soviet party spokesman Nikolai Shishlin and Foreign Minis try spokesman Gennadi Gerasimov. Previously, Soviet and Hungarian officials have stressed that Hungary would stay in the Kremlin-led War saw Pact military alliance. The Soviet statements followed a declaration by President Mikhail S. Gorbachev last week his nation had no moral right to interfere with changes underway in the Soviet bloc nations of Eastern Europe. Gorbachev also declared a will ingness to dissolve the Warsaw Pact if the West disbands the North Atlan tic Treaty Organization, a step the Bush administration has rejected as an effort to cut U.S. influence in Europe. Shishlin, appearing on the ABC TV program “This Week With David Brinkley,’ ’ was asked whether the Soviet Union would object if Hungary decided to leave the War saw Pact. “We respect the Hungarian choice, anyhow. We are not afraid of these changes,’’ Shishlin said. Shishlin also appeared to leave the door open to reunification of West and East Germany, which have been divided since World War II. The U.S. and West German governments his torically have favored unification, but the East German and Soviet gov ernments have not. Colombian extradited to U.b. buouia, ^oiomoia -- me al leged master smuggler of the Medellin cocaine cartel was turned over to U.S. narcotics agents before dawn Sunday at a Bogota airport and flown to the United States, Colom bian authorities said. The suspect, Jose Abcllo Silva, was the fifth and most important drug trafficking suspect extradited from Colombia to the United States since lilt V UlUlllUIdM ^uvuilllltlll Ut^dll a drug crackdown 10 weeks ago. He was being flown to Tulsa, Okla., where he was wanted on charges of conspiracy and distribu tion of cocaine. Abello was the fifth Colombian extradited to the United States since the government of President Virgilio Barco declared war on drug traffick ers Aug. 19. VOLGYES from Page 1 place he “absolutely hated.” "Everybody was terribly Ivy Lcaguish and terribly ‘Oh well, you know,’” Volgycs says as he purses his lips and slicks his nose in the air. "1 refuse la and I would never consider teaching at a private univer sity because I believe that education is not an elite matter.” Some of the finest undergraduates anywhere can be found in Nebraska, he says. Volgycs says he wants to teach his students “how to think, using the noodle and having their own individ ual opinions.” He says he wants to stay at UNL because the environment is condu cive to free expression. Volgycs says one of the times he wasallowed to express himself freely was in the early 1970s when he pro tested U.S. involvement in the Viet nam war. Today, Volgyes still uses the Viet nam war as an example of foreign policy procedures in the four classes he teaches on the political science of various facets of Eastern Europe. Volgyes recently returned from a two-week trip to Hungary where he got a first-hand view of the metamor phosis from a communist economic and political system to a more demo craiic frce-market system. He says experiences like this, his writing, and his consultation to the U.S. government complement his teaching. “I’ve gained insight that I can transfer to the student,” he says. “That’s the key to good teaching.” But Volgyes’ life is not all work' and no play, he says. “I do have a reputation for liv ing,” he says. “Hove fast cars, I like good wines and the care of good women and to care for good women.” At 53, Volgyes is a gourmet cook and says he enjoys spending time with his two daughters and his third wife, De Dee. Volgyes is comfortable with his life. Whether he’s in the classroom or at the stove cooking, he says, “I know what I am and I know what I’m not.” To his students, he’s a “tough” cookie, he says. Volgyes says that from the begin ning, he tells his students what he expects from them, warning ihem that class requirements are tough. “I demand written work. I de mand tests. I demand that they use their heads,” he says. But Volgyes says that once he and his students reach a point of mutual understanding, they find friendship. “Most regard me as a friend who has to be treated with respect or I’ll bite their heads off. “I can only be a friend if I’m respected and I respect them.” Nebraskan Editor Amy Edwards 472- 1768 Professional Adviser Don Walton 473- 7301 The Dally Nebraskan(USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board. Me braska Union 34, 1400 R St.. Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board For information, contact Pam Hein. 472-2588 Subscription price is $45 for one year Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St.,Lincoln, NE 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1989 DAILY NEBRASKA Unmounted Yi ct. Diamond Now Only r $995 Reg Price $1435 Mounted in solitaire ring or necklace X *1095 Reg Price $1535 Special Financing Available , ' JEWELERS ^ Downtown_Gateway Great Grateful Dead Sale! starts tomorrow. 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