Ssa. NEWS DIGEST aSte U.S. student killed in South Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Amy Biehl came to South Africa last year to try to help disadvantaged blacks. On Wednesday, a mob of young blacks in a squalid township stabbed her to death two days before the 26 A pair of black teen-agers were arrested Thursday and charged with her murder. She was believed to be the first American killed in the township vio lence that has killed more than 15,000 blacks since the mid 1980s. “She wanted to give herself to the African people,” a tearful Linda Biehl said from her home in Newport Beach, Calif. “She wanted to do whatever she could to help them. I was very worried about ner, out she would say, 'Mom, I’m okay. I’m doing this because I want to do this. You can’t live your life in a shell.’” Biehl’s final moments were typi cal of her time in South Africa. She was driving three black friends home to Guguletu, in one of the more noto rious black townships in the Cape Town area. According to police and witnesses, youths lining the street stoned the vehicle, then pulled Biehl out and hit her in the face with half a brick. Police said today they arrested two teen-age residents of Guguletu and that more arrests were expected. Friends and acquaintances in Cape Town, where Biehl had done research for 10 months at the University of the Western Cape, were unanimous in describing Biehl’s dedication. _ * *_ assailants, they stabbed her several times in the head. One of her compan ions, Singiswa Be vu, asked the youths why they were attacking her and was told “because she is a settler.” Settler is a term used by radical blacks for whites, referring to the original Dutch settlers who arrived in South Africa in 1652. Be vu was stabbed in the hand w hen She wanted to give herself to the African people. She wanted to do whatever she could to help them. —Biehl mother of slain student “She was one of the liveliest, most intelligent and most committed young people I knew,” said Kader Asmal, a law professor at the university. “She had this life-enhancing and lovely presence.” Melanie Jacobs, who shared a house with Biehl, called her“my white family, and I was her black family.” When Biehl tried to flee from her she tried to assist Biehl. The other two passengers escaped unharmed. African National Congress offi cial Allan Boesak condemned the kill ing as “racially inspired.” He said he believed supporters of the militant Pan Africanist Congress were respon sible. Boesak said the youths were shout ing PAC slogans and wearing T-shirts of the organization s siuuem wmg. PAC spokesman Gora Ebrahim said that the incident would be inves tigated. _ .. Until now, Cape Town townships have been relatively free of the chron ic violence in black townships in oth er parts of the country. Few whites have died in political violence, however racially motivated attacks by blacks and whites have increased in the last year. Militant blacks have targeted white civilians and police as part of their struggle against apartheid. One po liceman was killed and three injured Wednesday in three separate attacks, according to police. 1 ne A INC* saiu 11 wuuiu ujr IU uvip police find Biehl’s attackers. Boesak said such violence would spawn further racial violence and cre ate problems for talks being held to end white minority rule. The nation’s first multiracial elec tion is scheduled for April 27, and Biehl was involved with developing voter education programs for the town ships. Biehl graduated from Stanford University in 1989 and planned to begin a doctorate program at Rutgers University this fall. $ 18 million goes to AIDS-infected husband MIAMI — A jury put a price tag on knowingly infecting your spouse with AIDS: $18 million. That’s how much a former exotic dancer must pay her ex-husband for not telling him she was infected with the AIDS virus. Lucienne Wheeland, 29, was ordered to pay $8 million in compensatory and $10 million in punitive damages to Bruce Wheeland, 29, of Fort Lauderdale. She was not in Dade County Circuit Court for the verdict. The man’s attorney, Marc SamofF, said it was the nation’s biggest jury award to a man infected through heterosexual sex. Most i awards have gone to AIDS victims infected by tainted blood or a homosexual partner. “It was maybe as much a social statement as it was a damage statement ,” Samoff said. “This is the first verdict that’s going to affect, the general public.” Wheeland, who has AIDS, said the ver dict “should semi a strong statement” about the need for heterosexuals to communicate. The Brazilian dancer and Wheeland met in 1989 and had unprotected sex. Wheeland later found out the woman was HIV-posi tive, but the two decided to marry anyway, Sarnoff said. -1 SIGN UP NOW! COLLEGE BOWLING LEAGUES NOW FORMING 1IASUE STARTING DATE & TIME HUSKER MONDAY. SEPT. 13.6:00 P.M. PIN POUNDERS MONDAY. SEPT. 13.8:00 P.M. BIG 8 DOUBLES' TUESDAY. SEP). 14. 7:00 P.M. NITE OWLS WEDNESDAY. SEPT 15.8:00 P.M. COLLEGIATE THURSDAY. SEPT 16.6:00 P.M. NO TAP DOUBLES' THURSDAY. SEPT. 16. 8:00 P.M. DENTAL COLLEGE FRIDAY. SEPT. 17.6:00 P.M. 1*o paaorw par team to* that* laaQua* Students, faculty, staff and friends are eligible. Each league consists of 6 teams - 4 persons per team except where noted. Teams and individuals must preregister and pick up a copy of league rules at the East Union Lanes N* Games customer service area. For more information, contact Ray at 472-9627, or the East Union Lanes N' Games at 472-1761. AT THE £) ^ ^ UNL fowling Team Tryouts * Sept. 5 ft 6 Sign up at Lane N* Games King speech to be honored WASHINGTON — Police and other offi cials of the nation’s capital are preparing for the tens of thousands of people expected to attend weekend events marking the 30th anniversary of the 1963 civil rights march. But the preparations ap pear almost routine in a city that is the scene of dozens of protests each year. “I think it’s going to be a big day, but we’re going to take care of it,” said Maj. Robert Hines of the U.S. Park Police, the law en forcement agency that will 1929-1900 have primary responsibly for crowd and traffic con trol. “Anytime you get 50,000,60,000 or 70,000 people all together it’s an interruption,’’ he said. “But we ’ll have extra people working on to take care of it." Demonstrators are scheduled to gather near the Washington Monument on Saturday morn ing for two-mile march to the Lincoln Memo rial, the place where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech during the original March on Washington 30 years ago. From 200,000 to 250,000 people attended that watershed event, but far fewer are expected Saturday. Organizers originally predicted 250,000, but Walter Fauntroy, the march’s national director, later scaled back that esti mate, saying he expected “tens of thousands of people/ In keeping with longstanding policies for large demonstrations, police officials would not say how many extra patrolman will be on duty. But “this will be a peaceful march,” said Sgt. Joe Gentile, a spokesman for District of Colum bia police. “It also recognizes Martin Luther King, a man of peace.” Preparations are going smoothly so far, said Earl Shinhoster, a march organizer and south east regional director of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Colored People. “The city has extended itself fully," Shinhoster said. Some groups across the country have said they are having a hard time coming up with enough money to pay their way to the march, Shinhoster sard. “There’s no shortage in the number of peo ple who want to come up, but fund raising has always been a problem for events like this, ’ said Shinhoster, who also helped to organize marches commemorating the 20th and 25th anniversaries of the 1963 March on Washing ton and a 1989 march sponsored by the NAACP. Omaha woman charged with stalking abortion doctor I u ivia ha—An umana woman nas post ed bond and faces a Sept. 10 arraignment in a complaint that she was stalking an Indiana doctor who weekly performs abortions at an Omaha clinic. In a complaint filed Aug. 20 in Douglas County Court, Dr. James T. Howard of Bloomington, Ind., alleges that Sharon McKee, 37, has been following and intimi dating him for more than a year. A court clerk said Thursday that Mrs. McKee was located on an arrest warrant charging her with stalking Wednesday and released anerposting S350of a$3,500 bond. In an affidavit accompanying the com plaint, Howard charged that McKee fol lowed him out of Omalufs Eppley Airfield on Aug. 6, and told him, “You deserve to be blown away." He also said that on July 16, McKee followed him at the airport and said, “Think about it. You could go at any time." Howard commutes to Omaha on a week ly basis toperform abortions at the Women’s Medical Center. Stalking in Nebraska is a misdemeanor fimishable by up to a year in jail and a 1,000 fine on first offenses, said Assistant City Attorney Mike Tesar. Second and sub sequent offenses are felonies. Tesar conf rmed Thursday that McKee, a member of the group Rescue the Heartland, has been convicted on a number of lesser charges for her anti-abortion activities. Those charges include trespassing. NetSra&kan brJkTKnSfSSff ^ ** •» UNL PuMcabons Board, Na* we^kj dCriJJ, wmlSS mskiS00*"'NE* ****** ’hrou®h Frk** durtn® N •c#d*nito *•*! Dho^kil^2^S^C^^^*n!!^?fy k*fS^S.oomm#nti to D«*y Nabraakan by &2Ko£ffi2& ^ h“ t Subscription once is $50 for ona yaar. 9 4Jb^407, S! mJISKp w5US»522[?12!l!!28T5*’D*^Nabnakan. NabraskaUnion34,1400 R