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By The Associated Press Edited by Kristine Long news digest Nebraskan Monday, April 4, 1994 Parishoners’ faith survives storm + + „ » , PIEDMONI, Ala. — 1 hirtecn ycar-old Marcus Woods fidgeted in his wheelchair and shivered in the predawn chill. He had insisted on attending Easter sunrise service at the church where he lost half his family a week earlier. “1 just wanted to be here,” he said softly. His father. Buddy, and 9-year-old sister, Amy, were among 20 people killed when a tornado leveled the Goshen United Methodist Church during Palm Sunday services last week. Marcus, who tried to pull his little sister out of the rubble, suffered a badly bruised right knee. His mother is still hospitalized in intensive care; she suffered a crushed pelvis and bro ken legs. As much as a celebration of Jesus Christ’s resurrection, Sunday's half hour service was an emotional re union of tears and lengthy hugs. About 200 people attended, sitting on foldingchairs in the parking lot of the ruined church. The Rev. Kelly Clem greeted pa rishioners. some for the first time since the tornado. Mrs. Clem’s dress was dark red, her lace collar white and her forehead and eyes purple and crim son. I feel like we re like a symbol of hope right now. — Rev. Clem, Methodist minister -99 ~ Battered by whirling bricks, the 34-year-old pastor lost her 4-year-old daughter. Hannah, one ol'six children killed while waiting to participate in an Easier program. Friends and relatives took turns hugging her and her 2-year-old girl, Sarah. “There’s no place I’d rather be today,” Mrs. Clem said. . “We kind of need each other,” add ed her husband, the Rev. Dale Clem. Mrs. Clem read from the New Tes tament Book of Romans and chatted over a microphone with small chil dren. She presented the children with wrapped Easier baskets, among the many donations of money, supplies and children’s gifts that have streamed in from around the country. “Do you know how many people love you?” she asked. r\ iui. w*«w “That’s an understatement,” Mrs. Clem replied. The wooden cross behind her pul pit was made last week by a friend she hadn’t seen in years, she said, and four new stained glass windows that made a backdrop were sent by a Roman Catholic church. A painting of Jesus, (lowers and stacks of cards and letters also have arrived. “I feel like we’re like a symbol of hope right now, Mrs. C lem said af terward". She pledged to rebuild the northeastern Alabama church, the hardest-hit site in the series ol torna does and storms that killed at least 44 people across the Southeast. For parishioners, the service was a confrontation with traumatic memo ries. Carol Scroggin, the choir director who had just led a hymn when the tornado hit, said the Easier service selections were chosen carefully from congregation members’ requests. “Because He lives. Lean face to morrow,” was one refrain. A soloist sang: “We are standing on holyground. And I know that there are angels all around.” And all sang: “Bind us together. Lord ... Bind us together with love.” Street fighters protest Israel negotiations JABALIYA REFUGEE CAMP. Occupied Ga/a Strip — The gunman from PLO leader Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction punctuated every sen tence with a pistol shot after he seized the microphone. “We warn our leaders to slop the negotiations with Israel." he yelled at a weekend rally, the largest since the Israel-PLO autonomy accord was signed in September. Thousands of young men in jeans and battered jackets roared in approv al.but the PLOeldcrs sitting injackels and lies sal motionless. Tension between street fighters and officially appointed PLO leaders is intensifying, and Gazans expect rela tions It) worsen with the arrival this week of the first PLO police and administrators from outside the occu pied lands. Whether Arafat can control this internal competition will determine the success of Palestinian self-rule in Gaza and the West Bank town of Jericho, and ultimately whether the Palestinians can achieve their own state. About 50 deportees, including some of Arafat’s lop advisers, are due by Wednesday to help prepare the take over from Israel. A vanguard of 300 Palestinian police are expected m the Gaza Strip and Jericho by Thursday, also to lay the groundwork for the arrival of thousands more. Friday’s rally underscored a key problem the Palestine Liberation Or ganization faces in taking over. While publicly it must make peace with Isra el, popular sentiment is clearly on the side of continuing the Fight. Events that have sapped support for peace include the Feb. 25 mosque massacre in Hebron, when a settler killed 30 Muslim worshippers and the killings last week of six Fatah mem bers by undercover Israeli soldiers. PLO leaders shrugged off the calls for fighting. “This is the Palestinian street. It deals with feelings and emo tions more than actual events,” spokes man Sufian Abu Zayda said. But rank-and-file membersof Fatah said the leadership was having diffi cultycontrollingarmed fighters in the Fatah Hawks, with gunman taking pot shots at Fatah branch offices both in ihe (ia/a Strip and the West Bank. The street fighters, many in their 20s, were the ones who fought the occupation and built underground or ganizations. They resent being driven out by PLO appointees who don’t question orders from headquarters. Aralat is expected to announce this week whether he will close Fatah branch offices permanently. Nebraskan FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily NebraskanfUSPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NE68588 0448, Monday through Friday dunng the academic year; weekly during summer sessions Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments lo 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 Doug Fiedler, 436 6287 Subscription price is $50 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 1994 DAILY NEBRASKAN May Graduation Personalized Graduation Announcements includes your name and degree package of 30 $42.00 Generic Graduation Announcements Package of 10 $5.95 Name Cards to match generic graduation announcements package of 50 $7.35 Please allow 10 business days for delivery. V —y _ 'K/trfU - -Mm WttJU ^fSmtmtmtmmmU &mminmu »mJ Mm wiiMy Mm Jmytmm yf 5B^U.ffS£~ im &Wm .OfyymtJyy • c$-/<lru tSatumJmy mommlmy, c?#f«y uyhUmm 3M m JtoX •SBU Slvmtuy C&tJU Gpc/mi NEBR4SK4 BOOKSTORE 13th &Q 476-0111 Wall Street drop may not be over NEW YORK — The worst may not be over for the U.S. stock mar ket, pummclcd last week by a bar rage ofcconomic and pol it ical news that investors have increasingly viewed as omens of rising inflation and uncertainty. Many professionals don’t rule out a renewed selling assault Mon day when the market reopens from a three-day Easter weekend. But others say the respite gave investors an opportunity to rethink the im pulse ofdumping stocks. Some fore casters are even expecting stocks to rebound somewhat. “I think it’s hard to know,” said Marc Chandler, research director at Ezra Zask Associates, a money management firm in Norfolk,Conn. “We’ve seen some indiscriminate selling. That’s created some buy ing opportunities.” Sellers overran the market last week, depressing the Dow Jones industrial average by nearly 139 points, or 4 percent, from the week before. The best-known barometer of U.S. stock prices, which now stands at 3,635.96, is ofTmore than 8 percent from its all-time high of 3,978.36 reached Jan. 31. Broader measurements of stock values also tumbled last week, a possible sign that a 3 1/2-ycar-old Wall Street rally is undergoing or has undergone whal stralcgists call a correction, or a pullback to more realistic levels. A key reason for the drop has been the Federal Reserve’s moves to raise short-term interest rates Feb. 4 and March 23, reversing a five-year strategy of keeping rates low to stimulate the economy. The Fed has said interest rates must be raised to thwart inflation, a step that ought to reassure investors. But the Fed aroused the opposite reaction by creating uncertainty over when interest rates will stop rising. That means strong econom ic news has been viewed with in creased apprehension in the finan cial markets. The market’s behavior was com plicated by the Good Friday holi day, when the Labor Department said job creation surged in March, another possible warning of higher inflation. Further complicating the pic ture is the Monday release of anoth er potential market-moving piece of information, a monthly assess ment of the manufacturing econo my by the National Association of Purchasing Management. If its re port shows unexpectedly strong March growlhormuch higher pric es paid by factories for raw materi als. the market could fall. Front-line battles rage on despite Sarajevo ceasefire , S A RAJ E VO. Bosnia-Herzegovina —While thousandsjammed Sarajevo cathedral on the city’s first peaceful Easter Sunday in two years, fighting continued along Serb-Muslim front lines in other parts of Bosnia. Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic ordered an investigation into events in Prijedor in northern Bosnia, where 20 Muslims and Croats were reported killed in ethnic terror. Earlier some Bosnian Serb offi cial s dc n ted the k 111 i ngs and dc nou need theU.N. relief agency reporting them as biased. But the Bosnian Serbs’ self-de clared interior ministry later confirmed that 16 people were killed between March 29 and April 1. and said it wa* a “criminal act by so far unidentified perpetrators." In the eastern Muslim enclave ol Gorazdc, residents cowered in shel ters under heavy Serb bombardment Bosnian radio reported. The town ha.‘ been under Serb siege for more than a year. Bosnian Premier Haris Silajdzu appealed for international heip ir Gorazdc and Prijedor and warned thai “the whole peace process is seriously at stake.” He spoke after meeting with U.S. congressman Frank McCloskcy, D Ind., who attended Easter services at a Sarajevo cathedral. Although Sarajevo is quieter. “It is obvious that this war is still not so close to its end.” McCloskey said. Bosnian radio reported Serbs had launched a heavy tank and mlantry attack on Muslim-led government forces around Gora/dc and said a new tank battalion had moved in Saturday night. The shelling of Gora/dc resumed in recent daysaftergovernment troops made inroads against Serb forces in northern Bosnia, where the Serbs are trying to keep control ofa narrow land corridor linking their holdings in the east and west of the war-ravaged re public. Serb forces who hold 70 percent ol Bosnia fear that the new federation between Muslimsand Croats may turn into a military alliance. They have rejected offers to join the federation, opting instead for union with neigh boring Serbia. The Bosnian Serb military claimed Sunday that a “general Muslim offen sive” was continuing on all fronts. rederal spending per person rose $200 since last year WASHINGTON — Uncle Sam spent an average of $4,599 for every American last year, handing out mon ey for grants and benefits, to buy goods and services and to pay government salaries. That was up more than $200 per person from the year before. Overall, the federal government spent $1.25 trillion last fiscal year, according to new Census Bureau re ports on federal spending. Entitle ment programs and grants for Medic aid, family support payments and housing accounted for 60 percent of domestic spending, U.S. Census ana lyst Robert McArthur said. Alaska, where mill tary salaries gi ve the economy a big boost, remained the top recipient of federal dollars, receiv ing $7,697 per resident in 1991, ac cording to the reports. Nine of the top 10 states, and all o( the bottom 10, were unchanged from 1992, which surprised McArthur. He pointed to population migrations to the South and West, decreasing mili tary spending and a more emphasis on social programs. Second in spending per resident was New Mexico at $6,929, up one spot from 1992 thanks to Department of Energy procurement in the state. Virginia, home to major naval la cilmes as well as federal agencies in the Washingtonsuburbs.climbedlrom fourth to third, receiving S6.K24 per resident last year. Roundingoutthelop 10 were Mary land, Hawaii, North Dakota, Massa chusetts, Missouri. Maine and Rhode Island.