1994 Student Football Tickets Spring Lottery - April 4-8 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Athletic Ticket Office 117 South Stadium Applications available at student accounts 110 Admin & Bast Campus Union information desk. For more information call the athletic ticket office 472-3111 SPAGHETTI, WORKS Great Food at a Great Price Oodles of Woodies • Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday evenings • AB the spaghetti you can eat smothered with our Original, Thick Italian sauce^ • Piping hot garlic bread fit 5alad Bar All for $2.99 Please present coupon when ordering. Exp.5/15/94 Cal about our party rooms 475-0900 S8 H ^Just 2 Btocte_From CampiB J With good behavior, you'll be out in just 5 months. With a 4 year college degree, you can begin your career in law as a paralegal in just 5 months. • Approved by the American Bar Association • Free lifetime national placement assistance • Financial aid available for eligrble students • Includes a 100 hour internship Call today for a free video "Your Career In Law" 1 -800-848-0550 DENVER PARALEGAL INSTITUTE 1401 19th Street Denver, CO 80202 □ Please provide information on the paralegal profession Please send free video "Your Career In Law" Name_ Address_ City___ State _ Zip Phone_Age Graduation Date_ DENVER PARALEGAL INSTITUTE 1401 19th Street Denver. CO 80202 1 800 848 0650 mM*'**' " ■ ' WMt-' 1ST FULL-LENGTH Mountain Bike Movie! Saturday, April 9, 7:00pm UNL Culture Center 3331 N. 14th Tickets $4.00. Available at the door, The Moose's Tooth and Cycle Works. CYCUNQ* Stock market rebounds WASHINGTON (AP)—The gov ernment’s chief economic barometer declined for the first time since July, the Commerce Department said Tues day. The dip in the Index of Leading Indicators turned into a bad-news-is good report that helped calm inflation fears and send stocks rebounding. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 82.06 points while long-term in terest rates declined to 7.29 percent. Monday’s 7.40 percent was the high est level of the Clinton presidency. The news gave Wal 1 Street a chance to stage a badly needed rally after a week of battered stock and bond pric es. The downward slide was blamed on investor fears that the economy was growing so strongly that the Fed eral Reserve would be forced to push interest rates higher to stop inflation. The slight decline in the leading index was the first since a 0.2 percent drop last July. Since that time, the index rose for six straight months including sol id gains of 0.4 percent in January and 0.6 percent in December. The February drop accounted for a -44 We’ll get through this if everybody will just remain calm and let the market work itself out. — Clinton U.S. President -- decrease in the length of the factory workweek and a drop in building per m its, both bl amed on the severe weath er. The government has already re ported that the factory workweek re bounded in March to an all-time high. Analysts said the report indicated that the economy would post solid growth this year of around 3 percent, as measured by the gross domestic product. That would be down from a break neck pace of 7 percent GDP growth turned in during the final three months of last year. The administration said investors were finally beginning to realize they had overreacted to fears that the econ omy was overheating. President Clinton sought to allay nervousness by saying, “We’ll get through this if everybody will just remain calm and let the market work itself out.” Analysts said the rally in stocks and bonds after the leading index report was released occurred because investors were eager to snap up bar gains after the Dow Jones average of 3 0 bl uc eh ip stocks had been pushed to its lowest level in six months. Economists were not ready to say on the basis of Tuesday’s rally that the market turmoil was at an end. Some said the market could be pushed into further sell-offs by any reports that hint at worsc-than-cxpcclcd inflation. Others said they believed the episode was characteristic of a normal correc tion. Netfraskan Editor Jeremy Fitzpatrick 472-1766 Managing Editor Adeana Leftin Assoc. News Editors Jeff Zeleny Steve Smith Editorial Page Editor Rainbow Rowell Wire Editor Kristine Long Copy Desk Editor Mike Lewis Sports Editor Todd Cooper Assistant Sports Editor Jeff Griesch Arts S Entertain- Sarah Duey ment Editor FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily NebraskanfUSPS 144 080) is Kshed by the UNL Publications Board. aska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE 68588-0448, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to trie 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 BECOME A STUDENT MARKETING MANAGER Outgoing, goal-oriented student needed for marketing position. Leam management skills and marketing strate gies while implementing on campus promotions. ★ Excellent pay ★ Flexible hours ★ All wort< on campus ★ For the 1994-95 school year ★ Expense paid training conference ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEW Monday, April 11,1994 Sign up in 345 Nebraska Union, SEIC Blackmun to announce retirement from court WASHINGTON (AP)—Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, author of the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that in 1973 legalized abor tion nationwide, will announce his retirement Wednesday, the Associat ed Press has learned. Blackmun, 85, has served 24 years on the nation’s highest court alter being appointed in 1970 by President Richard M. Nixon. A government source told AP that Blackmun would announce his retire ment Wednesday morning. The source, who spoke on the con dition of anonymity, said Blackmun's retirement would take effect at the end of the court’s 1993-94 term, expected in late June. The vacancy will give President Clinton his second opportunity for a high court appointment. Clinton ap pointed Ruth Bader Gmsburg to the court last year. A lifelong Republican, Blackmun was considered a staunch conserva tive in his early days on the court. Today, he is considered by many ex EUROPE ^ BY RAIL We specialize in student and faculty travel to Europe! EURAILPASS S2BB 5-Day Flexipass 3 Countries 5-Day Flexipass Youth fares for ages 26 and under Slightly more for full fare Other passes also available DISCOUNT AIRFARES Savings on roundtrip to one city or arrival and departure through different cities International Affairs 1237 R Street 402-472-5358 J Free Computer Classes! The Computing Resource Center is offering free microcomputer classes to UNL students. The classes will feature an introduction to Microsoft Word for the Macintosh and WordPerfect for IBM machines. No reservations are required. Introduction to WordPerfect for IBM Thursday, April 14 3:00 • 4:30 Sandoz lab introduction to Microsoft Word for Macintosh [Tuesday, April 12 3:00 - 4:00 Andrews Hall lab ports to be the court’s most liberal justice. Towering above all else in Blackmun’s high court tenure was his role in the 1973 Roc decision and in subsequent abortion rulings. His au thorship of Roc vs. Wade made him lhe most v111lied Supreme Court mem ber in history. Blackmun received more than 60,000 pieces of “hate mail” in the past two decades. In a 19X3 interview with APon the eve of Roe’s 10-year anniversary. Blackmun repeated the phrase “au thor of the abortion decision’’ slowly and softly. “We all pick up labs,” he said. “I 'll carry this one to my grave.” A Iter years of stopping just short of reversing Roc vs. Wade, the court in 1992 reaffirmed, by a 5-4 vote, the 1973 ruling’s central holding—that women have a constitutional right to end their pregnancies. By the time he retires, Blackmun will be the third oldest person in his tory to serve on the Supreme Court. Police suspect alcohol abuse in Omaha deaths OMAHA( AP)—Hundreds ofhigh school students said goodbye Tuesday to three friends k illed inacaraccideni that police suspect was alcohol-relat ed. More than 1,000 adults and teen agers packed St. Leo’s CatholicChurch to pay their respects to Matthew Guilfoyle, 16. Jaydn Lombardi, 16. and Jancllc Papillon. 17. The three died Friday when the car they were riding in slammed into a tree after swerving out of control on a street northwest of Omaha, Investigators said they believed alcohol was a factor in the wreck. Officers found malt liquor bottles at the scene of the accident. Thcdrivcrofthecar, Kristen Deck er, 17, was hospitalized and under a hold by the Douglas County sheriff s office. No charges have been filed. Douglas County Attorney Jim Jansen said he would decide Wednesday whether charges would be filed. The three teens’ funerals were held back-to-back: first a Mass forGuilfoyle and Lombardi, who had been best friends since elementary school, then another for Papillon. The Rev. David Korth. whopresid cd over both Masses, said something positive could come out of the tragedy if the mourners would heed the les sons of drunken driving. “Allow the lesson to sink in so that none of you have to experience the intimate pain the Papillon family is experiencing,” Korth said during Pap illon’s funeral. During a vigil for the youths Mon day night, friends of the three victims started a campaign against drunken driving.