Student Travel 1-800-777-0112 Syi The world'* largest student & youth travel organization 5TA TRAVEL & STORAGE 6000 S. 56th 600 N. 66th 2601 N. 27th 423-3003 33% Off Total Framing Order* (glass, matting & frame) with coupon •Not in unijunction »ilh »ny other offer I-lxpircs 8-31-94 THE WHY HOME MCISIC 8 BOOKS UPCOMING WORKSHOPS... Sunday, 5/1: "Breathing & Sound Techniques," 1- 4 pm, $20.00 ea. _ Saturday, 5/14: "Manifesting Abundance," 2- 4 pm, $20.00 ea. Saturday, 5/21: "Beginner's Crystal Workshop," 1-5 Dm. $20.00 ea. Hours M-F: 10-7, Sal. 10-5, Sun. 12-5 3231 SC). 13th In ihc Indian Village Shopping Center 421-1701 "SINCE im YOUR FIRST CHOICE FOR INTEREST INC, MUSIC A ROOKS" GASH IN YOUR TEXTBOOKS City Campus: April 25 - April 28 April 29 May 2 & May 4 May 3 & May 5 May 6 East Campus April 29 May 2 - May 6 8:30-5:30 8:30-5:00 8:30-5:30 8:30-6:00 8:30-5:00 9:00-4:30 9:00-4:30 2 LOCATIONS: Lower Level Nebraska Union Garden Level East Union • S«t buying ditti md lmw» «bovc You still have time to earn credit over the summer! Register now! Read and Succeed through the 1994 Summer Reading Course Program Registration ends Tuesday, May 31, at 5 p.m. Space still available in courses in classics, economics, English, geology, history, human development, political science, psychology, and sociology. Register by phone: Call the Division of Continuing Studies at 472-2175 from 8 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Register in person: Come to the DCS Registration Office, Room 271, at the Nebraska Center for Continuing Education, 33rd and Holdrege Streets from 8 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Register by mail: Division of Continuing Studies _ Room 271 Nebraska Center Lincoln, NE 68583-9100 For details, call 472-1392. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Evening Programs and Lifelong Learning Services Ballot shortage threatens election JOHANNESBURG, South Africa [AP) — Police said they crushed a right-wing bombing spree Wednes day, but South Africa’s historic elec tion came under threat of collapse from mile-long lines of voters and a shortage of ballots. Police announced they had arrested ? 1 while extremists suspected of be ing behind a bombing spree that has tilled 21 in recent days. The latest jomb exploded Wednesday at lohannesburg’s Jan Smuts airport, injuring 18. Nothing could stop the great tide of voters on the second day of the three day elections, nor the euphoria fel t by many blacks as they cast the first ^allots of their lives. On Tuesday, landicappcd, elderly and expatriate voters had their turn. I liv ^UVVIIIIIIVIII wvg,uii m il 1 ions of new ballots, say ing it woul d have 5 million more ready by Thurs day morning. The army said il would help print and transport bal lots, which never arrived at some stations. And [he government was discussing ex tending the vote by a day. At 7 a.m., African National Con gress leader Nelson Mandela, 75, was able to cast the first ballot of his life, declaring “the beginning of a new :ra” after dropping his ballot into a simple brown box in Durban. “We have moved from an era of pessimism, division, and limited op bortunitics. We are starting a new era bf hope, of reconciliation, of nation building," declared the likely leader bf his country by next week. Fifteen minutes after Mandela’s ✓otc was broadcast live nationwide, a bomb detonated inside a sedan parked butsidc the international terminal at lohannesburg’s Jan Smuts Airport. Eighteen people were wounded. This time police were quick to an nounce they had apprehended a sus pect, a tall white man wearing the khaki clothing favored by the while right-wingers believed behind a spate of bombs exploded this week in an attempt to derail the election. In the violence-wracked East Rand near Johannesburg, a truck carrying ballots to votingstations in Katlchong was hijacked. The Independent Electoral Com mission agreed late Wednesday to postpone poll closings from 7 p.m. to midnight. Thursday was declared a holiday so more people could miss work and stand in line. ' The commission pledged that poll ing stations would remain open as long as needed to accommodate ev eryone in line at 7 p.m. Thursday. Election officials admitted that there might simply be more South African voters than they had esti mated based on previous censuses. Judge Johann Kricglcr ordered the printing of9.3 million additional bal lots. inkatna rrecuom rariy icauwi Mangosuthu Buthclczi threatened to pull h is parlyout unlcssofficials agreed to extend the three-day balloting to solve the glitches. Bulhclc/.i’s parly did not agree to contest the election until April 19, and one of the main hang-ups that emerged Wednesday was that polling places lacked the stickers used to add Inkatha to the ballot. Writing in Inkatha, would not work, Buthelezi said, because many of his supporters were illiterate and their ballot secrecy would be violated if they received help. White conservative leader -« If even two years ago, you had told me blacks and whites would be voting together in Ventersdorp, I would have told you it was a dream. —Van der Velde Methodistpastor Constant! Viljocn said delays and bungles were turning the vote that will transfer power to the country’s black majority into “an embarrass ment of world proportions.” I n Mondcor,outside Johannesburg, entrepreneurs sold pizzas and hot dogs to people in a four-hour queue. In Ventersdorp, whites and blacks voted together peacefully less than two blocks from heavily barricaded AWB headquarters. “Ifeven twoyearsago, youhad told me blacks and whites would be voting together in Ventersdorp, I would have told you it was a dream,” Rob Van der Velde, a Methodist pastor, said. Reporters saw blacks driving trac tors pulling flatbed trucks carrying as many as 80 black voters to the polls. Asked where they got the tractors from, they said the white bosses had lent them and given them the day off. The suspects, including members of the notorious neo-Nazi Afrikaner Resistance Movement, were wanted in a string of panic-sowing bombings that have Killed 21 and wounded more than 170 since Sunday. Nebraskan FAX NUMBER 472-1761 __ „ . .ir The Daily NebraskanfUSPS 144-080) is published by the UNI Publications Board. Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE 68588 0448, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions 4_co . Q „ m , , _ _ 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 Doug Fiedler, 436-6287, Postmaster lend addras's 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__ $$$ DAZE 501 Draws 8 $1 Cocktails Dollar Daaa Menu •Jzidayi 49 ( Draws 8 89 C Cocktails 9 - Close tSatuxdaus. 501 Off All Imports! zSwndaui. Burger Madness?! P.O. Puis 322 S. 9th Street Lincoln, NE 68508 (402) 4788551 Merer Ever 6 Covet! TAN TAN TAN Weve got more tanning equipment including a NEW Walk-In Bed! Others will try but there's only one ALTERNATIVE fUTERNfmVE Tflfl 466-1201 FREE FOOD from McDonald’s when you sell your textbooks back to NEBB4SK4 BOOKSTORE 13th & Q Streets 476-0111 Monday • Saturday 9 am - 6 pm Sunday Noon - 5 pm, Thursday until 8 pm offer ends Saturday, May 7th