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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1994)
s/XJet Help Handling the Stress of Finals Part 1 - Tuesday, Nov. 29 Part 2 - Tuesday, Dec. 6 2:30-4:00 • University Health Center Room E-Lower Level Questions? Call Counseling & Psychological Services Ask for Mary or Luis • 472-7450 Are You Late? ■ Free Pregnancy testing WmriPTI \ ■ Options counseling YY UIUCII » ■ Abortion procedures iVlCulCm Ldlter ■ Saturday appointments &vftilsblc 4930 L Street ■ Student discounts 0m^N^ka68"7 ■ vis*» Mastercard Ton (frec j800) 877.5337 NEBRASKA Women's Basketball NU vs. KENT WEDNESDAY Nov. 30 7 p.m. Bob Devaney Sports Center $2 - Individual general admission Free - Children age 6 and under Free - Full time UNL student with photo I.D. For ticket information call 472-3111. Looking tor a Christmas gift tor a great price? .in- -— jlf Look nofurther j r Brand Now U S. Military ALL-WEATHER TRENCHCOATS Plug Into the I World with FREE Herbie Classes Now that you have your computer account you can discover how to tap into the resources available to you on the internet. These classes are free and no reservations are required. Seats are available on a first come, first served basis. Call 472-0515 if you have any questions. Intro to E-Mail Tuesday, November 29 1:00 - 2:30 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Wednesday, November 30 2:30 - 4:00 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Gopher Wednesday, November 30 11:00 - 12:30 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Electronic News Thursday, December 1 12:30 - 2:00 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 FTP Tuesday, November 29 10:30 - 12:00 noon Bancroft Hall, 239 Finger/Talk Thursday, December 1 10:30- 11:30 a.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Serb forces fight door-to-door in remaining Bosnian safe zone SARAJEVO (AP) — Bosnia Herzegovina — Rebel Serbs were re ported in hand-to-hand combat Mon day with defenders of the last govern ment stronghold in northwest Bosnia. Western diplomats, stung by the United Nations’ inability to save the “safe zone,” scrambled to broker a cease-fire. There was little sign that Bosnia’s Serbs would agree to one—except on their terms. They have seized up to 40 percent of the safe zone in the Bihac enclave that was declared off-limits to combat by the United Nations, and they were intent on forcing the gov ernment garrison there to surrender. The Serbs’ war gains have created a crisis for the international commu nity. Three NATO airstrikes on Serb positions last week were ineffective, and more than 400 U.N. peacekeep ing troops have been detained by the Serbs to ward off more attacks. Britain’s defense secretary criti cized remarks by Senate Republican leader Bob Dole that Britain and France were partly to blame for the failure of the U.N.-NATO mission in Bosnia. Both countries fear NATO i attacks would trigger Serb retaliation against their peacekeeping troops^ The Serbs launched the war 2 1/2 years ago when they rebelled against a move by Bosnia's Croats and Mus lims to secede from Yugoslavia. The war has left 200.000 people dead or missing. J , . . Diplomats renewed their empha sis on a negotiated settlement after the NATO secretary-general, Willy Claes, and U S. Defense Secretary William Perry acknowledged Sunday that NATO was powerless to stop the Serbs U.N. officials have been pressing the Musi im-lcd government to accept a peace settlement offered by the Serbs on condition they keep the 70 percent of Bosnia they now hold. A U.N. official traveled to Bosnian Serb headquarters in Pale, just out side Sarajevo, to discuss cease-fire terms. Diplomats at a foreign minis ters meeting of the European Union in Brussels said a cease-fire was be ing discussed there as well. Members of the so-called Contact Group, rcprescnli ng the U niled States, Russia, Britain, France and Germany, were meeting witn merman President Slobodan Milosevic, the traditional patron of Bosnia’s Serb minority. The Bosnian Serbs have rejected a contact group peace plan that would give them 49 percent of Bosnia in stead of the 70 percent they hold. The government has accepted the plan. In Bihac, Serb forces were 250 to 500 yards from the town’s center and moving house to house, Mayor Hamdija Kabiljagic reported. He claimed hand-to-hand combat oc curred in some cases but there was no independent confirmation. “We don’t know how long we can hold out,’’ Kabiljagic told foreign jour nal ists in a conference call. The commander of the government’s 5th Corps in Bihac, Gen. Atis Dudakovic, reported 114 government soldiers were killed or wounded on Monday in the 32-square mile Bihac area and that there were 94 casualties Sunday. There were no casualty figures from the Serb forces U.N. spokesman Maj. Herve Gourmelon said one civilian was killed Monday when two 120mm mortar rounds struck. —. | Mass murderer slain in prison MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Jef frey Dahmer was attacked and killed while cleaning a prison bath room Monday in a gruesome end for the former chocolate-factory worker who strangled and dismem bered 17 boys and men and ate some of them. Another inmate was being held in Dahmer’s slaying and in the severe beating of another prisoner at Columbia Correctional Institu tion. Authorities wouldn’t identify the suspect, who was serving a life sentence for murder, or offer a motive. All three men were working on a cleaning detail in the recreation area of the maximum-security prison when the attack occurred. A bloody broom handle was found at the scene, but Corrections Secretary Michael Sullivan said he didn't know if it was the murder weapon. “One could surmise a number of things. Their heads could have been smashed against a wall.” Sullivan said. “There was a great deal ofblood in the area of the attack." Correc tions Department spokesman Joe Scislowic/ said. The 34-year-old Dahmer had extensive head injuries and died at a hospital about an hour after he was found. Dahmer, who had been impris oned since his crimes came to light in 1991, had been attacked once before. In July, an inmate tried to cut his throat during a chapel ser vice, but the razor blade attached to a plastic handle fell apart before it could hurt Dahmer. At the time, Sullivan said that it appeared to have been an isolated Attack on Dahmer Jeffrey Dahmer, the mass murderer who cannibalized some of his victims was killed Monday by a fellow inmate at Columbia Correctional Institute in Fbrtage, Wis. Another inmate was injured in the attack. Outside recreation area ^ ! Key- Walls -- J . Widows _I Music rooms I I :js office M .'.twi Siorage Office Siorage-* AP/Bob Btancnim incident and that Dahmer, who was serving 16 life sentences, was not believed to be in imminent danger. '^Qh my God! My son! How could this happen?" Dahmer's mother, Joyce Flint, saidwhenTV s “Hard Copy” informed her of his death. The other victim in Tuesday’s attack was Jesse Anderson, who was serving a life sentence for stab bing and bludgeoning his wife to death. “Dahmer had a death wish, and 1 know that he didn’t have the gumption to do it himself, so I had predicted that the day would come when he would be killed in prison,” said Gerald Boyle, Dahmer’s law yer at trial. “He never expressed fear,” his stepmother, Shari Dahmer, told WJW-TV in Cleveland. “From the day he was arrested he felt he de served anything that he got." Dahmcr's gruesome past came to light in July 1991, when a hand cuffed man flagged down police and led officers to Dahmer’s reek ing apartment. Police later lugged oil drums packed with body parts from the one-bedroom apartment Within days, the sandy-haired factory worker had confessed to killing 17 men and boys since 1978 in Milwaukee and Ohio. Clinton marshals support to pass trade agreement WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Clinton assembled the economic stars from eight previous administra tions on Monday to give a final push for congressional approval of a 124 nation trade agreement. “We have to do it now. We can't wait until next year,” he declared. The 22,000-page agreement slashes tariffs by an average of 38 percent worldwide and expands the rules of world trade into new areas such as agriculture, services and the firotection of copyrights and patents, t creates a more powerful World Trade Organization to referee trade disputes and eliminates the power of any one country to block an adverse trade ruling. Clinton said the trade deal would add hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs, boost the average American family’s income by $1,700 over the next several years and provide the biggest global tax cut in histoiy. He also acknowledged fears that the agreement could mean U.S. workers would face even more competition from low-wage workers in other coun tries. Supporters predicted that the re write of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade would sail through the House on Tuesday with perhaps as many as 60 votes to spare. But the fate of the trade deal was far less certain in the 100-member Senate, where it must win 60 votes on a procedural question of waiving the Senate’s budget rules. Nelxa&kan Editor Jeff Zoleny 47*17M Managing Editor Angle Bronkow Aaaoc. New* Editors Jeffrey Robb Rainbow Rowell Opinion Page Editor Karo Morrison Wire Editor Deb McAdams Copy Doak Editor Mike Learie Sport* Editor Tim Pearson Arts & Entertainment Editor Matt Woody FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily NebraskanfUSPS 14*060) is pubNahad by ths UNL Publications Board Nebraska Union 34.1400 R St , Lincoln, NE 68586-0448, Monday through Friday during the academic year, weekly during summer sessions Readers are sncouragad to submit dory ideas and comments tothe Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1783 between ft a.m. and 5 Km. Monday through Friday. Tha public also is access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Tim Hedegaard, 436 0256 Subscription price is $50 for on# year. Postmaster: Send address changes to tha Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St.,Lincoln, NE 68588-0448. Second class postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT _1»4 DAILY NEBRASKAN