The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 04, 1996, Page 2, Image 2

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    Complete Natural Foods Grocery
1618 South St 475-9069 '
Open 9 - 9 Daily i
It's A Pool
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Monday: 10:30 am-close
$3/hour pool
Tuesday: 4 pm-close
Happy Hour Bottles &
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Wednesday: 4 pm-close
Happy Hour pitchers
399 Sun Valley Blvd.
Lincoln - 474-3545
9819 ’M' St. - Omaha
Mondays
12:30-1:20
Room 338
Nebraska
Union
Stress Management Workshops
with Relaxation Training
For more information call Sue at 472-7450
Counseling & Psychological Services
March 4
Co March 11
O March 25
CL April 1
O April 8
l— April 15
Self-Hypnosis
Positive Self-Talk
Addictions
"April Fools"
Burn-out
Crisis Management
Blood Pressure Checks
Choles terol Testii tg
Nutrition Information
& Analysis
Body Compositions
| Blood Sugar Testing
| Grip Strength &
Flexibility Assess.
UHC Info. Booth
Pick-up a FREE
Spring Break
Survival Kit!
March 6. 1996
Campus Recreation
I 1:00 - 1:00 p.m.
March 7. I 996
Nebraska Union
I 1:00 - 1:00 p.m.
Topic Activities:
National Nutrition
Month
Spring Break Survival
Kits will be available!
(Spring Break. Survival Kits
are available only while
supplies last.)
For Students, Faculty & Staff!
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in cooperation with Campus Recreation.
For more information call 472-7440.
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March 8 & 9 Mr. Happy $2
March 10 Brother Cane $10
Opening Act: Hazies
Thick $2
Beatles Forever $5
A Tribute to the Beatles
March 18 God Lives Underwater
March 15 & 16
March 17
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340 CORNHUSKER HWY 474-2332
Israel declares war
on militant group
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel de
clared all-out war Sunday on the mili
tant Islamic group Hamas after a sui
cide bomber blew apart a second bus
in Jerusalem in just one week.
The blast, which scattered body
parts and pieces of twisted metal yards
from the explosion site, killed 19
people, including the bomber, and
threw the future of Midcast peacemak
ing into question.
Prime Minister Shimon Peres de
manded that Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat do more to combat terrorism.
He said i f Arafat did not comply, nego
tiations with the Palestinians on a final
peace agreement would not start in
May as scheduled.
“There arc no negotiations with the
Palestinians,” a grim Peres said at a
news conference. “There arc only our
demands to the Palestinians.”
Israel is “engaged in total war
against Hamas and other terrorist or
ganizations,” said Peres, a dove who
will be hard-pressed to prevail over a
right-wing rival in May 29 elections.
Arafat condemned the bombing as
a “serious and dangerous terrorist act”
and outlawed all armed Palestinian
groups. The Hamas offshoot that
claimed responsibility announced a
three-month moratorium on attacks so
long as Israel docs not crack down on
Hamas.
The blast tore through a No. 18 city
“7 he Palestinian Authority has decided ...to ban
all activities of all terrorist groups working to
torpedo the national goal. ”
YASSER ARAFAT
Palestinian leader
bus as it drove through Jerusalem’s
shopping district at 6:25 a.m., almost
exactly a week alter another No. 18
bus exploded in the city, killing the
bomber and 26 others. Hamas claimed
that attack and a bombing in Ashkelon
the same day that killed two people,
including the bomber.
“Bodies were strewn all over the
place,” Ariel Schussheim,a paramedic,
told the Yediot Ahronot newspaper.
“We had to push through the corpses
to treat the wounded.”
Hundreds of angry Israelis gath
ered at the scene. Some lit memorial
candles and recited prayers. Others
sobbed and shouted in fury.
About a dozen religious Jews
swayed back and forth in prayer. Oth
ers tied black cloths to tralTic lights.
When Peres visited the site, sur
rounded by dozens of police guards,
he was booed by demonstrators who
shouted “Peres go home,” and “Death
to the Arabs.”
In an address to his people Sunday
night on Palestinian TV, Arafat de
nounced “the conspirators acting
against our people ... through these
shameful terrorist operations.”
“The Palestinian Authority has de
cided with the confidence and support
of its people to ban all activities of all
terrorist groups working to torpedo
the national goal,” he said.
Hamas sources said Sunday that
300 Islamic activists had been arrested
by Arafat’s forces in the week since
the previous bombings.
President Ezcr Wcizman urged
Peres to suspend talks with the Pales
tinians. Opposition leader Benjamin
Netanyahu, declaring a political truce
for the time being, proposed deporting
ringleaders and sending Israeli troops
into Palestinian-ruled areas.
Instead, Peres warned Arafat that
Israel would honor its agreements with
the Palestine Liberation Organization
only if the Palestinians did the same.
Dole holds on as candidates
scramble for GOP baton
WASHINGTON (AP) — Bob
Dole’s big South Carolina victory
brought no instant surrenders in the
Republican presidential race. But as
Steve Forbes, Pat Buchanan and oth
ers battled on Sunday? their words
betrayedasenscofincvitabilityifDole
is not derailed in the GOP’s defining
week ahead.
With eight primaries Tuesday and
another on Thursday in New York,
time is on Dole’s side; rivals can’t
campaign everywhere against the re
vived front-runner, nor is there much
time for any new advertising to take
hold.
And with so many states in play at
once — and a bunch more on the
following Tuesday — the establish
ment support Dole can count on from
governors, senators and others should
prove an invaluable asset, as it did
Saturday in South Carolina.
“Senator Dole has enormous depth
across the country,” House Speaker
Newt Gingrich said in an interview.
And there’s more to come: Texas Gov.
George W. Bush could endorse Dole
as early as Wednesday, providing a
boost for that state’s giant March 12
primary.
The fact that Gingrich talked about
the presidential race at all, while Bush
moved toward backing a candidate,
was vivid proofofhow South Carolina
had changed the nomination calculus.
Dole was knocked from his place as
front-runner two weeks ago in New
Hampshire by rebel conservative
Buchanan, who then lost the baton,
along with Delaware and Arizona, to
flat-tax champion Forbes. It is now
back in Dole’s grasp, and it might slop
changing hands if the Senate majority
leader can hold it through the bruising
challenges this week in Georgia, New
York and elsewhere.
“If he has the kind of week he is
capable of, at that point it becomes his
to lose,” said Gingrich, who said he
wasn’t endorsing Dole but was eager
for the party to settle an oficn abrasive
nominating contest.
He urged everyone but Buchanan
and Forbes to give up challenging Dole,
so wc can have a nominee by the
middle of March and begin the work of
uniting the party.” It was a blunt mes
sage just before the primary in Geor
gia, Gingrich’s home state, where
former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
Alexander hopes for a breakthrough
but was running third.
Alexander balked at Gingrich’s
advice. After South Carolina, he said,
“the issue will shift from Buchanan to
Dole and the question will be is Bob
Dole who wc really want to run against
Bill Clinton?”
But as more states weigh in, it is
getting tougher for candidates who
keep losing to Dole to make the ease
they are stronger contenders.
Even as Buchanan vowed to con
test Georgia by challenging Dole’s
cultural conservatism, he was thinking
ahead to the GOP^ convention in San
diego. He warned that his supporters
would abandon the Republican Party
if a Dole-led ticket changed the anti
abortion platform plank.
Police take Keyes into
custody before debate
ATLANTA - Presidential candi
date Alan Keyes was taken into cus
tody briefly by police Sunday night
when he attempted to enter a televi
sion studio where other contenders
for the Republican presidential nomi
nation were preparing to debate.
Lee Armstrong, director of pro
gramming and creative services, said
the station was “absolutely not” press
ing charges.
Keyes apparently was not formally
arrested, but he was taken into cus
tody - with his hands restrained be
hind his back - as he attempted to go in
the main entrance of the WSB-TV
studios about 30 minutes before the
debate began.
“I have a right to speak,” Keyes
shouted as police hustled him away in
handcuffs.
He showed up later in the evening
for a live interview on a rival televi
sion station, WAGA.
Keyes said one officer told him he
was under arrest and that he was driven
around for about 20 minutes before
being told he was free to go at a
parking lot near a city hall annex. He
said he would consider suing WSB
TV and try to get its license lifted.
Throughout the day, Keyes and a
band of supporters had staged an “ex
tended fast” in five pup tents set up on
the studio’s front lawn.
Keyes also was denied participa
tion in a South Carolina debate last
week that was limited to the top four
finishers in the New Hampshire pri
mary.
He told reporters outside the build
ing Sunday that he was denied entry
by WSB-TV officials.
“I was invited to participate in this
debate and the owners of the TV sta
tion denied me,” said Keyes. “I am
qualified as a candidate in the state of
Georgia. No media outlet has the right
to choose (who can debate).”
“We never had any intention of
reconsidering,” the decision not to
invite Keyes, said Bill Nigut, WSB
TV political reporter and a debate
panelist.
The debate among Pat Buchanan,
Steve Forbes and Lamar Alexander,
started as scheduled shortly after the
Keyes incident.
NetJraskan
Editor
Managing Editor
Assoc. News Editors
Opinion Page Editor
Wire Editor
Copy Desk Editor
Sports Editor
Arts & Entertainment
Editor
Photo Director
Night News Editors
J. Christopher Hain
472-1766 -
Doug Kouma
Matt Waite
Sarah Scalet
Doug Peters
Michelle Gamer
Tim Pearson
Mitch Sherman
Jeff Randall
Staci McKee
Rebecca Oltmans
Melanie Branded
Anne Hjersman
Beth Narans
Aaron Steckelberg
Dan Shattll
Katherine Policky
Amy Struthers
Laura Wilson
Art Director
General Manager
Production Manager
Advertising Manager
Asst. Advertising Mgr.
http://www.unl.edu/DailyNeb/
FAX NUMBER 472-1761
The Daily NebraskanOJSPS 144-080) is
published by the UNL Publications Board,
Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE
68588-0448, Monday through Friday during
the academic year; weekly during summer
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Readers are encouraged to submit story
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Postmaster: Send address changes to the
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ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT
1996 DAILY NEBRASKAN