I^omens Services, P.C. • Abortion Services Performed During All Legal Stages • Tubal Ligations • • Birth Control • Awake or Asleep • Outpatient Care • Total OB/GYN Health Care • Caring Staff Call for an appointment: 201 South 46th St. 554-0110 or 1 -800-922-8331 Omaha, Nebraska What's a reason to eo wild with Ideas^^. ...For your FRIEND, of course! . Think of the most creative graduation gift I for your friend (within $50) end win e 1 wonderful PRIZE for your Priend from Helping Hands, ?th & P, 475-4122 'Think Globally, Act Locally* It’s really simple Just get your pencils ready and come on down to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union to collect an entry form. Entries are due April 15,1996 II M Phoenix HAIR ARTISTS Highlight/ Color Special , Reg. $40 i Special $25 W/ UNL ID Expires 4-24-96 3810 Normal Blvd. • 483-4726 * . . ' ' ^ ■; 1*> > U.S. helicopters evacuate Americans from Liberia MONROVIA, Liberia (AP)—The first U.S. helicopters flew intc Monrovia on' Tuesday and begar evacuating Americans from the cha otic capital, in the grips of fierce rebe fighting. / Twenty-six Americans, including two children, were on the first flight tc arrive safely late Tuesday in neighbor ing Freetown, Sierra Leone — a two hour flight from Monrovia — U.S officials there said. The Fighting that broke out Satur day was the worst in Monrovia sinci 1993. Liberia, which was founded ir 1847 by freed American slaves, ha: been wracked by civil war since 1990 the fighting broken occasionally bj truces that collapse within a matter o weeks. Late Tuesday, State Departmcm officials said they expect the hclicop lers to continue shuttling Americans out of Liberia. There are 470 Ameri cans holed up in the West Africar country. But, one official said, “We want tc avoid use of the word evacuation.’ The Pentagon is concerned that ar unstable situation could develop if ai this point there is a formal announce ment of an evacuation, the official said. Some 15,000 people, many of then' 1 foreigners, have crowded into a U.S. 1 Embassy compound since Monday i seeking safety from the worst fighting in three years. State Department spokesman Glyn Davies said U.S. helicopters were ready I to take out all of the Americans who i wish to leave Monrovia. The helicop ■ ters can carry about 25 passengers • each. “The several helicopters that arc there, that have brought in the military ■ assessment team, will not go back to : Freetown empty i fwc have anything to i do about it,” Davies said. “We want to : make sure that American citizens are , given the opportunity on those heli r copters to leave the country if they [' wish.” U.S. Embassy spokesman Dudley Sims had no details on how any further evacuation would be carried out cx i ccpt to say it could take several days. In Freetown, more than 100 U.S. special forces from the Air Force and Army — some from Germany, some i from other places —and at least four MH-53 helicopters were spotted at the Lungi international airport. The air port seemed largely taken over by the U.S. troops, which totaled about 200. A couple of Humvees, C-130 cargo planes and one C-141 cargo plane were i also seen at the airport outside Freetown, where the first Americans to be evacuated landed without inci dent Tuesday night. All the soldiers were in camou flage, dressed in flak jackets and car rying maps of Monrovia. Navy Cmdr. Bob Anderson, a spokesman for the U.S. European Com mand in Germany who is with the evacuation team in Freetown, said the airlift would continue throughout the night and that the Americans would be flown to Dakar, Senegal, because there were few accommodations available in Freetown. The fighting in Monrovia erupted Saturday, when rebel factions and gov ernment troops engaged in fierce battles for portions of the city. The conflict among seven rebel factions has killed more than 150,000 people and left at least half the country’s 2.3 million residents homeless in six years of war. * Rebels were reportedly holding hundreds of foreigners, including West African peacekeepers, at a military barracks in the capital. Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said about 110 of the 470 Americans in Liberia are at the U.S. Embassy compound and the others arc at various com pounds elsewhere in the capital. Oklahoma City bombing lawyer seeks evidence of international conspiracy DENVER (AP) — Timothy McVeigh’s lawyer asked for access to government intelligence filesTuesday on the Ku Klux KJan, European neo Nazis and Midcast terrorist groups, hoping to show the Oklahoma City bombing was the product of a far fiung conspiracy. But a federal prosecutor insisted investigators have no evidence the bombing that killed 168 people and injured more than 500 others was the work of foreign governments or ter rorists. McVeigh and co-defendant Terry Nichols arrived at a courthouse se cured by police convoys and electronic scanners. It was the first hearing in the case in Denver since a federal judge moved the bombing trial from Okla homa. Prosecutor Beth Wilkinson ac knowledged the government at first put intelligence agencies to work on international angles to the bombing of Oklahoma City’s federal building. But she said that within two days of the attack, “the government learned through the FBI’s diligent investiga tion that the bombinghad been carried out by a U.S. citizen.” “As of today, we have no informa tion showing anyone but Mr. Nichols and Mr. McVeigh were the master minds of this bombing,” she said. Stephen Jones, McVeigh’s attor ney, said if that is true, it is because intelligence agencies quit searching alter McVeigh’s arrest. The attorneys argued over a de fense request for classified in forma lion from the CIA and other govern ment agencies about their brief search for a foreign culprit. Jones says the government has intelligence data on neo-Nazis in Britain and Germany; terrorist groups in Sudan, Iraq, Iran and Northern Ireland; and the Aryan Nation, The Order and other white supremacist groups. He also is seeking purported state ments from witnesses whose descrip tion of the suspects did not match McVeigh. A list of 176rcqucstcd items was submitted to U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch on Monday. In other developments: • Prosecutors agreed to turn over letters from FBI agent Frederic Whitehurst, who tested McVeigh’s clothes for traces of explosives. Whitehurst has claimed that investiga tors faked evidence in the bombing case. • Attorneys for both Nichols and McVeigh said they would seek sepa rate trials. Jones said the defenses for the two men would be different. A hearing on the matter is set for Aug. 27. • W ilkinson acknowledged defense assertions that “inert explosives” were being stored in the federal building at the time of the attack. She said the explosives were being used as training devices by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms and were not armed at the time. Net*raskan http://www.unl.edu/DailyNeb/ FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 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 sessions. 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 Tim Hedegaard, 436-9253, 9 a.m.-11 p.m. 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. K ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT _1996 DAILY NEBRASKAN_ I APPLY NOW! !! Student Summer Employment in Housing May 4 - August 23 Custodial.$5.70/hour Building Maintenance.$6.10/hour Building Painter.....$6.10/hour Weekend schedules and occasional overtime available! Apply in person between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. to: •LaVern Priest at Selleck Maintenance •Lyle Harris at Abel-Sandoz Maintenance •Jerry Lokie at Burr-Fedde Maintenance •Mike Leupold at Cather-Pound-Neihardt Maintenance •Mike Kansier at Harper-Schramm-Smith Maintenance For further information, call Central Housing Maintenance, 472-3753.