PAGE 2_ ' FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1,1996 Dole plans for finale tour Campaign will ‘rock around the clock* for victory MIAMI (AP)—Pledgingto “shake up this race,” Bob Dole said Thursday he would battle to the finish in a 96 hour, nonstop tour of the nation. He compared the drive to his wartime fighting in Europe. “The last time I fought ‘round the clock for my country was in 1945 in Italy,” Dole said. “Beginning at noon tomorrow, I will once again fight ‘round the clock for America’s future.” “The stakes are that high,” he told a Miami rally. “We’re going to roll through the night and we’re going to rock around the clock,” said Dole campaign spokes man Nelson Warfield, promising sane middle-of-the night campaign events. The Dole campaign said he would travel by bus, plane and other trans portation in the campaign finale. The sprint was reminiscent of Presi dent Clinton’s own 30-hour, 10-city trip at the end of the 1992 campaign. “In the home stretch of this cam paign, I intend to take my message to Americans nonstop,” Dole said. “lam determinecfto make every hour of this decisive election count. “From the factories of Michigan through the bluegrass of Kentucky, in the towns and neighborhoods of the Midwest, across the Rocky Mountains, through the cities and streets of Cali fornia, I will give it all I’ve got,” he said. “Ninety-six hours.” Earlier today, in Tampa, Dole sug gested Clinton may have committal illegal acts in the White House and wasn’t telling the truth on Medicare or any other issue. “How low will this White House go?” he asked. Dole appealed to the area’s big eld erly population not to believe ^bar rage of Democratic ads claiming that Dole and other Republicans intend to slash Medicare spending. “I call it irresponsible. The White House shouldn’t be in the business of distorting the truth and scaring se niors,” Dole said, speaking at the or nate Tampa Theatre. , J . - SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) — A Brazilian jetliner crashed into a resi dential neighborhood in Sao Paulo shortly after takeoff today, igniting flames that engulfed apartments, homes and cars. A civil defense offi cial said all 95 people on board were killed. Three other bodies were pulled from the rubble, and the death toft was expected to rise as firefighters searched homes and apartments struck and set on fire by the crash. i V! '> — ’ : At least three Americans were on the plane, the U.S. consulate in Sao Paulo said. Citibank identified one as David Francis Tobolla, a financial director at the company. His hometown was not released. A second was identified as David Andrews, 49, of San Jose, Ca lif., a vice president of Behring Diag nostics Inc.-Americas, a subsidiary of the Hoescht pharmaceutical group. ’{ , One resident of the middle-class neighborhood where the plane crashed said^ shw *a-nver of fuel on fireilow ing dowtt the street.” Dozens of bodies lay covered with black plastic on the sidewalk, while firemen sprayed water on smoking rubble. Pieces of the plane were strewn over the neighborhood, and parked cars were burning. Thirteen people were treated for shock, bums and minor injuries at the nearby Jabaquara Municipal Hospital. Seven were hospitalized, one in seri ous condition with bums. Police and firemen used plywood planks as makeshift stretchers to carry bodies to morgue trucks.; •, * j Roberto Pacheco de Toledo, head of the police’s Special Operations Group, said 98 bodies were in the morgue. 1434 "O'' Street -475-5556 GO BIO RRD special 2 Large Pizzas 2 Large Sodas' $13.99 *2 BIG SCREENS TO WATCH THE GAME__I When your schedule isn't flexible, it's nice to know that UNL courses are. UNL's most popular courses in... Accounting Finance Philosophy AG LEC Geography Physics Art History History Political Science t v Classics Management Psychology Economics Marketing. Sociology English Math available through UNL College Independent Study: ■ Study and take exams when your schedule allows, when you're ready. ■ Take as long as a year or as few as 35 days to complete a course. ■ Send an average of six assignments per course to your instructor, ana receive rapid turnaround of your materials. H | - M I ’ " £cM r'l £& ^ ''Mm H9 ||p FAX NUMBER: 472-1761 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS144-080) 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 Ne braskan by calling 472-2588. The public has access to the Publications Board. Subscription price is $55 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, Neb.: ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1966 ‘ DAILY NEBRASKAN I Clinton campaign sticks to safe, routine themes i The president visits Arizona and Nevada as Election Day nears. TEMPE, Ariz. (AP)—Publicly ignoring the controversy over his party’s money-raising tactics, Presi dent Ginton Thursday stuck to the safe campaign themes his strategists believe have brought him to the brink of re-election. .'k .. ' . “There’s that great big future out there,” Clinton told a rally in bright sunshine outside the Grady Gammage Auditorium of Arizona State. University campus. “We’re going forward to the 21st century as one community.” * \X Clinton, in his third visit to Ari zona in this campaign, pressed his familiar argument that his administration’s policies are mak ing progress in fighting crime and drug abuse, as well as helping par ents succeed both at work and at hone. “We can make our streets safer for our Children and their future if •» we all work together,” he said, add- . ing that if re-elected he would push for more generous tax breaks for families facing the burden of col lege tuition for their children. Addressing a rally at the Na tional Western Events Center in Denver, Clinton said that unlike many other countries the United States has made its racial and reli gious diversity a strength rather than a source of conflict and division. “It’s good, and I want more of it,” he said, adding that his administration’s goal was to “build an American community where ev erybody has a seat at the table and a role to play.” This is the type of rhetoric that Clinton has made the centerpiece of his stump speeches in these final days of the campaign. His Denver speech was inter rupted by a small group of hecklers in the crowd who waved Dole Kemp banners and shouted. Clinton seemed ready for them; “The only reason they’re screaming is the truth hurts,” he said . ; to wild cheers. j Earlier in a speech at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti, Clinton promised an extension of a | Small Business Administration pro gram designed to help female en trepreneurs. j In Denver on Wednesday night, Clinton sounded the familiar thane of strengthening the “American codurtunity” through greater racial and religious tolerance. Refugees flee for safety after food supply cut GOMA, Zaire (AP)—Warfare and looting choked off the food supply for 700,000 refugees Thursday, sending tens of thousands streaming south in a desperate search for food and safety. Aid agencies halted food distribu tion in the Gama area—which now includes the world’s largest refugee camp—because of looting by Zairian troops and said they would have to evacuate foreign workers. Gars packed with people and their salvaged household goods sped south, and streams of others trudged by on _:_- .. ..._ • *■ 4 ? i v I _ foot, carrying reed mats and food sacks on their heads and babies on their backs. Artillery duels raged all morning around Goma’s airport — the only route for food supplies to the 700,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees living in sprawling camps near the shores of Lake Kivu. But even that lifeline was cut Thurs day —the airport remained ip Zairian hands but was closed by fighting. Road routes from Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda into Zaire have already been :, shut. * . After capturing the provincial capi tal of Bukavu on Wednesday, the Tlitsis, who are fighting to repel Zairian army attacks and to push the Rwandan j Hutu refugees further into Zaire, closed in on Goma, 60 miles north of Bukavu. Reports of a two-pronged Tutsi at tack on Zairian positions north of | Goma sent more than 110,000 Rwandan refugees from the Kahindo; refugee camp and 20,000 local resi-l doits fleeing along dirt paths toward ; Goma’s Mugunga camp. I--1 Dole to visit Omaha fer Reput^m ra% i j From Staff Reports Bob Dole will visit Omaha for the first time since May this weekend during a final run down the campaign trail before the Tuesday elections. The Republican candidate for president will be at Eppley Airfield’s Sky Harbor at 5:30 * p jn. Saturday. Dole and his wife Elizabeth will campaign for Re publican U.S. Senate candidate Chuck Hagel, Omaha Mayor Hal Daub and State Republican Party Chairman Chuck Sigerson. Dole’s last visit to Nebraska was in May for a crime rally in Omaha. ' i