1,000 dead in Colombia quake Citizens search for food, supplies, coffins as government looks for aid ARMENIA, Colombia (AP) - The death toll from the worst earthquake to hit the area in more than a century sur passed 1,000 on Tuesday as survivors anxiously awaited relief supplies and prayed for signs of life under the rubble. Those hopes were dashed again and again. Monday’s 6-magnitude earthquake devastated cities and villages across western Colombia, a vast Andean ter rain where much of the world’s coffee is grown. The tremor shook buildings as far away as the capital, Bogota, 140 miles from the epicenter. A small aftershock shook the region Tuesday afternoon, causing little dam age but sending panicked residents run ning into the rubble-littered streets. It was one of about 15 aftershocks. With hundreds of people believed still buried beneath the rubble, mayhem reigned Tuesday in the streets of Armenia, a city of300,000. Rescue teams had recovered nearly 650 bodies in the country by noon and estimated that at least 2,700 were injured - but warned this was only a par tial accounting. Capt. Ciro Antonio Guiza, Armenia’s deputy fire chief, said rescue workers were so strapped that many bodies remained on the streets uncol lected. “There are more than 1,000 dead, perhaps more than 2,000 in Armenia alone,” he said. Two-thirds of the city’s buildings were rendered uninhabitable. People wandered about desperately looking for relatives. There was no electricity or running water in most of the city, and food was in dangerously short supply. An estimated 180,000 people were left homeless in Armenia alone. ' Coffins have become a coveted commodity. “I’ve been looking for five coffins for relatives since 8 o’clock this mom ing and I couldn’t find any, so we’re going to have to bury them in plastic,” said 34-year-old Diego Ruiz, who lost his grandmother, a sister and three nieces. Rescue workers scrambled to evac uate the thousands of injured and to locate survivors. At die city’s small air port, ambulances arrived every 15 min utes with more victims, who were air lifted to hospitals in Bogota, Medellin and Cali. “There is a danger of epidemics, because we have mote than 200 bodies and we have no refrigerated trucks,” said Carlos Gilberto Giraldo, a top Colombian Red Cross official. Two members of Colombia’s pro fessional soccer chib Adetico Quindio - Diego Montenegro and Rubai Biurret, both from Argentina - were found dead. Witnesses said die two were holding onto each other in the ruins of a down town hotel. Another four players are feared dead. Authorities say they need help, tons of it: tents, food, forklifts, backhoes, antibiotics, generators - and body bags. Colombians, eager to help, formed long lines at blood banks. The govern ment set up a bank account to receive donations, and by noon more than $125,000 had been deposited. The European Commission promised $1.1 million, Colombian officials said Tuesday. What was needed, though, was far more - maybe hundreds of millions of dollars. “We’re going to need a great deal of international aid because the govern ment by itself does not have enough resources,” said Piedad Correal Rubiano, the ombudsman of Quindio state, whose capital is Armenia. First lady Nohora Pastrana went on national television to promise Colombians that relief was on the way. Pentagon admits to Iraq missile mistake ■ Officials say they can’t back up Iraq’s claims of fatalities and casualties. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon acknowledged for the first time Tuesday that an Air Force mis sile considered to be among its most accurate went astray during an attack on Iraqi air defenses and struck a residential area. Iraq has claimed it killed a number of civil ians. Kenneth Bacon, spokesman for Defense Secretary William Cohen, said a rocket-powered missile known as the AGM-130, one of the Air Force’s newest weapons, “did miss its target” by a few miles. He said the Air Force had not yet deter mined what went wrong. The missile landed in the al Jumhuriya neighborhood outside of Basra, a port city in southern Iraq where U.S. planes have attacked air defenses almost daily in response to increased Iraqi challenges to enforcement of a “no-fly” zone. Reporters who visited the neigh borhood Monday said four homes were completely destroyed and six were damaged. Iraq reported an unspecified number of casualties there; it said a total of three American missiles killed 11 civil ians in a series of attacks. Bacon said only one U.S. missile went astray. “It created some damage, we realize that and we regret any civil ian casualties, but this was done in response to a provocative attack against our planes by Saddam Hussein,” he said. “We don’t have any independent estimate of casualties or fatalities that can back up what the Iraqis have said about this,” Bacon said. In a related development, Bacon and other administration officials acknowledged Tuesday that American warplanes patrolling the skies over northern and southern Iraq are operating under new guid ance that authorizes more aggres sive action against Iraqi air defens es. “We’re acting here in self defense and in response to concert ed attacks by Saddam Hussein,” Sandy Berger, the president’s national security adviser, said in an interview with defense reporters. .. |nnGlbs?n Questions? Comments? AssSSSi£; 2K.?ig «^2%SU Opinion Editor: CM Hicks Sports Editor: Sam McKewon General Manager: Dan Shattil A&E Editor: Bret Schulte Publications Board Jessica Hofmann, Copy Desk Chief: Tasha Kelter Chairwoman: (402) 466-8404 Asst Copy Desk Chief: Heidi White Professional Adviser: Don Walton, Photo Co-Chief: Matt Miller (402)473-7248 Photo Co-Chief: Lane Hickenbottom Advertising Manager: Nick Paitsch, Design Chief: Nancy Christensen (402) 472-2589 Art Director: Matt Haney Asst Ad Manager: Andrea Oeltjen Web Editor: Gregg Steams Classifield Ad Manager: Mary Johnson Asst Web Editor: Amy Burke Fax number: (402) 472-1761 World Wide Web: www.dailyneb.com The Daily Nebraskan (USPS144-080) is published by tne UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE 68588-0448, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during the summer ses$ions.The public has access to the Publications Board. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by calling (402)472-2588. Subscriptions are $55 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R Si, Lincoln NE 68588-0448. Periodical postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT1999 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN House prosecutors push for Lewinsky subpoena WASHINGTON (AP) - House prosecutors pleaded with the Senate On Tuesday to issue subpoenas for “a pitiful three” impeachment trial wit nesses - Monica Lewinsky and two others - and to request that President Clinton answer questions under oath. As the Senate went behind closed doors to debate the witness issue, the White House said Clinton has no intention of submitting to questioning, even if the Senate votes to request it. “It’s time to wrap this up,” presidential spokesman Joe Lockhart said of the trial, in its third week. Clinton’s lawyers, joined by Senate Democrats, also warned that the issuance of any subpoenas for wit ness depositions would raise the possi bility of long delays in the proceed ings. Lewinsky, summoned to Washington over the weekend to be interviewed by the House prosecutors, checked out of her hotel and flew home to California. Her lawyer said she would return if ordered to answer further questions. The prosecutors said they had trimmed their list to pass Senate muster. “A pitiful three, and I would think you would want to proceed with that minimum testimony,” said Rep. Henry Hyde, the lead prosecutor. Democratic leader Tom Daschle conceded that the Republicans, with a 66 ... / think you would want to proceed with that minimum testimony” Henry Hyde leading House prosecutor 55-45 majority, were likely to prevail when the roll is called on Wednesday, forcing approval of subpoenas for Lewinsky, presidential friend Vernon Jordan and White House aide Sidney Blumenthal. “I think it’s going to be virtually a party-line vote, unfortu nately,” he said. All witnesses would be questioned under oath at private depositions about the facts concerning allegations of peijury and obstruction of justice by the president in connection with his efforts to conceal a sexual relationship with Lewinsky. Guidelines for the questioning remain to be worked out. Tuesday’s closed-door Senate ses sion was the second in as many nights. As was the case on Monday, a request by Democratic Sens. Tom Harkin of Iowa and Paul Wellstone of Minnesota to open the doors was rejected. Pope set for St. Louis visit MEXICO CITY (AP) - Pope John Paul II headed for St. Louis and a meet ing with President Clinton on Tuesday after a heartfelt “adios” from tens of thousands of Mexican faithful capped his triumphant, five-day Mexico visit The visit to St Louis was die second leg of a mission to give new direction to his flock on the eve of the millennium and to strengthen ties between Roman Catholics in North and Latin America. Upon arriving, he was scheduled to meet with President Clinton in an air port hangar - a day after the Vatican condemned the latest U.S. bombing raids on Iraq. In a statement, spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Vails said the U.S. bombing “confirms once again” the pope’s view that military measures “don’t resolve problems in themselves; rather, they aggravate them.” The pope has criticized US. policy on the death penalty, abortion and eco nomic sanctions against Cuba and Iraq. The differences shouldn’t dampen the pope’s welcome for the 30-hour visit, his seventh stop on U.S. soil during his 20-year papacy. As many as 600,000 people were expected to turn out Tuesday’s schedule in St. Louis includes a youth rally, a fitting event because the pope is counting on young Catholics to battle what he calls a “cul ture of death.” The 78-year-old pontiff used his Mexico visit to outline church strategy throughout the Americas for the start of the new millennium. He sighed a declaration containing that strategy. It also condemned the evils of exploitative capitalism, abor tion, euthanasia and capital punish ment. ■Jordan King to be treated in U.S. for possible cancer AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - King Hussein left for the United States Tuesday for urgent medical treatment after suffering what his doctor described as a possible recurrence of cancer. The 63-year-old king departed hours after naming his eldest son, Abdullah, as his future successor. Lt Gen. Samir Farraj, Hussein’s private physician, said the monarch suffered from “low blood counts and fever and I, as well as doctors from the Mayo Clinic, thought it is best to send him back to die clinic for check ups and treatment” ■Great Britain Lawyers say torture is not an international crime LONDON (AP) - Lawyers asking Britain’s highest court to free former Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet argued Tuesday that torture and hostage-taking are not international crimes. “They are crimes that give rise to international concern, which is not the same thing,” lawyer Clare Montgomery told a seven-judge panel in the House of Lords. “They are national crimes.” Pinochet was arrested Oct 16 in London at die request of a Spanish magistrate seeking his extradition on charges or murder, torture and kid napping during his 17-year regime. ■Yugoslavia Evidence-tampering may hide truth about deaths PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP) - Finnish forensic experts investi gating how 45 ethnic Albanian vil lagers were killed may be unable to determine whether they were mas sacred or shot in battle because of the possibility of evidence-tamper ing, the lead pathologist said Tuesday. The remarks by Helena Ranta suggest the world may never learn for sure the truth of the Racak village killings, which sparked international outrage and renewed calls for NATO action against the government of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. ■Antarctica Father-son team reaches South Pole - . SCOTT BASE, Antarctica (AP) - Hauling 395-pound sleds, Peter Hillary, son of Mount Everest conqueror Sir Edmund Hillary, * reached the South Pole with two other ski trekkers Tuesday after an Antarctic journey beset by prob lems. Hillary and his father, who was also part of a trans-Antarctica expedition in the 1950s, are the fust father and son to reach the bot tom of the world. “Now that I’ve got here, every thing seems worth it,” he said after his team reached the United States’ Amundsen-Scott base. “I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.” Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II . also praised the trio “on your notable achievement,” in a message read to them on their Iridium mobile phone as they stood at the pole.