VOL. 98 COVERING THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN SINCE 1901 NO. 131 SPORTS Full-court pressure Despite a 4-3 win over Colorado this weekend, Nebraska’s men’s tennis team still has a long and difficult road to the NCAA Tournament. PAGE 9 ■ . . ' ■ • ’ f A & E Plains people April 5,1999 The Center for Great Plains Study has organized an Impressive festival and symposium of artists and DARK DAYLIGHT SAVINGS lecturers to celebrate the plains culture. PAGE 12 Cloudy and windy, high 55. Cloudy tonight, low 40. Early morning fire destroys Lincoln church u The building can be replaced. But the labor of love is gone.” Maurice Champion Garthe church rector By Josh Funk Senior staff writer An early-morning fire destroyed a Lincoln church on Easter SQhday, forcing the congregation to relocate. No injuries were reported in the fire that leveled St. David’s Episcopal Church, 88th and Holdrege streets, and caused $700,000 damage, Southeast Lincoln Fire Chief Steve Phillips said. Fire teams were called tojhe church at 6:23 a.m., and by 7 a.m. word had started to spread to parishioners. “This is definitely not how I planned to spend Easter,” Church Rector Maurice \ Champion-Garthe said. After hearing of the fire from a parish ioner and the sheriff, Champion-Garthe went to the church to help in any way he could. As he drove in, Champion-Garthe said the flames were visible from 84th and Adams streets over the hill. Sunday night fire inspectors had not determined the cause of the fire which started in the attic of the church and spread quickly. The church burned until 9 a.m. when firefighters declared the blaze under con trol. Only a remnant of the offices and classrooms on the west end remain stand mg. Champion-Garthe said the most diffi cult part of losing the building was the “labor of love” his congregation invested in finishing the building itself. The handmade communion rail and custom-made kneelers for the pews may be lost, but die people are still there. “The budding can be replaced,” said Champion-Garthe in a voice made raspy by a day filled with thick clouds of smoke and long talks with parishioners. “But the labor of love is gone.” After word spread, at least eight area churches offered the congregation a place to worship both for Easter and long-term. Champion-Garthe said church leaders called the 100-member congregation and arranged to hold services Sunday evening at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, 60th and A streets. The events of the day inspired a new sermon, Champion-Garthe said. “I scrapped what I had written for the morning and went straight from the heart,” Champion-Garthe said. The church must now work together to rebuild, but Champion-Garthe said the most important element is already in place - the people, because they are the church. “Today is Easter and as Christ has risen, so will we,” Champion-Garthe said. “The important thing is we have the peo ple.” 1 U.b. agrees to send in gun ships ■ Pending NATO approval, 2,000 ground troops and 24 Apache helicopters will be sent to Albania, escalating the conflict. WASHINGTON (AP) - In a risk-laden escala tion of the American military commitment, the United States has agreed to send 24 Apache heli copter gun ships and 2,000 troops to Albania, giv ing NATO the ability to directly attack Serb troops and tanks in Yugoslavia, the Clinton administra tion said Sunday. To protect die Apaches, U.S. troops will man 18 Multiple Launch Rocket Systems deployed to Albania as well with short- and medium-range missiles that can take out Yugoslav air defenses throughout Kosovo, where ethnic Albanians are under continued attack. Some 14 Bradley Fighting Vehicles, military police and intelligence officers are included. Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said deploying the Apaches and rocket launchers was “a logical expansion” of the nearly two-week-old NATO airstrikes to halt Yugoslav Slobodan Milosevic’s military drive against Kosovars in die Serbian province. iNAiu leaders meeting Monday must approve using the weapons, followed by President Clinton. The Pentagon said it could take up to 10 days to deploy the Apaches from their base at Iilesheim, Germany, because many U.S. military cargo, planes also are being used for humanitarian aide. ‘It’s to give us the type of tank-killing capabil ity that the bad weather has denied us,” Bacon said. “It will give us the capability to get up close and personal to the Milosevic armor, (to) units in Kosovo, and to do a more effective job at eliminat ing or neutralizing the forces on die ground.” He acknowledged the increasing risk to U.S. forces. “Obviously, close-in engagement is by defini tion riskier than more distant engagement. Bid the army is trained to cope with that,” he said. Amid the growing refugee crisis in the Please see TROOPS on 8 Ryan Soderlin/DN UNL JUNIOR JUSTIN DARLING hangs on to a bucking bull out of the chute at the 41st annual UNL College Rodeo at the Saunders County Fairgrounds on Saturday in Wahoo. ^B^^B ^p^k BB The dimly lit, dust-filled air was almost enough to BB ^^B B^ B make you choke, but not quite. The sandy, dirty ground B B and metal and wooden bleachers played background for I ^^B ^UB ^^B ^^B an intimate crowd of about 200, and die smell wasn’t one ^^^B ^PB B^B most people would seek out. hh Although most of the crowd was probably there for the excuemeni-cnargea annospnere, me ians experiences couia never compete with that of the riders themselves - experiences ^Bfe^B ^B^B that encompass emotions of pain, disappointment and, at best, The 41st annual UNL College Rodeo, which took place Friday and Saturday at the Saunders County Fairgrounds in ^^^B ^^^B ^B^B ^B^B Wahoo, rounded up cowgirls and cowboys from the Midwest. ^B^B ^MB ^B^B ^B^B It was UNL junior Justin Darling’s final college rodeo UNL. C Cadau Raved “The bulls were excellent,” said Darling, a bull rider and OTORY RY DARAH BAKER criminal justice major. “This weekend was cool because the Photos by MATT MILLER amd RYAN SODERLIN Please see RODEO on 7 Read the Daily Nebraskan on the World Wide Web at dailyneb.com