SPOBTS Starting Strong With impressive play on Saturday, speculation has started over whether freshman I-back Dahrran Diedrick will start against Colorado. PAGE 9 Putting it Together Graphic Arts Professor Tom Sullivan combines text and images to create designs that teach and inform. PAGE 12 TUESDAY November lf>, 1999 Edom Toward SweateiWeather Sunny, high 63. Oearytdljght, low 33. VOL. 99 COVERING THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN SINCE 1901 NO. 59 Setting shades Holocaust historian analyzes camps ■ Auschwitz and other sites are devoid now of the horrors that happened inWWII,hesays. By Jake Bleed Senior staff writer Robert Warren is not Jewish or German, a victim of the Holocaust or even associated with World War n. Bom in 1939, a combat veteran in Vietnam and a trial lawyer for 23 years, Warren is now a full-time Holocaust historian. Warren said his interest in the Holocaust came from his personal experiences in Vietnam and partly after meeting a boy at summer camp who had survived a death camp. Those experiences interest ed him in evil and the politics of memory. Warren presented “In Search of the Holocaust: The Realization of Remembrance,” in the Burnett Hall auditorium Monday evening. Sponsored by the NU College of Law and the Department of Judaic Studies, Warren’s lecture described a journey he and his wife took through death and slave labor camps set up by Nazi Germany during WWII. Warren said 3.2 million people, or 17 percent of the population, died in Poland during die war. All six of Germany’s principal extermination camps were in Poland, Warren said. The largest Jewish war-time ghettos were in Warsaw and Lodz. But as Warren led the crowd through the journey, slides project ed on one of the lecture hall’s two screens contradicted the horror of the camps. Slides of Auschwitz, probably the Holocaust’s most known death camp, showed clean paths, green grass and leafy trees. “And yet I stood in a recon structed gas chamber where 70,000 lives had evaporated amid the acrid fumes of hydrogen cyanide, Zyklon B - and felt noth ing,” Warren said. “It was too sani tized, too clem” The death and slave labor camp was a curated memorial, some thing Warren said he has very little time for. “Auschwitz has been exorcised of its demons. It is no longer evil, just a place with a terrifying name. it Except for the remains of a recent campfire, there was no evidence that anyone had visited the site in months. I realized that this was the perfect memorial, precisely because it was not a memorial at all...” ■ Robert Warren Holocaust historian Like catching the bogeyman in broad daylight, the fear and dread disappear into sunshine,” Warren said. Warren visited Birkenau next, then Treblinka, Majdanke and Sobibor, all the tune hoping “to discover the Holocaust, or at least an apt monument” He didn’t find this until he vis ited a small, 54-acre camp between the Polish cities of Lvov and Lublin. Unlike the other camps visited by Warren, Belzac was vir tually unmarked. “Given its bloody history - roughly one murdered corpse for each square foot of the camp’s ter ritory -1 expected something straight from hell,” Warren said, “but found nothing.” An iron gate with the camp’s name, three worn-down memorial stones and a weathered sculpture were all that marked the site as a death camp. But Warren said the barren camp, destroyed by the Germans in Please see HOLOCAUST on 7 Five fires ignited in Selleck By Jake Bleed Senior staff writer No one had been arrested or cited Monday for five weekend fires set in Selleck Quadrangle, a fire official said. Two buildings of the Selleck Quadrangle were evacuated twice early Sunday morning after five fires - four in bathrooms and one on a bulletin board - were set. Lancaster County Fire Marshal Ken Scurto said he and other inspectors inter viewed a large number of Selleck residents to identify a suspect for the bathroom fires. Scurto said he thought the bulletin-board fire was caused by a different person. Scurto said a large amount of paper work must be finished before the Lancaster h y The suspect could be charged with up to five counts of first-degree arson, a class II felony, he said. “Anytime you deal with an occupied building, that’s a very serious issue,” Scurto said. Scurto said four fires were set in the 7000 and 8000 buildings between 2 and 3 a.m. Sunday. Trash cans in the men’s and women’s bathrooms on the second floor of the 7000 building were set on fire at about 2 a.m., Univeristy Police Sgt. Mylo Bushing said. About an hour later, bathroom trash cans in the first and second floors of the 8000 building went up in flames, Bushing said. Scurto said the fires were similar to an arson Nov. 7 when another Selleck bath room trash can was torched. Both buildings wgre evacuated because of the fires. Freshman Ryan Lacsh was sleeping on the third floor of the 7000 building when the fires started. Lacsh said the third-floor alarm did not sound after the first fires started, but his floor’s residence assistant heard the alarms going off on the floors below and woke up the floor’s residents. Students remained outside the resi dence hall for between 30 minutes and an hour before returning to their rooms, Lacsh said. The final fire of the night took place just before 8 a.m., Bushing said, when the bulletin board in the lobby of the 7000 building was set on fire. Fire alarms woke students again, Lacsh said, adding that this time his floor’s alarm worked. Scurto said die cost of damages caused by the fires was still being calculated but estimated* that each caused less than $100 damage. The fires in the bathroom trash cans started when someone used a lighter to ignite paper inside the cans, Scurto said. Ceiling tiles from one of the building’s elevators were also pulled down Saturday night, Bushing said, causing $100 damage. ReadtheDailyNebra8kanontheWorldWideWebatdaUyneb.com V . - '