Sod vworks' SB OPEN 24 HOURS 1320 Q. St. (Comer of 13th ft Q) 477-7400 Fax 477-8966 ?25% OFF "”"1 | with student ID j I Mapvworksr I ■ M OPEN 24 HOURS 1320 Q St., Lincoln • 477-7400 AWOL intelligence officer found THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PETAH TIKVA, Israel -AU.S. Army Reserve intelligence officer AWOL from his base in Texas turned up Monday at a youth hos tel in Israel, where police said they were talking to him but had no plans to arrest him. Lt. Col. Jeremiah Mattysse was picked up by plainclothes police in Mitzpeh Ramon, a desert town famed for its crater and its hippie culture, and brought to Israel’s international crimes unit in PetahUvka, near TfelAviv. American military officials said they're especially concerned about Mattysse's absence because of his background in U.S. intelligence. Joseph Hanley, a spokesman for the U.S. Army Reserve Command in Atlanta, said last week that it would be logical for an investigation to include ensur ing that nothing was missing from offices where Mattysse worked. Mattysse smiled as he got into the car Monday, wearing the knit ted gimHeap typical of Orthodox Jews and aT-shirt with a floral modi He agreed to “review the case,” a police statement said. Israeli law has no provision for arresting someone who deserts a foreign army, and Mattysse could leave the station when he wants. Late into a session that stretched over two hours, U.S. diplomats joined the meeting. Until February, Mattysse commanded the Army Reserve Intelligence Support Center at Camp Bullis in San Antonio, Texas, as a full-time reserve offi cer. The unit’s primary mission was to train reservists in intelli gence work. Mattysse, SO, foiled to report to duty on Aug. 8 after a vacation, making him AWOL, or absent without leave. Mattysse had been reassigned to the 90th Reserve Support Group in San Antonio after an investigation began into his wife’s allegations that he had an extra marital affair. The San Antonio Express-News reported that his wife, Vanda Mattysse, filed a divorce complaint March 7 in Virginia. RivkaArtzi-Nir, a woman who lives in Israel and identified her self as Mattysse’s girlfriend, has told Israeli newspapers he had become devoted to helping ismH since he converted to Judaism 10 years ago Santa Cruz promotes electric bikes 7 don’t want to get rid of the cars in your garage. It took me 50 years to put them there. I want to comple ment them." Lee Ioacocca former Ford president and Chrysler chairman SANTA CRUZ, Calif. - Even a proudly progressive, low-key college town like Santa Cruz can’t escape what plagues the rest of America: too many cars on the road Officials are practically begging people to get out of their cars and onto electric bicycles - an environmen tally friendly product that has been slow to catch on elsewhere As part of a $1 million plan, called the most com prehensive of its kind in the nation, Santa Cruz County residents will be eligible for discounts, rebates and even interest-free loans on elec tric bikes, which can cost upward of $1,000. The plan is being cham pioned by a former fixture of the transportation estab lishment, Lee Iacocca, although he has a vested interest: He now runs EV Global, a Los Angeles com pany that makes electric bikes and has found busi ness to be tepid at best “I don't want to get rid of the cars in your garage,” the former Ford president and Chrysler chairman said last week. “It took me 50 years to put them there. I want to complement them.” Electric bikes are much like regular bikes, except they have a battery-pow ered motor that spins the back wheel That provides a boost to a pedaling rider or replaces pedaling altogether for up to 20 miles-making it easy to zip up hills, cruise through town at 18 mph and arrive at work or school without breaking a sweat The batteries can be plugged into any standard outlet and need about four hours to folly charge. The bikes, which have been available for about five years, are a cost-effec tive way to replace gas-guz zling short car tripa But their popularity has been limited and electric bikes are mainly available only online or through spe cialty dealers. Gary Starr, chief execu tive of Zapworld.com, an electric bike and scooter maker in Sebastopol Calif, estimates that there are between 75,000 and 100,000 electric bikes and scooters on American roads. “I think the only reason it hasn’t taken off so for is lack of exposure” he said. Iacocca’s privately held company aimed to sell 2,000electric bikes a month this year; he said they’ve been struggling to crack 1,000. ZapworTd’s sales were up 56 percent in the first half of this year, but the company’s stock has hov ered around $5 for months. If any place is suited for kick-starting the market, it’s Santa Cruz, which prides itself on its spiritual dis tance from the traffic choked Silicon Wiley on the other side of the moun tains. Home to a hilly University of California campus 65 miles south of San Francisco, Santa Cruz offers extensive bike routes, and signs remind drivers to share the road with cyclists. But it appears no com munity before Santa Cruz has so strongly endorsed the bikes. “The bike, generally, around this country is still a second-class mode of transportation,” said Deron Lovaas, a representative of the Sierra Club’s anti sprawl campaign in Washington, D.C. www.ncbraskabookstort.com Nebraska Bookstore Stuff for college, just a click away. ■ It’s still your bookstore, it's just online now. So shop Choose from all Even books. What are you waiting for? Give us the finger* ^•*** ******* ** NOW AVAILABLE: STUDENT CHARGES OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT TODAY! FAST —SIMPLY—SPEEDS YOU THROUGH THE CHECKOUT! opeh.m®-3'"?-® jliagyWSai - Sundays u-? oft-SSXSf' McCain's cancer didn't spread THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOENIX - Tests on lymph nodes and tissue removed during Sen. John McCain’s skin cancer surgery confirmed that his skin cancer didn’t spread. His office announced this Monday as McCain went home from the hospital. The former GOP presidential candidate underwent more than five hours of surgery on Saturday to remove melanoma from his temple and upper arm. Melanoma is the most dangerous form of skin cancer. Pathologists completed the final review of the tissues around the cancers and found no sign the melanoma had spread, said Todd Harris, a McCain spokesman. If the cancer had reached one aOmmImcIimi_ or more of the lymph nodes, treatment would have been more complicated and less likely to cure the cancer, experts had said. McCain, 63, was released from the Mayo Clinic Hospital and was resting comfortably at his Phoenix home, a statement said. Doctors found the melanomas after McCain left the Republican National Convention to have biopsies performed at Bethesda Naval Hospital near Washington on Aug. 4. He had a melanoma removed from his shoulder in 1993. Melanoma is usually caused by exposure to the sun. People with firir skin have a higher risk of skin cancer. McCain spent hours in the harsh Arizona sun campaigning for Congress in 1982 and subse quent years. McCain’s friends have said he is religious about wearing SPF 45 sun block when outdoors and about seeing his doctor three or four times a year to check for new lesions. i 13250 St 435-1717 Tuesday INwaffoy $5.50 Pitchers Si-50 Bottles BWells Thursday Friday $1.00 Domestic HAPPYHOUR Big Beers »/* Priced 6” oigiicvn Sandwiches $1.00 Anything $1.oo Domestic Draws Welcome Back Students!