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Lincoln Journal Star du lieu suivant : Lincoln, Nebraska • 1

Lieu:
Lincoln, Nebraska
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1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

II feabit different I than it was in II--" LJ fevers bcivcrc: The inkless fingerprint ID 3 try to keep er ag hopes alive 10 I your pints'; day cc -) i LINCOLN Mm i sqe (Q)Mirinisiii 13 Having A Ball Y- Erej3) miB? i A The Nebraska women's soccer team celebrates the winning goal In period against Minnesota Sunday afternoon at Abbott Sports Complex NCAA tournament. The Huskers won 3-2 and advanced to the second will be Sunday at 1 p.m. at Abbott Sports Complex. Story, Page 1C. i i i ssL spersed a successful business career with high-ranking positions in both the Reagan and Bush administrations.

He was deputy administrator of the Veterans Admin-istration in i est-rankine posi HAGEL freshman tion given to a Vietnam veteran. He began his political career in the 1970s as a legislative aide to Rep. John McCollister, R-2nd District. Hagel brings experience BY DEBORAH COHEN MedM News Service WASHINGTON Mr. Hagel goes to Washington.

Unlike the naive Wisconsin senator played by Jimmy Stewart in Frank Capra's 1939 film, Nebraska's new freshman senator knows something about Washington's ins and "Chuck has got experience on the legislative side," said Sen: Bob Ker: rey. Recalling his own initial days on- -the Hill, Kerrey said, "He'll understand (the Senate) better than I Chuck Hagel has inter- 1-180 set to BY MARTHA STODDARD Lincoln Journal Star Inbound close Rebuilding Interstate 180 Starting Dec, 1 traffic headed downtown on Interstate 1 80 will have to take a Hackers release new U2 songs LONDON (AP) Hackers have distributed two unreleased U2 songs on the Internet, possibly after tapping into computers at the Irish rock group's recording studio, the Sunday Times said. The songs, "Discotheque" and "Wake Up Dead Man," have appeared on Internet sites in at least four countries, the newspaper said. The songs are to appear on an album scheduled for release in the spring. Band managers are investigating the possibility that hackers tapped into computers at U2's Dublin studio, it said.

They may have gained access through cables that have been feeding images of the band's recording sessions to an Internet site maintained by Island Records. Jury rules in nudists' favor SAN DIEGO (AP)- Getting down to the bare facts has not been a successful business plan for Elbert Poppell in conservative San Diego County. His nude social club in Solana Beach got him arrested for prostitution. His nude spa in San Diego was raided and he and his patrons were thrown in jajLLaMesa refused to let him open a nude church. Three other towns kicked him out He finally filed suit against the city of San Diego in federal court, charging malicious prosecution, harassment and violations of his right to run a business.

A jury agreed, awarding him $200,000 more than he asked for and last week U.S. District Judge John Rhoades turned down the city's request for a new trial. Women protest Miss World BANGALORE, India (AP) Police wearing riot gear blocked protesters from marching to a hotel where Miss World contestants are staying. Police arrested 800 protesters. The protesters, mostly women, were detained for about two hours and released after receiving a warning.

The women argue the beauty pageant is demeaning and contrary to Indian values and culture. Police stopped the marchers 1 Vj miles from the hotel where 88 contestants are staying. The pageant's finals are scheduled for Saturday. IBS A I rv i Agribusiness 6B Births 53 28 CityState 3D-8D Comics 7D Deaths 5B Horoscope SO Life 1D-2D 1B Movies 4B Nation 3A-5A Opinion 7B People 2A Puzzles 80 Sports 1C-5C Teen 6C TV 4B World 3D. Weather HIGH LOW TODAY TONIGHT 50 33 Weather details on 8B 28 page, 4 sections 1996 Lee Enterprises Lincoln.

Neb. 1 fi ifiiiiii CUULFOLOAUnednJounwlSUr the second sudden death during the first round of the round against Duke. The game to the Hill "The Veterans Administration was in a chaotic mess," said Pendleton James, the former personnel adviser to President Reagan who hired Hagel. "We were closing1 VA hospitals. He brought fiscal discipline and strong organizational control, yet he did it in a professional manner." On Dec.

3, Hagel will join 15 other incoming senators at freshman orientation sessions. This Congress has the highest ratio of newcomers since according to, Kelly Johnston, assistant secretary of the Senate. Hagel's three-day briefing will begin with the biennial Senate leadership election and includes intro- More on HAGEL Page 6A litis nigiiwdy. XXXXXX 1-1 80 Southbound closed Phase Alternate routes BY JOLENE DAIB Lincoln Journal Star The last of the harvest is in sight for Nebraska farm families, a welcome end to long work days and little time for family and friends. For Faith and Clarence Parde of Sterling it has been a good year for farming, but not a great year.

That description belongs to 1994, when they finished planting by June 1, the weather cooperated and yields were excellent. Faith Parde said Charles Dickens' novel "A Tale of Two Cities" comes to mind when she tries to describe harvest time: "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." If it has been a good year, farmers are anxious to get the crop out of the field before some calamity hits. If it has been a bad year, harvest is stressful because farmers have waited for it all year, but know they won't make much money. "What determines a good year is whether we can meet all our obligations," Clarence Parde said. "Weve 4 1 I Li DU ODD ASSOCIATED PRESS A A Rwandan Hutu woman cries while holding her sick child as she travels from a refugee camp in -Zaire back to her homeland.

This image was taken from a CNN broadcast Sunday. wandans rebuilding their lives. 2A based largely on enmity between Hutu and Tutsi, traditionally antagonistic tribes living side by side in several countries, festered all summer. The worst problem was in Burundi, where thousands were dying each month in tribal bloodshed. The Clinton administration, influenced by electoral- considerations and bitter memories of when the Somalia intervention turned sour three More on TV, Page 6A Mars probe from Russia Ms to Earth BY TERENCE HUNT Associated Prose HONOLULU The United States rushed into action Sunday as a Russian space probe fired toward Mars hurtled back to Earth, tracking its fall, plotting its impact site and offering help in the remote event of nuclear contamination.

In the end, the craft smashed harmlessly into the atmosphere at 17,000 miles an hour over the southern Pacific Ocean west of Chile. The U.S. Space Command said it could not confirm whether any objects survived re-entry. President Clinton, in Hawaii oh a weekend vacation, spent much of the day consulting with senior advisers about the matter. "He did not have a very restful day," spokeswoman Mary Ellen Glynn said.

The president talked by telephone with Australian Prime Minister John Howard. Originally, there was concern the impact site would be in east-central Australia. In that event, U.S. officials said an "extremely unlikely" scenario would see four tiny generators on board release a small lethal plutonium cloud. When it became clear the rocket would miss Australia, Robert Bell, a senior aide on the White House National Security Council, said, "If that's what happens, there's no danger to anyone and that's very good news indeed." Word of the expected crash came one day before Clinton was scheduled to fly to Australia on the first leg of a 10-day tour of Asia-Pacific nations.

The president, making his first visit to Australia, was due to arrive in Sydney In the southeast region of the country on Tuesday night, with subsequent stops in nearby Canberra and Port Douglas on the northeastern coast. 1 The unmanned Russian craft, Mars '96, got into trouble when it was unable to break out of Earth orbit after the failure of a fourth-stage booster rocket. From the start, the Space Command, based in Colorado Springs, tracked the re-entry path of the probe. T( BY GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Not long after taking office, Secretary of State Warren Christopher said U.S. decisions on committing troops to save lives in distant lands would not be dictated by television's graphic images of human suffering.

I CNN, he said, would not be the "north star" guiding policy decisions. I But U.S. officials said last week "the CNN factor" in no small way influenced President Clinton's provisional decision to send thousands of troops to Central Africa to help protect and, funnel aid to more than 1 million refugees. At week's end, the border crisis took an unexpected turn for the better when hundreds of thousands of Rwandan Hutus being held hostage by Hutu militants broke free from the captors and returned en masse to their homeland." i Administration officials said the new developments could lead to changes in any U.S. commitment's size and mission.

The crisis in Central Africa, detour. Northbound hW traffic out of Lincoln will be maintained. There will be 1 temporary closures onR anHS streets between 9th and 10th during construction of Phase 1. Ivmt St. DOWNTOWN DISTRICT riot 1 I I I I I I I 1 Dec.

'96 thru Aug. '97 Sourca: Nebraska Dept. ol Roads KIM STOLZERUneoln Journal Star never not met them." This year rain kept the Pardes out of the fields for much of May and extended planting to June 14. They began harvesting Oct. 5 and expect to finish soon.

A good year is when they can pay their bills and have money left over, Faith Parde said. It might be a year they can trade in a tractor on a newer used one or add to their grain storage space. Harvest time for the Pardes means leaving the house by 9 a.m. after their son and daughter go to school, and getting home after dark. Before the change to standard time they often worked until 9 p.m.

Now they may come in at 7 30. On a recent night, Clarence Parde worked until nearly 10 p.m., but Faith Parde didn't share his enthusiasm for extending their work day: "I told him, 'You go ahead. You cut to your heart's content If I stay out here any longer I'm going to go More on HARVEST, Page 6A me oeiuur oeyius ai tQitmusnei Alternate routes to downtown Lincoln Truck Detour Car Detour 6A I omnusKerjiwy West A Street TTaVlf1 cap wrj 0m i A Street JjLiL. Highway construction crews will close the incoming lanes of Interstate 180 as soon as this year's out-of-town Husker fans put Lincoln in their rearview mirrors. The last regular season football game will be Nov.

29 against Colorado. A major rebuilding project is to start two days later on southbound lanes of the expressway leading from Interstate 80 into downtown Lincoln. Construction will stretch from near Cornhusker Highway to the end of the viaduct that skirts Memorial Stadium and merges with Ninth Street near Street. "The project starts just south of the More on 1-180, Page Farm family welcomes harvest's end iv ii." JOLENE DAIBLincoln Journal Star A Faith and Clarence Parte, who farm near Sterling, look forward to the end of the fall com harvest. Faith says harvest time reminds her of "A Tale of Two "It was the best of times, It was the worst of 7llfJlllcci times," i 1 '3 1 A.

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