2 Monday, April 24, 2000 jCuban-Americans Protest Elian Raid Federal agents took the i ' Cuban boy from his family in Miami early Saturday, nationwide debate. Associated Press r: " MIAMI - Easter -one of the holiest of days in Litde Havana and the rest of r ‘the Christian world - found Marta '■Rodriguez praying for a little boy she knows only from a distance but, like many, calls by his first name, bo “Pobre Elian,” the 71-year-old Cuban ‘immigrant said after Mass at St. John _ Bosco Church, where Elian’s great-uncle and cousins have attended services. “He should never have been treated jhis way," she said in a grandmotherly tone. “My heart is broken.” So it was for many Miami Cubans life without the 6-year-old vbov reunited with his father in Washington after a swift and stunning pre-dawn Saturday raid by federal For the first time in five months, Elian was gone from Miami. And it was mosdy quiet in Little Havana, which had been the site of weeks of protests for the first time in days. Lessons That Will Last A Lifetime. Put that college degree to use by enrolling into the Air Force Officer Training School. Upon successful completion of the Officer Training School, you will become a commissioned Air Force officer with earned respect and benefits like - great starting pay, medical and dental care, management and travel AIM HIGH opportunities. For more on how to qualify and get your career soaring with the Air Force Officer Training School, call 1-800-423-USAF, or visit our website at www.airforce.com www.airforce.com _ UCS ANNOUNCES... ; 4 msN ,wp ctretr rggDtmcfiqi CHECK THESE EXCITING NEW SITES! (Must be registered with UCS) e-leads An online database of job leads for liberal arts students, experience “online An nline service that provides unique insider information on industries hiring college graduates. Career Search A computerised directory of general information on more than 600,000 employers. University Career Services i —- = ~ Di^ono!^ Affairs */ www.unc.edu/depts/career/oth_empj.html WHY Get A Real JOB Wm the hsttest Interactive mtkrtihwMnt ctmpMy is teokfeg far ai-camps reps ti N¥B i braalln EA SPORTS: Do von live sports? Are vou a goner? WHI yoi allow yourself to have fun ana moke money? If yon comprise all three of these skills you may bo selected to be one of only two EA SPORTHteps on yonr campns! s\ SPORTS. APftY NOW FOt FAIL 2000 Sod Yew Covor Uttar, Rmmm' ft TWn PrafassWed References Te: fei (863) 680-1326 Or l-ueil pr(Me@vwarki.na c/e CeNe|e Reps Eqvel Oppertwity Eapleyer At the home of the boy’s Miami rel atives, a place once so overrun with journalists and protesters that it was dubbed Camp Elian, bystanders dressed in their Sunday best stopped briefly to look. A bouquet of flowers was stuffed into the chain-link gate used by the agents a day earlier. There was a brief skirmish Sunday afternoon when two young women car ried signs supporting Attorney General Janet Reno’s order to raid. “Not here! Not here!” the protesters yelled, trying to hit one of the women and pulling her hair as she was escorted away by security guards. During protests that lasted into Sunday morning, police clad in riot gear arrested more than 350 people and cleared away thousands more demon strators from Litde Havana. Protesters set more than 200 fires, burning mosdy tires and trash, but there were few seri ous injuries. At St Michael the Archangel Church, another Roman Catholic church in Litde Havana, parishioners held radios to their ears as Spanish-language radio buzzed with talk of a strike Tuesday. If the idea catches on - there are 800,000 Cuban Americans in the area - it could shut down much of Miami. Postal worker Nick Perez Caurel lis tened to the announcements from his home a few miles away and vowed to take part. “I haven’t missed a day of work in six years. But in my own peaceful way, I will show my feelings,” said Perez Caurel, whose parents sent him from Cuba to the United States in 1962 when he was 12 years old. The former Boy Scout and Vietnam veteran also showed his displeasure Saturday when he came home from work, pulled an American flag from his hallway closet and hung it upside down in his front yard with a black scarf pinned to it. “We’ve always hung that flag proudly - on the Fourth of July, days like that,” said his wife, Rosi Perez Caurel. Now, Rosi, also a Cuban immi grant, says she’s not feeling particu- “Pobre Elian. He should never have been treated this way. My heart is broken. ” 71-Year-Old Cuban Immigrant At the Miami Relatives’ Church larly American. “There is a saying in Spanish, ‘Te mastican pero no te tragan’ - they chew you, but they don’t swallow,” she said. “That’s how it feels.” Neighborhood residents have photo copied and circulated an Associated Press photograph of an armed federal }ls your money situation looking dangerous? Participate in our life-saving & financially rewarding plasma donation program. IMMEDIATE COMPENSATION! Donors Earn up to $165 per Month! ★ New donors earn S2O for first visit, —£c.J, $35 for the second visit within 7 days. ' -4 New donors call for appointment. Call or stop by: parking validated Sera-Tec www.seratec.citysearch.com 'O2? 1091 /2 E Franklin St, Chapel Hill • 942-0251 • M-TH 10-6; FlO-4. I**-- **** Nmpl Wy mml ippj \ m sh*** BEST WAS* Utw ■ 81C PLANE! LB6OTES f 121 i FRANKLIN SI, ACMRSS ERMINE VARSITY THEATER •mkvebv my imkh ajl wm ul CALL 960-3955 F9R TAKE 99T WWW.6aSMICeAHTIHA.eOM WSTOK MHKHTOHMUM.MU.. m-M*! IMMfM News agent with his hand extended to grab a crying Elian. Some versions replaced the faces of federal agents with those of Reno, who gave the go-ahead for the raid, and Cuban President Fidel Castro. A poster-sized reproduction attached to the Gonzalez family’s front door included this label: “Federal Child Abuse.” Not everyone in Little Havana was upset. “I’m in agreement that his father is his only family,” said 77-year-old Virginia Escalona, pausing before adding, “Well, his grandmothers, too.” As she stood outside on her apartment stair well, her husband came out to try to quiet his wife, one of a few people becoming braver about a view that had been all but squelched in the neigh borhood. “Are you crazy ?” Escalona’s husband said. “You don’t have to talk to the whole world.” She shooed him away. “I say what I like,” she said. “This is America, no?” *0 This Week in Tar Heel History - 50 Years Ago: ( / ■ This week in 1950, budget cuts in the 1950-51 student V 1 legislature put the publication of six issues of The Daily Tar \ \ Heel in limbo. The Publications Board was forced to either \ remove or subsidize features from the newspaper. 25 Years Ago: ■ This week in 1975,450 students gathered in the Pit to protest a proposed tuition increase. The increase called for a S2OO boost for in-state and a S3OO increase for out-of-state students. Student Aid Director William Greer told students the increase could result in a change in the caliber of UNC students. 10 Years Ago: ■ This week in 1990, instead of donating to athletics, the Educational Foundation, or the Rams Club, contributed $50,000 to the UNC Library System. The donation replaced lost state funds and allowed the library to hire more students so it could operate on a full schedule during exams and breaks. Campus Calendar Wednesday 4 p.m. - AT&T Leaders in Networking Series presents via satellite feed “Networking in the New E-con omy,” a free public lecture by Rick Roscitt, president of AT&T Business Services. The public will be able to view the lecture from the Engineering Graduate Research Center Auditorium on the N.C. State University Centennial Campus. The lecture will also be available through www.ncsu.edu. Thursday 1:45 p.m. - UNC’s International Social Studies Project will present free performances of Lee Blessing’s play “A University Photo and Video ttwwwwwwwwwwwwi We can now make presentation slides for your Power Point files. GREAT PRICE $3.75 each!! Also available: • 1 hr E-6 developing with our brand new processor • slides & negatives to CD 1202 Raleigh Road • Chapel Hill, NC • 967-7821 .Jnnt 54 & 501 next to Harris Teeter joed ■ • yj- " *' am .... J Z P* | of the bands u * Sunday, April 30th featuring: Tin Can Jam Band fmm 1-finm the Balance Affect TrOIII 1 oplß Loose Gravel $g cover charge. Hoads Turn Gray Children admitted free. The Bridge All proceeds benefit charity. Conshafter Saunter Benefiting Make a Wish Foundation and saunter , Sponsored by Johnson Oldsmobile fMCAT There's a reason we're the #1 MCAT course. Classes Beginning For The August MCAT Chapel Hill class starts June 4th Enroll here and transfer to any other center! Call today to enroll —Jill -S&y (919)956-7374 kaptest.com AOL keyword: kaplan Slip Daily QJar Mppl Walk in the Woods.” Matinees for social studies students in Triangle middle and high schools will l)e held April 27 and 28. A public performance will be he)d April 28. All performances will be at the Durham School of the Arts. For more information, call Paul Frellick at 962-8911. j 5 p.m. - Representatives of a writing workshop comprised of UNC graduates and graduate students will read original poetry and prose at the Bull’s Head Bookshop This year’s readers include Rebecca Morphis, Tara Powell and Amy Weldoh. The event is sponsored by the Gradjits Writing Group. The event is free, and the public is welcome.