I 7n - Tho I Ainhir( n fl ilst __ Tne nrlnv Cn4 r wra -7n 7[SALC : - r tU - i ne m nigan LadIy - i uesauy, reuruary zu, NATION/W ORLD IRA claims responsibility for blast The Washington Post LONDON-The Irish Republican Army acknowl- edged responsibility yesterday for a bomb that ripped apart a London double-decker bus in what police said was a premature explosion as the device was being transported to another destination. The blast Sunday night killed one person and in- jured eight, one of whom was put under police guard as a possible suspect. Police made two other arrests in south London yesterday in connection with the bomb- ing but did not immediately file formal charges. The third IRA bomb in 10 days - one killed three people and injured dozens at London's Docklands development, the other was deactivated by police after en IRA warning - underscored earlier police warn- ings that the organization is planning a sustained, high- profile terror campaign in the wake of its Feb. 9 announcement ending its 18-month-old cease-fire. If the last two bombs are indicative, the campaign is aimed in part at hurting Britain economically by scaring away tourists. The bomb deactivated Thurs- day was preceded by a warning and was discovered in a phone booth in the city's theater district. While the intended destination of Sunday night's explo- sive was unknown, the location of the bus-in the same part of the city-suggested it was bound for somewhere nearby. Police also said a weapon was recovered from the wreckage of the bus, but gave no details, the Associ- ated Press reported. Police based their judgment of a premature ex- plosion in part on the absence of the usual advance coded warning from the IRA. Similar blunders by terrorists were regular occurrences during the IRA's previous bombing campaign on mainland Britain, which continued from the early 1980s right up until the Aug. 31, 1994, cease-fire declaration. In yesterday's coded phone call to the British Broadcasting Corp. in Belfast claiming responsibility for the blast, the unnamed IRA spokesperson also said, "We can say at this stage that we regret the loss of life and injuries that occurred." Sunday's explosion also underscored the difficul- ties authorities confront in preventing the terrorism. While they can conduct searches at government build- ings and airports, and stop cars at checkpoints - all of which they have resumed doing since Feb. 9 - there is no way to screen the 3 million people who ride the buses here daily, most of them carrying briefcases or parcels. The IRA -- whose membership is largely Catholic and which has as its goal the ouster of the British from Northern Ireland - is based both in the North and in the Republic of Ireland. It appears, at least for the moment, that it is avoiding attacks in Northern Ireland, possibly to avert retaliatory strikes from Protestant paramilitary organizations. AP P Monday's bus explosion in London killed one person and injured nine. New Hampshire primar! to open All full-time students receive a computing allocation of $1150 per month. These funds allow you to purchase services such as e-mail, file storage, remote access, and printing in the Campus Computing Sites. Learn how to subscribe to the services you need-and don't forget to check your account balance regularly! If you have questions about UMCE accounts, call 4-HELP or contact the ITD Accounts Office at 764-8000. This message is brought to you by the U-M Computing Environment (UMCE), Information Technology Division The Washington Post MANCHESTER, N.H. -The New Hampshire Republican primary cam- paign drew to a close yesterday on a mostly negative note, much as it has been carried out for the past week. Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander accused Senate Majority leader Bob Dole (Kan.) of hiding from the voters and offering negative at- tacks in place of fresh ideas, while TV commentator Patrick Buchanan con- demned Dole for trying to "win ugly" here rather than debating the issues. Dole defended his own advertising, but even he seemed weary of the tone of the campaign. "Hopefully tomor- row will be the end of that cycle and we'll move on to something else," he said on PBS's "Newshour With Jim Lehrer," in remarks that echoed the view of voters here. "I wish I heard from them more about what they would do. I mean, concrete proposals, about taking us into the next century," said Mary Mann, a homemaker from Manches- ter who said she wasn't sure whom she would vote for. "It is really frus- trating. You hear the ads, you read the papers and watch TV, but you don't understand exactly what they'll do. I think a lot of voters are frustrated. We're trying to make a decision, but I don't know if we have enough infor- _Campaigen 96 '# .. ,~ mation to do it." Voters here are proud of their first- in-the-nation primary and take their role seriously, putting candidates through their paces in public forums. But the character of this campaign has been unlike those in past years, when candidates spent much of their time fielding questions in face-to-face meetings with small groups. This year the voters have found themselves more props than inquisi- tors, crushed beneath swarming hordes of reporters, photographers and television cameras. The candidates have substituted negative ads for per- sonal appearances and staged events for joint forums, leaving the voters less involved in the campaign dia- logue than ever before. That may be one reason why there are so many undecided voters here, whose collec- tive decisions are likely to determine tomorrow's outcome. In their final messages to voters, the front-runners, now in a three-way standoff, offered reasons to choose them. Dole called on New Hampshire Republicans to embrace what he called his brand of mainstream conserva- tism and send him out of the Granite State with the boost he wants to push him toward the nomination. Leading a torchlight parade in the small town of Milford last night, he spoke of how his World War II inju- ries have made him a more "sensi- sought to convince voters that he is the Republican best equipped to de- feat President Clinton. "We're supposed to be nominating somebody who's going to stand up there with Bill Clinton, paint a pic- ture of the future based upon our principles that is brighter and more compelling than whatever Clinton comes up with based on whatever he tive" person. "I'm not perfect, but I'm essen- tially a caring person and I care about America," Dole said. When he finished, a fireworks dis- play lit up the sky. Alexandervis- ited a doughnut shop, spoke at Phillips Exeter Academy and then wrapped up his walk across the state, which "We'r-e supposed to be nominating somebody who's going to stand up there with Bill Clinton. " - Lamar Alexander GOP presidential candidate woke up believ- ing that day," Alexander said. "How are we going to know what Sen. Dole's ideas are if he won't tell us? How could he have gotten to this point in his career and not have one fresh idea about where to take this country as. we move into the next century?" Buchanan, Serb greneral snubs NATO The Washington Post SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Bosnian Serb military authorities snubbedl a key NATO meeting yester- day in spite of pledges made on their behalf Sunday to adhere to all aspects of the Dayton peace accord. The public absence of Maj. Gen. Zdravko Tolimir, the Bosnian Seb deputy commander, was seen as an ai front to the Bosnian peace process an a reneging on assurances given in Rome only 24 hours earlier by the president of Serbia, Slobodan Milosevic. Although anothermeeting was swiftly scheduled, Tolimir's no-show demonstrated again the difficulty in moving from diplo- maticaccords, in which Milosevic ne- gotiates for the Bosnian Serbs, to progress on the ground in Bosnia, where the Bosnian Serb military has authori@ of its own. In a statement, NATO peacekeepers "strongly urged" the Bosnian Serbs "to comply immediately" with the agreement negotiated in November n Dayton, Ohio, as Milosevic said they would. The Bosnian Serb republic's "refusal to participate is a direct con- travention of the Dayton peace accord and of the agreements announced in Rome this weekend," the statement declared. Tolimir was to attend critical talks among the former warring parties in the Balkans and the highest NATO authori- ties, designed to end a two-week Bosnian Serb boycott ofsuch meetings. The talks took place aboard the USS George Washington in the Adriatic Sea, in part to dramatize that the accord was being respected anew. For that reason, it was particularly embarrassing th Tolimir stayed away. After not showingup forearliertrans- portation out to the aircraft carrier, Tolimir attempted late in the day to arrange a special NATO flight, but the talks had already concluded, NATO officials said. NATO later announced that Tolimir and the NATO ground troops com- mander, Lt. Gen. Michael Walker of Britain,have scheduled a meeting yes- terday morning in Pale, the See stronghold east of Sarajevo, to dis- cuss the Serbs' "willingness to re- sume full cooperation with" thepeace- keeping force. In a briefing aboard the carrier, NATO's top commander for Bosnia, U.S. Navy Adm. Leighton Smith Jr., called Tolimir's absence "unconscio- nable" and emphasized that he believes the "civilian and political leadersh wanted peace," NATO spokespeoW said. The return of the Bosnian Serb mil- tary leaders to dealings with NATO was seen as crucial to the emergency political talks held this weekend in Rome to shore up support for the Day- ton accord. The Serb military severed contact on orders from their commander, Gen. Ratko Mladic, after the arrest last month by the Bosnian government of two Serb officers on suspicion of volvement in war crimes. NATO officials, bound by the peace accord, have refused to acknowledge the continued strength in Bosnia of Mladic, who has been indicted on charges of genocide by the International War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague. Tolimir, second in command in the Bosnian Serb army, refused contact with NATO for a week but relented just before the talks in Italy, and met w Walker in Sarajevo. But Tolimir made it clear, NATO sources said then, that future talks remained uncertain. began last summer, with a short hike in Portsmouth. "l believe the choice on Tuesday will come down to my new ideas vs. Senator Dole'snegative campaigning," he said. As he had all weekend, Alexander I Just i dase you decide to the book 'mep ~ti e t0ern buy who has been on the defensive the past few days over charges that his campaign has at- tracted extremists, launched a new radio ad yesterday blaming Dole for allowing the campaign to end on a negative note. "His campaign is making telephone calls smearing me," Buchanan says in the ad. "His surrogates are openly attacking my character. Why is an old friend doing this?" Buchanan called Dole "a desperate man" whose aides said they were going to "win it ugly" in New H amp- shire. Appearing at a lumber mill in Cen- ter Barnstead, Buchanan stood - mobbed by camera crews - in front of a log pile and again denounced what he said are Washington insiders like Dole who are selling American workers out to international trade agreements. The conservative commentator said that while Dole keeps repeating his negative "mantra" about Buchanan - that he stands for trade protectionism and isolationism -it is Buchanan alone who stands for "good jobs" and the American worker. Alexander may have criticized Dole for avoiding the voters, but none of the leading candidates has carried out an energetic schedule, compared with past campaigns. In the last four days, the four leading candidates, including Steve Forbes, listed a total of only about 40 events on their schedules, with Forbes the most vigorous of the four. It is likely that Clinton, who visited here Saturday, saw as many voters that day as the four Republi- cans did all weekend. "4 ter, STUDY ABROAD Semester, Summer{ and Year Programs Ecuador * Spain ", England e"France Canada "Mexico * Chile o Italy You are welcome to Ash Wednesday Meditative worship for Campus and Community A service of Scripture, prayer, silence, meditative singing of music from the Taize Community, ". hVI1ere i II