Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1984)
Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan Monday, March 12, 1984 1 D Game Gal-ry presents the Buddy System Special n y a yum viuvuiuy u. ana cacn 01 you can nave two toitans nlLLJ't n " -ci U rj $2 worth of rj tokens FREE p when an equal 0 amount is S purchased D D D D D -. m . IBM i iii n Chuckwagon & r Med Drink $2.00 Pteent dut UNI ID. n between 8.00 am-10X) am Li and rrt a FREE cip of cofbi, f HOT DOGS 4-S1.00 Q ' HOURS: D 8a.rn.-ll p.m.M-Th H 8a.m.-l a.m. Fri. 10a.rn.-l a.m. Sat. 0 We have the Iciest in in games including Mach M, Pole Position, and Cloak 'n Darker. Expires 321 fS4 n n D naanad Professor to discuss China visits Dr. Peter A. Bleed will present a seminar entitled "Off the Beaten, Track in China" today at noon in 540 Nebraska Ha!!. Bleed, an associate pro fessor and chairman of the anthropology depart ment, accompanied a group of robotics engineers to China in October of 1 083. Bleed's seminar is based on the talks the profes sors gave and his own vis its to Chinese sites such as Choukoutein, the Pek ing Man site. li inn) aloft mmi fiifitf vilUIU ipjcnDuiiiihncnnr If fill .'kjji !vifi?v(nfl1. kwrr (Mi , Is iU, , 1 lit- At Pearle Vision Centers wc have Doctors of The doctor keeps your medical records up- Uptometry on staff whose sole purpose is to to-date to help make sure you get the glasses give you an expert eye exam, Pearle has or contacts that fit your special needs s yhsts and opticians to take care of your By knowing you better, we can take better lasses, so our doctors arc free to devote care of your eyes, their time to taking care of your eyes. ' vision center cares for eyes imore than. Fearf m imi T""nrtiii"'j;iiiM"int GATEWAY MALL 464-741 6 Hours: r.Ton. - Fri, 10-9 Sat. 10-5:C0 Dr. L.A. Ccnjamin, O.D. Day, Evening and Satyrday Cya Examination Appoir.ircshts Available. ' Off 1 Mh?e National and international news from the Renter News Report Kenyan vetoes combat patrols of El Salvador NEW YORK President Reagan vetoed a plan for the CIA to fly combat patrols over El Salvador in an attempt to break up rebel troop concentrations, Newsweek magazine reported Sunday. The plan, turned down by Reagan two weeks ago, called for the CIA to use unmarked AC-130 Spectre gunships armed with rapid firing cannon against the anti-government insurgents, according to Newsy, eek's latest issue. U.S. ambassador to the United Naitons Jeane Kirkpatrick led the attack on the prop osal by Gen. Paul Gorman, head of the U.S. Southern Command, and CIA officials in Cen tral America, the magazine said, quoting two senior administration officials. Kirkpatrick ar gued "that Americans should not pull tri-',;;crs in El Salvador," Newsweek reported; Reagan -himself vetoed the plan, according to sources. The Reagan administration also recently rejected a plan to arm the Salvadorans with Stinger . anti-aircraft missiles. A U.S. Army intelligence battalion is flying OV-1 Mohawk observation planes on "intelligence missions" over El Salva dor, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told the magazine. Fire partly controlled on ship PORT CANAVERAL. Fla. Fire aboard thp docked cruise ship Scandinavian Sea was con tained within two of its. eight decks Sunday after "a concerted fire-fishting effort." a rzt Guard spokesman said Three other decks, where the fire was out, were gutted through almost one-third of the shirfs 505-foot length Almost two days after the blaze began in a passenger cabin, curtailing a gambling cruise off Florida's Atlantic coast, the liner was listing about eight degrees at its moorincs because of the tons of water and foam pumped in to aouse names. v Sumvorc: 'Llircculoua escape' PARIS Survivors of a bomb attack on a French airliner in Chad spoke Sunday of a "miraculous escape" saying they would almost certainly have died if the device had exploded in flight. Airport officials said 23 ceonle who were injured when the bomb destroyed a DC 8 oi me rrencn carrier UTA on the ground at N'Djamena airport Saturday arrived in Paris Sunday. An anonymous caller claimed resnnn- sibility Sunday for the attack on behalf of a previously unKnown group named after Chad's former vice president and foreien minister Idriss Miskine, who died last January. Seal hunt protests take newtwist OTTAWA, Canada Protesters trying to halt Canada's seal hunt have daubed seal pups with dye, charged the fishing boats and con fronted club-wielding hunters on the ice. Now, in the 18th year of their campaign against the cull, the environmentalists are trying a new tack writing thousands of letters to British and American shoppers telling them to boy cott Canadian fish as a protest against the hunt. ( It worked in Britain when the big super market chain Tesco received 10,000 protest cards and then said it would no longer buy Canadian fish. - Pope pronounces new saint VATICAN CITY An Italian nun who founded the small Dorothean order was Sunday pro nounced a saint by Pope John Paul II, who cited her as an example of what he called the real values of women. The life of Paola Frans sinetti, who died aged 73 in 1882, spanned the difficult years of national unification when anti-clericism was rife in Italy. In the solemn ceremony of canonization in St. Peter's Basil ica, the pope said the new saint recalled "the true values of woman, the expression of the most delicate female gifts, the affirmation of the identity and dignity of woman." -Sandstorm uiico.vero temple CAIRO, Eqypt A sandstorm that hit Egypt Friday has uncovered a 2,000 year-old Greco Roman temple near the Siwa Oasis in the west- ern desert, the newspaper al- Ahrara reported Sunday. The temple has pharaonic uucrip tions and hieroglyphic writings on its walls it -reported. . ...