Daily Ncbraskcn Tuesday, March 13, 1S34 SPRING BREAK! 1) O - " ! 2 days 450 miles mnrrormrinnro o , . . -4 I ..v - V, ti i. iR c, ,fe r . i rent a car or van for . j ) y Kansas City Swim Florida gas St tax 7 days mi : I I f gas & tax ESE5FI MOETEJC-aSAE) MEMBER CHRYSLER LEASING Lincoln 1646 "N" 477-7253 Omaha toll free 800 642-1 133 Beatrice 223-5252 mJ raTarmTmTrsTmxa-aTnra'a a raraTanrrraTTaTaTm'g a a 5 arsTnTSTR; TALKS AND TOPICS presents 4i Saxually Spsaking" with Dr. Ruth Westhsimsr . A popular guest on Johnny Carson and David Lettciman. TUESDAY, MARCH 13 at 7:30 pm Nebraska Union-Centennial Room FREE ADMISSION! ,2 H E 93 1.U 9.9 933 3333333333XS3JL9X9JLSLSJ3J3333.9333J3 8 Mips mm 11 ll j 1 1 til ...;-. National and international news from the Rcuter News Report EI Gnlvaclor aid rcnueot postponed by committe WASHINGTON The Senate Appropria tions Committee postponed action Monday for the second time on President Regan's emer gency request for $93 million in military aid for EI Salvador. The Republican-controlled panel last week defeated one urgent Reagan appeal, for $21 million in covert aid to Nicaraguan rebels, and delayed until today a vote on the Salvadoran assistance. But late Monday the committee decided to postpone today's meeting at least until Wed nesday. Reagan angered several key senators last week when he tried to bypass normal con gressional procedures and asked that the new aid be included in two popular emergency measures one for fuel aid to poor people, the other for food aid to Africa. U.S. military policy protected SAN FRANCISCO Twenty-seven people demonstrating against increased U.S. military activity in Central America occupied the local office of Sen. Pete Wilson for about two hours Monday before being arrested, police said. They demanded that the California Republi can, who was in Washington, D.C., sign a "peace pledge of non-intervention" in the volatile region. A further 300 demonstrators, chanting slogans and banging on tin pans, staged a rally outside the building close to San Francisco's CityHalL The rally was called in response to last week's announcement of U.S. maneuvers in Honduras and other military steps in the region in advance of presidential elections in El Salvador March 25. Ceasefire near, var continues BEIRUT Artillery exchanges shook Beirut Monday and rival radio stations reported nearby 50 people injured in residential areas on both sides of the "Green Line" dividing Beirut into Moslem- and Christian-controlled sectors. In the Swiss city of Lausanne, the nine leaders of Lebanon's warring factions were reported by official sources to have agreed Monday that cease-fire committees should meet in Beirut and Lausanne to discuss a disengagement of forces. But the sources said the leaders were reluctant to announce a cease-fire deadline before their military commanders had met in Beirut for fear it would be sabotaged yet again. The state radio's correspondent in Lausanne said the nine had started to contact their sup porters in Beirut and tell them the cease-fire should take effect immediately. The reporter on national television, however, said the timing of the cease-fire had not yet been announced. Lennon FBI files in question LOS ANGELES A federal judge Monday ordered the U.S. government to give specific reasons why FBI files kept on the late Beatle John Lennon might endanger national secure ity. District Court Judge Robert Takusugi gave government attorneys until May 20 to explain to him its refusal to turn over about 200 docu ments to a University of California history pro fessor who is seeking them for a book he is writing on Lennon. The lawsuit, filed last year, came after Pro fessor Jonathan Weiner received only a third of the Lennon documents he had requested under the Freedom of Information Act. In documents the government did release, it was shown that Lennon was under government surveillance before the 1972 Republican con vention because of fears by the Nixon adminis tration that he might help lead demonstra tions at the event. Glcmp returns to Poland, disputes WARSAW, Poland Cardinal Jozef Glemp, Poland's Roman Catholic primate, returned from abroad Monday to deal with a hunger strike in a church and a dispute with the Com munist authorities over the removal of cruci fixes from public buildings. The hunger strike by four men and three women started Sunday at St Joseph's Church in the Warsaw suburb of Ursus where parishioners have been angered by the cardinal's transfer of their radical acti vist priest to a new country post. A spokesman for the group said they had sent a letter to the cardinal seeking the reinstatement of Father Mieczyslaw Nowak and that supporters at 20 other Polish churches were ready to join the . fast if he refused. ,- - -!