The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 22, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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Daily Nebraskan
Thursday, March 22, 1G34
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The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-CS0) Is published by the
UNI Publications Board Monday through Friday in the (ail
and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the
summer sessions, except during vacations.
Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and com
ments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-2523 between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also
has access to the Publications Board. For lnformation, call
Carta Johnson, 477-5703.
Postmaster Send address changes to the Daily Nebras
kan. 34 Nebraska Union. 1400 R St.. Lincoln. Neb. CZLZ3
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UNVEILS ITS
1984 FASHION EDITION
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APRIL 5, 1984
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National and international news
from the Reuter News Report
-U.S. aircraft carrier
collides vitli Covict cub
SEOUL, South Korea Tlic EO.OOO-ton US.
aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk collided with a
Soviet submarine in the southern Sea of Japan
off South Korea Tuesday ni?,ht, a Seventh Fleet
spokesman said here Wednesday. The spo
kesman, Commander Steve Honda, said the
carrier was taking part in massive U.S.-South
Korean military exercises when the collision
cccured. U.S. defense officials in Washington
said there were no reports of injuries or major
damage to the Kitty Hawk. They said the Victor
class Soviet submarine had surfaced and had
not responded to offers of assistance from the
carrier and accompanying VS. Navy vessels.
Llinainddentminor, official cays
WASHINGTON A White House official said
Wednesday a mine explosion that damaged a
Soviet tanker off Nicaragua should not affect
relations between Moscow and Washington.
The Soviet Union lodged a formal protest with
Washington Wednesday and said it held the
United States responsible because the mine
was apparently laid by anti-Sandinist forces
that are receiving American military assist
ance. But White House spokesman Larry
Speakes responded that Moscow's support of
efforts by Nicaragua's Sandinist government to
destabilize other Central American govern
ments was a more imp rot ant source of tension
between the superpowers.
Kenyan drops arms sale plans
WASHINGTON President Reagan has with
drawn a heavily criticized plan to sell advanc
ed Stinger anti-aircraft missiles to Jordan and
Saudi Arabia, Speakes announced Wednesday.
The plan drew strong opposition in Congress
and from Israel and American Jewish groups.
Speakes refused to say why Reagan had aban
doned the plan to sell the shoulder-held Stin
gers to Jordan and Saudi Arabia, but other
officials said he acted because of strong con
gressional opposition. Reagan acted after con
sultations with the congressional leadership,
Speakes said.
Star Wars' plan dismissed
WASHINGTON A prominent scientific
group Wednesday dismissed President Rea
gan's "Star Wars" proposal for an anti-missile
space defense shield as an impossible and
dangerous dream. In a detailed 86-page study
of the multibillion-dollar proposal, the Union
of Concerned Scientists said the quest for a
perfect shield against nuclear weapons would
be endless and to embark on it would have
grave consequences "Such a system cannot be
built now or, in all likelihood, ever," the group
said. "A U.S. commitment to HMD (Ballistic
Missile Defense) would precipitate Soviet re
sponses and a chain of actions and reactions
that would radically change the strategic en
vironment to the detriment of both countries'
security," it said.
Acid rain pact signed
OTTAWA, Canada Canada and nine West
European countries Wednesday formally com
mitted themselves to a 30 percent reduction in
sulphur dioxide emissions by 1993 to combat
acid rain and urged other nations, notably Bri
tain and the United States, to join them. "We
have formed the 30 percent club," said Cana
dian Environment Minister Charles Caccia,
who invited his European counterparts to a
two-day conference here aimed at winning
international action to reduce acid rain.
'Strawberry Fields' dedicated
NEW YORK A part of New York's spra
wling Central Park Wednesday was formally
renamed Strawberry Fields and dedicated to
the memory of John Lennon, who was assassi
nated across the street from the site in 1930.
"This happens to be where John and I took our
last walk," Lennon's widow Yoko Ono told
more than 1 ,000 people. Ono donated $500,000
to the city to turn a 2.5-acre triangular piece of
the park near the Dakota apartment house,
where Lennon was killed by Mark Daivd Chap
man, into a memorial for her husband.