The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 05, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Pago 2
Daily Ncbraskan
Thursday, April 5, 1S34
I
The unique gift, card and candy shop
CANDY SPECIAL
Buy 12 lb of candy
and get
14 lb of candy free
(of comparable price)
poiicr's inn
1418 "0" St.
(across from the State Theatre)
il
Correction
The women's basketball team will play Tuesday
and Thursday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Bob
Devancy Sports Center for the remainder of the
school year.
The Daily Nebraskan incorrectly reported Tues
day that the open sessions would replace tryouts
next fall.
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National and international news
from the Renter News Report
Rearjan prop 0320 ban
on chemical weapons
WASHINGTON President Reagan said in a
Wednesday night press conference that the
United States would soon propose a compre
hensive ban on the production, possession and
use of chemical and toxic weapons.
He said the move reflected his administra
tion's strong commitment to arms control and
voiced once again his "deep personal regret"
that the Soviet Union had walked out of two
sets of nuclear arms talks in Geneva.
In other areas Reagan said Congress must
take some of the blame for stimulating terror
ism in Lebanon and that the current debate on
U.S. policy in Central America was not helpfuL
He reiterated his administration's criticism of
Congress' recent role in foreign policy-making,
saying these decisions could not be made by "a
committee of 535 members."
He also played down the importance of
Soviet naval maneuvers in the Atlantic Ocean.
Asked at his news conference what he thought
of the 40-ship Soviet fleet movement in the
North Atlantic, he replied: "I think it's spring."
House scuttles Reagan budget
WASHINGTON The House of Representa
tives Wednesday buried the budget for 1985
that President Reagan submitted only two
months ago.
The Democratic-controlled House voted 401-1
to scuttle the budget Reagan presented in Feb
ruary with a $180 billion deficit, two years after
his target date for balancing the U.S. budget for
the first time since 1969.
A Democrat offered the Reagan plan, which
has been re-estimated by the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office to show a $192
billion deficit in 1985.
Republican leader Bob Michel of Illinois
urged his party to vote against it as a "symbolic
vote against chicanery," asserting that Demo
crats wanted to "embarrass the president" by
raising it when Republicans had already con
ceded it was "obsolete" since Reagan has pro
posed additional deficit cuts since February.
Senate refuses troop ban
WASHINGTON - The Senate Wednesday
refused to ban the introduction of U.S. combat
forces in El Salvador without congressional
approval although Democrats charged that
the United States is "sliding" toward war there.
The Republican-controlled Senate agreed,
however, to withhold emergency military aid
for El Salvador if a new president elected there
next month is deposed by a military cpup.
Democrats tried to make an amendment to a
$61.7 million urging military aid bill for El Sal
vador a test of whether U.S. forces should fight
for the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government.
The lost 59-36.
Mental test ordered for Gaye
LOS ANGELES The 70-year-old father of
soul singer Marvin Gaye, charged with his son's
murder, was ordered Wednesday to undergo
mental tests.
Los Angeles Municipal Court Judge Michael
Tynan postponed an arraignment by the
father, also named Marvin Gaye, and remand
ed him in the custody of the county Depart
ment of Health for the tests.
Gaye, a former church minister, is accused
of shooting his 44-year-old son twice in the
chest on Sunday after an argument.
AIDS research success reported
u60?1 'Doctors reported Wednesday
that they may have discovered how Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome disrupts the
body's immune system, a finding that could
point the Way to a cure. The researchers said
at they have found that the white blood ceils
oi AID victims have lost the ability to make two
substances the body needs to fight the infect
ions Uiat eventually kill patients with the dis
ease. One of those substances is gamma inter
ieron, a once rare chemical that can now be
made m large quantities thanks to genetic
engineering techniques.
. wting in the New England Journal of Medi
cine, the scientists said their results are "encour
ang becase they offer evidence that ramma
interferon maybe a useful treatment for AIDS.