Thursday, December 6, 1934 Pago 2 Daily Nobraskan Police Report The following incidents were reported to UNL police between 1 2; 1 0 a. m. and 8:52 p.m. Tuesday. 12:10a.m. Suspicious person report ed trying to enter locked doors at Brace Physics Laboratory. Police were unable to locate anyone. 2:34 a. tn. Window reported broken at Sandoz Hall 7:43 .m. Mirrors reported broken off a vehicle in a parking lot near 1 7th and R streets. 9:01 a.m. Fire alarm reported sound ing at Love Library. 8;43 a.ra. Purse reported stolen from a vehicle near the Bob Devaney Sports Center, P:W a.iat. Items reported stolen from the weight room in the Coliseum. 9:52 a.ra. Door reported damaged at 716 N. 16th St. 12:22 p.ra. Items reported stolen from a vehicle in Parking Area 1 0 north of Mabel Lee Hall. 3 p. ci. Parking permit reported stolen from a vehicle. 4:07 p.m. Tools reported stolen from vehicles near the auto compound on East Campus. 4:08 p.m. Stereo and parking permit reported stolen from a veSiicle In Parking Area 2 near 17th and Vine street. 0:44 p.m. Vandalism reported to a vehicle in Parking Area 2 near 17th and Y streets. 7:23 p.m. Two windows reported broken at the Abel-Sandoz food service building. 8:52 p.m. Billfold reported stolen from a vehicle in Parking Area 35 east of C. Y. Thompson Library on East Campus. J a "" fi ifl 1"-'" E 1984 ANNUAL CHRISTMAS FT7T A. AND mill V n LJ J u ' ) m e TOTTTYa T II XL (CI A IT TT7' December 6th and 7th (Thursday and Friday ) 7:00 a.m. Sponsored by UPC Arts Committee tO 10:00 p.m. Main Lounge Nebraska Student Union r -mf .... "u.rf war vir MLina mVJt 1 k'MJSr- fi! I ..,.J J, flym.-ife .ar-RijiiA V41 E a E 9 7 I E fl f B HI St 4 fSS! 3 rf 0 ,;. L... - i I ""V T-n.-!j LrJ IMiHsj iP J y . 1. ' J X V I Some things just go hand in hand with good times. Pizza for one. And, when you've got the urge for pizza, Valentino's delivers the best deal in town. Order up one of our temptingly delicious legendary pizzas, and we'll throw in a liter of Coca Cola on the house. Delivered direct to your door. Fast and FREE! Get a FREE Utor cl Coke! So go ahead and be a part of it! lake us up on our mouth-watering good times special. Call us now, and then enjoy. Of er expires December 17, 1934 Campus Delivery Only 72. " 30thsHoldrcge 487-3811 o Tf AT National and international news from the Reuter News Report CIA admits its negligence in publishing rebel manual WASHINGTON CIA Director William Casey has admitted negligence in his agency's publication of a manual for Nicara cuan rebels that advocated assassination and kidnapping, Rep. Wyche Fowler (D.-Ga.), said Wednesday. Fowler also told reporters the House Intelligence Committee thought that by producing the primer, the CIA had violated a law prohibiting "advice or support to those who would seek to overthrow the government of Nicaragua" But, he said, neither he nor the panel believed the CIA inten tionally violated an executive order banning U.S.-sponsored assassinations. Fowler said that at a meeting with the House committee Wednesday, Casey promised to make specific changes In "the command and control structure of the agency, both in Washing ton and in the field, to try to prevent anything as embarrassing as this has been to the United States and to the agency from happening." Fowler said he did not believe Casey should resign. The agency's proper function is collection of intellignece and it should not conduct foreign policy, he said. Beag&n.to slow anno opentliiig WASHINGTON President Reagan told his cabinet Wed nesday that the rate of growth in Pentagon spending will have to be slowed as part of a broad-based effort to reduce massive budget deficits. Although arms spending will rise from the $266 billion planned for the current 1085 fiscal year, White House spoke man Larry Speakes told reporters Reagan has decided the rate of increase will be less than previously planned. Reagan is seeking to cut the deficit to about $100 billion by 1988. He told the cabinet the first step will be to hold spending on federal programs in 1986 to the same $830 billion level expected this year. Total spending, including interest payments, will reach about $980 billion in 1986 under Reagan's plan. Speakes said Social Security benefits would be exempt from the freeze and retired people would receive their normal increases to cover inflation. Reagan Wednesday gave his cabinet a list of $34 billion in domestic spending cuts designed to reduce massive budget deficits, Speakes said. 2,089 reported dead from gas leak BHOPAL, India The death toll was reported at 2,000 Wednesday in the poison gas leak from a pesticide factory here, and doctors said thousands more face possible blindness and crippling nerve damage. United News of India quoted unofficial reports for the death figure and gave no further details. The Press Trust of India put the toll at 1,600 and said there were fears that many of the 50,000 people given medical aid could go blind. The death toll could rise because of serious kidney and liver complications he expected to affect survivors. Poisonous fumes leaked from a Union Carbide underground storage tank Monday. Officials have begun to assess the possib lity of long-term damage to people, livestock and crops from the methyl isocyanate gas. Madhya Pradesh State Chief Minister Arjun Singh told PTI that hospitals in Bhopal had treated 50,000 of the city's 700,000 inhabitants. India's Petroleum and Chemicals Minis ter, Vasakt Sathe, said Union Carbide should pay compensa tion. Union Carbide Chairman Warren Anderson is traveling to India to head an investigation into the cause of the leak. U.S. probing death of hostage WASHINGTON The Reagan administration said Wednes day it is trying to determine if the hostage killed by hijackers of a Kuwaiti Airbus Tuesday was an American diplomat. State Department spokesman John Hughes said it was possible the man was one of three officials of the VS. Agency for Interna tional Development on the plane.' The hijackers holding the plane on a runway in the Iranian capital of Tehran said they sailed an American diplomat, according to the official Iranian news agency IRNA. Hughes said two American women were among passengers released by the hyackers. U.S. to send Africans more wheat WHINGTON - President Reagan Wednesday approved an additional $125 million worth of emergency food aid for drought-stneken countries in Africa He signed an order releasing 300,000 metric tons of wheat from government reserves and approving $50 million to buy and transport more grains and other food to Africa. Hffn McFherson' administrator of the Agency for Interna- J Development, said Ethiopia is receiving as much food as lf,X!nn V ,most of the new U.S. food wiH to to other . countnes. It should arrive in about two months.