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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1977)
dally nebreskan Ly 11-3 Ass3datd Press Statement challenged n?n rait nf 10 wera for men. A oatrol spokesman said at Grand Island that the persons arrested ranged ' from 15 to 33 years of ise. He said there hid been no di . prtrli m with th uresis. Q3St Lt. Gary Hansel, head of the patrol's drug division at CSr North Platte, sdi 33 warrants had been issued in Adams rvuntu i mot imAfi Hmi tn 37 warrants had been issued in Grand Island. Law enforcement ofiiccrs said they seized what they called a "hashish making machine." The machine was said to be one of only two or three l the state. t Ssrita Cmz Da Tenerifa. Csnsrv Minds-Tha denutvi director of Santa Crai's airport said Tuesday the pilot of prq JfVf tha Dutch iumho iet thst enEfctal with a Pzn American P-yvu jumbo ca-ag 575 &ths "did not receive clearance from the centre! tower to. take off. A Dutch airline official challenged the .statement, Meanwhile,- a U.S. Air Force C-130 carrying 53 of the 71 rsrvivcrs of Sunday's disaster ' took off from tha airport over the wreckage of the two tembo fits. Most of the survivors were to be flown to the; VS. Army Burn Crater, ii Ssa Antonio,' Tex., U.S.' officials tid.-A-source close to Pen American had r.o comment on tha statement by the airport deputy director, Jusn Linares, but he indicated the last order to the Dutch pilot was "clear to hold, indicating that the pilot had no clearance when he begsa take of?, . : In Amsterdam, KOJ said it was "complstsly isnthM aMe" that' the pilot would haw sttempted a take off with out proper clearance.- Fraai ' .vtn Reysen, .chief of the accident investigation branch of the Dutch Civil Avktlon Authority, said clearance was given by the tower and confirmed by KLM. All 249 persons aboard the Dutch air craft, including the captain, Z.A.V. vsa Zantendied in the crash' - Sunday, aviation's.- worst disaster. -.Airline officials ssid 71 persons aboard the Pan American jet survived the collision. The survivors included 67 Amer icans. Of the 575 dead, 321 were Americans. Arms control Moscow-The Soviet Union failed to respond to American nuclear arms control proposals Tuesday as talks resumed between .Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. Vance went into the morning round prepared to discuss proposals he outlined Monday for a new Strategic Arms limitation Treaty (SALT). Soviet representatives asked to go over other matters instead, U.S, spokesman Hodding Carter said after the talks recessed at midday. Carter would cot say which subjects wen discusxd, but they were likely to have included arms sales and troop cuts in Central Europe, Carter described the talks only as "businesslike." Vance had indicated he expected a response to his SALT proposals, although Carter said there had been no set agenda for Tuesday's talks. The talks are scheduled to end this afternoon, and Vance , wants to leave Moscow Thursday morning with at least a framework for more detailed negotiations on limiting and reducing nuclear arms. Tfoa I-Hst'.ir Tuefav passed savtn bis. including ' those mandating metric measure bottling cf wine and spirits, extending the time limit for collection of county Wednesday, march 30, 1977 tax refunds and one restricting eligibility for welfare. Senators voted 40-7 lo pass Waverly Sen. Jerome Warner's LB362 requiring all wine sold in Nebraska after 1978 and all spirits sold after 1979 to be in metric measure bottles. Adams Sen. Bill Burrows' LB245 passed 48-0; it extends deadline for collection of county tax refunds from 30 days to two years. A bill forbidding welfare payments to those who move to Nebraska solely to live in rest homes failed to gain the 33 votes required to pass with the emergency clause. But LB480, a Public Health and Welfare Committee bill,' passed without it on a vote of 28-20. Sen, John DeCamp of Nelifjh had requested a Justice DT'rtnwnt opinion on that bill's constitutionality. Hie opinion ssid me depart ment "cant say with ccrtslaty that L64S0 is constitutional." Pay increases New York-In the midst of what researchers say is a growing concern about inflation, recent pay increases to 48 White House aides are being criticized as lacking the proper symbolism for the nation. At the same time, the increases, which exceeded 25 per cent in some instances, are defended by some economists and others questioned about the consequences if ordinary workers sought similar raises. v "Another one of these cases of wanting to look for a basis for grousing and griping," said Walter Heller, chief economic adviser under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. "In substance, I think it's defensible." Heller and others noted that White House aides had received no appreciable increases since 1969, and that a study committee representing a range of opinions had recommended that even larger increases be granted. But Jack Carlson, chief economist of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, commented that "to have such large increases across the board, irrespective cf ex perience, is bad symbolism." Drug arrests The State Patrol said between 35 and 40 persons had been arrested Tuesday in a 10-county drug sweep in central Nebraska. One official described it as "the largest and most successful undercover operation ever conducted in the State of Nebraska by the State Patrol." Cept. Lynn Parks, head of the patrol's drug and criminal division in Lincoln, said about 100 arrest warrants had been issued charging individuals with the sale and possession of controlled substances. Of the approximately 100 warrants daily nsbraskan EdiSsr -in-chief : Sndy t&hr. tsneglrsg EsJUdt: ftt t&sxm. -tism E-itsr: FUx s3n. Asciste Ram Son: lorry Liz rd Ft?ii Ftutfg&tt. Layout Editor: Liz fteard. Enfcstaiwmnt Editor: Crto Ewjsffom. Eporti E-iisr: Jim Hunt. Wigfst fmm Editor: -Cron Armstrong . ptms&wby C&fef : "Tsi Kirk. - C&py miUor'. ZM Eotkfcshn, Ann Gwrs. Cs3 S.t3 and f rcky WiHismt. tsm'mm Vtenegar: Jerri Huml. Ad uniting tr.r33r: Grscj Wimgmmn. &mmm Advertising t&&Kggw: Ckk tiorfck. Production ftnjar: 3ey fte&y. " . " . Tm Diy Uxtan is pi&shad fey tha IffJL FfeisteFsi &ww4ttet on tfessSsy, WadrwsJsy, fWsi.nr t Friday Sarfe?9 t t fi3 and tprfej smrnssm. exaept durk-j nessiiant. A5i-?Ks: TT- B2y tirmkm, U&rmsk Ifoion Si, titi H weti, Uneatn, e3. Tsfepfefena: P32J 473-23. . Gorlrht 1i77, Cm CaSy tlnrt&sn. tfeartal mry t r-T- :mJ panrjmkm I tcrSart ta tern Da3f t$zn&at. MEN'S TRADITIONAL SODIUM RING OMLY Regularly $ p qJ JJ o JJ 1 1 rffr "r - v I WW Wfj- 1 I ...; i,t l ' f j1 ' RING DAY That's when the ArtCarved representative will be here to help you select your custom-made college jewelry. It's also the day you can charge your ArtCarved college jewelry on Master Charge or Dan!cArrericard. mm A - p a urn time: 9 ca. - 0 ni, ft 4