The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 19, 1983, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Page 2
Daily Nebraskan
Wednesday, October 19, 1C33
n r-x
j Wleeiihe
2nd Level Centrum 1111 "O" St. j
.- ,- .. . - . . -. - ., .. r
Agriculture
panel on PIK
Thursday
Sixth Annual Nebras
ka Media News Dys, a
forum for sericulture,
begins Thursday at the
East Campus Union.
"PIK versus Exports
Is There a Conflict?", will
be the topic of a panel
discussion, which begins
at 1:39 p.m. in the Great
Plains Room. The panel
will focus on whether the
United States should switch
its farm policy from one
of controlling supply to
one of generating de
mand for farm products.
Leo Mayer, deputy ad
ministrator of the
USDA's Foreign Agricul
tural Service, and Hisao
Azuma, counsular, Em
bassy of Japan, are the
featured speakers.
A communications sem
inar titled "Challenges in
Disseminating Informa
tion to Agricultural
Audiences in the 1080s"
will begin at 7 p.m.
James Webster, presi
dent of Webster Com
munications Corpora
tion, a world-wide ag
ricultural information
service based in McLean,
Va., will conduct the
seminar.
These seminars are co
ordinated by the UNL de
partment of agricultural
communications are are
open to the public free of
charge.
u
presents
COLLEGE DAYS
$183
WITHOUT
TRANSPORTATION.
JANUARY 2 -8
$225
WITH
TRANSPORTATION
JANUARY I -9
Htf1 hm:
FOR TWO WEEKS IN JANUARY
STEAMBOAT FILLS UP WTTll STUDENTS
rrS A GREAT TIME YOU DON'T WANT TO MISS.
THE OFFICIAL "COLLEGE DAYS" PACKAGE
INCLUDES MOTOR COACH TRANSPORTATION,
SIX NIGHTS AT LUXURY CONDOMINIUMS RIGHT
IN STEAMBOAT VILLAGE, FOUR DAYS LIFTS,
HOT TUB HAPPY HOURS, GIANT PARTIES, AND
A GUARANTEED GREAT TIME
SIGN UP IN
2CD NEBRASKA UNION
on FOH MOHE
INFORMATION CALL
472-2454
Want a head of hair that
really dazzles the crowd?
A cut or style from the
step! All cuts are $5.50
styles are $1 1 .50. And,
we offer perms for both
men and women.
Come out or call 489-8352
for an appointment. See
ya soon.
Clocktower Plaza
70th & A
439-0352
J L
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. " ' 5-' . --"'
: 1 .-. A
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- - fx S ' -hri'
2M . sm
Off The Wire
National and international news
from the Rcutcr News Report
U.S. files protest
in black box search
WASHINGTON The United States has
charged the Soviet Union with harassing ships
searching for the flight and cockpit recorders
of the Korean plane shot down by Soviet mis
siles, a senior defense official said Tuesday. The
official who asked not to be identified, said the
State Department filed a protest Friday with
the Soviet Union and another on Tuesday. The
State Department refused to comment on the
reported protests. The official said Soviet
trawlers sailed dangerously close to Japanese
l mooring ships, causing one of them to break
anchor. The ships, under contract to the U.S.
Navy, mark positions giving Navy salvage ships
the precise navigation needed to search for the
"black boxes" in the northern Sea of Japan. US.
officials hope the tapes will yield information
on how and why the plane strayed into Soviet
territory and whether Soviet authorities
warned the pilot before the plane was shot
down. , .. . -' - - '. j - -
Phone charges delayed
WASHINGTON The Federal Communica
tions Commission said Tuesday it will delay for
three months new charges on telephone bills
set to go into effect Jan. 1. The FCC also post
poned new rates to be paid by long-distance
phone companies to local phone companies
for access to their facilities.
The delay was needed to permit more time
for the commission and long-distance phone
companies to review the lengthy rate changes
filed last month, Warren Lavey, an FCC official,
said. The FCC action means that lower long
distance rates proposed by American Tele
phone and Telegraph Co. also will be post
poned, Lavey said.
Gold in ancient mining area
PARIS Gold, copper, lead, zinc and silver
deposits have been found in the hills of Sudan's
Red Sea coast, about 2,000 years after the
- ancient Egyptians stopped mining there. The
French Bureau for Geological and Mineral
Research said Tuesday a joint Franco-Sudanese-Saudi
exploration project found mas
sive sulphide deposits rich in these metals. The
bureau said it is too early to estimate the size
or quality of the deposits. Gold nuning may
begin in about two years, followed by zinc min
ing, a bureau spokesman said. The exploration
team has found traces of the ancient
Egyptians mines but no archaeologists have
joined the search, he said.
Fossilized skull found
NAIROBI, Kenya Kenyan anthropologist
Richard Leakey announced Tuesday the dis
covery of a nearly complete fossilized skull that
he hopes will answer questions about man's
evolution. Leakey, director of Kenya's national
museums, said at a press conference that the
skull was that of someone who had lived
between 150,000 and 300,000 years ago and
. who had language and culture. Leakey said the
importance of the fossil was not its age but its
fine state of preservation.
Cheeseburger investigation
PEORIA, III Twenty-four people re
mained hospitalized Tuesday for treatment of
apparent food poisoning while health investi
gators tried to determine whether botulism
was to blame. Federal and state health investi
gators said the patients appeared to have
dined at the same restaurant in a shopping
center during the weekend. All apparently had
the same meal a cheeseburger. The Food
and Drug Administration and the Centers for
Disease Control have been investigating the
food sold at the restaurant, including pickles
served on the sandwiches.
Soviets bombard village
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan Soviet air and
ground troops flattened almost half a village in
Afghanistan in a five-day bombardment ap
parently aimed at flushing out Moslem guerril
las, Western diplomats said Tuesday. The hO
side village of Istalef; SO miles northof Kabul,
took the worst beating from Sovkt MiGs and
helicopters as well as from ground artery
and tank cannon, they said :