Thursday, October 20, 1D33 Pago 2 Daily Ncbraskan Off The Wire Police Report , The following incidents were reported to the UNL police between midnight Monday and 10 p.m. Tues day. 12:49 a.m. Windows reported broken by rocks at Whittier Junior High. Estimated damage is $228. 8:47. a.m. Medical emergency reported at the Nebraska Historical Society, 14th and R streets. 11:18 a.m. ' Hit-and-run accident reported at the College of Dentistry on East Campus. No injuries were reported. 11:44 a.m. Woman reported screaming in the area of Cather-Pound-Neihardt residence halls. Officers were unable to locate the source. 12:28 p.m. Bicycle found in Broyhill Fountain. 1:10 p.m. Hold-up alarm reported sounding at the credit union in the 501 Building, 501 N. 10th St. apparently because of a malfunction. 1:42 p.m. Two-car accident reported in Parking Area 109 near 17th and R streets. A parked vehicle was struck by another vehicle, causing approxi mately $100 in damage. . 4:25 p.m. Trespasser was reported wandering through classrooms at Hamilton Hall. Police failed to locate the person. 4:59 p.m. Wallet reported stolen from the first floor men's restroom of Love Library. Owner report edly left the wallet in the restroom and found it missing upon return. 8 p.m. Loud stereo disturbance reported at 519 N. 1 6th St. Residents were contacted by the officers. 9:47 p.m. Wallet and watch reported stolen from a coat in the Coliseum. Estimated loss is $70. Owner reported that the coat was on the floor at the edge of a basketball court while the owner was play ing a game. f ff Thursday Uirjlit, Oct. 20. G pm-12 pm, OOO C, o And playing Thurcday nirjht, jaci: conrjo. IJ 75 o chot on BISKGLG KENTUCKY coon magii. 3? 9th Street H 9ISttCMliBar C5h CJBl CS. Q7G- Beer,. Wine, Cocktails and Offsale available. WM LZ3 Largest Selection of . CHILLED in Lincoln v Super Selection of f "-" t ' " I III MM I irfM -Absolutely "Ji35? GSLS2Q7' C223-. in Town Gsc Plus 0 1AII Warm ""T?--:! jqo ,5 or more rCeso beer - "l ' Mixed Cases; f r: J j"J beats our keg prices. - . :r;Ir 13 Gsl. -. TV. ' ' , 13 Gal. r,v,:u -j.. ..iwJiwJ..::;;.-..:-v;'. . L.4l..r .... ... 'UJbL J ' " k... .- - . . " i ?r:..fif.--.i.V Plus Many Others At The Same. Discount Price. :P.RiCES GOODINDERNITELY 1 Please reserve 24 hours in advance National and international news from the Reuter News Report Congress approves bill honoring King WASHINGTON Congress Wednesday ap proved a bill creating a national holiday honor ing Martin Luther King for his leadership of the civil rights movement. The Senate voted 78 to 22 for passage, as Loretta Scott King, widow of the slain civil rights leader, watched from a gallery. The bill, which President Reagan has said he will sign, would establish the 10th official national holiday and the first in memory of a black. Lebanese talks postponed BEIRUT The Lebanese government Wed nesday postponed the start of a national reconciliation conference, scheduled for today after four of nine politicians invited refused to meet at Beirut Airport. State-run Beirut Radio quoted an official government announcement as saying the conference Would begin at an unspecified later date. It has been delayed for more than three weeks because of a dispute over the site. The talks, envisioned in a Sept. 26 cease-fire agreement between the Lebanese army and the country's three main militias, are designed to end almost nine years of civil war by finding a new power-sharing formula for government. Retaliation for vodka ban WASHINGTON - The Soviet Union has told American grain exporters it will not import grain originating in a state that has banned sales of Russian vodka, U.S. grain trade sources said Wednesday, i "Z y. , About 20 states, including Iowa, have prohi bited sales of Russian vodka in retaliation for the Soviet downing of a commercial South Korean airliner with 269 passengers and crew Sept. 1, the sources said. U.S. Agriculture Department officials said they have received no official word from Moscow. They said such a demand would have litle effect on U.S. grain shipments to the Soviet Union. Grain trade sources said they questioned the practicality of the move since sales are made from large port storage facilities that hold grain from many states. De Lorean fails FBI lie test LOS ANGELES A lie detector test has shown that carmaker John De Lorean was a knowing and willing participant in an alleged drug deal, a U.S. government prosecutor said Wednesday. De Lorean, 58, Tuesday under went a two-and-a-half hour lie detector test conducted by an FBI examiner. He previously had taken a lie detector test arranged by his lawyers and conducted by David Raskin of the University of Utah, Defense lawyers said this .test had cleared De Lorean of drug charges and had shown his arrest was "set up." i Da Lorean, arrested in L03 Angeles a year ago, has pleaded not guilty to the drug charges, including one of distributing about GO pounds . of cocaine. Federal Jude Robert Takasui sche duied a court hearing for Friday to decide whether the lie detector tests should be admit ted as evidence at the trial, scheduled to begin "Nov.' Ivv'-'Jt:-;; Nobel prizes to Americans -STOCialOLM, Sweden Americans Wed nesday completed a clean sweep of the 133 Nobel science prizes when the physics award : went jointly to astrophysicists Eutrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and William Fowler, and the chemistry prise went to Henry Taubs. The Royal Swedish Academy cf Sciences awarded the physics prize to Indian-bcrn Chandraesk ; har, 73, of the University of ChicrD and to - Fowler, 72, of the California Institute cf Tech nology for their separate work on the evolution of stars. Canadian-born Taube, G7, cfCtanfsrd University, was honored for hb work on the mechanisms of electron transfer reactions, especially in metal complexes. Last week American geneticist Barbara Mc- . - Clintock received the medicine prize for her . discovery of mobile genetic elements.