The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 15, 1983, Page Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ' -Page' 2
Daily Nobraskan
u
eftS)
u
r
"An cufuft works to perfect tfie .
environment . Y . A chitd works to
perfect himsttf . . -
farta Montessori
Central 6704 Dodge 555-2X3
Lincoln 261 5 Austin Dr. 489-81 1 0
All-Day Class 9270 Ames 572-C020
Bellevue 2111 Kimberly 231-9355
fif!X7WTT0 ;SCKOOLS
o:
ASEt dv popular BSMATJ
y y y
Cm TJ. 1Ch Gfc
SIS EP PARKING LOT
0:30 pm -11:20 pm
Sunday Ghru Thursday
x it, ;; rrTt tt it ynTjnj.-g rr-n jt tt ix ts rt tt-
V . .7il V .
mm
)
M; to mm
-rJ
4
Vt ?. .V. V. .V, ,.V, 2...lJJ,Ukku .V V, ,m .w, .V.
4
Continued from Pee 1
The present US. posi
tion makes the possible
invasion of Nicaragua 8
possibility that might be
a worse situation that Viet
nam was.
Though President Rea
gan was not in Washing
ton during the protest,
Holder said he was sure
thedemonstatcrs? message
"to stop another Vietnam
war before it starts" would
still be conveyed.
Dawn Watson, a senior
majoring in journalism and
English, said the "whirl
wind trip" began with a
23-hour drive to the Ca
pitol, where the group
found lodging in a local
church. She said she began
marching from the State
Department, attaining lit
erature along the way from
the many different groups
she encountered.
"I went to show I was
not in favor of the VS.
wars we are fighting and
the wars we are planning,"
she said.
The Nebraska partici
pants departed on Nov.
10th and returned Sunday.
Shorts
A preretirement plan
ning workshop sponsor
ed jointly by the Teaching
and Learning Center and
the Department of Per
sonnel and Risk Man
agement will be in the
East Union today from 9
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. The
workshop deals with
lifestyle . changes in re-
tirement
T
Table for Six' an in
formal luncheon meeting
for faculty and profes
sional staff women will
be today at noon in the
Nebraska Union Pewter
Room.
Jean Vrbka of Woman
quest will lecture on "Wo
men and the Outdoors,"
today at 12:30 p.m. in
Nebraska Union 117.
47
(J77
V
i
4 f
H0IB XpJJ)
u
Oii The Wire
National and international news
from the Rcuter News Report
Castro: Invasion
a 'monstrous crime'
HAVANA President Fidel Castro said
Monday that the 24 Cubans killed during the
American-led invasion of Grenada had died in
a "Nazi-style" attack that could be repeated in
other parts of the world. Addressing an esti
mated 1 million people in Havana's Revolution
Square, Castro condemned the invasion as a
"monstrous crime." He told the sea of flag
waving Cubans that the invasion, launched
three weeks ago to topple an extreme leftist
government, should act as a warning for the
future.
The bells toll for Grenada today, but tomor
row they may toll for the entire world," he said
during a speech in tribute to the dead, who
were to be buried as national heroes later
Monday.
Chinese pilot defects
TAIPEI, Taiwan A Chinese air force pilot
who landed his MiG-1 7 fighter at Taipei airport
Monday said he had defected because he was
disillusioned with the communist system Wang
Shueh-Cheng, 28, said at a press conference he
had not known a huge reward was awaiting
him in Taiwan and emphasized that he flew
here to seek freedom. Wang said he had
planned the defection for several years, wait
ing for the right opportunity and weather con
ditions. The only problem during his flight was
that the plane nearly ran out of fuel
Wang, who will get a reward of about $2
million in gold, said he earned $42 a month in
the Chinese air force. He left his wife and par
ents in China. Both China and Taiwan offer
huge rewards to encourage each other's pilots
to defect.
New U.S. missile offer
WASHINGTON The United States Monday
proposed that the Soviet Union and the United
States each limit its medium-range nuclear
missiles worldwide to 420 warheads, the State
Department announced. Spokesman Alan
Romberg said the proposal elaborated on an
initiative announced by President Reagan in
September in which he called for parity in each
side's missiles in Europe.
Romberg said the new offer was presented
to Soviet negotiators in Geneva Monday. Other
officials said the proposal, marking the first
time Washington has attached firm numbers
to its barganing position, represented a final,
effort to reach an agreement limiting interme
diate nuclear force missiles before deployment
of 572 American missiles begins in Europe
next month.
Meanwhile in Britain, the first of the Ameri
can cruise missiles to be deployed in Western
Europe arrived Monday at Greenham Com
mon Air Base, which was besieged by women
protesters. Female protestors have camped
outside the base for more than two years and
have several times broken through its fences
and mounted mass sit-ins to blockad e its gates.
For love or basketball?
TEL AVIV Israel Is invest-
4
bhether
r3C;n-d their
two American basketball play;
Israeli wives fcr love or for fcl;L;-3.The
Interior Ministry suspects that-the flayers,
Pessah Daly end Mark Rankin, marrisU Israeli
women in civil ceremonies in Niecda last week
in order to get citizenship papers, which they
need in order to play for their Israeli team. The
two earlier trkd to convert to Judabm to ease
the process of become Israelb, the ministry
said. Their applications were rejected because
the . conversions had been . improperly con-
ducted. , ' ;
Flynt fined 010,000 a day
L03 ANGELES A UjS. jed-3 Monday
ordered sex magazine publisher Larry Flynt to
pay $10,000 a day until he cjrcc3 to reveal the
source of a tape recording an -rd to contain
threats gainst carmaker Jchn De Lcrean.
Inm iud-2 Rcbsrt Taipei r:o f-ti Flynt
25,003 for fai to eppcar in court Nov. 1 to
hand over the tr-3. ; .
, The tape tHr-:!y ccr.tair.3 a td:?!;cr.e con
versation made Li September 1CC2, the month
Before De Lcrc-n was arrested cn cocaine
charges. .