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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1984)
Monday, January 10, 1C34 Ofir The Wire Whole-wheat lover's if s here! t:;w;rj fcr.-a o c!:c!c! We e!so offer natural, honcy-swect-ened who! wheat National and international news from the Renter News Report cri cc.iST eras nzr g i:sr.c::s Cc-!r.3 :sa... il3Ee-.!i:.!i Street J V V w G7D-C37Q 1 -rM Dj 1 (Qi (Qi OllvDilD) nil id (0 "1 N7 0 $1X3 . ttt tZ c:i en cry Lcrga Medium Mini Pizza Pizza Pizza CrJ-r v.::c!r.-.l ctl:1 en J rzt $1.E3 71 zzt c;j c:? c;j Larse Medium ' Mini Pizza - Pizza Pizza ONE COUPON PER PIZZA Expires Jan. 31, 1934 . 1 ! 1 M U.C. vcraliino bombard mouniKiiio near juoituc BEIRUT, Lebanon U.S. warships bom barded the mountains east of Beirut for the first time in a month Sunday in retaliation for an attack on UJS. Marines at Beirut Airport, a Marine spokesman said. The Marines fought back for three hours with automatic re3, heavy artillery and the five-inch guns of the battle ship New Jersey and dectrover TattnalL he said. A fuel depot at the Marine base was hit, but no Marines were reported hurt. In Wash ington, a Pentagon spokesman confirmed that the warships had fired their guns. The Marines' position came under fire at about 8:20 am. (CST)," he said. "They returned fire and were supported by two snips." Munif Hamad, of the Druze Progressive Social ist Party, whose gunners have shelled the Marines before, told Keuters the UJS. gunfire killed one person in Shweifat, a Druze town ship in the foothills east of the airport Hamad said several men, women and children were wounded. He said villages in the mountains 'behind Shweifat were heavily damaged, but knew nothing of casualties elsewhere. The bat tle closed the airport for three hours. Flights resumed in the evening. Reagan to urns arms tallio WASHINGTON President Reagan today will urge the Kremlin to return to arms control talks and join him in efforts to improve strained U.S.-Soviet relations, a senior administration official said Sunday. Reagan will also defend his efforts to strengthen U .S.strateglc forces as a guarantee for world peace and stability, the official said. The speech is to be delivered to an audience of congressmen and administration officials in the White House East Room (9 a.m. CST) less than two months after the Kremlin walked out of three separate arms control negotiations in Geneva and Vienna. The admini stration official said Reagan's main theme would be a willingness to pursue "a realistic and constructive dialogue with the Soviet Union . . . and a stable, beneficial, relationship" while strengthening the UJS. nuclear deterrent. Shultz to cccli relations tl:av , LONDON Secretary of State George Shultz may try to begin a new UJS.-Soviet thaw by encouraging Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to renew talks on reducing military forces in Europe, a US. official said Sunday. 1 The official, who spoke on condition that he not be named, also confirmed British prcs3 reports that Syrian President Hafez Al-Assad took a tough stance at a meeting with British Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe Thursday against making any concessions toward with drawal of Syrian forces from Lebanon. The official, briefing reporters on Shultz's meetings Sunday with British leaders, said Shultz wanted renewal of all U.5.-sovict arms talks but implied Western allies may be ready particularly to offer a new position on the military forces. . In Stockholm, anti-nuclear groups from Western Europe and the United States opened a meeting Sunday, next door to the site of a 35-nation conference on reducing the risk of war in Europe. The International Peace Coor dination and Communication Center, head quartered in the Netherlands, opened its ses sion with an appeal to Washington and Moscow to stop testing and stationing nuclear arms. Hundreds pay tribute to Haddad MARJAYOUN, Lebanon Maj. Saad Had dad, the southern Lebanese militia leader who died Saturday of cancer at 47, lay in state Sun day in his home town as hundreds of Lebanese and Israelis paid him tribute. Building3 in this predominantly Christian town five miles north of the Israeli border were festooned with the Lebanese flag and posters of Haddad, who broke off from the Lebanese army in 1976 and allied hh force of Christian and Shiite Moslem militiamen with Israel Haddad is unlikely to have much effect on the course of events there, Lebanese military sources said Sunday. They noted that Maj. Haddad's "Army of Free Le banon" has operated normally since 1 health forced him to hand over temporary command to a deputy, tr.arbcl Barakat, in Octc: DuU.