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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1984)
jy, x anuary 25, 1934 Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan Better dental health goal of class By Deb Pcdcrcca Although February is National Dental Health month, the UNL Dental College will introduce its New Parent classes in March. Robert Sullivan, professor of pedodentics, said the New Parent classes will be a follow-up to the Payroll Saving a Simply tell your employer to set aside a certain amount every payday toward the purchase of United States Savings Bonds. With the Payroll Savings Plan, you won't be tempted to spend it. Yet, you'll know it's there steadily growing at a guaranteed rate of interest giving you a nest egg for the future. It's that simple. So sign up for the Payroll Savings Plan where you work. It'll pay you and your country. r PERFORMING X ARTS MINI SERIES 8384 1 . Daniel Hsifctz, violin With the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Friday, February 10 Two Hit Crocd .vay Shows 2. "f.testsr Harold".. . . snd ths boys. Thursday, February 23 This emotionally charged drama follows a young white student's transformation from innocent childhood to poisonous bigotry in 1950 South Africa. 3. Agnes of God Saturday. February 25 A spellbinding drama about a young nun who gives birth in a convent and whose child is mysteriously murdered. Starring Peggy Cass and Susan Strasberg 4. Czzux Arb Trio, piano, violin & cello Jelinek Memorial Concert With the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Saturday, March 3 5. Alvin Alley American Danco Theatre A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, March 5. 6, 7 Jelinek Memorial Concerts are supported by a fund made available to the University of Nebraska Foundation by Viola Jelinek, as a memorial to her father Stephen Jelinek. Mid-America Arts Alliance Programs are made possible by support from the Nebraska Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts through their participation in Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization. All programs in this year's series are supported in part by a grant trom the National Endowment for the Arts. Only orders of 3 or more events available at this time. Individual tickets available approximately 2-3 weeks before performances. For information or to order tickets, contact the Kimball Box Office at (402)472-3375. 1 1 am-5pm, Monday through Friday. IndMdunl i ie!;cl Snlan Daniel Hctfclz, violin With the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Friday, February 1 3 t 8 p.m. Heifetz individual tickets on sale only to UNL Students January 23-27. On sale to others beginning January 30. .0 KIMBALL Cf1fyLVh Cox 0ffict (11-5, Uon-Frl) 113 Music BIda. 11th R 472-3375 University American Dental Association's month. Sullivan said the national event started as a pub lic health week for children many years ago and expanded into the current format in Canada and the United States. Programs snd services arc pro vided cn the national level through state and dis trict organkation, he said. "Sponsors such as Crest," Sullivan said, "provide dentists with dental care items like toothbrushes and toothpaste for public awareness of dental hygiene." To reinforce and expand public awareness, the Dental College is providing New Parent classes start ing in March, Sullivan said. The classes will provide information and community services. The classes are designed for parents and child ren," Sullivan said. "The goal is to improve dental health, expecially with the children." Sullivan said the" classes have been scheduled at a time when both parent and child can attend. The free classes will be once a month at 3 p.m. in room 1 1 of the Dental College starting March 20. College of Dentistry faculty, undergraduate and graduate students will teach the classes, Sullivan said. Topics covered in the classes include dental dis ease and prevention, normal patient procedures at the College of Dentistry, new products such as types of fillings and fluorides, where services are located and when they are available, Sullivan said. - - J R R M m Vffl V m ' IffifQ ? V0UT greeting a lire. Everybody sends cards. Put your greeting on a helium balloon from Paper Parade and really raise seme spirits. . . Ie have balloons that say everything from "Get 1 YfelT to "I Love You." In a rainbow of styles to add color to the occasion. And remember, Paper Parade has the ingredients to make your next party perfect. ( , Filled with things to make life fun 824 "P" Street in Haymarket Square 475-0216 Monday-Saturday 10-5, Thursday 'til 8 If nri it sii 'ink: iftM-:f:Vi,ir1: Of f The Wire National and international news from the Renter News Report Nev budget pronoaalo oliow no deficit decline WASHINGTON President Reagan's budget proposals for the 1 083 financial year will show almost no decline in federal budget deficits over the next three years, an administration source said Tuesday. Reagan's tax and spend ing blueprint, which will made public Feb.l, says the federal deficit will total about $184 billion in the 1894 financial year that began last Oct. 1 and will still be at the $180 billion level. in financial 1C37, the source said. Last summer, the administration released a set of figures showing a much more rapid decline in the deficit to about $118 billion in the 1087 financial year. The large budget deficits are a potential political. liability for Reagan, who won the election in 1SS0 on a platform that promised a balanced federal budget by 1034. During the campaign, Reagan blamed large budget deficits for record U.S. inflation rates. He succeeded in cutting inflation, but the deficit was soured from about $60 billion in 1980 to $105 billion last year. eay they invaded Russia MESHED, Iran Afghan guerrillas fighting a bitter "holy war" against Soviet and govern ment troops in Afghanistan's northwestern Herat province say they have struck inside the Soviet Union itself. Leaders of the fundamen talist Moslem rebels interviewed in this East ern Iranian city near the Afghan border, said they last raided inside Soviet territory about two weeks ago. In their attack on a Soviet cus toms post at Torghundi, on the Soviet-Afghan border, the guerrillas killed several guards and captured some arms and ammunition, the leaders said. The customs post was on the main road between Herat and the Soviet Cen tral Asian city of Merv. Sayed Mohammad Kheirhah, who said he wa3 a rebel political officer in the Herat area, painted a grim pic ture of the historically strategic area. Fighting there was incessant, he said, and Soviet bom bardments were killing many civilians. -Kohl: Nnzb X7ozo JERUSALEM West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl greeted by anti-German demon strators on his arrival in mankind and his country accepted full responsibility for the holocaust that killed six million Jews. "The face of man was disgraced in the name of Ger many," he said. "It i3 impossible for us today to imagine what happened then. But it did happen, and Germany bears responsibility for it in his tory," he said at a dinner given by Prime Minis ter Yitzhak Shamir at the start of Kohl's five day visit. Kohl, who was 15 when World War II ended, said he spoke for a new German nation, most of whose citizens were not yet born when the Nazis committed their crimes. He said he hoped his visit, only the second by a German chancellor, would help "bridge the terrible chasm of the past" and that the younger gen eration of Germans regarded the country's his tory not as a burden, but as a challenge. Blizzardo blast Great Britain LONDON Storms and blizzards lashed Britain Tuesday sinking a ship and drowning 13 merchant sailors and raising the death toll to 24 since the weekend. The blizzards, which have swept northern and central Britain since Saturday, have killed at least 1 1 other people, trapped thousands of travelers snd isolated dozens of villages. Police said ships and helicopters picked up 13 bodies and nine survivors off the Channel Island of Guernsey alter the 2.37-ton Radiant f.Ied, a Libcrian-rclstcred grain ship, sank in viohr.t seas. Three seamen were unaccounted for. The crew of the Radiant lied, carrying grain from Belgium to Africa, were Filipino and the officers Indian, police szid. Scottish rescue teams .scoured the Cairn the weekend.