Friday, February 17, 1C34 i J . Daily Ncbrcckan V HQ Vvf np , - tl WuV a, ByBUlCsErji The Office of Campus Recreation cut its open recreation hours Monday by an average oflO per cent. However, some recreation facilities will be cut more than others, depending on how much they are used. Jerry Howell, coordinator of club sports and leis ure activity, said students use the weight room, for example, more than they use the pool at Mable Lee Acjvei iioing Woncger The Daily Nebraskan is accepting applications until 4 p.m. Feb. 21 for Advertising Manager. The position runs from May, 1984 through May, 1985. Applicants should have relevant sales experience and academic preparation in advertising, marketing cr management. The ad manager must be a student at UNL. Applicants should see Dan Shattil, No. 34 Nebraska Union. , ; lLlfc.-LIl;.' UNL does not discriminate in its academic, admissions or employment programs and abides by all federal regulat ions pertaining to same. Mickey Manila says . . . 1 v r-rrn rrr.-:y:r v ys . " -caulCES. INC..V "A VISA and MaiterCard Credit Cards Now Available to Students through TtfTE5RVBV'i lankActlon Programl No Minimum income or Job Requirements. Savings account and fees required. Mail this coupon tor complete information. Send to : Timesaver Headquarters Building Student Dept 12276 Wilkins Avenue Rockville , MD 20652 Nam Address CD Cltv Sol. Zip . School Attending Status- ft a SophD JrG Sr L) Grod U There's Never Been a Better Time to Get VISA end p MasterCard Credit Cardsl Apply Today! 1984 Timesaver, Inc. Now you too can brighten , your life the way even the simplest French peasant does. Direct from Holland The beauty of European flowers specially priced by the stem - Enchantment lillies " - White lilacs - Frefhia - Tulips - Daffodils - Alstromeria and more HOUSE OF FLOWERS 226 S. 1 1th 476-2775 UNIVERSITY FLORAL I ' 118 N. 14th - '.' 474-3792 H ' . - - . '0. Hall. Pool hours will be affected to a greater degree in this case, Howeil said. Howell said that few people use the pool from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. on weeknights, so the office cut one hour from the original 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. schedule. The pool will operate from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. on weekends instead of 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. as before. The department cut hours to stay within its 1033 84 budget, Howell said. Higher utility costs helped cause the office's tight money situation and the resulting cutbacks, he said. The budget includes wages for about 40 student supervisors, Howell said. About 1 5 supervisors work every day, distributing equipment and watching over their areas. . Howell said that other Big Eight schools have sim ilar facilities. However, he said, most also have a separate recreation building. If UNL had such a building, Howell said, the consolidation would make supervision easier and possibly less expensive. Because of the altered hours at Mable Lee pool, the office has received four phone calls. Mark Brackenbury, a junior art major, said the cuts are an inconvenience to him because of meal hours at his residence hall and because of his sche dule. Brackenbury said the cuts show "how much the university cares" about non-varsity athletes. Ellen Touchstone, a junior French-German-psychology-linguistics major, said that if only four or five people swim from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m., the cut makes sense. However, she said, in the future changes should be better publicized. Police Report ' The following incidents were reported to the UNL Police Department between 2 am. and 11 p.m. Wednesday: 1 2:57 a.m. Suspicious person reported near the University Health Center. Person gone before offic ers arrived. 8:06 a.m. Fire alarm reported sounding at Sel leck Quadrangle. It reportedly malfunctioned. 8:46 a m. Attempted theft reported at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. Nothing was reported sto len. 11:08 am. Fire alarm reported sounding at the College of Law on East Campus. It reportedly malfunctioned. , 11:44 a.m. Relief map reported stolen from Avery HalL Estimated loss is $25. 12:18 p.m. Stereo speakers reported stolen from car in Parking Area 1 at 17th and R streets. Estimated loss is $120. 1:40 p.m. Stereo speakers reported stolen from car in Parking Area 1 at 17th and R streets. Esti mated loss is $250. 2:10 p.m. Hit-and-run accident reported in parking Area 27 near the Dental College on East Campus. Estimated damage is $150. 5:40 p.m. Hit-and-run accident reported in the parking lot south of the Bob Devaney Sports Center. Estimate damage is $200. 1 1:25 p.m. Attempted car break-in reported in Parking Area 23 west of Harper-Schramm-Smith. Person fled before officers arrived. Sweep Left presents i TT ; Thurs., FrL, Sat. ?ofor? X DRINK rwrts.. SPECIALS x. - N Presents LADIES NIGHT X' Saturday Only Male Dancers from Kansas City Two Big Shows Call for reservations 474-9575 Sweep LeftPeter McCue's . .' : 7:815 'O' St. . " National and international news from the Reuters News Report Underground nuclear blast iiyurco nine teclmiciaiia LAS VEGAS Nine government technicians remained hospitalized Thursday after an under ground nuclear test explosion caused the desert floor to collapse beneath them, Energy Department officials said. In the first on-site casualties directly attrib utable to a nuclear test at the government's 33-year-old Nevada site, 12 people were in jured. Three were treated and released. Among the nine more seriously hurt, one was reported in critical condition and most of the others were suffering from multiple injuries and trauma, hospital officials said. No nuclear radiation escaped when the blast, 1,163 feet underground, caused an area of the desert floor about 1 50 feet long and 60 feet wide to fall about a dozen feet, Energy Department offi cials said. The technicians withdrew to safety before the explosion. The cave-in came after they had re-entered the area two hours later to begin checking recording instruments in sev eral trailers. "Some had the ground drop out from under them, some were shaken off ladders leading to the tops of trailers, and one man was appar ently inside a trailer when it toppled over," an Energy Department spokesman, James Boyer, said. Lebctnon-Icrael treaty abrogated WASHINGTON Lebanese President Amin Gemayel has signed a peace plan that would annul his country's troop withdrawal accord with Israel and install a United Nations force in Beirut, Reagan administration officials said Thursday. They said Gemayel had accepted the plan, worked out by Saudi Arabia, Wed nesday and it was now being presented for mally in Damascus, where Syrian approval was likely. The proposed U.N. contingent would replace the multinational peacekeeping force which includes some 1,500 Uf. Marines along French, British and Italian troops. : Washington played a key role in negotiating the May 17, 1983, agreement between Lebanon and Israel on withdrawal of Israeli forces. Although the administration has continued to call for implementation of the May 17 accord, President Reagan suggested Wednesday that he would not object strenuously to abrogation. Marines leaving Beirut coon WASHINGTON U.S. Marines in the peace keeping force in Lebanon will begin leaving Beirut airport in the next two or three days to go aboard Navy ships offshore, a senior White House official said Thursday. He added that up to 500 U.S. military personnel would stay ashore to guard the American Embassy and train the Lebanese army. The official, who briefed reporters on condition he not be named, said the withdrawal should be com pleted within 30 days. 10 liilled in El Salvador claslieo SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador At least 18 people were killed in fierce clashes between government troops and left-wing guerrillas in eastern Salvador Wednesday, sources from both sides said Thursday. In one incident, four soldiers and at least six guerrillas died after troops ousted rebels from the guerrilla-held -town of Dolores, a military spokesman said. The guerrillas retreated under heavy fire from an airborne battalion and strafing from air force planes and helicopters, he said. In separ ate fighting Wednesday, the insurgents' Radio Venceremos said five soldiers were killed in a clash with government forces in the southern province of Usulutan. - Nurse sentenced to 00 ycaro GEORGETOWN, Texas - A jury Thursday sentenced nurje Genene Jones to 09 years in prison for killing a 15-month-old girl by inject ing her with a lethal dose of a muscle-relaxing drug. The jury of seven women and five men deliberated for about an hour before handing down the severe sentence requested by the prosecution. The defense had asked for a min rnium penalty of five years' probation. Under lexas law Jones will become eligible for parole in about 12 years. The 33-year-old nurse was found guilty Wednesday of murdering Chelsea Ann McCIeiian m September of 1932 by inject-. mg her with s uccmylchoUne, a muscie-rekxLng arug at a pediatrics clinic in Kerrvilie, about to miles northwest of San Antordo' - -