Page 2 Daily NcorasKan r""l f-f r r - r I ""J -1 7 L3LaLl.N V V n 0 ' i ' - vy i couro;i- "A til Alf i i i mi U li orj;::: a dot niu- r."2 till notour Good ONLY Feb. 21, 1S34 bi u Lib y OHO 1st Ffccc 025 2nd Fbcc 7-10 pr.) Night i FE5IMY LHPDES FREE DRINKS FOR LADIES MONDAY 8 P.1L (BOYLESQUE HALE REVUE by Uagic Show for Ladies Only. Hen admitted after show. ONLY SI Danes to Stooga's New Video Music System STOOGES 9th&.PSt. WE ROCK LINCOLN Faculty offered help in stress workshop By M&ron Brouillctte. The traditional belief that teachers have less stress than other white-collar workers is no longer true, said a UNL associate professor. Wcs Sime, an associate professor of health, physi cal education and recreation, said today's economy puts new stress on teachers. Budget cutbacks, infla tion and low salaries help contribute to that stress, Sime said. To help teachers handle their stress correctly, Sime and two other UNL professors will conduct a faculty stress workshop Feb. 27 and 28. It is free and open to all UNL professors. Professor Robert Brown, with the education and psychology departments, will present a survey on occupational stress at UNL. The survey relates more directly to faculty than previous similar surveys, Wheeler said. This makes the workshop unique, he said, because the participants will be able to relate their levels of stress to definite information. The workshop's second phase will help faculty learn how to correctly reduce physical stress. Sime will show faculty members specific physical tech niques. Daniel Wheeler, a career consultant with the Teaching and Learning Center, will help teachers look at their life-work situations and pinpoint stress-causing factors. Wheeler said he hopes to help provide a reservoir of support systems from which they can draw. Sime said there will be a list of campus sources that can assess stress levels to help faculty members deal with their stress. For UNL students, Wheeler said the counseling center can help. Students also will benefit indirectly from the faculty workshop, if the faculty learns how to deal with stress, he said. Daily Nebraska! Urry,-srkt, 472-1753 Dinlsl ItzlYA K'Atf Pc"5cy Trxcy L Cixvtra EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER KtHy Grctsothm WHUULAI IUN MANAGER '.Vt tZtftt NEWS EDITOR ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITORS SPORTS EDITOR "ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR COPY DESK SUPERVISOR NIGHT NEWS EDITOR ASSISTANT NIGHT NEWS EDITOR WIRE EDITOR ART DIRECTOR PHOTO CHIEF v.'trd v. tr:-::t III UuH I!;;! KtFrcrt Pet Czt Ft.!- Fryor Jsff C3C-.v!n ChriiV.i'rcJi Lord l.zr.zzr The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-CSO) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story idsas and com ments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-25S3 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, call Carla Johrjson, 477-5703. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebra skan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 8583 0443. ALL L'ATIRIAL COPYRIGHT 1S24 DAILY KZCHASXAN a 1-XJ ,V w w-i V 0 , .-' 7 n V, rr-'rT-r-' v jotk-x fm t'sw yu ccn c"drd .- " .. oTho finest contact lenecs oTho (Inert continuing cere oFrco ln-c;C3 tricl o 45-C3 cfy hcrr,2 trbls Cp"Cll ccr.tcct . CzA tzdz j tor a hi ln-c...ca v 3200 "O3 "St. - 475-1030 -i- wlSh niintmum Sswn pcymnt ond qualified eiBd AAA mi m 1 - ft' mmM 'flM X !! I,.'. 1 ... .. A A i if O T1 National and international news from the Reuters News Report lora on eno caucus a; I.londale a flucliinn success DES MOINES, Iowa Iowans opened the presidential selection season Monday with precinct caucuses expected to boost Walter Mondale toward the Democratic nomination and provide the first clue to whether any rival can catch him. After a year of preliminary skirmishes, the former. vice president and seven rivals led by Sens. John Glenn, Alan Cranston and Gary Hart finally faced the judgment of the voters at a series of party meeting ballots all across this midwestern farm state Monday niht. The meetings started at 8 p.m., and firm vote results will be announced today. - In Emmetsburg, Iowa, the residents fore casted former Vice President Walter Mondale as the winner of Monday night's Iowa presi dential precinct caucuses in a poll conducted by the flushing of their toilets. Coming in last place in the surv ey with only a trickle of sup port was former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew. For several years the poll has been an election day event conducted by radio station KEMB FM. The radio station reads the names of the candidates and asks listeners to indicate their choice by flushing their toilets. In Monday's poll, which used up 19,000 gal lons of water, Mondale came out on top with 1 ,755 flushes. Ohio Sen. John Glenn was second with 945. Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado came in third with 540. Former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern and the Reverend Jesse Jackson were tied for fourth with 405. Sens. Alan Cranston of California and Ernest Rol lings of South Carolina, each had 270 flushes. "'t" tft'tvi T" """ ri WATERLOO, Iowa President Reagan was welcomed Monday by 7,000 chanting suppor ters calling for "four more years" as he deli vered jibes at Democrats who "promise the moon, but deliver green cheese." Reagan spoke at a concrete hockey rink. Reagan's fun was dampened a t it by a public opinion poll released Monday that showed a majority of Iowans think he has had four years too many. A poll by the Des Moines Register newspaper said Reagan now trails former vice president and Democratic frontrunner Walter Mondale by 14 percentage points in Iowa. Reagan's motorcade was jeered by several hundred sign-bearing protesters lamenting what they called the president's failed economic policies. "We call it Reaganomics and it doesn't work," one sign said. Italian troops leave Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon Italian troop3 Monday left Beirut as informed sources said that Syria, as one of its conditions for backing a settle ment in Lebanon, was refusing to link a with drawal of its forces to an Israeli pullout. About 1,000 Italians, part of a four-nation force deployed in late 1032, sailed from Beirut port in two car ferries, leaving 270 colleagues behind in a naval vessel offshore and 100 onshore to guard the Italian Embassy. Most of the 1,300 American Marines in the force are due to fol low the Italians and a small British unit has already gone. Only 1,250 French troops will remain. After the Italians left, key negotiator Rafiq Hariri, a Saudi-Lebanese businessman, arrived in Beirut to present to beleaguered President Amin Gemayel the latest Syrian proposals on ways of ending the fierce fac tional warring that forced the multinational contingents to pull out. Syria backs anti government Druze and Shi'ite Moslem militias which have seized control of West Beirut and larg3 areas of the country and are demanding Gemayel's resignation. Informed sources said one of three Syrian conditions was that a pro posed withdrawal of its 40,000 troops occupy ing much of east and north Lebanon should not be linked to a pullout of Israeli forces in the SOUth. : Transferred priect ctiro protest WARSAW, Poland Nine Polish pJrishion-' era are on a hunger strike inside their church to protest the decision of the Roman Catholic authorities to transfer their popular anti Communist priest. A spokesman for the five women and four men said they were accepting only water with a little salt and would continue their protest until the priest, the Rev. Miecsys law Nowak, was reinstated. The spokesman, .who declined to give hi3 name, was speaking to Reuters from a room at St. Joseph's Church in the Warsaw suburb of . Ursus.