Daily NcbrcGkcn Monday, March 5, 1E34 Police Report 1 V" AT Pago 2 The following incidents were reported to the UNL Police Department between 1 a.m. Thursday and 11 p.m. Friday. 1:13 a.m. Safe reportedly found open on East Campus. Nothing was reported missing. 2:27 am. Nuisance phone calls reported re ceived in Abel HalL 2:40 a.m. Prowler reported in bushes on west side of Nebraska Union. Person was gone when officer arrived. 12:55 p.m. Security alarm reportedly set off accidentally by employee on East Campus. 1:18 p.m. Two males reported fighting in Schramm HalL No arrests were made. Case was turned over to the county attorney. 2:10 p.m. Parking permit reported lost or stolen from an unknown location. 8.53 p.m. Officers assisted a western Nebraska police department by checking out the welfare of a female student in City Campus dormitory. 9:19 p.m. Person stopped for traffic violation at 33rd and Potter streets was arrested on an out standing warrant for failing to appear in court. 9:59 p.m. Maryuana reported being used in dormitory. Officers were unable to locate the' vio lator, 10:45 p.m. Safe reportedly found open on City Campus. Nothing was found missing. Friday 12:04 a.m. Officers attempted to locate student wanted by the Lincoln Police Department. Student could not be located. . . Ccr.tlr.ued cn Fcge 3 ill I ; : f i ij : li H H i k c i 0 if v X Hard lenses, soft lenses, extended wear new extended wear lenses, so they're prepared ...with all the choices to make Concerning to explain the differences to you. You'll feel contacts, you need the help of an expert. At even more comfortable with your contacts Pearle, our doctors keep up with : because you'll know they're the latest developments, like the ' nghtforyou. 7 OFT A DP v vision center Kc!hoiiy cares for eyas more than Pearly , , , ' : w GATEWAY MALL " 464-7416 Hours: Man. Fri. 1 0-9 Sat. 1 0-5:30 Dr. L. A. Benjamin, O.D. Day, Evening and Saturday Eye Examination Appointments Available. National and international news from the Reuters News Report As many co 1,009 deed in religious violence LAGOS, Nigeria As many as 1,000 people died in a week of religious violence in the northeast Nigerian city of Yola and frhtir.;: is still nz'u, the government-owned New Nigerian newspaper ssid Sunday. Hospital sources said the death toll was 250. A government of.leial said Wednesday that 137 people had died in the disturbances, which bet-pn Monday. 11. e newspaper said about 500 bodies had been removed from the Yola hocpital for mass burial. The News Agency of Nigeria said 100 bodies had been buried in a raac3 crave Tu: : dby. Troops moved in Friday to quell violence by Muslim, fundamentalists who had regrouped and were using "sophisticated weapons" to beat back police, a police spokesman said. The violence, the country's third outbreak in just over three years, was started by followers of Moslem fundamentalist leader I.luha adu Marwa Maitstsine, police said. Maitatsine was killed in rioting in the northern city of Kano three years ago. An official report said more than 4,000 people died in these riots, which were suppressed by the army. Without draft, forces need v,c:.:en WASHINGTON The armed forces will need to recruit more women in the next decade unless there is a return to the draft, the chairman of the House armed services subcom mittee on military personnel said Sunday. Rep. Les Aspin, a Wisconsin Democrat, said the reduction in the birth rate and the improved economy meant fewer men would be eligible for or choose to join the military. The military needs to recruit 37 percent of all eligible males to meet the administration's plan for an increase in armed forces enlisted personnel of 160,000 over five years, he said. He said the Air Force had the worst record on hiring womcn!aAbout 23 percent of the jobs open to women in the Navy are occupied by women. In the Army, it's 22 percent, and in the Air Force only 12 percent," Aspin said in a statement. Altogether there are more than 200,000 women in the armed forces about 10 percent of the active force up from 45,000 in 1972, he said. Congressmen: G end feed to Africa WASHINGTON A bipartisan group of 96 congressmen Thursday urged President Reagan to take emergency action to send food to 24 needy African countries. Rep. Byron Dorgan, who organized the group, said the United States must move quickly to prevent a repetition of the 1973 African famine. "We can't sit by and let millions of people die from hunger when our own food bins are overflowing many nations can send guns and other weapons to these poor countries, but few can match the surplus food aid of the United States " Dorgan, a North Dakota Demo crat, said. In a letter to Reagan, the youp urged the president to rush feed shipments already approved for distribution, use 300,000 tons of grain in the emergency vheat reserve, work with Congress to c;: prove additional food aid, and draw on the 50 million in borrowing authority for the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance. ' Chemenlio fceua of elections MOSCOW Soviet voters Thursday endorsed officially chosen candidates to the Supreme Soviet (parliament), in an election marked by an emerging campaign to project the personality of Communist Party Chief Konstantin Cher nenko. Nearly 100 percent of the country's 160 million-strong electorate were expected to cast their votes for 1,500 candidates to the two-chamber house, which meets for short sessions twice a year to approve laws. Although all power remains in the hands of the Communist Party leadership, the e lections are treated as a major national event, with thousands of party activists mobilized to ensure a big turnout. As voters trooped to red-draped polling stations scattered across the country : from the Pacific coast to the Baltic republics, the state media focused its coverage on one man ' the 72-year-old new party leader. Western diplomats have been struck by the scale of official praise devoted to Chernenko as well as by the uncertain style of his public performances.