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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1984)
Page 2 Daily Nebraskan Monday, April 23, 1934 r I vTWO DO-DIZc'M ,- ) COOKIES FOR ; li THE PRICE OF ONEft I LIMIT: 1 fKR PERSONVISIT V'- I I? V. ' EXWKES WEH. MAY 2, 1J84 '.: I ; WITH COUPON ' . ,C f 120 N. 14th Pizza by the piece or by the pie. 1S01P STREET 475-CCSO nn7 nrm P-- irTT-A cuv nnv Lnncn pizza 1 I EXPIRES MAY 13, 1984 J Cable TV discussed during RHA meeting Ey Jonathan Tcyler Installation of cable television In the UNL resi dence hall3 was discussed at Thursday nights. Residence Hall Association meeting. Deb Baker, cable TV committee- member, gave the council a report outlining considerations for a pay TV service. According to the RHA proposal, Cablevision of Lincoln would install $70,000 worth of cable free of charge in each dorm room, TV lounge, staff apart ment, fraternity and sorority house and Love Co-op. For $5.50 maximum per month per room, Cable vision would offer 12 channels, with the possibility of students buying Showtime, Cinamax, Home Box Office and The Movie Channel at an additional cost. With two people occupying a room, the average cost would be $22.50 per person a year. If installation begins this summer, Baker said, the service could operate by fall 1 984. Woody Getz, RHA advisor, presented a memo from Douglas Zatechka, UNL director of housing. Zatechka gave reasons why Cablevision should develop a contract with lower monthly rates than the normal commercial bulk rate of $5.50. In the memo, Zatechka said Cablevision should offer lower rates because it is virtually guaranteed a captive audience of about 4,000 people during the academic year. Cablevision also could save time and money by submitting one bill to UNL customers. In an unofficial show of hands, the council voted for cable television and also approved an option for a special hook-up that would give each room's TV better reception on existing channels. The special service would be available to students free of charge. The council appropriated $50 to the cable TV committee so it can print surveys and other publications. i 1 - Ji V V I f . I t ' I m ' U .... U i( O D A !( UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN TUESDAY APRIL 24, 1934 7 PM LOVE LIBRARY AUDITORIUM SPONSORED BY UPC. TALKS & TOPICS FREE ADMISSION Join en expert from ICoda!cfcrlhi3in:pirIngc::!oncn photography. o l 4 71 National and international news from the Rcutcr News Report Herman ctrzzz zn cl:::il::rltic3 HONOLULU, Hawaii President Reagan Sunday stressed opposition by CI. ma and the United States to "aggression" in Cambodia and Afghanistan as he began hb journey to Peking to confer with Chinese leader;;. Herman, in an Easter Sunday statement, aba r :!:cd for pray- crs for the success of his mission and for peace. Reagan has called for a constructive dialogue with the Soviet Union but has frequ ently accused the Kremlin of spreading subversion and revo lution throughout the world. The United States has denied it wants to take advantage of border and ideological disputes between China and the Soviet Union, the world's communist superpawers,.but Reagan Sunday linked Pek ing's concerns about Soviet behavior with those of the United States. British reaction curprlcca Libyans LONDON Libyan officials expressed 'sur prise and indignation" at Britain's decision to break off diplomatic relations over the shoot ing of a London policewoman but did not announce it was doing the same. A statement from the Libyan Foreign Liaison Bureau (Min istry) in Tripoli, carried by the Libyan news agency J AN A and telexed to Reuter in London, also said Libya would continue to provide security and protection for the estimated 8,000 British citizens in Libya. The lengthy statement repeated Libya's fre quently stated assertion that Britain was res ponsible for the death of the policewoman by providing protection for demonstrators in a march past the Libyan mission Tuesday. 33 dead in mine cxplccion BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - The death toll in a Yugoslav coal mine explosion southeast of Belgrade Saturday rose to 33 Sunday with the discovery of two more bodies, the Yugoslav news agency Tanjg said. Twelve other miners were injured when the explosion, blamed by authorities on igniting methane gas, occurred 800 feet underground at a pit at Resavica mine about 60 miles from the Yugoslav capital Authorities said the victims appeared to have died instantly in the blast. Four cf the injured were in a serious condition suffering from burns, doctors said. Fislitin in Dqimt continued . . . BEIRUT Shooting broke cut across the front lines in central Beirut Sunday after the four main fighting forces failed to resolve a dispute over the deployment of a buffer force in five frontline positions. Security sources said the shooting was concentrated at the Primo sector, where the force of 1,500 Leba nese gendarmes has not yet deployed to se parate the combatants. The dirpute over the five positions, three close to the Primo sector and two in the mountains southeast of Beirut, was the only remaining hitch Li a dieengage- ment which began Thursday and wa? almost complete by Saturday afternoon. Representa tives of the four parties Shi'ite and Druse Moslem militias from West Beirut, the Leba nese Army and the Christian "Lebanese For ces" militia from the east met at Beirut's disused horse race track in search of a solution. IRA man killed by crn LONDONDERRY, "Northern Ireland - Ait Irish guerrilla was killed Saturday nfeht by fly ing debris from a massive truck bomb he deto nated near a British patrol, police said Sunday, lne Irish Republican Army said that Robert Quigley, 20 and unemployed, was an IRA volunteer on active service. Police said Quigley 7ffr 5he truck bomb from a distance of about 70 feet in Londonderry's city center as a police army patrol drove past. Three soldiers were BdghUy injured. A police spokesman said the truck was packed with explocives, concrete blocks and a 35 gallon drum cf gellae. ,