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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1984)
.y'lm.,. mi jnp.ipiiunu ii.-inuTi fttlP- " 1 OOGES O&1.C0 Oi ' ii ii foe vvize 1 I! nnn - TONIGHT s-12 pan. 0"10 pin PROMOTION 50 DRINKS 01 SO PITCHERS Conic Hodc To The Hits Of The SQ's, 60 & 70's! THURSDAY Unisex Swim-Suit Contest $200 1st Prize 3-Fers 8-10 PM M FRIDAY 'LAD1(S lv FREE Dfeb 8-9 ki airfti&jl Monday 8 p.m. BOYLESQUE MALE REVUEl Show For Ladies Only Men Admitted After Shew- DANCE TO STOOGES' NEW VIDEO SYSTEM O Ji U 9th&PST. WE ROCK LINCOLN The following incidents were reported to the UNL police department between midnight Monday, June 18, and 6 p.m. Sunday, June 24. Monday 12:02 a.m. Trespasser reported at -464 N. 16th Street. 12:25 a.m. Attempted burglary reported at 1510 Vine St. Tuesday police arrested person for both the attempted burglary and earlier trespassing incidents. 1 2:40 a.m. Person reported tampering with the emergency phone at 14th and W streets. Minor damage reported. 7:19 a.m. Security alarm reported sounding at Love Library. Malfunction tripped the alarm. 7:44 a.m. Car accident reported at 13th and R streets. Case turned over to Lincoln police. 11:49 a.m. Fire alarm reported sounding at Stewart Seed Complex. Employee accidentally trip ped alarm. 4:37 p.m. Burglary reported at 1510 Vine St. 11:03 p.m. Disturbance reported near Burr Fedde residence halls. Tuesday 12:26 a.m. Theft reported at Smith Hall "type- writer reported missing. 1 2:46 a.m. Security alarm reported sounding at the Nebraska State Historical Society. Cause un known. 10:25 a.m. Bike reported stolen from an apart ment on Starr Street. Wednesday 12:12 a.m. Disturbance reported at Burr Hall. Case turned over to program counselors. ' " 7:05 a.m. Security alarm reported sounding at Love Library. Malfunction tripped the alarm. . 8:10 a,m. Fire alarm reported sounding at East Union. No fire was found. 10:46 a.m. Burglary reported at 715 N. 16th St. Camera equipment reported missing. 5:59 p.m. Disturbance reported at Avery HalL Officers cointacted juveniles. 9:40 p.m. Prowler reported near Westbrook Music Building and Architecture HalL 12:42 a.m. Accident reported at 16th and Hol drege streets. Minor injuries reported. 7:36 a.m. Bicycle reported stolen at Harper HalL 10:45 a.m. Bicycle reported stolen at Harper Hall. 1:40 p.m. Bicycle accessories reported stolen from a bicycle at Schramm HalL 3:37 p.m. Person reported panhandling at Nebraska Union. 9:48 p.m. Noise disturbance reported at Harper-Schramm-Smith courtyard. 11:31 p.m. Person reported tampering with emergency phone at 14th and R streets. Person gone when police arrived. 1 1:33 p.m. Noise disturbance reported north of Nebraska Center for Continuing Education, 33rd and Holdrege streets. Friday 7:32 a.m. Car accident reported at 17th and Holdrege streets. No injuries reported. 8:47 a.m. Bicycle reported stolen at 1235 N 16th St. 9:05 a.m. Attempted theft reported at Love Library. Person attempted to take book. Person gone when police arrived. 10 a.m. Bicycle reported stolen at Nebraska Union. 10:46 a.m. Bicycle reported stolen at 1235 N. 16th St. 12:1 1 p.m. Person reported tampering with emer gency phone at 14th and W streets. Person gone when police arrived, 12:16 p.m. Bicycle reported stolen at 1235 N. 16th St. 3:05 p.m. Wallet reported stolen from a car parked near Schramm Hall. 3:58 p.m. Three juveniles reported in Salt Creek. Police located juveniles. 4:52 p.m. Car accident reported at 16th and Holdrege streets. UNL police assisted Lincoln police on calL 9 p.m. Fire alarm reported sounding at Smith HalL Person reported to have pulled alarm box. 9:40 p.m. Bicycle reported stolen at Harper-Schramm-Smith courtyard. Saturday 10:40 p.m. Person reported tampering with emergency phone near Avery HalL Person gone when police arrived. 10:58 p.m. Intoxicated person reported at 12th and P streets. Sunday 2:25 am. Noise disturbance reported at Selleck HalL 12:20 p.m. Bicycle reported stolen at Love Memorial Cooperative for Women on East Campus. 1:22 p.m. Security alarm reported sounding. Location withheld. Malfunction tripped alarm. 2:02 p.m. Medical emergency reported at Neb raska Center for Continuing Education, 33rd and Holdrege streets. Person not hospitalized. 5:45 p.m. Burglary reported at Smith HalL Purse reported missing. Dally Nebraskan National and international news from the Rcutcr News Report U.S. and Sondiniot iplOEElQ&S COIUl MEXICO CITY Against a background of skepticism and mutual mistrust, Nicaragua and the United States began talks Monday on policy differences that lie at the root of an insurgent campaign to overthrow Nicaragua's government. Tight security was in force and the press was kept at bay a3 Nicaraguan Dep uty Foreign Minister Victor Hugo Tinoco and Washington's special ambassador to Central America, Harry Shlaudeman, met in the Pacific resort town of Manzanillo, 518 miles west of Mexico City. The talks followed a surprise visit to Nicara gua on June 1 by Secretary of State George Shultz. The U.S. government kept silent on the meeting. Mexico, which hosted the meeting, has been active in diplomatic efforts to defuse Central America's crises. Mexican Foreign Minister Bernardo Sepulveda greeted the participants but did not sit in on their talks. The talks in Manzanillo coincided with re ports of fresh fighting between Sandinist troop3 and rebels of the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN), the biggest of the U.S.-backed rebel groups. An FDN communique issued in Hon duras, the operational base of most of the insurgents; said the rebels had killed 65 Nica raguan troops in an ambush 75 miles south of the Honduran border. Meanwhile, in Washington Monday night, the Senate bowed to the House of Representa tives and stripped $21 million in extra 1834 aid for anti-Sandinist guerrillas in Nicaragua from a $1.1 billion supplemental spending hill The 88-1 vote was a defeat for President Reagan, who had indicated he would veto the measure if funds for rebels seeking to overthrow the leftist Managua government were deleted. MIondale makes amends NORTH OAKS, Minn. Leading Democratic presidential contender Walter Mondale will hold a breakfast meeting Tuesday in New York City with his top rival, Colorado Sen. Gary Hart, Mori dale aides said Monday. The meeting comes after weeks of speculation about a reconciliation between Mondale and Hart, who Friday said he would continue working for the nomination. During a week-long stay at his home here, the former vice president has indi cated a general willingness to meet with Hart if it could produce concrete results toward re conciliation. The site and time of tomorrow's meeting was unknown. French philosopher dies PARIS French philosopher Michel Fou cault, a leading intellectual wliose works ex plored Western culture's approach to social deviance over the centuries, died Monday at the age of 57, hospital sources said. His pub lisher, Editions Gallimard, said the cause of death was not immediately known. He had been admitted to a Paris hospital 10 days ago for treatment of a neurological disorder. Foucault was best known abroad for his first major work, "Madness and Civilization," which examined society's need to define its limits by categories such as reason and madness and the birth of the insane asylum as an institution of exclusion. Other works included "Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison," "The Archaeology of Knowledge," and most recently a three-volume "History of Sexuality." Critics heralding the publication last week of the last two volumes of that work described Foucault as a moralist, stylist and esthete who had taken the place of the late Jean-Paul Sartre as the leading philosopher in France. Traffic jammed in Pern LIMA, Peru Peruvian Maoist Guerrillas blew up a key railroad bridge last weekend, suspending rail traffic from the capital to the central part of the country, officials said Men day. A national rail company spokesman said damage was so extensive at the Infiernillo train bridge that repair crews would have to work at least two weeks to restore normal train service. The destruction of the bridge 75 miles west of here was part of the Sendcro Luminoso (Shining Path) weekend offensive that hit at least 10 towns and killed un to 40 1 , T" I J Page 2 Tuesday, June 26, 1984