Monday, September 24, 1934 Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan Campus Calendar Monday National Direct Student Loan checks of the 19S4-S5 school year will bo issued today through Wed nesday from 9 to 1 1:30 am. and from 1 to 4 p.m. in the Nebraska Union Ballroom. First-time borrowers a? ihe 5 percent interest rate ill to bring ccmpk t ed pa -en ork To the issuance - nts s .ould have receive containing those papers in the mail. If you u;-1 ier 19 and this is your first a parent also must sign ..i promissory not e before you can pick up your check. All stu- dents must bring their current Thursday student ID. Wednesday Fall semester tuition and fees are due no later than 4 p.m. at t he Office of the Bursar in the Admin istration Building. A $20 service charge will be added to your account if it is unpaid. Payment of the balance of your account, which must include the $20 ser vice charge, must be received at the office no later than 4 p.m. Oct, 3. If you haw further questions, contact the Office of Student Ac counts, Administration 204 at 472-2SS7 and they can direct vour call Mum sale through Friday at the East Union. Sponsored by the UNL Horticulture Club. Catherine Gozier will perform at Kimball Recital HalL Scsdzy Homecoming Bar-b-que from 5:30 to 7 p.m in Union Plaza. 'Demond Pond," a movie from Japan, will play through Monday at Sheldon. Delta Gamma "Anchor Splash" from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Mable Lee PooL Shorts Nancy Hoch, republican candi- e for the I benate wu speak to members of the Downtown Scc&ry Club Tuesday at noon in the 1 ftli floor dining room of the NBC building, 1 1th and O st reets. The Rape Spouse Abuse Crisis Center is offering a support group COUPON CONGrLTULATIOXS N nmi Krtrmn IT l "SAYE" - for victims of sexual assault and attempted sexual assault. The first of seven weekly meetings will be Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. There is no charge. For location and more informa tion, call the RapeSpouse Abuse Crisis Center at 476-3327. Eight study skills workshops, sponsored by the Educational Learning Center, will be in the SeDeck Quadrangle Multi-purpose Room. Each of the eight workshops will be presented twice and 50 cents will be charged to cover material costs. Call 472-1 4S1 for more information and to sign up. Four of the eight sessions and their dstes given are: listening and notetaking: Tues day at 1:30 p.m. and Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. ; SQ3R study reading system: Thursday at 9:30 ajm. and 2:30 rxm. Time management: Oct- 2 at 1 :30 p.m. and Oct- 3 at I SO p.m. Test taking: Oct. 4 at 2:30 pji and Oct. 5 at &30 am. Challenge to Fitness, a special event to encourage physical fit ness as a healthy alternative to alcohol and other drug use, will be Oct. 7 at the Lincoln High School track and will include Eve activities. Entries are due Tuesday for the events which include a predi ctor walk'njog, a 3-mile fun run and the team events, including an obstacle course race, a t ricycle relay race and a tug of war. For more information about entries or events, call the Lincoln Council on Alcoholism and Drags, sponsor of the event, at 475-24. Setti cililt F.J INDEPENDENT SFECLU.ISTS IXC 7 TOOT HP O A TH1 h to SPECIAL! ZING IX VOLfcttA&EV AITI. DaTSTV 130NTIA. TOYOTA. SfBAEl IMPOST TOWING An article on the UNL Pre Der.tal Gab in Friday's Daily Nebraska was misleading. The chib. wtith is not offered through tie College of Dentistry, has an izzerz program which helps in terested students get placed only rv obnm dental practices. Stu dents have the privilege to otiserve at the UKMC College of Bernsrrrs specialty departments sadi as oral surgery. The interns do not actually work nor do they get paid. Club members also have access to proced ural information which can help them get applica tions to various ILS. dental col leges. Club requirements include participating in one of two soc ial events per semester and one fund-raising event per year. Mem bers also must observe a dentist at work for a total of four hours per semester. One topic to be discussed at a meeting is tree gingival graft," a peridental technique. For more information on the club, call the Pre-Dental Club c3ce at 472-5379 Monday through Friday in the late morning or mid-afternoon. nionn ;1 MAJOR AIO MtWOH vCV BRAKES REPAYS r , mm, MWRSOW STRUTS AJJSEVT 2I1G-ac'" ACCESSORIES AWO SAIAW0W3 AW COtOfTlON!W3 fe'V" j 2435N.33-C Lincoln I . .1 iMi.i .u mi in ..urn 1 in 1 11 11 in 1 11 1 arj 1 1 r 1 ! K' 1 4. n f a 1 mi 11 1 1 1 W National and international news from the Renter News Report, unty TTS . not negligent NEW YORK President Reagan Sunday acknowledged security at the U.S. Embassy In Beirut was only "75 percent" complete when it was bombed last Thursday, but denied any negligence was involved. At least eight people were killed when a bomb exploded in a hail of gunfire at a wall surrounding the VS. Embassy annex. The administration has been criticized or moving personnel from west Beirut into the new embassy in east Beirut before all security precautions were in place. He defended the decision to move into the new premises, saying it was considered "safer territory and a safer building." Reagan also rejected charges that the attack might have been prevented if U.S. Marines had not been withdrawn from guard duty and replaced by people hired locally. The Marines cannot be exterior guards outside the com pound. That is foreign territory and there was no need inside the compound for a detachment of 80 Marines," he said. Officials continue bombing probe BEIRUT, Lebanon United States experts Sunday con tinued their investigation into last Thurfy's suicide car bomb attack on a U.S. Embassy annex In east Beirut as Lebanese leaders promised rail cooperation in implementing any new security measures. An embassy spokeswoman said Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy left Beirut Saturday after a 24-hour visit following the attack, which Ui5. cfScials say killed eight people, including two U.S. servicemen, and wounded 35. Three or four U.S. experts, including Robert Oakley, head of the State Department's Office of Combat and Terrorism, were continuing the inquiry into apparent security lapses that allowed a suicide car bomber to get within a few yards of the annex's main entrance. Murphy told reporters Saturday the US. would not pull its diplomats out of Lebanon. President Amin Gemayei and Prime Minister Has hid Karami had assured him they would implement any security conclusions reached . by the VS. team, he added. Sliuitz may offer U.S. mediation NEW YORK Secretary of State George Sh ultz said Sund ay the United States wanted to be helpful in securing withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon if the parties concerned wished. Shultz made the statement as Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy had talks in Damascus to see whether Syria believed the United States could be helpful in the Lebanon situation. Former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir told the New York Times in an interview published Sunday that Israel's new coalition government intended to ask the United States to serve as a go-between with Syria to work out arrangements for withdrawal of Israeli troops form southern Lebanon. Shamir said he would raise the possibility of a new US. mediating role in talks with Shultz here next week Shamir, who is now Israel's foreign minister, was reported to have suggested that Israel would no longer insist on simultaneous Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon as a condition for pulling out its own troops. If the United States decides to mediate, it would be its first active role in the Middle East since the Lebanese government last March, acting under Syrian pressure, cancelled the US sponsored accord for withdrawal of Israeli troops. Violence erupts in France, Spain PARIS Violence broke out on both sides of the French Spanish border Sunday as angry crowds protested a French announcement that it would extradite three suspected Basque separatist guerrillas to Spain, police said. Three Spanish Basques who are wanted on murder and assault charges in Spain will be extradited, France's European Affairs Minister, Roland Dumas, said Sundav. Four other Basque fugitives were deported to Togo Sunday, French officials said. Shortly after the announcment, hundreds of youths began a rampage through the streets of the Spanish border town of San Sebastian, Spanish police said. Across t he Border, in St, Jean de Lux. French police fired tear gas grenades to disperse some 2,000 protesters chanting 'Mit terrand assassin " eyewitnesses said Traditionally, France has not extradited people charged with political crimes, but the courts recently ha? approved Spanish extradition petitions for Basque separatists charged with violent crimes. The Spanish government welcomed the French decision, saying it marked the end of t he use of France as a safe have n for suspected Basque guerrillas. Reagan, Groniylco meet so dully NEW YORK President U?aan Sunday met Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei C.romyko socially and then publicly tailed for a realistic and const ructiw relationship with the Sonet Union. The brief meeting was Reagan first personal contact with a hisa-level Soviet official in his wars as president. He holds formal talks wit h Gromyko at the Whii clloue Fndsy.The two men shook hands and t alkcd for about a minute a reception tor world leaders marking the opening of the Ur.ned Nations iionoral Assembly. In hiS tvm.irk I t.i Av. v ..v, ,!- ...... .. 4 , ... i awn H