Tuesday, September 25, 1934 PS03 2 Dally Ncbraskan ; Police ' - - Report The following Incidents were reported fj0 fire was found. to UNL police between 12:22 .m. and 11:43 p.m. Sunday. 12;22 Noise disturbance report ed at tk'Ueek Quadrangle. 3:31 .m. Stereo equipment reported stolen from Harper Hall. 4:23 ,m. Bicycle reported stolen from Harper Hall. 1:01 p.m. Report of explosion sound ing near University Health Center. Area was checked and no problems were found. In?, at Gather Hal). 8:18 p.m. - Security alarm reported 11:43 p.m. - Loud noise disturbance sounding at South Stadium. ' reported at 16th and S streets. People 10:23 p.m. Fireworks reported sound- were quiet when officers arrived. 1:57 p.m. Stereo equipment reported stolen from a car in Parking Area 2 at 18th and Vine streets. Setting it Straight An article on the UNL Pre- dental work done at the UNMC rwtii riiih in FHHav's Dailv Collese of DcntiStrv. but can both . , Nehraskan was misleading Club assist and observe at dental ..." . ..... .. 1 1 1 J a. L..... wr rT ins at Kesearch Annex a Si n. lL'ih st. memDers are auowea 10 uuserve yiavuwo. r: Not just for Spanish majors only, but students, and advanced. Put soma excit FgGiNNEROR ADVANCED Cost it about tha same as semester in a U.S. collajs: $3,380. Price includes jet round trip to Saville from New York, room, board, and tuition com plete. Government grants and loans may be applied towards our programs. colipgt you attend your name f-5 ; hp i If you would lik inlormelicn on future program ghr. I permanent addrtaa below. I your present street address city your permanent street address city for everyone: beginners, "in between" cment into your coiicge career!! Live with a Spanish family, attend classes four hours a day. four days a week, four months. Earn 1 6 hrs. of credit (equivalent to 4 semesters taught in U.S. cottages ovr a two year time span). Your Spanish studies will be enhanced by opportunities not avaiiabla In a u s. classroom. Standardized tosU show our students' languagasKiils superior to students completing two year programs in U.S. Advanced courses also. Hurry, it takes a lot of time to make all ar rangements. SPRING SEMESTER 30 May 29 FALL SEMESTER - Aug. 29 Dec. 19 each year. FULLY ACCREDITED A Program of Trinity Christian College. For full information send coupon to: SEMESTER m SF&fM 2442 E. Collier S.E., F-5 Grand Rapids, Michigan 43506 (A Program of Trinity Christian College) How to procrastinate tastefully 'iaftllfo. I V " ' Hint' WfHSI ' 1 '' l,rrm " . V V I fA - , : k ' i - .. J, V.-.'"r .. V. --I.' i --v . i - -i -V;v i " VJ ' - : .- . n X- lUkj': :" : "O .f. -'.V: ;05' ' """ " :"- z, . i. !M 4,Hr- TV v t ft . i i ' a. v .A Pour yourself a aip of Irish Mocha Mint. Chocolatey, with a hint of mint, it's a delicious way to postpone the inevitable. And it's just one of seven inspired flavors from General Foods' g-w International Coffees, .-w.. j.w- mm. . w-' cf-c eeST"c5S' GENERAL FOODS' INTERNATIONAL COFFEES. AS MUCFi A FEELING AS A FLAVOR. e. 1 S84 General Foods Corporation 3EIKM1F000( National and international news from the Renter News Report s to HC nyno iim 3W tseasa stssac UNITED NATIONS President Reagan, in a markedly con ciliatory speech, proposed Monday steps to reduce American Soviet tensions "to the great end of lifting the dread of nuclear war from the peoples of the earth." Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, with whom Reagan will confer in Washington Friday, sat immediately below the rostrum from which the president delivered hte statement, but displayed no reaction. Neither he nor his aides applauded. Moscow Radio's English-language service reported Reagan's speech, and said it indicated the United States would continue its present policies in Central America, the Middle East and southern Africa, The broadcast, the first Soviet reaction to Rea gan's speech, said Reagan claimed that the increased military power of the United States was the basis for talks with the Soviet Union. - In the 35-minute address, which many observers saw as a response to election-year criticism of his earlier anti-Soviet rhetoric, Reagan called for ministerial-level talks with the Rus sians that could lead to a summit, and for an unprecedented U.S.-Soviet exchange of military data. On disarmament, the subject of a large number of General Assembly items, Reagan said he was committed to redoubling negotiating efforts to achieve real results. in Geneva, a total ban on chemical weapons; in Vienna, real reductions in Warsaw Pact and NATO Conventional forces; in Stockholm, concrete practical measures to enhance mutual confidence, reduce the risk of war and reaffirm com mitments on the non-use of force. He held out the possibility of restraint in space weaponry if Moscow returned to nuclear arms negotiations. Gromyko, whose own speeches here often have been marked by strident attacks on U.S. policy, is to address the General Assembly Thursday, two days later than he originally planned apparently to allow time to study Reagan's message. U.S. embassies alerted to threats WASHINGTON The .State Department Monday issued a worldwide alert to U.S. embassies warning that the shadowy terrorist group Islamic Jihad had made a new threat against U.S. interests. The Lebanese daily Al-Safir Monday quoted an anonymous caller as saying the Islamic Jihad, which claimed responsibility for the suicide bomb attack on the U.S. Embassy in Beirut last week, would make a new strike against U.S. interests in the Middle East. "Whatever the threats are and however much we dont know about this so-called Islamic Jihad, nevertheless we take every threat seriously," State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said in announcing the alert. He said security experts just back from Beirut would report to Secretary of State George Shultz in New York Monday. 1 The Islamic Jihad also claimed responsibility for killing 63 people in a car-bombing of the old U.S. Embassy in Beirut in April 1983, and for killing 299 U.S. and French servicemen in bombing last October. In its report, the Lebanese newspaper said the Islamic Jihad caller said the new attack against U.S. interests was made in retaliation for an attack by Israeli backed Druse militiamen on the village of Sukmur last week in which 13 people were killed. The newspaper said the caller specified the new strike would be in the Middle East. "We are sending an advisory alerting posts worldwide to this most recent threat by the Islamic Jihad," Romberg said. "We have advised posts to make a critical evaluation of their secur ity measures and to take appropriate actions to decrease the risks to their facilities," he said. Westmoreland suit granted trial NEW YORK A federal judge Monday rejected a request by CBS to dismiss the $120 million libel suit brought against it by retired Gen. William Westmoreland. Westmoreland, former commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, contends in his suit that he was Ubeled in a 1932 CBS documentary, The Uncounted Enemy," which alleged that American commanders suppressed the true strength of the enemy in the Vietnam War. The case will go to trial Oct. 9. In a 19-page decison, Judge Pierre Level said a jury would have to decide the truth of Westmoreland's allegation that CBS deliberately and with malice broadcast information it knew to be wrong. The documentary claimed Westmoreland led an effort to underestimate the sre of the Viet Cong forces to bolster optimistic reports on the progress of the war. CBS told the court Westmoreland had failed to show that the news organization had not made a diligent effort to determine the truth. Laval ruled there was a question as to whether deliber ate misstatements were used and that the matter could only be ueierminea oy a jury 9 FalMands leaseback concidered UNITED NATIONS . -v. tuvtii.iso tiiuusA J - r-t i ' i r - . I j i i . . - . . 4- . t """-cijr e, sau would consider a isaseoacK areemeai v between three and five years. He added, "We want it (sover eignty) to come in our generation."