day, October 9, 1934 Peg o 2 Daily Nsbraskan ii in Mic7 Rajs im gjmmi til w ftepor The following Incident were reported to t'NL police between 12.40 .m. and 11:40 p.m. Sundry. 12:40 Window reported broken fttl433RSt. 1:C1 a.ei. Person reported to b paascd out In the lounge on the second floor of Harper Hall Person wti escorted home. l:C3 jsl Hit-and-run accident report ed at 16th and W itreeu. 1:C3 a. ci. Person reported passed out on the steps of Morrill Hall. Person was gone when police arrived. 2.43 a. n. Noise disturbance reported Schramm HalL l.E-3 a. tn. Noise disturbance reported at Abel Ha!L J. CI a. in. Noise disturbance reported at Schramm HaU. S.IO a.n. Noise disturbance reported on the ewt side of the Nebraska Union. 4:13 a.ra. Items reported stolen from a vehicle at l&th and R streets. 6:23 a.ci. Flags reported stolen from the East Campus malL 10:23 a.u. Window reported broken at the metered lot near Abel H&1L 11:14 a.33. Person reported tamper ing with emergency phone at 14th and New Hampshire streets. 11:43 a. is. Window reported broken at 405 University Terrace. 1:12 p.m. Wallet reported stolen at 2224 U St 6:11 pjau Monty reported stolen from a room In Schramm KalL 10:04 p.ra. Bicycle reported stolen from Abel Hall. 11:49 p.ra. Person in Selleck HaU reported receiving obscene phone calls. "lU irflpilfiii mi 1 "x f l If I f r UU "13 1 n m 1 1 x mim m nmmam war 31 .iff a fc4L'Ai few r? Hf FREE with Only 103 f.lfntatim Cranio 5V4 Interest on CtecSxfng jf FflEE $100,000 Accidents! 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We're vyith you every step of the way. liiMUUtjLj Ins U I Checking Savings Investments 1 1 3th & "O" 475-5321 70th & Vina 473-0765 56th & "O" 473-0800 1 6th & South 473-0773 Lincolnshire 473-0754 Anteiopa Creek 473-0761 SAVINGS RATE HOTLINE 800642-8804 V, '.'. t mr jit 1 Loans National and international news from the Renter Mews Report Ef oiicMe declared lictor post-debats polloters WASHINGTON First voter polls on Sunday night's debate between President Reagan and Walter Mondaie declared the Democratic challenger the winner but said the public still thought the president was more capable of dealing with the nation's problems. A poll conducted during the night for Newsweek magazine said Mondaie beat Reagan by 54 percent to 35 percent, and a similar poll by ABC News said Mondaie won by 39-33 percent As Reagan campaigned in the South, his aides admitted their man looked tentative in the first of two debates leading up to the Nov. 6 presidential election. Mcndsle mrrched up New York's Fifth Avenue in the annual Columbus Day parade Mon day, exuding a rare feeling of success in a campaign that has lagged far behind Reagan's. His aides talked of turning a corner gjid waging an October offensive despite polls, taken before the debate, that show Reagan leading by up to 30 percentage points. "What Mondaie did was to destroy the Republican argument that there i3 no election, that they have a superhero versus this dishrag guy," said Mondaie press aide Dayton Duncan. In the Newsweek poll, conducted by the Gallup organization among 379 registered voters, the Democratic presidential can didate was judged more confident and self-assured and more thoughtful and well-informed than Reagan. But those sur veyed felt the president came closer to reflecting the public's views and was "more capable of dealing with the country's problems." Sixty percent of those surveyed identified them selves as Reagan supporters and 38 percent said they backed Mondaie. The poll found that the debate on domestic issues would probably produce some political galn3 for Mondaie. The two men tangled on such issues as the federal budget deficit, religion in politics and abortion, with Mondaie assault ing the Reagan record and firmly defending his own. White House Chief of Staff James Baker said neither Mondaie nor Reagan made any factual errors and added, "We thought Mr. Mondaie was capable of being more strident than he was." He could not explain the president's tentativeness but said, "I doiit think he was uptight or nervous." The next Mondale-Reagan debate, on foreign policy, is sche duled for Oct. 21 in Kansas City. The candidates' vice presidential running mates, Geraldine Fcrraro and Vice Presi dent George Bush, square off against each other in a debate Thursday in Philadelphia. raqi jets end Peroian Gulf Ml MANAMA, Bahrain Iraq Monday shattered a three-week lull in the Persian Gulf tanker war with an attack that set fire to a supertanker south of Kharg Island and killed six of its crew men, including two British officers. An Iraqi iniHtary spokes man in Baghdad said Iraqi jets had attacked two naval targets in the Gulf and returned safely to base. Shipping sources con firmed the 1 14,573-ton supertanker World Knight had been set afire in an air attack. In London, Lloyd's Shipping Intelligence said six crewmen were reported killed and six badly burned in the attack. The British Foreign Office said the British officers were among those killed. It said Britain would make a formal protest "once the facts are clear." In Baghdad, the Iraqi military spokesman said the strike was a warning to ships against approaching Kharg and other Iran ian ports "in order to prevent the Iranian regime from using its oil resources to achieve its aims against Iraq." He said Iraq would continue to destroy all ships that approach Iranian ports, exercising its right to self-defense. Shuttle loses communi cation link CAPE CANAVERAL The space shuttle Challenger lost its main communication link with Earth Monday as its crew shel tered in an overheated cabin. The tracking and data relay satellite used for most of the voice and electronic communica tion between space arid ground went out Monday morning and was not expected to be working for at least eight hours. A space agency spokeman said the high-flying satellite received a "cos mic hit" intense radiation from a "sun spot," an enormous eruption of energy from the sun. ' The seven astronauts had to work with intermittent com munications provided by old ground bases. They also had to work in shorts and T-shirts because a malfunctioning "space radiator" sent the temperatures in their double-deck cabin soaring into the high 80s. littler birthplace provokes lawsuit VIENNA An Austrian court Monday barred the erection of a plaque at the birthplace of Adolf Hitler at Braunau, ending an argument that has split this small Austrian town on the West ts-7? v u numoer id isasDurgsr vorstaac, wnw wniS3 b0rn 'm lm- T9 Pe would have carried the f JrT1" &mn fascism - millions of dead remind us of peace, freedom and democracy." i?,!T?nt .wner of the house, Geriinda Ponner, obtained iJiiTCi0n erecting the plaque, which she tZ . t fir,!ct violent taonstnLtions to her property. iSfcPS!d ?!ond-y y the district court st Fded, Upper Austna. bmall groups of neo-Nazis have occasionally turned up at Baunau.