The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 24, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Wednesday, October 24, 1934
Pago 2
Daily Nsbraskan
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Eastfest
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sisbration!
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4 :6U ureal riesns noom: ivncnaei iceoerg unu inu iueuuiya
Machine - Iceberq Dertorms on a machine wnscn is
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a bank of svnthesizers. comouters and devices
electronically engineered by Disney's World's
best technicians
Friday, October 26, at
the Nebraska East Union
from 730 pm -130 am
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Cost - Students and 12 and Under 3.G0
Non students 4.25
Tickets available at both Unions
Hollow: Short Movies: W.C. Fields
Keystone Cops
Little Rascals
1 Ticket and free popcorn
Loft: Abbott and Costelb Film Festival
Abbott and Costeilo Meet the Keystone
Cops
Here Comes the Coeds
World of Abbott and Costeilo
4 tickets and free popcorn
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40 North Forty: Surprise Event by Burr-Fedde Council o
:00 Loft: Mountain Dew Chugging Contest by FFA ClutS
30 Game Room: Pool-Tournament - N
Young Ranchers and Farmers
Main Level: Tex-Rope Twirler o
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:45 Terraces: Sandy Knecht - Singer 0
00 Main Level : CPD Breakers - Breakdancers n
15 Terraces: Harmony Jam Piano & Singer g
30 North Forty: Tridelt Washboard Band " gj
Loft: Surprise Event by Rodeo Club
9:50 Terraces: Gene Klosner - Performer sings and playso
piano & guitar
10:00 North Forty: Jello Eating Contest by Student n
o Dietetic Association
10:50 Terraces: Trash Can Alley Harmony Singers g
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1 1 :uu ureal riasns: uance 10 oxreei igyi
2.G0 per person
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g 11:45 Great Plains: Pie Throwing Contest Pre -Vet Club
12:45 Great Plains: Swing Dance Gontest
1:30 Goodnight
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7:30-1 1 :00 Trivia Contest
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Other Event:
, Hayrack ride
n LJ MAIN EVENTS COMMITTEE
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National and international news
from the Reuter News Report
OPEC tO Ctlt 11 Oiitgmt
not pace, to
iaees crisis
WASHINGTON - The Organization Petroleum Exporting
Countries will probably be able to head off an oil price cut, but
its grip over the world market may weaken as a result, Energy
Secretary Donald Hodel said Tuesday.
Hcdel agreed with other government and private analysts
who said a cut in OPEC's oil output, not a price cut, is the most
likely way for the cartel to meet its latest crisis. Saudi Arabian
Oil Minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani, in Geneva to prepare for next
week's full OPEC meeting, has vowed no change in the group's
$29 a barrel price, despite last week's unilateral price cut by
cartel-member Nigeria. It appears the only way OPEC can do
that is to cut back production, according to HodeL
But by keeping its price above spot market levels, the group
risks losing some of its 40 percent share of the world oil market,
Hodel said.
"At $29 a barrel, there is a lot of incentive for consumers to
find alternates to oil," Hodel said, explaining why OPEC's oil
control would diminish. The constant threat of an oil supply
disruption posed by the Iran-Iraq conflict also encourages
consuming nations to seek other sources of energy, he said.
Carmakers ask for eiitra quotas
WASHINGTON Three U.S. carmakers have asked Presi
dent Reagan to seek a multi-year extension of limits on Japa
nese auto exports to the United States. In separate letters to
Reagan, the chief executive officers of Ford, Chrysler and
American Motors said their companies needed continuing pro
tection from Japanese imports in order to restore American
competitiveness.
They said their difficulties were partly due to an under
valued Japanese yen that Ford Chairman Philip Caldwell said
gave the Japanese "an unearned cost advantage of serious
proportions." They also complained about Japanese tax poli
cies that they said encouraged car exports. Chrysler Chairman
Lee Iaccoca said restraints would be needed until such time
as the misalignment between the undervalued yen and the
overvalued dollar is corrected."
General Motors, the largest of the U.S. car companies, is
opposed to extending the quotas past their scheduled March
31, 1985 expiration because they are hampering its plans to
import cars produced under pacts with Japanese companies.
The restraints program limits Japanese exports to 1.85 million
passenger cars a year.
Generals charged with murder
MANILLA, Phillipines The chief of staff of the Philippines
Armed Forces, Gen. Fabian Ver, and two other generals were
among 26 people involved in the murder of opposition leader
Benigno Aquino, according to an official report made available
Tuesday.
The report, by four of the five members of an official commis
sion that investigated the murder of Aquino at Manila Airport
last year, alleged a widespread conspiracy and subsequent
coverup reaching to the top of the military hierarchy. Earlier
Tuesday, commission Chairman Corazon Agrava, a retired
judge, issued her own findings. Agrava also found evidence of a
military conspiracy, but concluded that only one general and
six of his subordinates were implicated.
The death of Aquino, a leader of the non-communist opposi
tion, precipitated a grave political and economic crisis that has
simmered in the Phillipines for mere than a year.
Letter compares Kennedy, Marx
ANN ARBOR, Mich. Walter Mondale Tuesday released a
letter purported to have been written by Ronald Reagan 24
years ago comparing former President John Kennedys ideas
about government to those of Karl Marx and Adolf Hitler.
The Democratic presidential nominee circulated copies of
the document, obtained from federal archives, to support his
assertion that Reagan is being hypocritical in citing Kennedy
now as one of his political heroes. The letter was written to
then-vice president Richard Nixon during the I960 presiden
tial campaign in which Kennedy defeated Nixon. The letter
states: "Under the tousled, boyish haircut, it is still old Karl
Marx first launched a century ago. Ther e is nothing new in
the idea of a government being Big Brother to us all Hitler
called his "State Socialism' and way before him it was 'Benevo
lent Monarchy'."
The White House had no immediate comment on the letter.
U.S. denies rochet fired at plane
WASHINGTON The Pentagon Tuesdsy denied a report by
the Libyan news agency, JANA, that US. forces mzy have fired a
rocket at a Libyan airliner Monday as it landed at Athens
Airport. JANA said the Libyan plane had narrowly evaded a
rocket fired from the direction of a nearby U.S. military base as
the Libyan plane touched dawn in Athens. ,
Airport sources in Athens later sufgested that the pilot of
the aircraft might have mistaken a Grsh cf sunlight bouncing
from a child's balloon for a rocket.
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