Page 2 Thursday, November 8, 1984 Daily Nebraskan Wire K it National and international news from the Reuter News Report . .I HI. I VI i fi 1 -r 1 9 .y SALE ENDS November 17th 1324 P Street 474-4975 STORE HOURS: Mon.-Sat 10-5:30 Thursday 10-9 1 se -0 SJITSUJ 1 1(8) m w8ah to protect -. ". .1" if V S v.. X t ? f -.v. . :w CLASS RINGS INC Now when you buy any ArtCarved colleae rinn vnu nnt nnh not nno rinn InnrtArl with ch!o snrf ntml .. ' ""' unu VVrfUKiy, JWU get tvo. A great college ring and a diamond fashion ring, FREE. It's a beauty 10K gold with a genuine 2 point diamond. Retail value $60. The perfect way to express yourself, your style, or your feelings for that special someone. Available exclu sively from your ArtCarved Repre sentative for a limited time only. TH iE mOST CONVENIENT CflmPUSWCOTJON WW5 VBS:,' nstafJmj. C&h a Clh TimeOigSiM Pixr Hnrth n:sn Lcy. Deposit required. MasterCard or Visa Accepted. 1983. ArtCarved C!as Pngi inc Reagan vams Moscow, oays MiGo 4niiiiece8sa WASHINGTON The United States has warned Moscow not to deliver advanced warplanes to Nicaragua and U.S. intelli gence is keeping watch on a Soviet freighter that could be carrying MiG-21 fighters, U.S. officials said Wednesday. Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Miguel D'Escoto said that the Soviet freighter arrived at the Nicaraguan port of Carinto Wednesday and began unloading. President Reagan told a Los Angeles press conference he would not comment on what action the United States might take if advanced warplanes were delivered to Nicaragua's lef tist government. Reagan, speaking a day after his landslide election victory, said such planes were "absolutely unneces sary, and would be an indication they are contemplating being a threat to their neighbors here in the Americas." The frequent U.S. expressions of concern about the prospect of MiG's in Nicaragua have led to speculation Washington would act to knock them out if they were delivered. D'Escoto told a news conference a U.S. warship cruised 12 miles offshore of Nicaragua and VJS. aircraft flew over the port during the unloading of the freighter, which UiJ. officials have said could be carrying Soviet MiG fighter planes. In Washing ton, the Defense Department denied the report. The Pentagon denied that VJS. ships and planes had violated Nicaraguan territorial waters and airspace. A Pentagon official said no ships were operating in Nicaraguan waters and none had been. He added that one U.S. ship was sailing off the western coast of Central America but was not inside Nicara gua's territorial waters. And D'Escoto said that although military equipment might be in the cargo, it did not contain any type of combat plane and did not represent any threat to the region's military balance. The Nicaraguan minister said U.S. allegations about the deliv ery of MiG's "are a smokescreen designed to mask what is really happening in Nicaragua and are part of President Reagan's pathological obsession with destroying the Nicaraguan revolu tion." Winds postpone shuttle'o launch CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration abandoned Wednesday's launch of the shuttle Discovery half an hour before liftoff because of violently shifting winds high above the earth. NASA officials rescheduled the liftoff of the 14th shuttle flight on its eight-day satellite rescue mission for 7:15 am. Thursday when they hoped the winds would be less turbulent. The countdown had proceeded routinely and the weather looked perfect. However, thousands effect up, a trough of low pressure was moving through. It created 70 mph winds that shifted rapidly from the northwest to the southwest Air Force Capt. Arthur Thomas, weather officer for the shuttle mission, said the rapidly switching winds could exert enormous torque on the spacecraft, twisting or destabilizing it in midair. Thomas held out the possibility that conditions might not be acceptable by Thursday, but said continued improvement was expected throughout the week. The highlight of the mission is the retrieval of the Palapa and Westax communications satellites that failed to go into their proper orbits in February after being launched by Discovery's sister ship, Challenger. The rescue operation is due to take place on the fifth and seventh days of the mission, after two more communications satellites have been placed in orbit. Cutting farm policies top priority WASHINGTON Reducing the cost of government farm programs, which ballooned from $3 billion to $19 billion in the last four years, will be one of the Reagan administration's first attempts at cutting the federal budget in its second term, administration officials said Wednesday. President Reagan's landslide win, coupled with a growing perception among farmers that the farm economy is ailing because of the large federal deficit, will help the administration tailor future farm programs to cost less, the officials said. Agriculture Secretary John Block said the policies will become more market-oriented. "Market-oriented means the govern ment supports farm prices at lower levels, offers fewer pro grams that pay farmers to leave their land unplanted and puts more emphasis on exporting VS. farm goods, administration officials said. As early as mid-January, the administration will get together its recommendations for the new four-year farm bill that will be debated in Congress during 1935. etuclents found naked, guilty i ' Gre.ece, Three American students Wednesday ?JltVen nmmaI Pron terms of 24 months each for "pro votang a public scandal" after being found guilty of photo graphing each other naked on the AcVopolis. nZlXltAemf said thev ha seen the three strip com h2 hln ? a Saturday evening. The three denied that they eth of w ed' T1'Cy1sid that as a joke they had stood before rpmitf cameras in poses as though they were about to remove their trousers. r.s.