The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 12, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Monday, November 12, 1984
Page 2
Daily Nebraskan
National and international news
from the Renter News Report
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U.S. planea, varoMpo
preooere Niccrcfjoano
MANAGUA, Nicaragua More sonic booms shook Nicara
euan cities Sunday in what diplomats consider psychological
pressure by the United States as international efforts to defuse
the tension between the two countries began.
For the fourth consecutive day, a U,S. reconnaissance plane
shattered the sound barrier in violation of Nicaragua's air
space, Defense Ministry officials said. And two U.S. Navy ships
are anchored off Nicaragua's port of Corinto, sources said.
The Soviet freighter Bakuriani later sailed from the Pacific
port of Corinto after unloading military equipment, which is at
the center of the latest crisis in relations between Washington
and the ruling Sandinlst National Liberation Front.
In Corinto, port officials said they could not confirm reports
by the U.S. government's Voice of America radio station that
another four Soviet freighters were heading for Corinto, Nica
ragua's main port. Officials there compared the broadcasts
with reports earlier this week that the Bakuriani might be
carrying Soviet MiG-21 aircraft, which they denounced as mis
information. After five days of tension, including an Incident in
which Nicargua said its anti-aircraft guns fired warning shots
at a U.S. aircraft off Corinto, Washington said Friday it was
unlikely there had been an MiGs on the freighter.
Nicaraguan leaders insisted the MiG affair was part of prep
arations for direct U.S. military intervention in Nicargua.
Washington backs an insurgent army of some 15,000 men
there, who are fighting to overthrow the Sandinistas. The
Nicarguan warnings have been accompanied by war prepara
tions which include an order to 20,000 student volunteers to
drop plans to help in the coffee harvest and instead prepare for
the defense of Managua.
Diplomats here said the decision would adversely affect the
harvest of Nicargua's major export commodity and underlined
how seriously the leadership was taking what it sees as the
threat of intervention.
President Reagan has repeatedly said he has no intention of
ordering U.S. troops into Nicaragua but his statements have
not reassured Managua.
4BabyFae' ourvives rejection time
LOMA LINDA, Calif. Four-week-old "Baby Fae" showed
signs of rejecting her baboon heart in the past two days but she
has come through the episode very well, hospital officials said
Sunday. "Baby Fae," who has not been identified because her
parents do not want publicity, had a baboon's heart trans
planted into her chest in a five-hour operation 16 days ago
because she was born with an undeveloped heart.
Doctors diagnosed during the past 48 hours what they called
an initial, brief rejection period but it appears to be over,
hospital spokeswoman Jessica Baker said. "She is feeding well,
behaving normally and showing normal heart functions,"
another hospital spokeswoman, Jayne McGill, said.
Another hospital spokeswoman, Patti Gentry, said later:
"Sunday has probably been the best day of 'Baby Fae's' Ufe to
date. She is vigorous, alert and she sleeps soundly between
feedings. 'Baby Fae' has now lived longer with her transplanted
heart than with her own heart," Gentry said.
Siidis cancel meeting, confirm rift
NEW DELHI, India Five Sikh high priests indefinitely
postponed a meeting Sunday of the Sikhs' political party, con
firming a rift that is opening up in the sect's leadership.
The Press Trust of India news agency said the meeting of
Sikh leaders in their holy city of Amritsar was called off after
supporters of the party, Akali Dal, shouted slogans against the
priests. The meeting had been arranged to discuss nationwide
anti-Sikh violence which erupted after Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi's murder by two Sikh bodyguards on Oct. 31. About
1,000 people have died in rioting and arson attacks across
India since the assassination.
Disagreements between the priests and politicians surfaced
five days ago when the priests dismissed the acting chief of the
Akali Dal, Prakash Singh Majitha. PTI quoted the priests as
saying Majitha was removed because he had been secretly
meeting Indian Home Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao to discuss a
compromise over Sikh demands for political and religious con
cessions in Punjab state.
The Akali Dai's two-year-old campaign for more autonomy in
the Punjab triggered off Sikh extremist attacks in the border
state, which ended when Indian troops stormed the Sikhs'
holiest shrine, the Golden Temple of Amritsar, in June.
Soviet deputy dies unexpectedly
MOSCOW - Deputy Soviet Finance Minister Alexander
Kamenskov died unexpectedly at the age of 54, the Soviet news
agency Tass announced Sunday night.
JvlS Ktmensk?.v one of four deputies to Finance Minis
ter Vasily Garbuzov, died Saturday.
HeSi0n nd radioPrgrams were otherwise normal Sun
?hS a rS"ng ?PcuJation amongst foreign diplomats here
that a member of the Kremlin leadership might have died.
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