The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 26, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Pago 2
Daily Nebraskan
Monday, November 26, 1934
West 6
ermans
honor Ro
The West German government
today will honor NU President
Ronald Roskens with its Com
mander's Cross Order of Merit,
the university announced Wed
nesday. A representative from West
Germany's consul general in Chic
ago will present the award to
Roskens during an invitation-only
dinner, according to United Press
International.
The award recognizes Roskens'
"unstinting efforts to foster inter
national understanding," the uni
versity said in a statement Wed
nesday. Roskens has visited West Ger
many, the People's Republic of
s Re IIS
China and other nations to seek
expanded educational exchanges
of faculty and students, the uni
versity said.
According to United Press Inter
national, Hans Brisch, Roskens'
executive assistant, said the
award is "quite significant" and,
"we believe the first ever made to
a Nebraskan."
0
The Five Co of Diamond Value
Carat Weight
IS
0 vn x 9.
JLMJQ
JEWELERS
"The Bright-Idea"-
' & . , .
Coor
'runt:
13th a P St.
Lincoln, Nebraska CS503
u TTT
BOPJT-PAY-nmi-.
Don't throw money swsy! First-quality lenses in designer frames
at HALF the prices you'd pay elsewhere.
S!pJGLE4lSI0i! CLASSES P,(S
(rem v)
Iff sscrr-S
4 .'
DON'T PAY MORE . . . 1,000 frames to choose from.
Fashion 2nd quality from HsSston, Bill Biass,
Civenchy and Yves Saint Laurent.
I THE OPTICAL SHOP 333 N. 12th 477-9347
EvboIoss
Outlet
Mon., Tues., Wed,, Fri. : 10-5. Thurs.: Noon-8, Sat.: 10-1
Omaha: 325 N. 72nd Street
Mon.-Sat.: 10-6. Thurs. until 8. 551-1639
Omaha: 1323 Jackson Street
Mon.-Fri.: 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 344 0219
l'"V
P f f f ' '
Lay Down
S.P.
Become a plasma donor! $10 is paid for each donation and
you can donate twice a week (but please wait 72 hours
between donations).
That's up to $100 a month!
So watch your income go up when you lay down at
UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER
1442 O Street 47&-E
Mon., Tues., TJturs., Fri. 8:00 am to 6:30 pm
Wed., Sat. 8:00 am to 6:C3 pm
FEDERALLY INSPECTED
National and international news
from the Reuter News Report
U.S. missile deployment
ie, advioersays
WASHINGTON President Reagan's national security ad
viser said Sunday the United States would not unilaterally halt
the deployment of nuclear missiles in Western Europe to foster
progress at arras talks with the Soviet Union.
Robert McFarlane, speaking on CBS television, said the
upcoming negotiations, which will be planned by Secretary of
State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gro
myko in Geneva in January, will be aimed at achieving an arms
balance. Even with the deployment of U.S. Pershing 2 and cruise
missiles that has already occurred at the request of NATO
allies, the Soviets still have a 10-to-l advantage with their
missiles aimed at Europe, McFarlane said.
Officials in Washington and Moscow announced the resump
tion of talks last week almost exactly a year after the Soviets
ended them because of the U.S. missile deployment.
The Soviet Union had insisted that the United States stop
deploying the missiles as a condition for the arms talks and
agree to a moratorium on space weapons in advance, steps
that Washington refused to take.
Salvadoran leaders, rebels to meet
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador The archbishop of San Sal
vador said Sunday that econd round of peace talks between
the U.S.-backed government and left-wing guerrillas would
take place Friday.
Archbishop Arturo Reivera y Damas said both sides have
agreed on a date and place. But he said he would not disclose
the site of the talks for security reasons.
Guerrilla leaders and government officials, including Presi
dent Jose Napoleon Duarte, first met for church-mediated
peace talks in the Salvadoran town of La Palma on Oct. 15.
Duarte is not expected to attend the second round of talks.
The La Palma talks were the first direct talks between the
government and the insurgents in five years of civil war.
Ortega calls for Urgent meeting'
MANAGUA, Nicaragua Nicaraguan President-elect Daniel
Ortega said the ruling Sandinistas had underestimated the
seriousness of U.S. intentions against them and he called for an
urgent meeting with President Reagan to ease the tensions
between Washington and Managua Saturday.
Relations between Managua and Washington reached a cri
sis level early this month, shortly after Ortega won the first
national election held in Nicaragua since the Sandinistas came
to power in 1979. The crisis flared after U.S. officials charged
that Soviet weapons were flowing to Nicaragua in amounts far
exceeding its defensive needs. Nicaragua denied this.
Relations between the two countries have long been tense, as
Washington has accused Managua of trying to spread Marxist
revolution throughout Central America and of shipping Cuban
and Soveit bloc arms to left-wing guerrillas fighting the U.S.
backed government in El Salvador.
Chilean troops, police patrol shims
SANTIAGO, Chile In an apparent bid to deter participa
tion in anti-government protests, troops and police patrolled
four slums of the Chilean capital Sunday and arrested dozens
of people.
Witnesses said the soldiers arrived on foot and in military
trucks, rounding up dozens of men to check for criminal
records. They said at least 70 people had been detained Satur
day and Sunday. Local priests said the patrols appeared to be
aimed at deterring people from taking part in the protests
Tuesday and Wednesday, called by the opposition in defiance
of a state of siege imposed nearly three weeks ago. The opera
tions were reported Sunday in Santa Julia, Lo Hermida, El
Salto and Villa Francia all neighborhoods where protest
calling for a quick return to democracy have been staged over
the last 18 months.
Most of Santiago suffered a one-hour blackout this morning
as President Augusto Pinochet celebrated his 69th birthday
with pledges of unswerving loyalty from the army. Spokesmen
for police and the electricity company said the blackout was
due to a technical failure. The phrase previously has been used
after bomb attacks on power lines. The frequency of such
attacks was the main reason given for the 1 1 -year-old milit ary
government's decision to impose a state of siege almost three
weeks ago.
2nd artMieai heart transplanted
LOUISVILLE, Ky. A plastic and aluminum artificial heart
was implanted in a 52-year-old man Sunday and hospital offi
cials said the seven-hour operation, the second of it s kind, went
extremely wclL
The Humana Heart Institute International and the Ken
tucky Medical Center, where the surgery was performed, said
the patient, William Schroeder of Jaspsr, Ind., was in good
shape following the operation. Doctors sdd Schroeder, who
was considered a poor candidate for a human heart trans
plant, would have lived for less than a week without the exper
imental surgery.
A team of more than 20 doctors and nurses led by Dr. William
Devnes, who performed the first artificial heart implant two
yeariA began the operation on Schroeder shortly after 7
a.m LbT Sunday. They implanted the type of manxnade heart
mat Kept Barney Clark of Seattle, Wash., alive for 112 days.