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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1985)
Monday, January 14.I985 Page 2 DailyNebraskan- University students can obtain first semester grade reports UNL students can pick up first semester grade reports at several cam pus locations. Today through Wednesday, most students can pick up their grades at Selleck Quadrangle's Center Building from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 4 V"M"W Grade reports for students in dental were not picked up by Jan. 9. hygiene, nursing and the College of Law will be distributed through their Grade reports currently available at repective deans' offices. Grade reports pick-up sites will be mailed to stu- for December Graduates and continu- dents' permanent home addresses if ing studies students will be mailed to students' permanent addresses if they 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 they have not been picked up by Jan. 18. 0 J'J---ijjii-. iti jj j-j 0 -j ' i-f NOTICE TO TUDENT 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 8 8 0 0 0 All students are eligible to apply for a refund of their Fund "A" portion of student fees during a period beginning January 14, 1935 and ending February 15, 1935. Students claiming a refund will lose benefits provided by Fund "A" users during the spring semester of 1S34-85. A. Application forms are available at the Student Activities Financial Services Office, 222 Ne braska Union; ASUN Office, 115 Nebraska Union; or the East CAP Office, Nebraska East Union and should be returned by the applicant in person to 222 Nebraska Union. Students must bring their student I.D. cards at the time of application. Students who are unable to personally return their application to the Student Activities Financial Services Office should contact Doug Mctzger Room 222 Nebraska Union (ph. 472-2181) before February 15, 1935 for other arrangement. B. Students who have completed a refund application and returned it on or before February 15, 1935 will be mailed a check for the amount of the refund claimed. Refund checks will be mailed between the dates of February 18 through March 1, 1935. Fund "A" refund amounts are as follows; A.S.U.N. $1.72 Daily Nebraskan .92 State Student Association .50 University Program Council 2.S3 Total Refund $5.72 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Students claiming a refund will lose certain benefits provided by the above-listed Fund "A" users. For details on which benefits may be lost, please refer to the cover sheet on the refund application. CCC0OOOCCO0COO0C0OOCC' 0 0 0 uity Ti N EXTRA MONEY U am) u l ill Ibiltoyilk AS A COLLEGE AGEWT FOPi NEWSWEEK You can get monthly commission checks by working just a few hours a week. Profits are quick when you attract students to sub scribe to Newsweek. It's interesting work, and you'll feel proud as you promote this exciting newsweekly. Its award-winning editorial covers world and national events, people, business, tech nology, sports, entertainment. Students welcome the great ideas and insight that Newsweek brings. You'll welcome all the extra dollars you can bring in, so contact us today: zu V O i j ft. v: 1 ',-!fn' Campus Network 444 Tilsdison Avonuo Nevi York, flew York 10022 Attn: Delores Pressiey Or simply phone: 1-C00-52S-25S5 (Ask for Education Dept.) 1 7 I TCP Eewiter j&epos 1 Shultz says arms talks not 'doomed' by Gromyko WASHINGTON Secretary of State George Shultz, In an apparent effort to quash uncertainty over the forthcoming U.S.-Sovtet arms talks, said Sunday the negotiations on nuclear arms and space weapons might beSpekak?ng on NBC Television's "Meet the Press," Shultz said, "I think the fact that there is a relationship is something we believe and the Soviet Union does too." The secretary was commenting on a statement by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko that no agreement could be reached with the United States on limiting nuclear arms without a similar pact to ban weapons from space. .... Shultz said Gromyko's remarks "certainly don t doom any chance (of successful talks). We may seek to link things ourselves, it makes sense to link the things you are talking about." But Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, underscoring once again differences with Shultz on arms control, today bluntly stressed the U.S. commitment to developing space weapons. Moslem group warns U.S. of attack TRIPOLI, Lebanon The head of one of the main Moslem fundamen talist groups in north Lebanon said Sunday the United States would be attacked on its own territory in the next few days. Sheikh Saeed Shaaban, head of the Islamic Unification Movement (Tawheed) in Tripoli, told a rally: "America will in the next few days witness operations against it in its own country and own land to avenge the people of south Lebanon and Palestine. "No one can stand against the Islamic tide. It has begun to knock at the White House door, which reinforces itself with concrete obstacles for fear of Islamic attacks." Questioning to begin on missile fire BONN A parliamentary committee announced Sunday it would question West Germany's defense minister about a fatal Pershing-2 mis sile fire, but the decision appeared to fall short of demands for a full government probe. Defense Committee Chairman Alfred Biehle said the panel would ask Defense Minister Manfred Woerner about the accident Wednesday when he attends a meeting to discuss military and political matters. But the announcement appeared to fall short of demands from both Social Democrats and Radical Greens for a full government inquiry of the Friday fire, which killed three U.S. soldiers and injured 16 others. The accident occurred when the first-stage solid fuel rocket motor of the Pershing-2 ignited as it was being hoisted from a shipping container at the U.S. Red Leg military base near Heilbronn, 25 miles south of Stuttgart. The U.S. Army said nuclear weapons were not involved. FBI authority concerns committee WASHINGTON An influential American Bar Association committee Sunday made 20 wide-ranking recommendations aimed at protecting civil liberties under the Reagan administration's guidelines on domestic security and terrorism investigations. The administration's guidelines, announced on March 7, 1983, sparked an immediate controversy with some congressional members criticizing the changes for tilting too far toward security concerns. The committee warned that the guidlines might increase the FBI's authority to launch investigations based on political beliefs or opinions rather than conduct related to a crime. The guidelines for the first time gave the FBI explicit authority to investigate groups solely based on what they advocate. The reports also called for FBI filed offices to be required to inform their superiors at headquarters before opening preliminary domestic security investigations and for procedures describing the scope of the probe. While the report accepted the FBI view about using informants in preliminary investigations it proposed stricter internal approval mechanisms. U.S., Chinese military leaders meet PEKING Visiting Gen. John Vessey, the chief of the U.S. armed forces, Sunday inspected the Great Wall, China's earliest line of defense, and reported back to the Pentagon by radio telephone. Later, amid reports of a Sino-American weapons deal, Vessey held talks with his opposite number, Yang Dezhi, and attended a banquet with Defense Minister Zhang Airpang. Vessey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is the most senior American military official to visit China in 30 years. He arrived in Peking Saturday and held 90 minutes of talks with Yang. Yesterday, he resumed talks with Yang and other Chinese military leaders after inspecting a restored section of the 2,000-year-old Great WalL built to repel invaders from the north. The New York Times reported yesterday that Washington had reached a preliminary agreement to sell anti-submarine warfare equipment to paPer said a formal agreement to sell China Submarine n.J?r mi "shiP defense" weapons was !S In? Me V ?mky afisistant secretary of the navy for research and engineering, visits China later this month. Crow! uf& J?8?,,"? tke head of U-S-Padfic Forces' Adm. William Crowe, officially billed as a "getting to know you" visit. Movie spawns bachelors' ad, fiesta sDriroVhnnJ tiny mountai village plans to hold a fiesta in the " ried meS nuSS n? ,f W?en who answered " advertisement its unmar The offlcSM00"1 newfPaPer for es, local officials said today, soedal men C0Ur'cU ofplan village in the Pyrenees agreed at a LSSlSk pr?T'c authoritiesforfundsto pay for an event oSicIaTs atdth,vh?H?nn Spain abroad Plled to the ad. The Kl?S ,0illln "Westward the Women" on television on United stiJ.7; . If l-e 8MI2f of brides taken across the