0 Wednesday, January 16, 1985 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan Beater Report 3flinii5!L- if I if Featuring: I I . FfkiDJf ; - Admission: j I January 18, 1985 Students 2.0O 1 1 Great Plains Room East Union Nonstudants $3.CD I . 8:30-12:30 ' ' I d FOR CI SINGERS DANCERS Worlds of Fun is conducting an audition tour in search of the Midwestern talent to appear in our 1985 show program. If you sing (pop, rock, country), or dance (tap, jazz), you can earn over $4,800 performing six days per week during the summer, and weekends in the spring and fall. R S best in fl We are looking for singers with poprock talents for a lively 5O's-60's musical review, and also for singers who can per form popular country music Addition ally, a numuer ut uancers win De hired to oerform as Dart of v lavish new magic production. LINCOLN AUDITION: University of Nebraska at Lincoln Ballroom in the Nebraska Union Tuesday, January 22, 1985 4:00 p.m. (registration begins one-half hour before the scheduled audition times listed above) COME SEE IF YOU ARE GOOD ENOUGH. It can be a great part time job, or The First Step. It's fun, professional experience, and great exposure more than 1,400,000 Worlds of Fun visitors are waiting to discover you! For more information and a complete audition schedule, contact the Show Productions Department, Worlds of Fun, 4545 Worlds of Fun Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, 64161: (816) 459-9276 . . . Tho Bczt Stsgo Expcriencs In tho FJIdwest No jobs are available for dramatic actors, or instrumentalists. X I - ... 1 ) I ., 4 L,vuw Supreme Count broadens se&reli law in drag case WASHINGTON The U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday gave school admin istrators greater flexibility to search students by ruling that marpana found in the purse of a girl at a secondary school could be used as evidence. The justices ruled that school authorities need not obtain a warrant before searching a student as long as there was a "reasonableness" for conducting the search. The decision found that school children have a legitimate right to privacy, but said a balance must be struck by easing some restrictions so that authorities can conduct searches. The decision comes as a major victory for school administrators and the Reagan administration, which has long sought to narrow the application of the controversial "exclusionary rule," which provides that evidence may not be used in court if it was obtained illegally. The 6-3 decision, written by Justice Eyrcn White, reversed aa earlier ruling by the New Jersey Supreme Court. Soviets ban U.S. Cliemenlco reports MOSCOW The official Soviet press kept President Kcnstantin Cher nenko firmly in the public eye Tuesday after the list-minute postpone ment of a Warsaw Pact summit meeting set off fresh diplomatic specula tion about his health. All the main dailies gave front-page prominence to the foreword of a Polish edition of writings by Chernenko. Bat Soviet state television refused to transmit U.S. television network news reports on Chernenko's health and the postponement of a summit meeting of Warsaw Pact leaders. Western diplomats said Chernenko's shaky health seemed the only likely reason for Monday's announcement that the summit had been put .off indefinitely. Probe roles out missile sabotage WASHINGTON Static electricity and a break in a hoisting crane are being examined as possible causes of the Pershing missile fire last week at Heilbronn, West Germany, the Pentagon said Tuesday. Pentagon spo kesman Michael Burch said that so far as he knew sabotage had been ruled out in the incident, which killed three U.S. soldiers. He said the accident occurred when the missile's solid-fuel motor was being removed from its container after arrival from the United States, and the cause could have been a break in the crane lilting the missile or static electricity. Burch said two teams, one from the United States and the other from the missile's unit were conducting investigations. ' Reagan praises King's leadership WASHINGTON President Reagan, marking the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., praised the slain civil-rights leader for his "moving example of dignity" and for giving the nation "a new hero to admire and emulate." "By the end of his career he was a deeply respected leader of internati qai stature who helped lead an extraordinary revolution in America's laws and customs," Reagan said in a statement. King, who was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., in 1968 would have been 56 Monday. In 1986, King's birthday will become a regular national holiday. Volunteer soldiers shoot youths BELFAST, Northern Ireland Part-time soldiers Tuesday shot up a carload of joyriding Catholic teenagers at a roadblock, killing one and wounding four. Politicians on both sides of the border exploded with outrage. Police said members of the Ulster Defense Regiment, a Protestant volunteer group, fired on a stolen car that tried to crash through their checkpoint in west Belfast. en can- rate hift WASHINGTON M&sy Americans rata women as better political candidates than men and Genldine Ffemro's vice presidential candidacy strengthened that view, according to an opinion poll released Tuesday. "Voters have come a very long way in their attitudes toward women candidates," said Kathy Wilson of the National Women's Political Caucus, which commissioned the poll. "Old stereotypes have turned into new assets...Women are viewed not only as being mere caring, understanding and compassionate, but also as having new ideas, being effective and speaking directly to the point." The poll by Cooper and Se crest Associates surveyed 1,786 voters, equally divided between men and women, in five widely separated dis- 5?Si w!ere ,men competed against women for seats in Congress in the 1884 national elections. Lone Sanger to don mask again LOS ANGELES The Lone Ranger is taking cfT his dark glasses and putting on his mask once again. Sixty-nine-year-old actor Clayton Moore, wno played the western hero in 208 television episodes, said Tuesday he could once again be the masked man fighting for law and order. "Fair play TnP7olr-d t!,e Raw believes in Mr play," he declared. r.wai Me Wrather Corp., which owns the rights to the Lone Ranger cnaracier, obtained a court restraining order preventing Moore from appearing at public functions as the masked rider. Moore had to make do cy wearing a pair of green-tinted sunglasses with Ms cowboy outfit.