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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1985)
Tuesday, February 19, IS35 Daily Nobraskan Mi Deadl me... Coctiiraed Stem Pass 1 Groups for office space the union's west side and would include jjq CoillITlOnplciCG . .... , t , 4. 4 'The Nebraska Union Board anncunc Swanson said the supply store new rooms to replace the Rostrum, meeting cd t it3 metln3 last week that It had occupies the former freshman text- rooms and a new RecSoom, he said, 18 applications from student bock stcre and will be moved la mid- Swanson said he hopes the temporary rr0U3 hoping to be "allotted cfHce July to the new bookstore area. location of the Rec Eoora eventually j2Cg jn t8 recently purchased Con can be usad by.the Dally Nctraakaa. nronpa;8 building, GG3 N. 14th St. When the university bookstore is The board will study the applica complete, Swanson said its current The RecRocm's video and plnball tions for two weeks before voting on location will become the RecRoom's machines have been moved to the TV how the Commonplace rpace will be temporary location. The RecRocm will room in the main lounge, and the TV used for the 1985-88 school year, remain there until Phase II of the reno- room has been moved to the union's Also at the meeting, Daryl Swanson, vation project is complete. southwest corner. The pool tables will director of Nebraska unions and board be stored at the East Union until the adviser, announced that tne wr.mii- Phase II would add about 40 feet to RecRoom opens this fall. J i ?' .SV - M.'l f 'Ml r tee for Fees Allocation approved the more than $1 million union budget for 1S85-88. If UNL's Culture Center is relocated to Commonplace next year, another $4,500 will be trimmed from the total union budget, he said. In other business, a proposal te begin publishing an all-university Com husker yearbook by 1 087 was presented. Under the proposal, the yearbook would be produced, by the Daily Nebraskan, using staff and space separate from its newspaper office. The proposal must be approved by the UNL Publications Board, the DN's policy making body. Union Board president Mary Marcy delayed a vote on the yearbook since the board will elect new members in early March. Shorts r Hsva You Checked our Food Prices Lately? f" 1 LIS K n"iii"-"ii'rMi1 Q D Students in civil engineering con struction technology and architecture are invited to attend a fcur hcj? wood design seminar at UNL today at 1:30 p.m. The seminar will be in Former Law 201. The illustrated lecture will introduce students to the structural capabilities of wood creative design. Topics will include lumber, pressure-treated wood, laminated wood and structural panel products. to :.t... .1 J YES, LESS I FOOD 4 LESS is the food store that brought low food prices to Lincoln. You'll always spend less at Food 4 Less. eon name says n WE ST! I fa '"3 AX -I & - at ' i 3 Convenient locations with hours that fit Your schedule! 45th & 0 St. 63rd & Havelosk Ave. 43th & Pioneers Opsn 24 Hours Mort.-Sat. 7:00-10:00 Mon.-Sat 7:30-10:00 Sun. 9:00-10:00 Sun. 9:00-10:00 imam Dr. Katherine Riddle and Shirley Maly will speak on "Older Feminists" today at 12:30 p.m. The free event, which is sponsored by the Women's Resource Center, will be in Nebraska Union 117. - r-y f" r A 1 1 i ' bad 1 & jk a uiiii L vwfv 10 tM. J 1:1. c How yot five nay saw; yew !ife. pj y-a--wt ip1! fi sr-im .-jS kwMO-i ikK,.aa lk.;iuaJ lui WuJ G- ipswij p--s5-s F7! (r1 - "i ("1 f'li f";-v's ps F'TI ST S!!!M11 f f,B,, P? f- 4 :- -u&j,. .- r yM na GkUAa feB -J IftH'.-i ar-., fc--TT.iJI GurJi ta.J fikud lurd tf Jt, 0 'S fx K 1 v i I n -" I o V; . ht D fx n Sfe.,, H--' A...:. v-rii NEW STEREO ON YOU. MIND, BUT NO MONEY 0 JW YOUH POCKET? Become a regular plasma donor and earn $20 par week plm $10 bonuses!! It's easy, it's relaxing, end it pays! Bring in this ad for $5 extra on your first visit, UE PAY ORE! Tl n u 0 0 0 0 0 in'Tf inn Oon. Vcd. 0-5 Tuts. Th'jr. 0-6 Friary 0-4 Cstwrdsy 8-2 , itb3Ui L-'-J . k-W KuuA fcva Si'--.-Jii t-feai j u 0 0 n y n n fma parking in ths rssr y fw fH""rTi r ri r- pw I fc..- Mim. Stvaj'K ktti fe 474-2335 t H 1 J la ii W sotmorolcH? id decides t drop suit againot GB8 NEW Y0F.X Gen. William Westmoreland Monday agreed to drop his $120 million libel suit against CDS after testimony by former key aides begin veering dramatically against him in the 18-week .trial. Attorneys for the former Vietnam War commander and CL3 presented a settlement agreement to U.S. District Court Judse Pierre Leval in his chambers. The settlement terms will be given to the jury today. Westmoreland attorney Dan Burt said after meeting with Leval that CDS will be issuing a statement that will be "the functional equivalent of an aDoIOtty." "The bottom line is that CBS never questioned Gen. Westmoreland's patriotism," Burt said. But CBS attorney David Boies said, "when an opponent comes to you and says, 4I quit, I take it." According to informed sources, both sides in the case agreed Sunday night that the "court of public opinion" rather than a law court should determine whether Westmoreland ordered aides to cut estimates of the number of troop3 poised against the United States and its allies in the war. In testimony over the last two weeks, two former Westmoreland aides told how the general, now 70, rejected higher, more accurate troop estimates because they were "politically unacceptable." According to testimony, Westmoreland told President Lyndon Johnson and Congress that at most there were 300,000 troops fighting against the United States and its allies, while in fact the true estimate was more than 500,000. CBS contended that by underestimating enemy strength, Johnson and the public were misled during the war. CBS said the out-of-court settlement followed private discussions in the past few days. The case had been expected to go to the jury within the next two weeks. Westmoreland, in his suit, alleged that a 1032 CBS television documentary libeled him by saying that his military command engaged in a conspiracy to underestimate enemy strength in the Vietnam War. U.S., Soviets Gtart MMecist taliio . VIENNA, Austria U.S. and Soviet Middle East experts arrived in Vienna RIanday for the first superpower talks on ths region since the 187C3, diplomats sail The two-day talks come amid a flurry of Mideast diplomacy and after an agreement last week between Jordan and the Palestine liberation Orgsaiz&tion on a joint peace effort. The talks, the first since the Geneva Mideast conferences broke down in the mid-70s, will be secret and are described as an "exchange of views," with no cScial agreements foreseen. No press statements or communiques will be issued on the talks, which have been played down by the Resigan administration. Poland links together CIA, union WARSAW, Poland Poland's Communist authorities have proof that the CIA has worked with activists of the banned free trade union Solidarity, the official PAP news agency reported Monday. The charges are based on documents obtained from the Solidarity coordinating office in Brussels, Belgium and brought here by a Pole who returned home last week from 10 years in exile, PAP said. Interior Ministry Col. Zbigniew Pudyss read extracts from the documents on state television Sunday and said they showed the union was in touch with the CIA, AFL-CIO chief Lane Kirkland, and former Secretary of State Zbigniew Brzezinski. Pudysz, who said he would present further evidence on television, said the documents showed Solidarity's Erussels office was in touch with pro-Solidarity groups in almost every country in Western Europe. AM postpones trip buck to U.S. BEIRUT, Lebanon Muhammad AH has decided against returning home immediately and instead plans to go to Damascus to ssek help from Syrian President Hafez al Assad in securing the release of four kidnapped Americans, his lawyers said Monday. Ali said Sunday that he intended to return to the United States alter failing to find where the four men were being held and deciding apinst his original plan to try to meet with the kidnappers. Bui Ms lawyer, Eichard Hirschfeld, said that Ali was a frknd of Assad's md waited to ask wie ojrniu lexers acvice "regarding efforts to obtain the release" cf the Americans and a Saudi Arabian dmifi?n ?t West Beirut over the past year. Artificial heart patient doing well n95S r Murray Ha. the world's third recipient of a ESS recovering frora Ms dactors ssid EHvt UiimAMA If- a. ... tZVlvtZt sari,mst international, where the Byesr-old StiS wo?ker received medical heirt Bmd had sue ciscourafsritf npwe oKi, s . . W jrssultfrcaa -v, uu, auuerea m uecerber. me news about Egydon, hcv.cver sli r--ur-- r v was tot no blool Sckosdsr's, doctors gaid, mi he Is wl?4