The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 15, 1985, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Friday, March '1 51985
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SATURDAY MARCH 11X5 8:C0PM. NEEHASSCA UNION H t R UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN
J3.C0 UNL 5TUULN lb JYVUH UNL I.U.J MUlM Siuwcia
FASHIONS PROVIDED BY:
LINCOLN AREA MERCHANTS
TMOtI Will It A DAMCf KJUOWINC THE f KSHIOH SHOW IN THI NEtRARKA UNION
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COUNCIL TRI-CULTURE
Dally Nebraskan
Complaint.,,
Continued front Pe 1
M&rlene Beyke, ASUN's director of
development, said the two parties'
requests will be heard by the electors
commission today at 12:30 p.m. in the
ASUN offlce, Nebraska Union 115. Beyke
declined any comment on the com
print until after today's meeting.
line complaint stated that in the
union, "Target people were seen by the
voting area instructing voters." It also
stated that Target's financial forms
"were net in order" and "not filed on
time."
Goldstein refused farther comment
until after today's meeting.
Electronic
Love.
Post your loves, rides, job hopes,
items lor sale on National Campus
Classifieds, where the whole
American student body can see them
via microcomputer. Just ask ct The
Daily Nebraskan s classified ad
office.
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It's easy, it's relaxing, and it pays!
Bring in this ad for $5 extra on your first
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Men. Wed. 9-5
Tus. Thur. 9-6
Friday 8-4 ;''
Saturday 8-2
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WASHINGTON President Hssa's csntpdp to keep building MX
nuclesr missiles suffered a setback Thursday wJiea it was disclosed that
Sen. Nancy Ksssebam has reversed her petition sr.d will vets next week
ipinst new funding. .... . . . tl
A spokesman for the Kansas Bcpubhcsa though she voted for the
MX in the past, she has now decided the missile b net worthwhile and
should be hslted.
. . I i it . LI-LI - .
Keshan has mounted ki iniensa castrTi w t-. ins raiy accuraie,
InterccatineVtal ballistic missile forca t-t tlso b essential if revived
anas ccatrcl talks in Geneva m ta hz succtsr'J.
Cor.ress in the next two weeks will vets en T...:.her to mease $1.5
MiHcnln 1SC5 budget fonds Lr the pr--t'en ci 2) HXs,
The Senate, ccntrcllsd by jaasters ef Herd's era Bepubhcsa Party,
will vote first and it is in that chamber that czXs feel they have
the besi and perhaps only chance cf dc.'c'-rj the ccntrcversial
weapon.
Osrtcie committee ompiawm budget -
WASHINGTON The Senate Budget Committee ???cved late Wed
nesday night a budget for 108S with a smaller deficit tlua that proposed
by President Eean.
Tha Senate version, passed by 11 votes ta nine, cdi cut the military
buildup and freeze Sccbl Security cost of living sustments. The
Republican-controlled committee approved a budget calling for a $172.3
billion deficit that is roughly 155 billion beicw that carreatly projected for
the next financial year beginning Oct, 1. Reagan proposed cutting that
deficit to nearly $180 billion, but the committee said that did not go far
enough.
Earlier in the dug the committee rejected overwhdmlny by a 164 vote
' Eaa-gsn's budget because of large defense increases and v.hat some
Senators said were unrealistic program reductions. - -
He Senate budget, sutject to Ml Senate and llmm tpprc.-d, would
serve m the government's working budget and guide further congrts
siossal deliberstiens when it approves actual spending bills.
Efffptiaii president's feip proves fiitile
WASHINGTON Egptlan President ilcsri Mubarak has ended a U.S.
"visit failing to convince the Eeagan administration to launch a new
high-proll peace initiative in the Middle East Mubarak argued that
developments in the region provided "a golden opportunity" to move
ahead in the Arab-Israel peace process. .
Without directly criticizing the administration, he assailed a "defeat
ist" policy of inaction and warned Washington it could had to the United
States being threatened by an escalation of "tension and radicalism."
The administration has avoided taking a leading role in Middle East
negotiations since being burned when a U.S.-brskered agreement on
withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon collapsed a yea? ago.
Mubarak wanted the United States to re-enter the peace process
actively by meeting a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation In Washing
ton or elsewhere. '
Weinberger: StarWnrs no cure-all
WASHINGTON Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger admitted
Wednesday the Star Wars missile defense system would not end war and a
key congressman said the world might benefit by continuing to rely on
offensive weapons.
Weinberger told the House Armed Services Committee: "If it works, it is
going to remove the shadow of terror of the most destructive weapons of
all (medium range and intercontinental ballistic missiles) but it is going
to leave other weapons of a conventions! nature that we will have to
defend against if we want to preserve the peace.1
Israel pledges to shoot t
vn
TEL AVIV, Israel Israel, which bombed a Palestinian base Wednes
lay after losing 14 soldiers in Lebanese guerrilla attacks thb week, says it
will continue to hit Palestinian and Shilte Hostess guerrillas at will.
Prime Uwster Shimon Peres issued the wsrnins after tie Israeli
air
strike against a Palestinian suerrBla base ia eastern Lebanon.
' Defense Minister Yitzhak Bahin told parliament the snarwould use all
its power to fight Shi'ite guerrHlss in Israeli-held south Lebanon.
hsms negotiiitoro get dovm to vm rk
GENEVA, Switscriaad U.S. and Soviet nestistcrs met Thursday for
their first substantive session after Tuesday's 'formal reopening of anas
talks following a l&msnth freeze. .
The talks, the first between the superpowers since the Soviet Union
walked out of negotiations on nuclear anas in lS3j begsnTuesdaywith a
meeting of the three chief U.S. negotiators aad Soviet delegstion leader
Viktor Ksxpsv at the Soviet missisn to the United NuiieBS.
U.S. defection chief Max Kasipefeian add discissions had been
"serious and busteslike,
S SP long and complex negstiatiens md western experts
'sy MlOmd Gorbachev's appointment as Kremlin leader b unlikely to
mea any early cksa in Bmki mm polcy.
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