The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 30, 1985, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    n
Tuesday, July 30, 1935
Pago 2
The Nebraskan
orkshop to help sharpen
women's management skills
Rente Report
"Women in Managpment," a series of
workshops designed to help working 9:30 a.m.
women with management skills, will be
held August 1-2, at the Nebraska Cen
ter for Continuing Education, 33rd and
Iloldrege streets.
For more information contact Beth
Marsh at UNL's Department of Confer
ences and Institutes, 205 Nebraska
Center, or call 402-472-2344.
ment of Aging
"Identifying and De
veloping Your Leader
ship Style" Susan Scott,
president, Susan Scott and
Associates Management
Training Consultants
10:45 a.m. "M&rngYour Respon
sibilities Effectively
Through Delegation"
Susan Scott
Thursday, August 1
3:00 am. Registration
Second floor conference
lobby, Nebraska Center.
9:00 am. "The Historical Ad
vancement of Women
into Management Posi
tions. Helen Boosalis,
director, Nebraska Depart-
11:45 am. "Women in Management
in the Private Business
Sector" Alice Dittman,
president, ComhuskerBank
1:00 p.m. "The Personal Side of
the Professional Wo
man" Marcia Phelps
Glynn, director, Human Re
sources Division, American
Charter Federal Savings and
Loan Association
2:20 p.m. "The Art of Negotiation
and Resolving Conflict"
Susan Scott
3:20 p.m. The Dynamics Between
Men and Women in the
Work Place" Linda
Tuttle, vice president, BLN
Investment Corporation
6:00 p.m. "Women in Government
al Management"
Donna Karnes, state tax com
missioner Friday, August 2
8:30 am. "Developing Successful
Communication Skills
Up, Down and Across
the Management Lad
der" Janet Krause,
assistant dean, UNL College
of Law
9:30 a.m. "Creating an Action
Plan For Your Own Pro
fessional Development"
Susan Scott
11:00 a.m. Panel Discussion of Cur
rent Issues Pertinent
to Women in Manage
ment
Police
Report
The following incidents were reported
to UNL police between 4:51 am. Thurs
day and 9:14 p.m. Sunday.
Thursday
4:51 a.m. Person stopped for an
alleged traffic violation at 35th and
East Campus Loop. Person was arrested
on a warrant for the Lincoln Police.
9:01 a.m. Bicycle reported stolen
from Love Library.
IMPORT CAR REPAIR
SPECIALIZING IN-VOLKSWAGEN, AUDI,
DATSUN, HONDA, TOYOTA, SUBARU
IMPORT TOWING
MAJOR AND MINOR
REPAIRS
TUNE-UPS
ENGINES
ALIGNMENT
AND BALANCING
1 institute
C f iiiTfimnTivi
ece-ftrc I
JXCEUIHCf,
BRAKES
Mcpherson struts
front end
rebuilding
accessories
air conditioning
VISA
3
Certified Mechanics
467-3631
467-2397
2435 N. 33rd Lincoln
Same location for over 14 years!
3
5:23 p.m. Wallet reported stolen
from a vehicle near University Terrace.
5:25 p.m. Bicycle reported stolen
from Love Library.
Friday
8:44 a.m. Money reported stolen
from Wesley House, 640 N. 16th St.
11:51 a.m. Stereo equipment
reported stolen from a vehicle in Park
ing Area 10 near East Campus Loop.
Sunday
1:30 p.ra. Injury reported at the
Bob Devaney Sports Center.
9:14 p.m. Bicycle reported stolen
from 1245 N 16th St. .
Nursing...
Continued from Page 1
"I don't see the decision as a post
ponement," Yeaworth said. "The peo
ple of the state have spoken. So I don't
think there will be a vertical cut in the
future. I think we've fought our battle
and won it.
"But I do think the decision is a
postponement of finding a solution to.
the total budget problem." .
Unless the Legislature addresses the
problem and appropriates more money,
the problem won't be fully resolved,
she said.
To help with the budget problems,
the college will try to generate some
outside funds from benefactors,
Yeaworth said.
"We're certinaly going to work on
getting more support," she said.
I Li!
O
For students, Freshman thru Graduate
levels, First National Lincoln can meet your
credit needs with two attractive Student
Loan Programs:
GSL Guaranteed Student Loans
PLUS Parent Loan Program
Take advantage of our quick processing
and fast turnaround. Apply today
downtown at 13th & M Streets.
Or phone 471-1527 for more information.
J 42
A FirsTier Bank
f " jppft.c''w fyr j
Member, F.D.I.C.
Equal Opportunity Lender
Moscow announces freeze
on nuclear weapon testing
MOSCOW Soviet leader Mikhail Gorachev Monday announced a
five-month moratorium on nuclear weapons tests beginning August 6 to
mark the 40th anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on
Hiroshima.
The Soviet Leader, in a statement published by the official news agency
Tass and read on national television news, said the test ban would last
until the end of the year.
The move came just after an announcement in Washington that Presi
dent Reagan had invited Soviet observers to witness an American under
ground nuclear test as a unilateral gesture to inspire an increase in trust
between the superpowers.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan's offer was made in
a message delivered to Gorbachev Monday.
Another U.S. official said Reagan had been notified of the Gorbachev
proposal Sunday and had rejected the idea of the United States also
halting tests.
Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir Lomeiko condemned the
U.S. response to Moscow's nuclear test freeze, saying it showed Washing
ton had no political will to limit atomic arms development.
Rejecting charges by U.S. officials that the Soviet move was propaganda
and in any case unverifiable, Lomeiko told Reuters that Washington
always made such allegations when it was trying to avoid serious arms
control commitments.
Mission goes despite engine failure
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Space agency officials decided to continue
the mission of the space shuttle Challenger despite the failure of one of
the spaceship's main engines six minutes after liftoff Monday, a spokes
man said.
Charles Redmond, spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), said the loss of a single engine would prevent the
shuttle from reaching its planned 240-mile-high orbit, but would not
seriouslyjeopardize either the seven-member crew or the scientific exper
iments planned for the seven-day mission.
Reagan rejects budget proposals
WASHINGTON President Reagan Monday rejected a series of budget
proposals drafted by Senate Republicans, including a tax on imported oil,
and told Congress to come up with a plan before its summer recess begins
at the end of the week.
"The President will not support a tax increase in the form of an oil
import fee," White House spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters.
Speakes said Reagan also opposed Senate proposals that would mean
less frequent increases in federally-paid pensions and allow income taxes
to rise because of inflation.
The proposals were part of a budget-cutting package which Senate
leaders said would save the government $338 billion over three years and
$65 billion in fiscal 1986 alone.
The deficit for fiscal 1986, beginning October 1, is expected to
approach $230 billion under current policies.
Nationalist freed, general strike ends
POINTE-A-PITRE, Guadeloupe A Guadeloupe court ordered the
release of a jailed nationalist Monday, and pro-independence groups
responded by ending a six-day-old general strike that had paralyzed this
Caribbean island.
Organizers of the strike called for a march to the main town of
Pointe-a-Pitre to celebrate the release of Georges Faisans, who has been
on a hunger strike since his imprisonment on June 3.
A three-judge appeals court, meeting in the French island's administra
tive capital of Basse-Terre, ordered Faisans' release. A French Justice
Ministry spokesman said he would be freed Monday night from a prison
near Paris.
Faisans had been sentenced to three years in prison for wounding with
a machete a white teacher who had kicked one of his black pupils.
"The court has given the people's verdict. It is what the people
wanted," Faisans' sister Simone told Reuters.
Vice admiral lolled in Madrid attack
MADRID, Spain Suspected Basque guerrillas struck at the head of
Spain's military establishment Monday, assassinating a vice admiral in
charge of defense policy in a daring submachine-gun attack on his car in
central Madrid.
Three gunmen stopped a car taking Vice Adm. Frusto Escrigas Estrada,
59, to work and riddled it with bullets.
Escrigas Estrada was pronounced dead on arrival at a hospital. Hospital
sources said his 57-year-old chauffeur, a civilian, was in critical condition
with several head wounds.
Police later found the gunmen's getaway car in Madrid and blew its
trunk open to defuse a booby trap.
The killing occurred as U.S. Attorney-General Edwin Meese was having
talks on terrorism with Interior Minister Jose Barrionuevo..
Escrigas Estrada was the highest-ranking Spanish military officer
assassinated since ETA killed the former captain general of the Madrid
region 18 months ago.
Fed considers spraying paraquat
WASHINGTON The Federal Drug Enforcement Administration is
considering spraying the controversial herbicide paraquat on maryuana
growing on government land, a DEA spokesman said Monday.
According to a recently completed environmental impact statement,
paraquat can be used safely to eradicate weeds such as maryuana,
spokesman Con Dougherty said.
Officials of the National Organization for the Reform of Maryuana Laws
(NORML) disagreed, saying paraquat causes serious damage to the envir
onment and poses significant health problems for those who smoke
maryuana that has been treated with the substance.
Kevin Zeese, NORML's national director, said the organization would
go to court if the DEA decided to use the chemical. NORML won a court
order blocking paraquat spraying in 1983 pending completion of the
environmental impact statement. -