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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1985)
Tuesday, August 6, 1935 Pego2 The Nebraskan ROTC enrollment increases (AP) Enrollment in Reserve Ocer Training Corps programs at UNL are Increasing, says Lt. Col. Gary II. Wade, who took over July 1 as chair man of the Army ROTC program at UNL Interest in military studies has increased dramatically over the last few years as students' faith in the country and its institutions has grown, he said. Fall enrollment in Army ROTC classes is expected to hit 300 students, up from a low of 63 students in 1976. Par ticipation in Naval and Air Force ROTC is also increasing. "There's a growing feeling of patriot ism nationwide, said Wade, 38, who taught military science at Lincoln Uni versity in Jefferson City, Mo., in the mid-70s. "You can see it especially in the latest hostage crisis." Students may also be motivated by the chance at a military scholarship or because they are attracted by the a. nihilities of an officer in the army, he said! "But I don't think the monetary aspect is the primary motiva tion." , . Although many students take only one or two ROTC classes in their freshman and sophomore years, an increasing number are making the commitment to the junior and senior program, which leads to a minimum of four years military service after graduation. Police Report The following incidents were reported to UNL police between 1:44 a.m. Thurs day and 8:29 p.m. Saturday. Thursday 1:44 a.ra. Allegedly intoxicated person reported at 14th and Q streets. Person was taken to a detoxification center. 9:30 a.m. Animal reported in Miller Hall on East Campus. Case was turned over to animal control. 11:45 a.m. - Indecent exposure reported at the northeast side of Mem orial Stadium. 1:17 p.m. Attempted theft of a book reported at the C. Y. Thompson Library on East Campus. 1:42 p.m. Two car accident reported on East Campus Mall near the College of Home Economics. No injur ies were reported. 9:58 p.m. Fire alarm reported sounding at Oldfather Hall. Alarm was allegedly set off by a firecracker. Friday 12:07 p.m. Injury reported be tween Nebraska Union and Teacher's College. Person was reportedly struck by someone on a bicycle. Person was taken to the hospital by ambulance. 12:55 p.m. Belated report of a cassette radio stolen from Harper Hall. 4:39 p.m. Property damage accident reported at 15th and S streets. Saturday 12:19 a.m. Money and food reported stolen from 1245 N. 16th St. 4:0$ a.m. Person arrested on a previous warrant after being stopped for a traffic violation at 48th and Walker streets. 5:04 p.m. Security alarm re ported sounding at Love Library. Sunday 1:27 a.m. Flag reported stolen from the Bob Devaney Sports Center. 11:02 a.m. Stereo equipment reported stolen from a vehicle in Park ing Area 3 near Harper Hall. 7:30 p.m. Fire alarm reported sounding at Benton Hall. 8:29 p.m. Fire alarm reported sounding at the College of Law on East Campus. 9. &&is&&fsi$8888&&88$i'. q P an el. . . c5 m 1 . m W JJ2) 111 14 DAYS NOnHALPROCE&SXNGlIEIII FREE PARKING NORTH OF BANK 6 ELGCZS SOUTH OF TIXS STUDENT VNION1 'O. ?. o. v 'O. 'O. ' 'O. 'd '?. 'O. 2 d 'O. 'O. c O. uncon " tag BmMifJit ) yy 2 7TA I -J I- City Dank A Trust Company of UtTco'n 14Sh and M SfrMts Pfront: 477-4431 Unccfc Kstoreaka tZZZi U&rJtm F.DXC Continued from Page 1 "There are more doors open and less resistance," she said, and added that self-esteem is primary to overcoming fear and taking risks necessary for advancement. Tuttle said also that everyone has an "inner desire to achieve something in their lifetime." Other panel members included Sally Schneider, assistant vice-president and employment manager at First National Lincoln, Susan Scott, president of Susan Scott & Associates, Janet Krause, UNL assistant dean of the College of Law and Jean O'Hara, executive director of the Nebraska Commission on the Sta tus of Women. m i r ' "' . - --' "" " " -.- L LEG lA pIeIsI x r t 7 fir r i a si iyacTh T 1 1 NQ ElRA RICO tH I ITS r- 1 " """ mmmw mmm mmm .. a mmm mmm ; -frini i ta H AjR A JW C Ala f ell Of e s t iro Ho oil P R 1 E NfXl D Q L g IT j sec p rFv tmi Til ' 7rT6U jj 'A H CM I 'ijfjs sip eTc Tg" aTl? TEoiypIc t e aTtT e rr A A pi A R A T s m e (a v t sj 8 p m e la I p 0 8m DAVg hor9e Thanks. It's time to head back to class. didn 't hear the bell. I don't mean school, I mean hairstyle. You want hair with class? Absolutely. You show what's in your head by how you treat what's on it. For Ivy League quality, at a State U price, visit 245 North 13th Street 475-5550 Q i (.3 mm ( igaii oSere to join Soiet nuclear freeze WASHINGTON (Reuter) President Reagan Monday offered to join Moscow in halting nuclear tests after the United States catches up with Soviet weapons developments. But Reagan's comments at an informal news conference the latest in a new series of U.S.-Soviet exchanges on nuclear arms issues did not make clear when such a U.S. test freeze might take effect. Both sides last week made fresh offers, apparently in anticipation of a summit meeting between Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev set for November in Geneva. Gorbachev announced a unilateral five-month moratorium on nuclear weapons tests from today the 40th anniversary of th8 U.S. atomic attack on Hiroshima. Eeagan says growth was cancerous WASHINGTON (AP) In his second brush with cancer in less than a month, President Reagan revealed Monday that tissue removed from his nose last week was a sun-induced skin cancer, the most common and easily curable form of the disease. Reagan said no further treatment was necessary, but added: "I'm told I must not expose myself to the sun anymore." Reagan's wife, Nancy, had a similar skin cancer removed from her upper lip in 1982. The tissue on Reagan's nose which the President called a pimple, was removed by a dermatologist at the White House last Tuesday. The White House did not reveal the procedure until two days later and then refused to say whether it had been biopsied or whether it was cancerous. Dr. Thomas Nigra, chief of the Dermatology Department at Washington Hospital Center and a recognized expert in his field, said there was no relationship between the skin cancer known as a "basal cell carcinoma" and the malignant tumor removed from the president's colon July 13. ICidnapped boy found in Valentine VALENTINE, Neb. (AP) A "scared and confused" 14-year-old boy kidnapped in Florida four months ago was found Monday at a remote highway rest area 23 miles south of Valentine, a Nebraska State Patrol trooper said. Jay L. Phillips was found at 5:10 a.m. asleep in a car, said trooper Stan Williams. Also in the car was Ronald Mulholland, whom Williams said he arrested on a kidnapping warrant from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Williams said the Phillips boy and Mulholland, 34, were sleeping in a 1973 Mercury Cougar without permanent license plates. The car was parked along U.S. Highway 83. "Mr. Mulholland is a very smooth person and he just produced his driver's license and ownership papers for the car," Williams said. Williams said he ran a check on Mulholland through the National Crime Informa tion Center and found the outstanding kidnapping warrant from Florida. Treason trial begins in South Africa PIETERMARITZBURG, South Africa (AP) The treason trial of 16 anti-apartheid activists began Monday and black miners announced an impending boycott of white businesses to protest the state of emergency. Police reported 16 more arrests under the emergency imposed last month in an attempt to quell the tide of riot and protest that has swept black cities and townships for nearly a year, claiming 500 black victims. The trial of 16 leaders of the United Democratic Front, in this city of eastern Natal province, is seen as the most significant treason case in South Africa since 1 56 activists were acquitted after a four-year-long legal contest that began in 1956. A-bomb survivors mark anniversary HIROSHIMA, Japan (Reuter) Mayors of 100 cities from around the world met survivors of the U.S. atomic bombing of Japan as they gathered in Hiroshima Tuesday for ceremonies marking the 40th anniversary of the air raid. Mayor Vladimir Atopov of the Soviet Union's most battle-torn city, Volgograd, swapped war stories with Hiroshima survivor Hisao Doi, 61, on the eve of the anniversary of the world's first atomic attack. Thousands of foreign visitors have poured into the broiling summer heat of the thriving metropolis that rose out of the devastation inflicted by a U.S. bomber on August 6, 1945. Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone will address today's memorial gath ering in Peace Park, set out on ground which bore the full force of the atomic blast. Hiroshima Mayor Takeshi Araki will pay tribute to the estimated 200,000 people who died here and in Nagasaki in the second atomic attack on August 9 that year. The gathering of mayors, 67 of them from outside Japan, was the centerpiece of this year's anniversary ceremonies. Lincoln to receive 0920,000 windfall .LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - The city of Lincoln will receive a $928,000 windfall m unexpected federal aid next fiscal year, Budget Officer Jamie Warner said Monday. Warner, speaking before the City Council, said the windfall was a result of the federal budget passed last week by congress. The city will get $865,000 more than it anticipated in federal revenue sharing funds, and $63,000 more in mass transit aid for the 1985-86 fiscal year, he said. A recommendation on how the eitra money should be used was being drafted by Mayor Roland Luedtke's administration. Warner said the windfall could reduce property taxes by 4 percentage points. Luedtke already has proposed a 25 percent cut in property taxes leived for city services for the fiscal year 1985-88. York man contacts space shuttle YORK, Neb. (AP) Wayne Shipferling of York said at 6:53 p.m. Sunday he made voice contact on his ham radio with the space shuttle orbiting the earth. Shipferling said he exchanged call signs with astronaut Tony England, who also is a ham. Shipferling said that to the best of his knowledge, he is the first Nepraska ham operator ever to make two-way contact with the shuttle.