Tuesday, April 15, 1986 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan By The Associated Press LIBYA from Page 1 Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Dole said during an approximately two hour long briefing for congressional leaders from the president and top administrat ion officials, lawmakers were in agreement that action had been necessary against Libya. "I just believe the president did what the American people would have wanted him to do, a proportionate response to an act ofterrorism where CArF CANAVERAL. Fla. A sal vage ship has recovered a two-ton piece of Challenger rocket debris with a 2 foot -square hole burned through the steel casing at the joint blamed for the explosion of the space shuttle, the Navy said Monday. The 1 0-foot -by-20-foot piece, which could be vital to the investigation, was pulled from the floor of the Atlantic Ocean about 40 miles northeast of here by the Stena Workhorse after a robot submarine attached lift lines to it. The retrieval was made at 5 a.m. Sunday in 5li0 feet of water, the Navy said. Lt. Cmdr. Deborah Burnette, a Navy .spokeswoman, said the hole burned in Taxdeadline at midnight WASHINGTON - The Postal Ser vice and the Internal Revenue Ser vice are gearing up to handle, an estimated 10 million federal tax ret urns that are expected to be filed in the last few hours before tonight's midnight deadline. Most of the 104 million couples and individuals who will file this year already have done so. Nearly 40 million of them already are enjoying lefunds averaging nearly $800 a piece. The average American will have to work another 15 days until May 1 to pay his or her federal, state and local taxes for the year, the Tax Foundation estimated Mon day. That is what the foundation, a nonpartisan research organization, calls "Tax Freedom Day." Viewed another way, the founda tion estimated the average worker will put in 2 hours and 39 minutes each day this year to pay a share of all taxes. Setting it Straight A typographical error in Chris Welsch s column ("Fad makes men primp, preen," Daily Nebraskan, April 14) incorrectly stated the number of words allowed for special essay. Welsch asked readers to explain why they would or wouldn't be willing to die in a war with Libya in 50 words or less, not five. Send responses to Welsch at the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588 0448. Nebrayskan 34 Nebraska Union 1400 Ft St., Lincoln, NE68588-0448 Editor Vicki Ruhga. 472-1766 Managing Editor Thorn Gabrukiewicz Publications Board Chairperson John Hilgeri 475-4612 Professional Adviser Oon Walton. 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p m Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact John Hilgert. 475-4612. Subscription orice is S35 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan. Nebraska Union 34 1400 R St Lincoln. Neb. 68588-0448. Second-class oostaqe paid at Lincoln. NE 68510. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1986 DAILY NEBRASKAN there's no doubt about Libya's finger prints being all over the disco bombing in West Berlin," Dole said. Dole said he did not believe there had been major problems with War Powers Act compliance, but added that if future action of this sort is needed, "I hope the next time, if it happens. . . it will be done quickly and without three or four days of rhetoric and eve rybody guessing, including the media, what will happen next." Showing support for the I'.S. action. the joint and casing by a plume of escaping flame measured 1-foot -by-2-feet. The surrounding area was badly scorched. The recovery was announced earlier by the presidential shuttle commis sion, and a member of the commission was coming here to inspect the piece. A statement by commission Chair man William I Rogers said, "One of the two sections of critical interest" was recovered and that it was from the joint area where a leak in the right booster rocket is thought to have occurred, causing the shuttle's explo sion on Jan. 28. "A burnt out area of thejoint tang at Author Beauvoir dead at 78 PARIS Simone tie Beauvoir. 78, one of France's leading literary figures and lifelong companion of the late existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, died Monday at a Paris hospital. She wrote the international best seller "The Second Sex," published in 11)4!) and now regarded as a foundation stone of the women's liberation move ment worldwide. De Beauvoir was an ardent champion of women's rights and a fundamental philosopher oft he move ment. Constantly at Sartre's side during his leftist crusades, de Beauvoir never lost sight of her commitment to women's liberation. It was the main theme of her Pianist Horowitz returns MOSCOW Vladimir Horowitz, the patriarch of classical pianists who left his homeland 61 years ago saying he wouldn't return, had a flower-filled reunion with Russia on Monday and declared he wants to be an ambassador of peace. He said he had a message for his former countrymen "that I will deliver with my piano." "I am very glad to be here," Horowitz Get Your Hands Tandy m A Computing Seminar With Something For Everyone! April 22 & 24 Walter Scott Engineering Center Tues. 7:00 Career Opportunities, Computer Aided Designs (Graphics) Rm. 357 Thurs. 7:00 Xenix, CAD-CAM, Graphics Applications Rm. 241 A Special Offer From Radio Shack! SAVE 20 To help you really get your hands on "a computer. Radio Shack is offering faculty, staff and students a coupon for a 20 discount on any one of our Tandy computers, and any software and accessories purchased with the computer. This coupon offer applies to a one time purchase only, so don't miss this opportunity) Must attend to receive 20 coupon. Plan to Attend Tandy on Campus. No registration. No fee. Sponsored by Association for Computing Machinery the brother of an American soldier killed in the bombing of a West Berlin club said Monday that U.S. military retaliation against Libya was long overdue. "I think we did the right thing. The president did what he had to do," said Robin Beecham. Beecham's brother, Army Sgt. Ken neth Ford, 21, died in the April 5 explo sion at the La Belle nightclub a week before he was scheduled to return to Detroit for the first time in 2' i years. about the 300 degree position is evi dent," the statement said. The other key piece, the bottom of the joint, has not been located but is believed to be in the same area. Investigators have said the accident that killed seven astronauts was caused by a failure in this joint. But they don't know exactly how it failed, and they feel that by recovering the part con taining the joint they may find out. Experts believe a leak in the joint allowed flame to escape, eventually severing the bottom rocket attachment and causing the top of the booster to swivel into the large external fuel tank, setting off the explosion. prolific and mostly autobiographical writing, and it shaped her life from early childhood to her death. In "The Second Sex," de Beauvoir described marriage as an "obscene bourgeois institution" because it re duced to a litany of rights and duties what she felt should be a partnership of equals based on mutual and spontane ous attraction. De Beauvoir's critics accused her of being remote, cerebral, and humorless in her treatment of women's issues. Her books, especially when she addressed the question of sex, showed a certain prudishness inherited from her upper middle class upbringing and convent education. said in fluent Russian at a short airport news conference. "There are no ene mies here, only friends." His two concerts in the Soviet Union will lend glitter to the U.S.-Soviet cul tural exchange agreement signed at the Geneva summit last November. He told reporters at the airport he changed his mind about returning home because "there is a cultural exchange now." on a Computer Caimpii !n conjunction with Engineering Week Weather deaths Six people were killed Monday in accidents that occured in blizzard like weather that struck northeast and north-central Nebraska. Five people died when a twin engine plane crashed shortly after takeoff near Norfolk. The victims were not identified. A woman was killed when the car she was driving slid off an icy street in Norfolk. Cindy Burgel, 20, of rural Norfolk was driving northbound on U.S. Highway 81 when her car went off I he road and landed in a cemetery, a Norfolk police official said. Tractor testing LINCOLN The NU tractor testing site would assume interna tional responsibilities under a mea sure passed Monday by the Legis lature. The bill, LB 70S, introduced by Sen. Rex Haberman of Imperial, was advanced to Gov. Bob Kerrey on a 44 1 vote. Agriculture Commit tee chairman Rod Johnson of Sutton has said NU's tractor-testing site would become the only test station in North Amer ica for the Organization for Eco nomic Cooperation and Develop ment. Before tractors can be sold legally in many count ries, a model of each type of tractor must be tested at an OECD station. The university's tractor testing site has been in operation for more than 60 years, and tests an average of 30 models of tractors each year. Public radio LINCOLN - The Legislature, moving to broaden the listening opportunities of most Nebraskans, passed LB 461 Monday, a bill author izing creation of a statewide public radio network. The bill was sent to Gov. Bob Kerrey on a 28-18 vote. to Russia after 61 years Horowitz will play at Moscow's Tchaikovsky Conservatory next Sunday and on April 27 in Shostakovich Phil harmonic Hall at Leningrad, where he performed before he left his country at age 21 to become one of t he great expatriate Soviet artists. His elaborate entrouge includes a 43-member television crew to beam his Moscow concert back to the United States. liiiiilo IB o 9 presents tomorrow night MARE EARTH One Night Only! Wed. April 16 Admission $5 I ft it i i Tonight-KFMQ 15th Birthday Party Thurs.-Sat. "Bad Reputation" Sun. Battle of the Bands Dog Bodies, Cocky Monroe, Jag 75 cent Longneckers Thursday! Penny Draws Friday! LITTLE BO'S at 27th & Comhusker Where the Live Music never stops 7 nights a week Supporters say all Nebraskans should be given the opportunity to listen to public radio broadcasts. Currently, only residents in the Omaha and Lincoln area can tune into public radio. No state funds will be approp riated in the upcoming fiscal year, which begins July 1, to help set up the statewide network. Public radio supporters could seek state finan cial support in later years, which is a sore point wit h opponents. National Guard bill advances LINCOLN A bill curtailing a tuition credit program for members of the Nebraska National Guard picked up final approval, 40-"), Mon day in the Legislature. The measure, estimated to save the state .$100,000 annually, sets up criteria limiting the tuition pro gram to 1,200 people. The tuition assistance would be available to members of Nebraska's Guard for up to 10 years, beginning with a person's admission into the Guard. The criteria also would ex clude officers with bachelor's de grees and those eligible for equival ent federal benefits from participat ing in the state program. Tutu elected CAPE TOWN, South Africa -Bishop Desmond Tutu, winner of the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize for his anti-apartheid campaign, on Mon day was elected leader of t he Angli can Church for all of southern Africa, The announcement came after a day-long meeting of some 500 Angli can clergy and lay people who con vened to choose a new archbishop of Cape Town, the highest Anglican position in the region. Archbishop Phillip Russell is re tiring in August after five years in the job, and Tutu will take over Sept. 1. Horowitz, accompanied by his wife Wanda, daughter of the late Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini, was met by U.S. Ambassador Arthur Hartman and Oleg Smolensky, head of the Soviet concert agency. Horowitz then walked into an em brace with Yelena Dolberg, 67, a niece he last saw in 1 925 before he emigrated from the Soviet Union. Tickets available at Pickles and Dirt Cheap