The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 07, 1987, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    News Digest. By The Associated Press
Refuseniks and journalists roughed up in Soviet Union
MOSCOW — Hundreds of burly
men in civilian clothes roughed up
refuseniks and journalists Sunday and
knocked down and detained U.S. TV
newsman Peter Arnett during rival
demonstrations on theeve of the U.S.
Soviet summit.
At least 100 refuseniks — Soviets
denied permission to emigrate —
planned to take part in a protest
against Soviet restrictions on emigra
tion.
But at least 27 were detained en
route to the Moscow demonstration,
and the others were overwhelmed by
about 200 plainclothes KGB agents
and about 100 members of the offi
cially supported Soviet Peace Com
mittee.
The agents jammed Smolensky
Square and jostled refuseniks who
managed to get through police cor
dons blocking all entrances to the
protest site, a small triangle of grass
opposite the Foreign Ministry.
They shoved and occasionally
threw punches at refuseniks and
Western journalists trying to photo
graph the clash.
It was the clearest indication in the
weeks leading up to the Dec. 8-10
Washington summit that Soviet au
thorities will not tolerate public ex
pressions of dissent, even under
Mikhail S. Gorbachev’s policy of
“glasnost,” or openness on certain
topics.
It appeared that authorities went to
considerable lengths to quell the re
fuseniks’ protest.
Alexander Feldman, a refusenik
and would-be demonstrator, told The
Associated Press he spent Saturday
night at his sister’s apartment in an
attempt to avoid Soviet authorities.
But when he left his sister’s home
Sunday morning to go to the demon
stration, Feldman said three men put
him into a wailing sedan and drove
him to a police station 40 miles out
side Moscow. He said he was released
about 2:30 p.m., two hours after the
protest was over.
About 15 minutes into the re
fusenik protest, plainclothes agents
knocked down and struck Arnett, the
Moscow correspondent for Cable
Network News, and then hustled him
into a bus and drove him to a nearby
office.
In Brief
Study: Cohabitating couples divorce more often
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Couples who lived together before marry
ing have nearly an 80 percent higher divorce rate than those who didn’t,
according to a study by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
“As a practical matter, it appears that careful screening before
marriage has displaced in part the willingness to make adjustments after
marriage as the supposed key to promoting successful unions,” said Neil
Bennett, one of the study’s three authors.
The results are based on a 1981 survey of 4,996 Swedish women.
Report: Welfare fraud may cost $1 billion a year
WASHINGTON—Fraud in the federal government’s major welfare
program for mothers and children could be costing $1 billion a year
according to a report by the Department of Health and Human Services’
inspector general.
The report estimates that federal and state governments could save
$800 million a year just by placing more emphasis on weeding out
unqualified applicants before they start receiving benefits after their
initial qualification.
Iranians hit 2 neutral-flagged tankers in gulf
MANAMA, Bahrain — Iran launched unusually devastating gun
boat attacks Sunday on two neutral-flag tankers in the Persian Gulf,
killing a Danish sailor aboard one and igniting the highly volatile
naphtha cargo of another.
I v The abandoned Singapore-flagged ship Norman Atlantic was still
1 burning more that eight hours after it was attacked in eariy afternoon in
I th5 Strait of Hormuz, the gulf’s only gateway.
^-—---mm4
-————-—————— ————— — —-^
- 1-»»»»»»»»
475-6363 M SPECIAL S 475-6363
Qn£.-ia| ■ 3-10 inch ■
special H One item Pizzas fl Special
Offer m & 4 cokes M Offer
M xS/ s
leen-age Omaha girl found strangled
OMAHA—A woman whose body
was found near Omaha was strangled,
an autopsy showed.
The nude body of Kathryn Huoer,
17, was found down an embankment
along U.S. 75 north of Omaha Friday
by a jogger.
The autopsy did not reveal how
long Huber had been dead, Douglas
County Sheriffs Lt. Gary Hammer
said.
Investigators have interviewed a
number of people, and “so far there’s
nothing new, nothing good that will
get this thing solved right away,” he
said.
Autopsy results and evidence at the
scene indicate Huber was not killed
where she was found, Hammer said. It
appears her body was dumped along
the road after she was killed, he said.
Her father, Thomas Huber of
Bellevue, said his daughter tele
phoned less than an hour before she
disappeared and told her parents she
wanted to move back home. She was
living in an apartment with two room
mates.
Later that day, her friends called to
say they were worried because Huber
had not returned home after saying she
was going to a nearby store and would
be right back, her father said.
Senators weigh tax increase
to cut federal budget deficit
WASHINGTON — For the third
time in six years, the Senate is about to
decide whether taxes should be raised
to reduce the federal budget deficit.
Senate leaders hope to take a final
vole this week on a $23 billion lax
increase that is the ccnteipiccc of a
plan to slash the deficit by $76 billion
over the next 22 months.
The framework for the anti-deficit
measures was worked out by Presi
dent Reagan and congressional lead
ers in a much-publicized effort to
show that the partisan differences can
be put aside in the national interest.
Nevertheless, there is opposition to
the plan from those who arc against
any tax increase and from others who
say the spending cuts arc much too
timid.
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas,
chairman of the Finance Committee,
which wrote the lax bill, predicted it
will pass because it is “as painless as
possible” — meaning the impact will
hardly be felt by typical taxpayers.
The burden will fallalmostcntirely on
corporations and upper-income indi
viduals.
Nebrayskan
Editor Mike Reilley
472 1766
Managing Editor Jen Deselms
Assoc News Editors Mike Hooper
Miry Nell Westbrook
Editorial
Page Editor Jeanne Bourne
Wire Editor Linda Hartmann
Copy Desk Chief Joan Rezac
Sports Editor Jett Apel
Arts & Entertain
ment Editor Charles Lieurance
Asst. Arts &
Entertainment Editor Geoff McMurtry
The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is
Bublished 6y the UNL Publications Board,
ebraska Jmon 34.1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb
68588 0448, weekdays during academic year
(except holidays), weekly during the summer !
session I
Postmaster Send address changes to the I
Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R I
St, Lincoln, Neb 68588-0448 Second-class I
postage paid at Lincoln, NE 1
ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1987 DAILY NEBRASKAN %
-■ -■■■■■--■■■ ■■«
Get a $100 gift certificate just for doing
a little name calling.
Beginning in March of 1988, the University of Nebraska will have a new campus student
center located at 16th and "W" streets The student center, formerly the OMC building, will
house an atrium type food court including six different restaurants, a dry cleaning service,
banking senvces, sundries, a copy center, a casual clothing store, c' . : 'u> rental store and
other retailers
There’s only one problem with the new student center, it doesn’t have a name That’s
why we need your help Since Jie new facility is primarily for students and faculty, we
thought you should have some voice in what it should be called So, weVe decided to have a
"Name Calling’ contest
Hardy Luilding Corp: ation, the developer of the the center, wants you to submit any
ideas you might have for naming the facility If you come up with the winning name, you’ll
receive a $100 Gift Certificate to any service offered Ly the ct'Rter
Just take a couple of minutes to jot down a few ideas and then pick your best one Fill
out the entry form below and who knows'? You just might be the winner' Deadline for all
entries is December 20, 1987. The winning name will be announced on January 11 1988 ’ **
Dat®—-Student___Faculty Other_
Name_Address
City_State_Zip_ Phone
Name Suggestion for New Student Center
Return to:
Hardy Building Corporation
1327 H Street, Suite 300,Lincoln, NE 68508
Deadline: December 20,1987