The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 22, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Pag 2
Wednesday, February 22, 1934
Daily Ncbraskan
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?FiiEE FREE TIIEE : FREE" FREE
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Appreciation Night
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BELEMSS
9 11 PM
Plus 2 Live Bands-
The Jacks
Wed. & Thurs
Itchy Brother
. Fri. & Sat.
MAINSTREET
W ed. & Thurs
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Fri. & Sat
27th & Cornhusker
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Correction
AH university employees, including students, must
report new license plate numbers of new cars to the
UNL Police Department Parking Office, 1335 N. 1 7th
St. Yesterdays Shorts column listed only students
having to fuluii that requirement.
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fn American Heart
WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE
-7! 1 J sljt
O 1 I
Flexible study hours are yours with
independent study. Study at your pace,
your place. Over 75 courses to choose
from. For . information, visit the UNL
Division of Continuing Studies Inde
pendent Study Department, 269 Ne
braska Center for Continuing Education,
33rd and Holdrege. Take the shuttle
bus from cfty campus. Or call 472-1926.
' 1 Campus
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UNL doi not diwriminat In its ec&famte, sfksin
cr tmployment programs, and abides by ail federal
regulations pertaining to tame. - -
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ie Wire
National and international news
from the Renter News Report .
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Soviets malic concoction
on chemical wenponn
GENEVA The Soviet Union, In its first
major arms control statement under the new
leadership of Konstantin Chernenko, Tuesday
made what Western experts described as a
significant concession in negotiations to ban
chemical weapons. Viktor Issrcely&n, Moscow's
chief negotiator at the 40-nation Geneva dis
armament conference, announced that the
Soviet Union would agree to the principle of
permanent on-site verification of chemical
weapons destruction by international inspec
tors. He said this would speed up the process of
completing a treaty banning manufacture and
stockpiling of such weapons. Later, chief U.S.
delegate Louis Fields said Washington wel
comed the Soviet statement. However, he told
reporters outside the conference wall, "while
this appears to represent a breakthrough in
one facet of the chemical warfare negotiations,
there remain many equally difficult outstand
ing issues to be resolved before an agreement
on an effective and verifiable convention can
be achieved."
P.Iondale: Caucus steppin etone'
DES MOINES, Iowa Former Vice Presi
dent Walter Mondale Tuesday promised to use
his overwhelming victory in Iowa's Democratic
caucuses as a stepping stone to the White
House, while Sen. John Glenn vowed to bounce
back from his crushing defeat.
Before the caucuses, Glenn was considered
Mondale's closesf rival, but with 96 percent of
the returns counted from last night's polling,
Mondale had won 46 percent of the vote and
Glenn only five percent. Colorado Sen. Gary
Hart scored a surprising second-place finish
with 15 percent of the vote. Former Sen.
George McGovern also did well by taking 13
percent of the Iowa vote, third best. Sen. Alan
Cranston of California had nine percent for a
fourth;place finishGlenn finished sixth, after
the "undecided" vote. Former Florida Gov.
Reubin Askew and the Rev. Jesse Jackson had
about three percent each, and South Carolina
Sen. Ernest Hollings drew less than one percent.
NEW YORK Three members of the snti
Castro Omega 7 underground group Tuesday
pleaded guilty to reduced conspiracy charges
in return for agreeing to tell the government
about the inner workings of the secret organi
zation, prosecutors said. Two of the defend
ants, Geraldo Necuze and Justo Rodriguez,
pleaded guilty in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. The third,
Jose Ignacio Gonzalez, entered his pica in Ft J
eral Court in New York. The three pleaded
guilty to charges of conspiring to possess and
set off bombs.
Lumpectomies, rcEicvsl ccr:pr.rab!e
BALTIMORE, Maryland The survival rate
for women who undergo lumpectomies to cut
away small cancers but preserve their breasts
is the same over a five-year period as breast
removal, according to a leading cancer sur
geon. Dr. George Elias, Maryland chairman 6f
the National Surgical Adjuvant .Breast and
Bowel Project of the U.S. and Canada, said in
an interview that a joint U.S.-Canadian study
of 2,499 women showed matching survival
rates of 85 percent after five years among both
lumpectomy patients and patients who had
modified radical mastectomies. The study, soon
to be published, also showed that women have
a 12.6 percent chance of developing a second
tumor in the same breast after a lumpectomy, :
but the recurrence rate was only five percent
-.among those who' receive radiation therapy.'"
Court npliolcb Burnett ruling '
WASHINGTON . The Supreme Court Tues-
day let stand a lower rmirf rvV't that tht
rational Enquirer must pay Carol Burnett
COnn AAA 1 l;u- -1 1 r- ' . .
uvj,vjv m imei carnages for suggesting she
was intoxicated in a fashionabk Washington'.;'
restaurant. The weekly tabloid said in a March -2,
1976, gossip column that the popular teievi- :
sion star had had a loud argument with former
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, girled '
after spilling wine on another diner and went
around the restaurant offering everyone a bite
of her dessert Before Burnett sued the Enquirer, -she
demanded and got a retraction that said:
"We understand that these events did not
occur and we are sorry for any embarrassment "
our report may haw caused Miss Burnett."