The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 20, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Pago 2
Daily Nebraskan
Friday, April 20, 1034
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Pita Kcbob Gyro) Sandwiches, Dinners,
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TAKE OUTS WELCOME 477-2333
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(with purchase of
medium drink)
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Hrx cuts at The Chop Shop are
enly C550, and styles arc a mere $1150.
A cut or style torn The Chop Shop '
will prove you don't have to pay more to get
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; rZT Ca!i today for your
appojiimeni.
438352
Clocktower Plaza 70th & A
Cornstock will wrap up
Western Week events
The Cornstock XIV concert and several Western
games are the main events of Western Week, which
begins April 25.
Deanna Armstrong, chairperson of the main
events committee of University Program Council
East, said Western Week begins at 3 p.m. Wednesday
with games at the East Campus tennis courts.
Armstrong said teams of six people will race
against other teams in events such as a piggyback
race, seven-legged race, bale stacking and other
games. . .
A traveling trophy will be awarded to winners in
both the men's and women's divisions. A $5 entry fee
is required and teams still can register in the UPC
Campus and Activities and Programs office on East
Campus, Armstrong said.
The sights and sounds committee will sponsor the
screening of SouUi cm (Jmnfort at 8 p.m. Wednesday
in Burr lialL Admission is $1.50 for students and
$2.50 for non-students.
Friday's Cornstock XIV features three local bands
playing from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the open grass
south of the East Union. .
MX, a contemporary rock band, begins the festival
at 12:30 p.m., followed by "The Rave," which features
a '60s sound. High Heel and the Sneekers from
Omaha will complete the show. High Heel and the
Sneekers also feature contemporary rock and pop
, music. Cornstock XIV is sponsored by the dance and
Cornstock committees.
T-shirts for Cornstock can be bought next week at
booths in both unions and also at the show.
Armstrong said she anticipates a crowd of 4,000
for the Friday concerts
7
SPRING SA
Jewelers
LE.
mi
V -
Sartor Hamann annual spring sale is on now. There are savings to be
found throughout the store. This is for a limited time only, so hurry in and
take advantage of our spring sale prices. -
VISA-MASTERCARD -LAYAWAY-SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE
SINCE 1905
17
DOWNTOWN 1130 "0"
ACROSS FROM THECENTRUM
GATEWAY MALL
Off Tine Wire
National and international news
from the Rcutcr News Report
WASHINGTON Hie Kcrn administra
tion has rejected Nicaragua's noiranation of
Nora Astorga, a heroine of that country's San
dinist revolution, to be its c.;r.Lr:.v.-::r;dor in
Washington, a senior administration official
said Thursday.
Astorga, a 36-year-old lawyer, was promi
nent in the revolutionary army of the S;mdinist
National Liberation Front that overthrew the
government of Ar.asta.sio Somoza in 1979.
She has admitted her role as an accomplice
in the March 8, 1978, murder of Gen. Eeynaldo
Perez Vega, deputy commander of Scmoza's
National Guard.
Astorga has said the original plan was for
her to invite Perez Vega to her bedroom where
Sandinists were waiting to kidnap him, but the
general resisted and was killed in the ensuing
struggle.
The Reagan administration official refused
to give specific reasons for the rejection of
Astorga but said, "She's not the type of person
we want here, we wouldn't send that type of
person there."
Britain and Libya in ctcndoIT
LONDON Britain and Libya were locked in
a contest of wills Thursday night as police in
London maintained their stakeout at the Libyan
Embassy and fresh diplomatic contact brought
no immediate breakthrough.
Britain is demanding to search the building
and question those inside about the killing of a
young policewoman in a shooting incident at
the embassy Tuesday. But Libyan leader Muam
mar Gaddafi Thursday blamed the British
government for the shooting and demanded
the immediate withdrawal of the police, who
have kept the building surrounded ever since.
In an interview with NBC-TV, Gaddafi denied
personal involvement in the shooting which
also injured 10 anti-Gaddafi demonstrators.
He said the Libyans in the mission had been
acting on their own under police siege when
they were attacked by "some Middle East
people."
Leftist Salvadorano claim attack
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador Lctist Sal
vadoran guerrillas said Thursday they had
fired on two U.S. helicopters which crossed
into El Salvador from Honduras Wednesday.
A U.S. Army helicopter carrying two Ameri
can Senators was hit three times by gunfire
close to Honduras' border with El Salvador but
no one. was injured in the incident, U.S. officials
in Tegucigalpa said.
The rebel Radio Veneer ernes said in a broad
cast Thursday that anti-aircraft units firing .50
caliber machine guns shot at two U.S.
helicopters.
Sens. Lawton Chiles of Florida and Bennet
Johnston of Louisiana, both Democrats, were
flying to a Salvadoran refugee camp in Hondu
ras close to the border with El Salvador when
the two helicopters carrying their party came
under fire. Only one of the helicopters was
reported to have been hit and made a precau
tionary landing.
Most Americans oupport freeze
WASHINGTON - A large majority of Ameri
cans support a U.S. Soviet nuclear freeze, but a
majority also think Moscow cannot be trusted
to honor such a pact, according to a nation
wide poll released Thursday.
The poll, financed by the Committee for the
Present Danger, found that 81 percent of those
surveyed favored a verifiable freeze, and 76
percent felt verification was a very important
aspect of any arms control agreement.
But 71 percent said they dfd not think Mos
cow could be trusted to honor a freeze
agreement. . . ;
The Committee for the Present Darker, a
conservative organization formed m 1976 with
Ronald Reagan as one of its founders, supports ::
increased defense spending. A freeze motion .
wza approved last year by the Hours cf Ecpre- i
sentatives, which has a Democratic rar'ority," -but
was defeated in the senate, which U con- -
trolled by Republicans. The poll fcuhd CO rer-v.
..cent of Americans -.backed-a uni-iirU II-S.
nuclear freeze, 55 percent thought a freeze
would reduce defense spending, and 33 per
cent thought a freeze would reduce the chance
of war.