The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 24, 1984, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Tuesday, April 24, 1t34
Pago 2
Daily Ncbraskan
y
1
1
OO O. Gtrt
jjtrinin in W
Haircuts at The Chop Shop ere .
only $550,and stes ere a mere $1150.
A cut or style from The Chop Shop
will prove you don't have to pay more to get
the VERY BEST. I
tll2
1 1 - -V
Call today for your
appointment. I
4828352
Clocktower Plaza 70th & A
Wesleyan group
offers gay support
The reb:rth of the two-year-old gay-lesbian support
group r.t Nebraska Wesleyan University is making
some people nervous, the group's 'adviser said. ,
But most of tite community is fairly tolerant, the
Rev. Jim Etui man said. . u
"People have varied reactions," Stillman said. A
number ot people are supportive . . . others feel it is
absolutely not appropriate."
Interest in the support group has renewed because
of new leadership and new enthusiasm, Stillman
said.
The group does not advocate homosexuality,
Stillman said. But he said that, like all people,
. homosexuals deserve community and social support
Stillman said the support group functions as an
on-campus organization, meeting Tuesday nights.
Those interested in participating, Stillman said, can
contact Mary Smith in the English Department, or
Stillman, to set up a visitation appointment.
KodakyWGresmt
pJwtography seminar
"An Experience in Photography," presentation
sponsored by the Eastman Kodak Company at 7
tonight in the Love Library Auditorium is designed
to help amateur photographers expand their visual
awareness. .
Robert Harris, directing photographer for Kodak s
multimedia travel productions, will conduct the
slide presentation which covers many subjects.
Harris' work has been featured in Popular Pfmtxy
graphy and other magazines.
The presentation is part of the University Pro
gram Council's Talks and Topics series.
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IC O D A IC
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UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN
TUESDAY APRIL 24, 1C34
7 PM LOVE LIBRARY AUDITORIUM
..'SPONSORED BY" UPC TALKS Ct TOPICS '
FREE ADMISSION
Join an expert from Ibda!:fcr1hb Irirplrlng c:::!cn cn photography. .
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ff The Wiire '
National and international news
from the Renter News Report
1 n nmini.
WAKHiKnTON VS. researchers
Mnndav thrv had discovered the probable
cause of the discuss AIDS which hz$ caused
panic in the homosexual community said
they could be within two years of developing a
cure. .
Speaking on behalf of a research team from
the government-funded National Institutes of
Health, Margaret Heckler, secretary of Health
, and Human Services, told a news conference,
Today's discovery represents the triumph of
science over a dreaded disease." AIDS, Acquir
ed Immune Deficiency Syndrome, which leaves
its victims open to a series of wasting diseases
by affecting their immune systems, attacks
hemophiliacs, drug users arid recipients of
blood transfusions as well as homosexuals.
In the United States about 40 percent of the
more than 4,000 people afflicted with the dis
ease since its discovery in 1931 have died.
Heckler identified the probable cause of the
disease as a varient of an unknown human
cancer virus called Human T-cell Leukemia
Virus (HILV), which attacks human T-cells, an
essential element of the immune system.
She said the discovery at the Washington
based National Institutes of Health had come
at the same time as a similar discovery of an
AIDS-causing virus in the Masteur Institute in
France.
Court hears draft-aid caae
WASHINGTON The Supreme Court Mon
day hearda constitutional challenge to the fed
eral government's ruling it would deny federal
aid to male university students who fail to reg
ister for military conscription. The case was
brought by a Minnesota group against a 1D33
law which makes men who fail to register for
the draft as required by law ineligible for any
form of federal aid to higher education.
The Minnesota Public Interest Research Group
argued that forcing men to sign a statement
that they had registered for the draft as a
condition of getting aid forced many to make a
choice between self-incrimination, perjury or
losing the aid. Protection against self-incrimination
is guaranteed by the filth amendment
to the Constitution. Attorney William KeppeL
representing the Minnesota group, said the
law discriminated against the poor' because
a student who did not neec federal aid to con
tinue in college did not have to say whether
they registered for the draft.
Libyans to leave before deadline
LONDON Libyan diplomats ordered to
leave their besieged embassy here after the
shooting death of a London pclicevcrasa said
Monday they would remain until a few hours
before the expulsion deadline r.ext Sunday.
The British government braced for
reprisals over last night's order expelling them
and severing diplomatic relations with Libya.
Libyan radio broadcast an editorbl warning
Libya would strike "painful blows" cgdinst Bri
tain in alliance with Irish guerrilrj fighting
British rule in Northern Ireland. At the em
bassy in central London, armed police con
tinued a stakeout that begsn l;r;t Tuesday
, when bullets were sprayed at an anti-Gaddafi
protest outside the mission, killing policewo
man Yvonne Fletcher, 25, and wounding 10
demonstrators.
AncelAdamsdeadctO.. '
MONTEREY, Calif. - Ansel Adams, one of the
world's greatest photographers whose work
portrayed the rugged of beauty of the Ameri
can landscape, died Monday at the age of 82.
He spent most of his life building up a giant
collection of more than 50,000 negatives of
landscape photographs, mostly taken in Cali
fornia. He died of an undisclosed illness in a
Monterey hospital after a stay of several weeks.
Director Landis to ctar.d trial
LOS ANGELES Film director John Landis
and two' colleagues. Monday were ordered to
' stand trial for the involuntary manslaughter of
actor Vic Morrow and two children while
shooting TMligU Zone. If convicted, Lsndis,
and his colleagues, pilot Dorcey Mingo and the
. chief of a film special effects crew, Paul Ste
wart, could each be sentenced to six years
imprisonment. Los Angeles Municipal Court
Judge Brian Crahan ordered the three to
stand trial amid criticism fi era msrr.ber s of the
Elm industry that an ktereiir.g y.-StMc deznsnd
for more spectacular stoats Li jscpsrdizfcig the
lives of film crews.