Friday, April 27, 1834 Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan Kimball ticket scheme slashes student prices V A 7 o - - - v Daily 1 ' 1 u 'I f ii ' 'i ' ! ! OS EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGER NEWS EDITOR ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITORS SPORTS EDITOR ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR COPY DESK SUPERVISOR NIGHT NEWS EDITORS WIRE EDITOR ART DIRECTOR PHOTO CHIEF ASSISTANT PHOTO CHIEF PUBLICATIONS BOARD CHAIRPERSON PROFESSIONAL ADVISER Larry ?-rkt, 4T2-17S3 , Dnitl Vr,;:. Kitty Pc'.'zkf Tracy L. fcvrs KKy Gro$thm V'i;d W. f rlp!li til Jinn Nyf'tr Vlekl Ruh;t Crown ' H:kt FfOit P;ty Pryor jfl Goodwin . Chrii Wtiach fv".;k Frctl Chrlt Wtiach Lord ktsnsr- -Cfl3 Andrtsi Davt Troub Carta Johrnon, 477-5723 Den Wsiton, 473-7331 The Daily Nebraskan USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fail and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and com ments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-2583 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, call Carta Johnson, 477-5703. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebras kan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 63583 0448. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1SS4 DAILY NEBRASKAN Thanks to a new ticket-pricing policy, UNL stu dents no longer can use cost as an excuse to avoid performances at Kimball Recital Hall. The privileged price, designed by Kimball Direc tor Ron Bowlin, allows students who paid activities fees to enjoy performances for $3 in B section seats, Kimball Box Office manager Amy Meilander said. Three dollars is kind of like going to a movie , Meilander said, "except it's cheaper and it's live." Additional price reductions' are made for stu dents who buy either a four-performance or eight performance season ticket, she said. Ticket costs are $10.20 and $18, discounts of 15 percent and 25 percent, respectively. .Prices for regular, non-student B section seats range from $3 to $14, Bowlin said. "A student could find himself sitting next to someone who paid $14 to see the same perfor mance," he said. New prices were started to eliminate price con siderations, Bowlin said. He said the new prices were not a reaction to a decrease in student attendance. . "We made the decision that we wanted to do something about student prices," he said. "The prive leged price was just something we dreamed up. It's really important." Students who buy season tickets before May 30 can pay in three-part installments, Meilander said. Students pay one-third of the price before the dead line and the rest of the money is due in June and July, she said. - atk. if tin. m JL nJ 'ewelen V : ' : . . : : : : : . '-': ::-::.-'. . - 7 ; 7 - : - 7- 0 t y 4 Sartor Hamann annual spring sale is on now. There are savings to he found throughout the store. This is for a limited time only, so hurry in and take advantage of our spring sale prices. VISA - MASTERCARD -LAY A WAY- SFLCIAL FINANCING A VAILABLE SINCE 1905 7 DOWNTOWN 1130 "0" ACROSS FROM THE CENTRUM mil t V GATEWAY MALL National and international news from the Renter News Report China and ILD. cin ' nuclear cc operation pact PEKING China and the United States have signed a nuclear cooperation pact, clear ing the way for the sale of U.S. reactors to Peking, a senior Keshan administration official said today. He said the Ere-eraent, concluded Thursday sfter three years of talks, was not a commitment to supply reactors and nuclear material but rather "a framework agreement which specifies the guarantees and controls .under which supply may take place." The pact, which administration sources said would make U.S. companies el:;;;bb to bid for contracts worth up to $20 billion, is to be initialed in Peking on Monday in the presence of President Reagan and Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang. The administration official said China's plans to create a nuclear energy generating capacity of 20,000 megawatts meant the Chinese were aiming for "easily 10 or 12 big reactors." Soviets reject chemical treaty GENEVA, Switzerland The Soviet Union Thursday formally rejected a U.S. proposal for a treaty outlawing chemical weapons, telling the 40-nation Geneva disarmament confer ence the plan would seriously set back negotia- tions on the issue, Moscow's chief delegate, Vik tor Issraelyan, said the U.S. draft, presented last week by Vice President George Bushr con tained "deliberately unacceptable" provisions for verification and was aimed at concealing American plans for a major chemical rearma ment program. Tutting forward demands for unimpeded access to the territory of other states con tinues to block the achievement of agreements on a chemical weapons ban," Issraelyan said in the first official Soviet response to the U.S. plan. Moslem is Lebanece minister BEIRUT President Amin Gemayel Thurs day appointed Rashid Karami, a veteran Mos lem politician backed by Syria, to be prime minister of a national unity government in Lebanon. Gemayel's plan,' agreed on with Syria, is to bring leaders of all the main Christian and Moslem factions into the government to work on a plan of political reforms which might end Lebanon's nine years of civil strife. Karami, who has served as prime minister nine times since 1955, announced after two hours of talks with Gemayel at the Presidential Palace that he had agreed to form a new Cabinet. Karami, 62, called on the Lebanese to "cast weapons aside" and work together to rebuild society and the economy. Better herpes treatment found CHICAGO Researchers may have found the first meaningful treatment for genital herpes, an incurable disease afflicting millions worldwide, according to a study published Thursday. The agent is a capsule form of an ointment already on the market acyclovir, developed by Burroughs Wellcome Co. and sold in salve form under, the brand name Zovirax. A study published in the Journal of . the American Medical Association said the ' oral form of the drug, w hile not a cure, worked faster and better than the ointment in clearing up the infection in persons who suffer recur ring attacks. Saudi tanker burning x:t csa MANAMA, Bahrain A giant Saudi-owned oil tanker was still burning Thursday after an explosion on board last night that occurred while the vessel was in an area declared a prohibited zone by Iraq in its war with Iran. The captain of a rescue ship quoted survivors as saying the blast could have been caused by a missile or a mine and that the tanker's hull plates were bent inward. There was no w?ord from Baghdad of any Iraqi attacks on shipping. m In Washington, the Pentagon said some Iraqi aircraft had been in the vicinity but there was not enough information available to say whether the ship had been attacked. Shipping sources said all but one Filipino member of the 33-man crew had been rescued from the 178,808-ton Safma al-Arab, which caught fire alter the blast 70 miles southeast of Iran's Kharg Island oil terrain aL In Stockholm, the ship's operators, Saleninvest, said it had taken on more than 300,000 tons of 'crude oil at Kharg and was bound for France. The tanker was about 100 miles northeast of Bahrain ihursday.