^m The Apollo 009 capsule, displayed outside Morrill Hall for nearly 20 years, now sits alongside tractors in an East Campus warehouse used by Landscape Services. Apollo 009 waits for restoration By Adeana Leftin Senior Editor Deterioration of the Apollo 009 spacecraft has slowed but hasn’t stopped, a University of Nebraska Lincoln official said. Hugh Genoways, director of mu seums, said UNL was doing all it could to save the craft, but few op tions remained to renovate the cap sule. The Apollo 009 was outside the Nebraska State Museum for nearly 20 years. It suffered damage from hu midity and extreme temperatures before it was moved indoors in Janu ary. Last year, the Kansas Cosmosphcrc and Space Center in Hutchinson, Kan., offered to give UNL $1.5 million in space artifacts in exchange for the capsule. But the NU Board of Regents decided last December to keep the Apollo 009 in Nebraska. It was put indoors on East Campus to protect it from another Nebraska winter. Regent Margaret Robinson of Norfolk said storing the capsule would give regents time to decide whether to restore it, without worrying about further deterioration. Genoways said last week that he didn’t know what plans the university had for the craft. “(The cosmosphcre officials) wanted the opportunity to display the renovated capsule,” he said. “But since there is no capsule to renovate, we can’t do anything.” Genoways said the cosmosphere lost the funding it needed to restore the capsule. The only option left now, he said, is for UNL to pay the esti mated $400,000 to move the Apollo 009 to the cosmosphere and have it restored. “There really isn’t anybody else qualified to do it,” he said. The capsule is being stored in the Landscape Sendees east ware house, the only building on campus big enough to hold it. The craft is checked periodically to see if it is still there and still in the same shape, Genoways said, but the public can’t view it. “It’s not serving any purpose,” he said. Free testing now available for sexual assault victims By Deb McAdams Staff Reporter This fall, the University Health Center will begin providing free and confidential testing for victims of sexual assault. Kunle Ojikutu, the center’s direc l >rkI I tor, said he hoped the service en couraged sexual assault victims to ^come forward. The service is part of the Rape Education Project, a joint program with the Association of Students of the University of Ne braska and the Women’s Center, he said. If victims want to press charges in a sexual assault, Ojikulu said, they will be encouraged to go to Lincoln General Hospital for more detailed testing. The health center will cover the testing fees. The health center also will offer a reorganized Counseling and Psycho logical Services department to stu dents this fall. The department is the result of an Suion of the health center’s mental department and the university’s Counseling Center, Ojikulu said. The department’s services include counseling and therapy for personal concerns, anxiety, depression, rela tionships, eating disorders, sexual identity, communication skills, life planning and stress management. Workshops and support groups will r- " ■ be offered throughout the year. Appointments are available week days from 8a.m. to 5 p.m., with hours extended to 7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays. The first three sessions will be free. Subsequent visits, up to 24, will cost S10 an hour. More than 25 sessions will cost $30 an hour. A counselor is on call for emer gency or crisis situations. Also new this year are free hcpati lis-B immunizations for health aides. Health aides arc students who pro vide non-emergency aid in residence halls, fraternities and sororities. The health center is offering the immunization to comply with federal occupational health and safely regu lations, Ojikutu said. The cost of the immunization is about $116. The health center also is trying to expand its urgent care services, Ojikutu said. dtuueru ices cover vimis 10 uosi^ carc physicians or nurses. Visits to specialists, tests, X-rays and prescrip tions will cost significantly less than in the private sector, Ojikulu said. In addition to regular medical serv ices, the health center has a physical therapy department, dental services, a dietary and nutrition section, a radi ology lab, a pharmacy and a visiting ophthalmologist. Students may request testing for sexually transmitted diseases or AIDS at the health center. Blood is drawn at the health center, then sent away for analysis. But Ojikulu recommends students go to the County Health Department for these types of tests. ■---—-1 tataSNKMMrM! U 8 Qfitmmt of Tun^onaow l •10 Pool Tables • Dart Machines •Pinballs-Videos f •Shuffleboard •CD Jukebox •19 Beers On Tap BnnensmanBi flp~ Foster's (Australia) Moosehead (Canada) ■“loin XU Beer Wall oi l ame duh-™??l?7T^CTeli| I I Free! Double Prints At Northridge Photo Center Just Show your UNL Student I.D. 24 Exp. Same Day Only $6.75 Bring your film in by 11:00 am and pick it up at 6:00 pm 4 Hour and 1 Hour Service Also Available Offer expiree Oct. 15, 1992 Only 5 min. North Of Campus At 14 th and Superior ■ 1 "~~i Hairstyling... For those who care • Free parking 474-4455 • 7 Stylists • Appointments or Walk-ins • Perms and Colors Mon-Fri 8:00 to 8:00 r°FFLER Sat 8:00 to 4:00 The Clipper .---■-1 J Open to students of all levels. FEES: $2.50 monthly service champ. First 15 checks each month are FREE; additional checks $.25 each. For your convenience, one of our CASHBOX114 ATMs is located in the UNL Administration Building. DCommercial Federal.Bank A Federal Savings Bank Insured by FDIC 13th & 0*4734707 56th &0*4734800 VSJJE/ 70th & Adam • 4734765 16th & South *4734773