6 Thursday, October 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan UNDERCOVER The pink building at 9th & Vermont Pure Silk Boxers! a perfect gift for him or her. Elastic waist shorts S, M, L, XL Palsley, houndstooth, and solids in red, hunter green & black. Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 10:00-5:30 Thurs. 10:00-8:00 Sat. 10:00-5:00 Sun. 1:00-5:00 We Fit Lawrence Beautifully 740 0004 Turn heads tonight. Call today for a new look. You're invited to visit Merle Norman for a wonderful new look. Simply bring this coupon with you. Call or visit soon. And open the door to a more beautiful you. MERLE NORMAN STUDIO 9th & New Hampshire Under New Ownership CELESTE CAMPBELL "This man is a pretty decent person," he added. "He's had a couple of traceable contacts and they are negative (AIDS-free). But he had multiple other non-traceable contacts — one night stands. He's fully vaccinated, but he hasn't made these other women he had casual sex with. ... He used condoms occasionally, but on other occasions he didn't." O'Brien said because HIV-2 was rare in the U.S. and probably would remain so in relation to HIV-1, he did not expect a second AIDS epidemic. HIV-2 was first found in 1985 in West African prostitutes who had no symptoms. It was then reported in 1986 in two West Africans who suffered AIDS, O'Brien said. HIV-1 and HIV-2 both can cripple the body's ability to fight disease, leading to fatal infections and cancer. Look in on our Grand Opening might be infected with HIV-2, Ho said. Kerndt said the infected Los Angeles resident never donated blood, did not use drugs intravenously, or engage in any homosexual activity. The infected man, a Los Angeles resident who moved here from Sierra Leone in 1979, hasn't developed AIDS, and chances are low that he infected his lovers, said Dr. Peter Kerndt, AIDS epidemiology director at Los Angeles County's Department of Health Services. Rare type of AIDS virus found in California man You're going to love this store TAKE AN EXTRA 20% OFF ENTIRE STOCK OF SWEATERS The Associated Press Until now, only seven cases of HIV-2 infection had been confirmed in the United States; three in Massachusetts and one each in Connecticut, Rhode Island, Florida and New "This is the first case of HIV-2 to our knowledge in the western United States," said Dr. David Ho, director of the AIDS virology laboratory at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. HIV-2 or human immunodeficiency virus type 2 — is common in West Africa, but very rare in the United States, where almost all of more than 105,000 AIDS cases were caused by the HIV-1 type. A second woman also was uninfected, but officials expected to locate only two or three more of the women. Kerndt said. LOS ANGELES — A second type of deadly AIDS virus has reached the West Coast, where it was found in a West African man who often failed to wear condoms when he had sex. OSLO, Norway — Czechoslovak playwright Vaclav Havel and jailed South African black leader Nelson Mandela are among the contenders for the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, committee sources say. The Nobel Committee was to announce the award today to a champion of human rights, an arbiter of peace or a worker of humanitarian deeds. The Associated Press The Dalai Lama, the Buddhist spiritual mentor and exiled political leader of Tibet, also was considered a strong candidate in what reportedly was his third consecutive year on the list of contenders. Manf. suggested retail-$38.00 Harper's price $19.90 GRAND OPENING PRICE-$15.90 HARPER'S FASHION S New location: In 1986, the winner was author and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel. The 1987 award went to Costa Rican President Oscar Arias for his Central American peace plan. Last year's prize went to the U.N. peacekeeping forces. The last Eastern European to win the prize was Polish Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, who won in 1983. South Africa's Desmond Tutu, an Anglican archbishop and anti-apartheid leader, won the following year. Mandela, Czech on Nobel list With nationalist ferment running high in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, speculation focused on human rights activists who like Havel have struggled for years to safeguard freedoms in the East bloc. Ninety people and organizations were nominated for this year's prize, which carries a cash award of 3 million Swedish kronor, or $49,000. The man, whose identity was withheld, had multiple unprotected sexual contacts over a long period of time with one woman, Kerndt said. She has been tested and is not infected with the virus. Andre Sakharov, the Soviet physicist who spent years in internal exile before he won a seat in the legislature this year, came to Norway in June. The man is in his 30s, works full-time and attends school part-time. He has refrained from sex since learning three months ago that he 835 Massacbusetts (formerly the Jay Shoppe) Mon-Sat 10-6 Thur 11-8 8:30 Sun 1-5 Jersey, said Dr. Thomas O'Brien, an epidemiologist at the national Centers for Disease Control. Three of those people developed AIDS. But in recent years the committee has used the prize to encourage human rights or to build international support for fledgling peace efforts. Six other people believed to be infected with HIV-2 have been identified in New York state, including five in New York City, O'Brien. Almost all the patients imported the virus from West Africa, he said. Kerndt said the HIV-2-infected Los Angeles man had 20 to 40 sexual contacts since moving here. But Kerndt and Ho said the possibility the man infected his partners was relatively low because he had low levels of HIV-2 in his bloodstream. Committee sources confirmed that two Czech dissidents, Havel and Jiri Hajek, were among the candidates. Both were signers of the human The prize was established by dynamin inventor Alfred Nobel to reward the person who has worked hardest for "fraternity among peoples," disarmament or promoting peace conferences. Other contenders included Mandela, leader of the African National Congress, Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and former President Reagan for their disarmament efforts and Bruno Hussar of Israel for setting up a peace village with Palestinians. Prague later confiscated Hajek's passport for violating his travel permit by also visiting Sweden. country, could be the winner. Also among groups considered was the International Scout Movement, celebrating its 100th year. rights manifesto Charter 77 and have been repeatedly arrested by authorities for speaking out against the Czechoslovak government's policies. Havel's plays, which condemn the moral lilies of totalitarianism, are banned in his Communist homeland but have been and acclaimed internationally. Havel has in recent years acquired internationalia, where chants of "Long Live Havell!" ring out at every anti-government protest. There was speculation in France that the priest Abbe Pierre, known for his humanitarian works in that Hajek was the foreign minister of a reformist government that was purged after a 1968 Soviet-led invasion. He was in Oslo earlier this year to visit his son Jan, a naturalized Norwegian. Dalai Lama wins Peace Prize The Associated Press OSLO, Norway — The Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual and political leader of Tibet, won the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize today for shunning violence and seeking liberation from China for his Hisalman nation through peaceful means. "The Dalai Lama has come forward with constructive and forward-looking proposals for the solution of Nobel Committee chairman Egil Aarvik said the Buddhist monk was reached in Los Angeles and informed of the decision. international conflicts, human rights issues and global environmental problems," said the citation from the Norwegian Nobel Committee. The man born Tentin Gyatso in 1935 had been nominated for the coveted prize for at least the last three years, the national NTB news agency reported. Last year, in a speech to the European Parliament, the Dalai Lama proposed a compromise for ending China's 29-year occupation of his homeland; offering to keep Tibet as an autonomous Chinese territory and to retinue control of foreign affairs to Beijing. Strike ▶ Continued from p. 1 report for work. about 12,000 of the more than 25,000 people employed at the plant are covered by the contract that expired at 12:01 a.m. yesterday. Of those 12,000, approximately 9,000 are union members. Boeing Military Airplanes is Kansas' largest private employer. Kansas' largest private employer. Chanting strike slogans, an upbeat voice of more than 600 workers marched from a union office to one of the company's main gates just before midnight. At first, the workers were rowdy and vociferous. Union officials conceded what was obvious: many of the strikers had been partying since the contract rejection vote earlier in the day. "Now I know how those folks in North Carolina felt when they knew that hurricane Hugo was out there and that it was coming, and they had no idea how big it was going to be," said a Boeing official who asked to remain unidentified. But 45 minutes into the walkout the 48-degree temperature and the lateness of the hour appeared to the energy of some of the machers. Only a few incidents were reported. "They had their little bit of fun and disappeared," said Briggs, a veteran of 1977 and 1965 strikes at Boeing. Two motorists were detained for questioning by Sedgwick County Sheriff's deputies after they allegedly bumped into people with their cars. Nobody was seriously injured. The wife of a picketer was treated and released at a local hospital after she suffered cuts and bruises when she jumped on an oncoming car and then fall off, a sheriff's snookman said. The union announced a plan to allow workers to pick up their regular Thursday paychecks at an off-site location. After the second week of the strike, workers begin collecting $100 a week in strike benefits. Noriega Continued from p. 1 there was no intent to intervene in the fighting. Reporter saw U.S. troops posted on roads leading to or through U.S. installations, but the soldiers did not block 'the eastern and southern approaches to the eastern border with a small area' where foreign's headquarters are located. Loyal forces were able to move in and crush the uprising. Yesterday, relatives of men in the Urraca Company gathered across the street from the headquarters. It was not clear whether the entire company joined the revolt, since Lopez said only about 65 people were under arrest. "We've been trying to get someone to tell us where they are," said Luis Alberto Gonzalez' wife, who would not give her own name. She said Gonzalez was a corporal in the company. Norrega said that all the moves against him were part of a U.S. plot to retain control of the canal after Dec 31, 1999, when the United States is to turn it over to Panama under treaties signed in 1977. MAJOR HELP Engineering Relieve some stress. The stress of solving mile-long equations. Of tracking the elusive quark. And of analyzing the strains placed on your average suspension bridge on a windy day. Macintosh gives you the ability. With powerful, easy-to-learn cad systems and desktop publishing programs. Cross the bridge from average student to over-achiever. Decision made. Macintosh. 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