Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan Friday, November 4, loa High School Journalists To Get Press Awards High school students from 67 schools across Nebraska will be attending the Ne braska High School Press Association Convention in Lincoln today. About 600 people are ex pected to attend the con- Over 7,000 Participate In Regents' Over 7,000 Nebraska high school students will partici pate in the 38th annual Uni versity Regents' Scholar ship Examination Satufday. Henry Cox, director of the University Examinations Service, reports that 408 schools will take part in the Examination program this year. Participating students com pete for 100, four-year, full tuition scholarships to at tend the University and 200, one-year scholarships. The examination now in cludes five areas mathe matics, science, social stu dies, English, and a com posite section. This is the first year testing has been done on a Saturday. Pre viously the test was admin istered in a regular school day. Dr. Edward Lundak, dir ector of scholarships and financial aid at the Univer sity, explained that the ex amination can be beneficial to a student even though he may not receive a Regents' Scholarship. He said that it is a definite "learning ex perience" and the examina tion results are often used "as a yardstick for award ing other scholarships." vention which will be held at the Nebraska Center For Continuing Education. The convention is being sponsored by the NHSPA, the journalism division of the Nebraska High School Activities Association, and the University School of Journalism. Registration for the con vention will be from 8-12 a.m. at the Center. A gen eral session will be held at 9 a.m., featuring Mr. James Schwartz, Director of the School of Journalism at Iowa State University, as the speaker. Following the general ses sion, journalism workshops will be given by Schwartz, and by Miss Hazel Presson, National President of the Columbia Scholastic Advis ers Association. Sectional meetings will be conducted in the morning and afternoon by the facul ty and students of the School of Journalism. Student as sistants Susan Leonard, Jim Patten, Frank Partch and Steve Hungerford will head some of the sessions. A convention banquet and awards presentation will be held at 6 p.m. in the Oma ha Room. R. Neale Copple, Director of the School of Journalism, will preside. Awards that will be pre sented include the Ridle Me morial P i n, The KMTV Yearbook Trophy, The Scottsbluff Star - Herald Yearbook Trophy, The Omaha Sun Newspapers Yearbook Trophy and The Omaha World-Herald News paper Plaques. Paul Swensson, Director of The Newspaper Fund, Inc. of the Wall Street Jour nal, will give the address, "Why Should I Go To Col lege?" James Morrison, Assist ant Professor of Journal ism, is the convention director. Unidentified Flying Objects 'Possible But Not Provable' - v:-' - I SS . SB' J. Whether unidentified fly ing objects are really seen is possible but not prov able, was the indication of an East Union lounge se ries discussion panel. Members of the panel were Dr. Nora Brassard, a clinical psychologist spe cializing in hallucinations; Carroll Moore, professor of astronomy at Nebraska Wesleyan University and Allen Griesemer, geologist and curator of educational services at the University planetarium. This week a research team from the University of Colorado was given a $300,000 grant from the fed eral government to investi gate reports of unidentified flying objects (UFO) throughout the U.S. More than 90 per cent of UFOs have been identified as objects which are ordi narily seen, Moore said. Comets, meteors and fire balls, in general, can defi nitely be mistaken as UFOs, he said. Scientists believe that the basic principles of aerody namics and physics will apply throughout the uni verse as on earth, Moore stated. The latest explanation for a UFO is a plasma, which has an equal number of neg ative and positive charges, he said, and could dart in VOLUNTEERS JOIN DIGS ... at excavation sites in England. Summer A rchaeologist Excavate English Sites GOP Nominees Parade With University YR's An archaeological summ er study program in Eur ope is being offered to col lege students by the Asso ciation f or C u 1 1 u r a 1 Ex change, a British non-profit organization. Fifty volunteers will first join a three-week seminar for training in British arch aeology and excavation tech niques at Westminister Col lege, Oxford. The students then split up into small groups for three more weeks digging on an archa eological site. In previous y e a r s, stu dents have joined "digs" on the paleolithic in Suffolk, an Iron-Age hill fort on the Welsh Marches, a Roman Palace near the South Coast of England and a Roman town near Stratford-on-Avon. Two courses are offered in this study program in cluding a general survey course for students without previous knowledge of arch aeology or a specialist course for anthropology ma jors and graduate students. Class work will be illus trated by visits to Cheddar Caves, Stonehenge, Winche ter, Chedworth Roman Vil la and Verulamium. The program which has been conducted for t h r e e consecutive years begins with the three-week academ ic courses at Westminister College July 10 and contin ues until August 20. Total cost of the program is $685, including round-trip air transportation More than 60 University Young Republicans and GOP candidates turned out Thurs day night to parade through Lincoln in support of the Re publican cause in Tuesday's elections, Among the candidates in. the parade was congression al nominee Robert V. Den ney. In 40 degree weather the students and candidates rode in the backs of con vertibles and regular cars displaying signs for the GOP candidates. The living unit having the greatest representation at the parade receives a trophy from the Young Republi cans. The parade began on the north steps of the Nebraska Union, went down 14th Street, and then moved over O St., attracting large crowds of Thursday night shoppers. Drivers honked their horns WW IS ALWAYS THE BEST PLACE TO BUY FOR SERVICE AND DEPENDABILITY. cteat nefl to fetors- .,- - to ,,:,. '- jg -' we X vX mu'f business, now to cope W'N your par e"ts. There's a sPeca Super man f:. I bok insert fn 1 iine coin. And never- befnra.n,.!. ... puo- 'ished photos. OHolt, Rinehart 4 -and Winston, Inc. n . v i t 1 I i r " ? tm a i f. - mm II I ! 1 .w . 1 is. m$m .Fight testboolk Get a Tensor' high-intensity lamp. 3 Want a clean, white, bright light ? Want to ee words etched on the page sharp and clear ? Want to come away from those heavy assignments without squinting and eyestrain ? Want a lamp that gets in close without getting in your way ? 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BRING THIS COUPON TO THE BOOKSTORE FOR SPECIAL CAMPUS RATE This often $4.50 - lest than 9t copy Newistand cost: $20.80 -40 a copy Reiular lubscnptioni S9.00 - less than lit a copy and riders waved their signs as the parade was guided by Lincoln police One feature of the parade was a truck pulling a large billboard supporting Den-ney. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS different directions by electro-static attractions. Laws of aerodynamics and physics do not permit scientists to believe that UFOs are things in the terms of man-controlled flying saucers, Moore said. Griesemer said that un informitarianism is an im portant ingredient in under standing the physical and biological world. It seems possible that civilizations within the last few million years devel oped into highly efficient systems and departed from the earth and are now ex isting, Griesemer said. Dr. Brassard said that perfectly rational and rea sonable people have report ed seeing UFOs under very normal conditions. They had the perception of an object which may or may not have been there, but there is no evidence to say what it was, she said. Psychologists call it a perceptual phenome non, she added, and a hal lucination is an extension of a normal phenomenon. How perception is inter preted depends on learning, motivation and needs of the person, she said. Hypnosis, a hyper-sug-gestable stage, neither val idates nor invalidates origi nal reports, Dr. Brassard said, and is not relevant to whether or not something was perceived. FRIDAY INTER-VARSITY, 8 p.m. Nebraska Union. BURLINGTON R.R., 11:00, Nebraska Union. ENGLISH Depart m e n t, 12:00, Nebraska Union. PLACEMENT Office Luncheon, 12:30, Nebraska Union. SIGMA NU, 1:00, Nebras ka Union. A. PH. A., 1:00, Nebras ka Union. MENNONITE STU DENTS, 7:30, Nebraska Union. BAHA'I CLUB, 7:30, Ne braska Union. PALLADIAN Literary So ciety, 8:00, Nebraska Un ion. DELIAN UNION, 8:00, Nebraska Union. SUNDAY CHESS CLUB, 4:00, Ne braska Union. 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