THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 3 Student health aide: Chow down, Private Hobson . . . Post-Vietnam meet scheduled .THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1969 'closest to students The Student Health Aide Program is one of the most unique programs carried on by the University Health Center, according to Carl Peter, assistant in public health at the center. He explained that the health aide is the member of the health center team who is closest to students, he is both student and Health employee. The aides 3erve a number of functions, said Celeste Rnipmeyer, public health nurse for the Center. She added that the aides serv as peer educators in a number of ways. They are people who can give straight answers to members of their living units about health problems, she said. Carol Helm, Center Mental Health Nurse, explained that the aides are chosen from nominees of the members of the living unit. The Center asks that nominees be people with some influence and concern in student life, she said. There are now 90 aides in University living units. Each fraternity, sorority, and cooperative house has its own aide. Harper, Schramm, Smith, and Abel Halls have one aide per two floors. Other University dormitories have two aides each. The program Is slowly ex panding, Miss Knipmeyer said. She explained that the program was begun with the Asian flu epidemic in 1957. However, it was small and loosely organized. Miss Knipmeyer said that since 1967 the program has been growing larger in numbers and more stringent in its requirements on the aides. Aides are now required to take a course In public health during their time in service. They are also familiarised with the services offered by the Health Center ani ac quainted with Center personnel. The aide serves the func tion of a mature adult in his living unit, Peter said. Thus, the help that they give students is sometimes a bit more than mere first aid. The aides are encouraged to become competent lp handling minor problems by themselves, he said. Miss Helm explained that to be effective the aicie must have the trust and friendship of his peers. She stressed the point that anything told to a Health Aide is completely confidential. "The aides are probably the most effective means of educating students in health matters," Peter said. ig Savings! IT'S QUALITY IT'S ELECTRIC IT'S VALUE flew everyem cm afford BRAND NEW FULL RATURI ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER What people hove been paying up to $200 for, yon can now buy for almost halfl CHICK THESE QUALITY FEATURESI Full off ico size standard keyboard . II standard characters Repeat keys Special repeat spacing key Ccpy control for clearest copies, plus accurate touch control Special half spacing key give you five line spaclngs 88-character keyboard Full carriage length key set tabulator Full 10-inch carriage Two-color ribbon Jeweled "ON", "OFF" light Pushbutton ribbon or stencil change Comfort sloped keyboard Vertical or horizontal line finder Un drawing aperture ... and paper meter NOW ONLY 10 Ne Trade NKiiiary WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! OPEN THURSDAY TIL 8:30 P.M. YOU At WAYS DO BETTER AT... : .TH lUIINdl MAN'S DiMRTMtNr (IOU 1100 '0' St. Lincoln 477-713! Acting Chancellor Merk Hobson (left) and 13 others toured military instal lations as guests of the Secretary of the Navy in September. Here he is shown sampling some of that delicious Marine Corps food. Foreign service exams set A foreign service exam, which may lead to career appointments as Foreign Service officers in the Department of State or as Foreign Service information officers in the U.S. Informa tion Agency, will be offered on December 6. Parade, games for Derby Day The 15th Annual Sigma Chi Derby Day will be held Sat urday, beginning at 9 a.m. Thirteen sororities will participate in a parade, games and the Miss Derby Day Contest. A Sigma Chi open house party will follow that night. Read Nebraska Want Ads Persons who wish to take the examination must first obtain and complete a special application form and forward it to the United States Department of State in Washington, D.C. The form, which must be postmarked no later than Oct. 24, and descriptive literature may be obtained from the University of Nebraska Placement Office. Applicants for the written examination should be be tween 21 and 31 years of age, must be citizens of the United States, and must meet certain residence requirements. The examination and selection process includes both the written exam, which covers one full day of testing, and an oral exam. Persons interested in tak ing the examination for the Foreign Service may wish to consult, prior to Oct. 24, Dr. William B. Miller, a career Foreign Service Officer serving at the University for one year as diplomat-in-residence and visiting pro fessor. Appointments with Dr. Miller can be scheduled for Oct. 9 or 10 on the downtown campus through the University's Placement Office. This year's World in Revolution Conference is te ntatively scheduled for March 16-19, 1970 with 'Beyond Vietnam' as its theme. "Our idea is to get a perspective of the United States' position in the world over the next 10 to 20 years," Kerry Winterer, assistant chairman of the Union Forums Committee, said Wednesday. "The program will concentrate on domestic problems and international relations after the Vietnam conflict." Committee member Dave Buntain said the title of the conference does not mean that it will be radically oriented. The conference will feature speakers with various viewpoints, he added. "Revolution, in the title, simply means rapid change," he explained. "The con ference wouldn't be v&y thought-provoking if all those participating thought the sarnie way." "Even those that wince at the word can't ignore the fact that the world is in a state of revolution," Buntain said. "We hope the conference will give participants a better perspective of the forces shaping the world." He said the format of the conference speakers will go b?yond that of usual Union speakers. The conference witt consist of discussion groups with speakers as well as formal speeches. Two-way communication between participants and speakers Is the goal, Buntain added. "We hope to get speakers that might not otherwise come to campus," he stated. "The conference is actually an attempt to make more use of the speakers we have." Though a conference was planned for last spring, it failed to materialize. Winterer attributed the failure to lack of coordination and a late start in planning. However, the Union has now organized the Forums Com mittee to plan Its part in the) program and there Is good coordination with ASUN, he) said. Winterer added that the coordination and ad ministration problems are solved. Funding for the pro gram will be about $3009 from the Union and another $3000 from ASUN. ASUN committee representative Ron Alex ander said planning for the program has been going on since this summer. A number of possible speakers are being considered, but none has been selected or agreed to come as yet. The Raiders Are Com w ... 1 "ft VV ! '' V.. "s. SAT. OCT. 4th 8:30 P.M. w fnyj tv TICKETS ON SAL! 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