PAGE 2 1 I " ) -s, 1 v) V ) Sounds help break through silence Photoi ty Barb Peiws A nine-year-old girl with animated eyes gazes across the table at Mrs. Margo E. Wilson, Nebraska Union Barber Shop Expert hair cutting & razor styling featuring Consort Products for Hair Control Lower Level Nebraska Union Empress f0 s , Just like your dream has been; Just like your love will be: Timeless. if you want a summer job, call Manpower". The pay Is good. You can work when you pleat. Tho experience will help you later on. That sound you hear Is Opportunity, knocking. If you'ra a gal-and you hava soma secretarial skllls-wa'll put you to work. If you can typo, operate various office machines or handle some) stenography... knock knock knock. If you're a guy, you might want factory or ware house work-Indoors or out We've got both... and both can help you build up your experience ...and your bankroll. But wa cant call you... so call us. Knock knock knock. In 400 offices throughout the United States Manpower specializes in finding the right peo ple to do the temporary Jobs that have to bo dona. We've been at It for 21 years, so we know what you're looking for. Why not deal with tho best When you're homo on vacation com on In. Knock knock knock knock. MANP0WER TIMPOMItY Hl 8SRVICCS An tqud (Opportunity Employer a university speech pathology instructor. "Chocolate cake," Mrs. Wilson says. The child's eyes turn away. She smiles shyly, but only makes bizarre noises. "Chocolate cake," Mrs. Wilson repeats. Hesitatingly the child says the phrase. For this young girl, saying a two-word phrase is quite an achievement. Before last September when she started working with Mrs. Wilson, she used Little mean ingful language. She is just one of eight emo tionally disturbed children Mrs. Wilson works with at the Children and Adolescents' Unit of the Nebraska State Hospital in Lincoln. .Many of the children Mrs. Wilson sees have little or no speech. The program at the Children and Adolescents' Unit began last semester. During the fall term, Mrs. Wilson observed and worked with the children while planning to expand the program. This semester several students are helping her enlarge the program, or ALL THE BOOKS YOU CAN CARRY ONLY $1.00 Soles Starts April 6th NEBRASKA BOOKSTORE BEWARE THE IDES OF MARCH!! 15 March 1970 is the deadline for application to the Air Force ROTC 2-Year program. If you meet the basic criteria of a full-time student -in good academic standing physically fit then and interested contact the Department in flying of Aerospace Studies M Or N Bldg., 432-8163 or campus X-2473-74 But do It before the Ides of March 1 1 1 V ' A . b' con tops LOOK WHO'S COMItf . . . SAT. MAR. 14 NOT ONE, NATION'S GROWS! THI BUT TWO OF THI TOP IEC0KDINQ 3BOS "IVfl WOMEN"! AND tntf MUSICAL TRBAT . . . "THI UTTER"! DANCE BASH Advtnc Ticket mt UHt at imitna Tien omc -- M, i. C. Fanny, m4 Tr Mr City Rcr Oaof. - 11. M. At Oow i. are observing therapy as a part of their clinical training. Mrs. Wilson described her contact with the children as the favorite parts of her week. "I enjoy most the children in whom I can detect a sense of humor and a desire to learn,' she said. "Seeing these kids change and get better is a ter rific reward. Helping them re quires my own ingenuity." Mrs. Wilson explained that she first has the non-verbal child comprehend and use single words. Then she pro gresses to two-word phrases, expressions and sentences. The goal is to teach the child to understand and answer ques tions. Her work with the children includes a type of behavior modification. One of the devices Mrs. Wilson uses to achieve this response is a cof fee can mailbox. When the child responds correctly to a question about a picture card, he is given the card to drop into the mailbox. "The child must be rewarded for trying," Mrs. Wilson ex plained. "Even if it's something as simple as putting a picture card in a coffee can mailbox or putting a piece into a puzzle." continued on page 3 the LINCOLN BROADWAY LEAGUE PRESENTS BEST PLAY OF 1968 NEW YORK DRAMA CRITICS C1RCI! AWARD"TONY" AWARD lioscncrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead by TOM STCPPARO ON STAGE AT THE STUART THEATRE MARCH 19 CURTAIN 8:15 tickets $2, $4, $3, $5.50 $6 plus tax For Reservations Call 433-6904 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1970i