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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1974)
o 1 v "W v v-V "'- 'W & V "V- is n 6 I! t page 2 Wf ft bwr Ml i mi ,1 ftttt Wtii'uLj.-. j 0 ft "3 n psr-fio 3 uw Ly If a in H f . S'i 31 FEi I nigs ric! Once again our Barter Shop wants your road signs, props, flags, stuffed animals, license plates, pictures, paintings, antiques and any other appropriate junk. We'll trade our suds for your duds or simply buy a can of bud at our sale price 35 cents-and watch the show. $1 5-1 st prize, $10-2nd prize, $5-3rd prize given at midnight. Winners must be present. Raid your attics, rooms, barns, garages, and local junk yards. 0 ,p.mm .Mil. IIHIIVW WWFlIIJi,JliUIUlHWHWW" 9 5 II S.A.E. authorizes price reductions on pre-amp and power amp. V Vy JIM ir VUAkV'.U.XJ.V Audio connoisseurs arc used to paying top dollar tor their kiml' of precision equipment. So this is a rare opportunity to pick up one of the most respected brands of equipment at specially reduced prices. Authorized by SAE, we are passing the savings on to you. f I I If MARK IX PRE A MP EQUALIZER Reg. S450. NOw$mfS I i WAN J "3" ill r :j "f jfi tmeemft , It & & m h 4 j :I f J I II I.ikc a professional you tan alu r the sounl iharatter t t ul ! programmed material. Five equal izers cnah'e adjustment for ail kinds of room atousiics.' or modification of loudspeaker tonai characteristics. (Walnut enclosure optional.) 4 1 ll 1 1 . I 1 4. I " , .1 MARK IVC POWER AMP if Reg. $450. f i ' ,, Supcr reliable, ultra-low iiis tortion stereo power amp. (Conservatively lated af lUOf watts RMS per channel into K ohms. (W'alnuf enclosure optiunaij I ! f V i 1 ' - s fl Campus Mail stops accepting U.S. mail BVStdeits who have deposited mail the last few weeks in boxes for Campus Mail. proDawy hav sliced .crarss sttckm rtatinq that Campus Mail service no longer accepts personal mail. "About a month ago I was authorized to no longer handle personal mail," said Bob Cunning, director of &mpw Mail servies. He said the change was made m order to decrease the volume of mail coming into Campus Mat!. The se",c" persons to send mail from one campus location to another without paying postage. , . ., "We would end up with up to seven bags of just personal man each day," Cunning said. He said most of the petsonal ma.l was water, aas and phone bills which students were paying. He said even though this mail was not intercarnpus mail, people would put it in the wrong slot and Campus Ma.l would forward it to the U.S. post off ice. , "This mail would com In with the postage already on it, Cunning said. "It's just handy for some people to drop the.r business reply mail in the boxes for Campus Mail. He said it is this type of mail Campus Mail is trying to curtail rather than correspondence between students living on campus. "Unless It's obviously a valentine, we assume the mail is University business," Cunning said. "We give the benefit of a doubt" to all other mail, he added. Despite the discontinued handling of personal mail, tunning said Campus Mail, with its seven full time and two part-time employes, still takes in up to 22,000 pieces of mail a day. That number increases to about 40.000 pieces a day during preregistration periods and when tuition bills and grade reports are mailed, he said. Cunning, who began working for Campus Mail in 1968, said ne though the service was begun "sometime just after World War II and was run by a veteran. , A few years later, a custodian picked up the campus mail and "could carry all the mail for East Campus in one hand." Now, four to five boxes of mail are delivered to East Campus twice a day, he said. With the added mail comes added problems. "Some people who are communicating within their office, will not put a last name on the correspondence," Cunning said. "I have no idea who it belongs to." He said if Campus Mail can't get rid of some mail, it is destroyed. doily nobraskon Editor Irvchlef: Mary Voborll; New editor; Jane Owens; Associate new editor: Vint Boucher. Th Daily Nebraskan Is written, edited nd manarjed by ttudent at th. Urtrverslty of Nebraska-Llncoirt, It i editorially indupundunt of the University faculty, administration and student body. Th. Daily Nebraskan I published byth Publication Commlttdo on Monday, Wednwiday, Thurday and Friday throughout thu lsl and spring semesters except holidays and vacations. Copyright 1974, The Daily Nebraskan. Material may Lu reprinted without permission if attributed to the Daily Nebraskan, excepting material covered by another copyright. Second class postage paid at Lincoln, Nabraska. Addies: The Daily Nebrsskan34 Nebraska Unlon14th , B StreetsLincoln, Nebr, 68E03. Telephone: 4024722588. : R . 119 II. 14lh HUMAN HEALTH SAFETY in regards to the use of drugs in livestock production. speaker: DR. ROBERT ZIMBELMAN Ph. D UPJOHN COMPANY, AG DIVISION KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN CENTENNIAL .COLLEGE COMMONS ROOM THURSDAY, APRIL 4th 2:30 P.M. everyone welcome daily nebrsskan Wednesday, epril 3, 1074