n NEIHARDT RESIDENT CENTER . 8 AM 8 PM PBX ENTRANCE AREA ABEL-SANDOZ HALL 8 AM-8 PM FIRST FLOOR. UNDER CAFETERIA 1 V" CO o HARPER-SCHRAM-SMITH HALL 8 AM-8 PM IN FRONT OF STEPS LEADING TO THE CAFETERIA 3 A.S.U.N. ELECTIONS MARCH 19 BURR HALL 8 AM-8 PM IN THE LOUNGE AREA SELLECK QUADRANGLE . 8 AM-8 PM 7000BUILDING, IN LOBBY FERGUSON HALL . 8 AM-8 PM WEST END, FIRST FLOOR UNION LOUNGE . 8 AM-8 PM EAST UNION 8 AM-8 PM The purpose of this election is to elect a new student government at the UNL campus. SAINT LOUIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA WALTER SUSSKIND, Conductor and Music Director LEONARD SLATKIN, Associate Principal Conductor CERIIARDT ZIMMERMANN, Assistant Conductor University of Nebraska-Lincoln KIMBALL RECITAL HALL 11th and R Streets Tickets on Sale Beginning March 19 No advance orders Thursday, April 17 8 p.m. Friday , April 18 8 p.p. Saturday, April 1JL 8 p.m. Sunday, April 20 3 p.m. UNL Students $2.50 Regular $5.00 Coma to Box Office for best seat selection Kimball Box Office Room 113 Music Building 472-2508, 472-3375 A Project coordinated by the Mid-America Arts Alliance in cooperation with the state arts Councils of Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Oklahoma. This project is sponsored in part by grants from the Nebraska Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts and the Mid-America Arts Alliance. ;- I i ' I 1 I 'm v it i t X, I M ft. 4 M v I A. ...... M - 4j-...i Husbandwife team Eliot and Elizabeth Janeway will speak on "Living with Crisis: Human Relations in the year 2000," at the Nebraska Union on Thursday, 3:30 p.m. Sara Boatman, program adviser, said the program offers an opportunity to see partners who are both distinguished, but in unrelated fields. Eliot Janeway has a background in economics and political science, Boatman said, while Elizabeth Janeway's expertise is in history and sociology. Together, the two will examine the changing roles in society and what holds the changing society together. ? e Gov. J. James Exon, a friend of the couple, will introduce the Janeways at their Thursday address. The program is part of a symposium on the future, "Tomorrow Today," which deals with various aspects of the future. The symposium runs through March 14. Economist Eliot Janeway has advised and MAY GRADUATES Mutual Omoho represented by . . . BARREL STUEDEMANN RON POTTS r Vi r t 5a' rTi. . ' .V.. .'' -: 'ii' '. J1 M: vf xi !.-., - M7fH foe interviewing on campus March 1 7 Contact the Placement Office to arrange for an interview on campus, or call Darrell Stutlemann at 402-342-7600 for an interview at the Home Office, 33rd and Famatn, Omaha, Nebraska 68131 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Eliot and Elizabeth Janeway will speak at UNL Thursday as part of the "Tomorrow Today" symposium. The Janeways combine expertise In economics and sociology to examine changing social roles. Husbandwife team to speak criticized every president since Franklin Roosevelt. He attribut s America's present problems to high-level mismanagement in Washington, Boatman said, and he has said that government bankruptcy at the policy level is spreading to the financial level. Janeway has warned the public to be certain of savings dollars before making investments and has explained how to hold food costs down while letting farm income increase. He wrote" The Economics of Crisis. Elizabeth, a social historian, sees the "woman question," in the context of social dynamics. She is concerned with changes in lifestyle, challenges to family structure and threats to traditional patterns of economic life. Her writings include Man's World-Woman's Place: A Study of Social Mythology. The Janeways will participate in an informal rap session at Burr Hall lounge, East Campus, Wednesday at 8 p.m. UNL research could aid cancer treatment A UNL Physics professor has received pledges of $50,000 each from the National Science Foundation and the Atomic Energy Commission for research with atomic particles. The project, to study "tracks" made by atomic particles, has been headed by Robert Katz and has received more than $400,000 from the two agencies the past eight years. Katz said he believes the research could lead to the development of a dosimeter for use in treating cancer patients. Present X-ray, cobalt and other sources of radiotherapy are a "compromise between destruction of cancerous cells and minimum destruction of healthy cells," Katz said. It is crucial to have a simple means of providing information on radiation doses which can be administered with maximum effectiveness without damage to healthy tissue, he said. Last ycai JCatz, working with undergraduate student Fred Rnkerton, discovered a special photographic emulsion with the potential to respond to bombardment by particle radiation in the same way human tissue does. They found the photographic emulsion showed a definite track. Using a computer programmed to similate the characteristics of the emulsion, their experiments could be duplicated. Using computers programmed to simulate the track structure of particles in emulsions, radiologists and therapists will have a rapid, exact means of calculating radiation hazards and dosage requirements in radiotherapy, according to Katz. The experiemnts center around unstable particles called pions, which Katz said, "can be concentrated on an internal tumor without causing radiation damage to a patient's skin and other tissues through which the radiation passes. ' Katz said he hopes the research will lead to development of a dosimeter to "help radiologists and physicians with treatment plans which will provide maximum benefit to the patient." United v !f V'-' " .; i ..:J tin o o A n n n ThaAmmcan P.4 Cross. True Good page 1 0 daily nebrskan monday, march 10, 1975