daily nebraskan page 11 monday, December 8, 1975 Resignation creates seat on fee board By Marian Lucas A Fees Allocation Board (FAB) seat is vacant because of the resignation of Dennis Martin, a Council on Student Life (CSL; appointee. Martin, a law student, said he gave up his seat on the i three year-old board because of a substantial amount ot work and class load next semester, not because of a conflict of interest between FAB and his other campus activities. A former Union Board member, Martin said he did not think he could keep up Mailman may have solution to Christmas gifts dilemma If you seldom can find enough time to buy even your weekly groceries, browsing through a mail-order catalog and buying by mail may be your answer to the Christmas gift-buying delimma, according to the Better Business Bureau. Catalog items are not always the same, but sometimes they are less expensive than those available at local retail stores, the bureau says. Before deciding to buy by mail, how ever, the Better Business Bureau suggests that you compare prices at local stores to make sure the mail iiem is a good deal. To help those who want to be wise mail order shoppers and satisfied customers, the Better Business Bureau offers these additional tips: Order several weeks in advance of the time you actually want the merchandise. For Christmas purchases, for example, it is wise to allow at least four weeks for delivery. New Federal Trade Commission rules require mail-order sellers to give con sumers the option of canceling an order and getting a refund if the goods are not shipped within 30 days or with the time promised. These rules will become effec tive Feb. 2, 1976. -Choose your mail-order company care fully. If you are doubtful about a company, uanicularlv if its address is a oost office box, check with the Better Business Bureau t nearest the' company before deciding to order. -Beware of exaggerated claims about quality or unrealistically low prices for an item. -Follow the catalog's ordering instruc tions carefully to minimize the chances of mistakes. -Indicate clearly your name and ad dress on the order and, if it is to be a gift, give the exact address to which it is to be sent -Never send cash through the mail; pay by check or money order. Be sure to in clude the full amount, including shipping and handling charges and sales taxes, if applicable. If your check does not clear your bank within two weeks, contact the company to make sure it received your order. -Keep a copy of the catalog, advertise ment or brochure from which you order. Know the store's refund policy. Also keep your canceled check, or money order number, in case any problems arise, con cerning the purchase. -Check your , merchandise promptly when you receive it to make sure the item is exactly what you ordered and is in good condition. If you have a complaint about the mail-order service, complain first to the company. If the merchandise is not what you ordered, or if it arrived damaged, ask for a prompt replacement. Wait at least two weeks for an answer, and if you do not receive adequate attention, contact the nearest Better Business Bureau. First appearance at senate Faculty to hearVarner NU President D.B. Varner will talk about the budget and the relationship between the central administration and the UNL chancellor's office at Tuesday's Faculty Senate meeting, according to Franklin Eldridge, senate president. Eldridge said it is the first time he can remember Varner speaking to the senate. He was invited "because we feel we need to maintain the best communication pos sible in this sizable organization of ours (the University),' Eldridge said. Also at the meeting in Love Memorial Library's Auditorium, NU executive vice president for academic affairs Steven Sample will present the UNL-University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) Equity Study Report originally scheduled for presentation last month. The report con cerns a comparison of faculty salaries and academic program support on the two campuses. The scholarship and financial aids com mittee will present a resolution at the meeting calling for scholarships for scholas tic excellence that would pay all expenses. The proposal specifies 10 scholarships be awarded the first year. The Grading Committee will propose that students wishing to receive credit for a class from which they have withdrawn must reregister and pay the registration fee. Partial election results for the new facul ty representative senate, which will replace the present senate in January, also will be announced, according to Eldridge. He said the senate intends to go into closed session to discuss nominees for honorary degrees to be presented at the May graduation. Chan's lecture challenged Continued from p.l "I thought I was giving a damn good lec ture, Chan said. "I thought they gained something (from the lec ture.)" Apparently the student had talked to the dean of his college who in turned in formed the chancellor's office, Chan said. The complaint then circulated from In terim Chancellor Adam Breckenridge to Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Ken Bader to Ronald Smith, dean of the Col lege of Business Administration, to Roesler, he said. Rriated to economics Chan said he told Roesler that he asked first if anyone objected to his discussing senate business. He also said he told Roesler he had related the discussion to economics. "han said he teamed later that Bader had met with Thompson and Simonsen. Sim onsen returned from the meeting and said that Bader had asked about Chan's "background," Chan said, and that Bader was angry because Chan had called him something "vulgar" In class. It was at this Doint. Chan said, that he decided to resign from the senate. Bader said the student who complained had been referred by the dean of his college. He said he then referred the stu dent to Smith. Badsr said he had met with Thompson and Simonsen several times about ASUN business, but denied asking about Chan's background. Bader said he had heard from the stu dent's complaint that Chan had called him a name in class. "I don't know Chan, have never met him and probably wouldn't recognize him if I saw him "he said. No-formal complaint Chan said he heard from Roesler no for mal complaint had been filed against him as of last Thursday. Indirect pressure from the students complaint and Bader's reported remarks were "really dirty-tricks stuff," Chan said. "I believe that during that Friday class discussion, I tried to be bipartisan and just state the facts on the issue, ' he said. with FAB's rigorous second-semester sche dule. Martin's resignation did not taint the job he had done on the board, said FAB chairman Don Wesely. "He couldn't do the things he wanted to do as an FAB member," Wesely said. Any full- or part-time UNL student is eligible to fill the vacated seat. Jack Guthrie, Business Officer of the Development Center and Student Organiza tions, said the appointment will be made by the CSL subcommittee on student organizations. A resume, inlcuding campus activities, job experience and reasons for wanting to serve on FAB should be submitted to the subcommittee, 200 Nebraska Union, by Jan. 16, Guthrie said. Interviews will be scheduled between Jan. 19 and 23. The subcommittee, headed by chair man Chris Baty, must choose the new member before Feb. 1 . Guthrie said he would like to see the decision made sooner, because FAB will be making decisions regarding fund require ments for student groups. CCZjCZJsoo hMJiMLmmi (HP-45 $245SR-51 $149.95) With MOSTEK single chip technology, the new Corvus 500 is the first non-Hewlett-Packard calculator with Reverse Polish Notation, 9 addressable memories, 4 level roll down stack to be introduced. If you compare the Corvus feature by feature with the HP-45 and the SR-51, you will find striking similarities. There are also some very important differences. Corvus 500 HP-45 SR-51 RPN (Reverse Polish Notation) Yes Yes NO Memory Store and Recall 9 Registers Yes Yes NO 4 Level Stack, Rotate Stack Yes Yes NO 9 Memory Exchange with Displayed Value Yes Yes NO Log, LN Yes Yes NO Trig (Sine, Cosine, Tangent, IN V) Yes Yes Yes HYPERBOLIC (SINH, COSINH, TACH, INV) YES NO NO HYPERBOLIC, RECTANGULAR TO POLAR AND INVERSE YES NO NO yx,e.10x.x,1x,xl,x y.n.CHS Yes Yes Yes jy through INVERSE YES NO NO GRADIANS NO YES NO Degree-Radian Conversion Yes Yes Yes Degree-Radian Mode Selection Yes Yes Yes DECIMAL-DEGREES-MINUTES-SECONDS NO YES YES Polar to Rectangular Conversion Yes . Yes Yes Recall Last x Yes Yes NO Scientific Notation, Fixed and Floating Yes Yes Yes Fixed Decimal Point Option Yes' Yes Yes DIGIT ACCURACY 12 10 13 DISPLAY OF DIGITS 12 10 10 , R Yes Yes Yes Mean and Standard Deviation Yes Yes Yes 2 .2- Yes Yes Yts Product-Memories Yes Yes NO C.F. DIRECT CONVERSION , YES NO NO F.C. DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO LIT-GAL. DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO KIL-LBS. DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO GAL-LIT, DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO LBS-KIL. DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO CENTIMETERTO INCH DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO INCH TO CENTIMETER DIRECT CONVERSION YES NO NO Larger Size LED YES NO NO Features based on T.I. SR51 instruction manual No. 1 020278-1 D Avsllshta st e!I Jtzm Stores and the Uof M Main Engineering Bookstore i I m f 21 ct. Q "O" Gt 3 0 "Sm 0 j O 5 "1 t t I fm9