( tfwrsir, mcrcfi 10, 1073 P5 CcL John E. VcIier wi3 replace CbL lindy C Ctmdmon as professor of Aerospace Stixdkj at UNL suiting Friday. Cur.drnoa is leaving his post as commander of the NU Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps to head a repoml ROTC program. Gtmderson has been at NU since 1974. V.'olter currently is viceommander of the Air Foce Command and Staff School at ilaxwell Air Force Dase ia lionfgomcry,AIa. Rodney Eiss, a freshman ia the College of Engineer ing and Technology, has been awarded the $150 Omaha Fcst-Society of American limitary Engineers Scholarship. Hiss, a construction management major, is from Nebraska cay. , m Aa exhibition dril team of UNL's Navy ROTC llid shipmrn placed second in the sixth Annual University of South Dakota DxO Meet March 13 ia Vermilion, SJ. Ins 14333 team, commanded by Midshipman Mike Van Nordheim, a sophomore from Ord, was selected for the award on the basis of originality and variety of the drO movements, its difficulty and showmanship. . Ten schools from six states had teams entered in the competition. - A team of UNL Army ROTC sharpshooters took first place in a Reserves Officers Association Rifle Match Saturday, March 13 in Lincoln. UNL sophomore Cadet Kit M. Hams was the top shooter, . scoring 537 points of a possible 600. Ills chaskscship teansnates were sophomore Ronald Carda, freshman Robert Johansenand freshman Steven Dcseh. :, . :. -" -Two graduates of the UNL School of Journalism, Nancy L. Kehrli of Schuyler and Linda ECaott of Lincoln, were recently awarded $500 scholarships for graduate work in journalism through the J.C Seacrest fellowships. Kehrli was graduated with distinction from UNL in December 1974, and has since had professional experience with the David City Banner Press, the Schuyler Sun and the Nebraska Football Reporter. Elliott a a producerdirector for the Nebraska Educational Television Network (?ETV). She was graduated from NU in June 1971 and also has worked as a staff director and assistant producer for NETV, and a reporter for KQLN-TV in Lincoln. ML Inflation stamps . pre-reglstration By Vu&sh twzdy foliation has put artwork on the back of the UNL spring 76-T7 class schedule and may cause problems tor students--i2sing the US. mail to complete their pre regstratioa for next falL The artwork is four full pages of advertising. The mail problem is that postage has increased and 24 cents, cot 20 cents as indicated on the pre-regtstratica packet, is needed to send the envelope through the malL Gary Fouraker, director cf Student Accounts, said " the 20-ccnt postage mark on the packet envelope was an administrative oversight. Envelopes are ordered by the Bursar's office ia July for both semesters, C0JD00 to 70C0 at a time, Fouraker soil. Last Jdy the Eur sars office did not know postal rates were increasing, he added. . . According to Fouraker, mail with postage due wO be returned to the sender. New Postal regulations no longer allow mail with insufficient postage to be for -warded. If the student does not put a-retura address cn the envelope, it may end up in the dead letter Ge, Four aker said. The post office wO pen dead letters and try to determine who sent them, but sometimes several weeks pass before postal employes get to them, he said. Fouraker said he did cot expect the postage increase to be much cf a problem. Usually students do cot mail their packets, he saM, and if they do they usually use two first-class stampsC Ce added that the postage amount has been changed by hand on packets sent to students applying for UNL admission. These students probably wl mail their pre-registration. According to Gerald Bowker, Dean cf Academic Services, the advertising was an attempt to keep the budget law. However, he said, the advertising relates to what he called educational activities on campus. The four pages include advertisements for bookstores. Army ROTC, Rank Americard and student services. Although Bowker declined to say how much a revenue the advertising brought in, he dM say it helped to compensate but was not nearly enough to pay for printing the dass schedule. . ' . . The 403-page class schedule is as long as it usually would be without advertising, Bowker said. The adver tising space was made by condensing space used for student information, and by using extra white space, he added. A, Sss. Mh Profits of PreaEsy " . Idoizdmy LZzrch 22, ; - d tli2 IXoyzzl rows cfco eppscrfczj, 'ffillszz9 pjecznzbzg thczr A. ' p v 3jQ efeli r p f t 9 L k. f 1 It 2v nrn tUxlu Li i- r m t ' 7v rvAL r ' mm - m ill 1 n l i lJ9llV..t. -.'JIM-BILL JV.VV'-- fc W