ursdsy, October 7, 1970 pc3 13 iVtaddbi: ceoiif id a iy E.K. Csscccio Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox, American Inde mdent party presidential candidate, Wednesday laid he :s only a "small chance" of winning the presidency be :use he isn't getting enough coverage from the media, j "If we were given equal time, I feel confident we could 53t them (Ford and Carter) in a number of states, iaddox said while campaigning at Gateway Shopping Renter.. j The political establishment has decided who can and ran't be heard, he said. We've been blacked out of the called debates. j They reminded me of the old silent films. I couldn't Jail when the sound went off, he added. addox said he blames both the Republicans and Democrats for the country's problem. j "Carter blames the Republicans and Ford blames the Democrats-I agree with both of them, he said. I Y'a3voteforme I Maddox walked up and down the mall, stopping at stores, shaking hands and handing out pamphlets. He greeted shoppers with a "Hey, good lady, vote for me and IH work for you" and "Valt dont let nobody else get , that vote. At one store a necklace with a gold peanut was ad vertised as "The Jimmy Carter Peanut." j Maddox saw it and said, "Well, it's good to grow 'em ; and I k . - j eat em, but some people trunk like em and he's (Carter) one of 'em. , Maddox said Carter should have withdrawn from the race after the Playboy interview in which Carter made some remarks about committing adultery in his mind. Shouldn't be personal "I don't think private personal things should be a part of a campaign," he said. "Somebody should tie Jimmy Carter's tongue and amputate Rockefeller's finger," refer ring to Vice President Nelson Rockefeller making an ob scene gester at a rally. Maddox said the Ford administration and Henry -Kissinger have placed America in a secondary position in the world. He said he disapproves of what he called Ford's relin quishing of rights in the Panama Canal and said he would fire Henry Kissinger the minute after he was inaugurated. m ov vj on Ou GOVCu Maddox al-o saiJ he opposes busing and amnesty. "If we decided to rive amnesty to all those who turned UJS. now, Maddox said. He sail he would support freedom of choice by re- BETE) Of V0S the needs of the average person, he said. In addition, Maddox told a clerk at a health food store that "our government needs a prescription. . a good dose of integrity and honesty. . - ' ',!. v m t r v iYi A American Izdependest party presidential candidate Lester Maddox speaks with Lincoln East IHh School sta dests dsring hs lincchi vtt Wednesday. Life E Dl ning Workshop halps students find goals "You won't get anything earth-shattering out of this " Don Wesley, facilitator of the Life Planning Workshops, said at the first workshop Sept. 18. "But you will get a sense of the present, and take a look at the future and make some plans for it,' he added. The second session of the workshops, sponsored by the UNL Counseling Center, is this Saturday. Composing a personal coat of armswas the first exer cise in the first workshop after the four participants intro duced themselves. Because the workshops are discussion oriented, the groups is limited to five persons, including Wesley. The carpeted room on third floor Seaton HaQ is filled with a gambling hall atmosphere during the identifica tion and stripping of roles Participants wrote the five most significant roles they played in life on five separ ate cards. They then discarded each role one at a time, trying to imagine what their life would be like without that role. These exercises emphasized the importance of roles, and helped participants form a clearer picture of them selves and the goals they are striving for, Wesley said.. "If you don't know what youll be doing in 30 years, this is good stuff," Wesley said. The final stages of the workshop consisted of reassum , ing the discarded roles. Participants then defined some personal goals and made a group effort to outline concrete steps to achieve them. "Maybe you thought that you'd come in here and we'd give you a goal" Wesley said. "We'll show you how on your own you can put a goal into realistic terms and make 'it possible." The life Planning Workshop doesn't end when the five hour session is over. Four to six weeks after the first meet ing, the four participants will meet again to discuss their progress. "If you came because you wanted to get some thing done, you can do it," Wesley said. Reactions to the workshop vary with each participant. "Sometimes people change directions, it depends on how they are when they come in," Wesley said. The workshop generally results in a change of attitudes, he said. "This has helped," one of the participants said of the value of the workshop. "I can't expect this to set up my life for me. I come to things like this to get me thinking." Effectiveness of the workshop is also gauged by evalua tions completed by group members. Questionnaires are distributed to participants several days before the work shop, immediately before and after the session, and at the follow-up meeting several weeks later. Results of the questionnaires has been "pretty favor able," according to Sue Bukacek, workshops coordinator. "The Counseling Center has broadened the Life Plan ning Workshop in scope," she said. The workshop ful fills one of the center's five goal areas that of career planning. Life Planning Workshops have been conducted at UNL for five years, according to Bukacek. Participants mainly have been students, but Bukacek added that some sessions have been for faculty members to "make them aware of what their students are going through." A faculty work shop is scheduled for sometime this month. Facilitators for the sessions are drawn mainly from a leadership training course offered through the Educational Psychology Dept., Bukacek said. The students must lead two workshops to meet course requirements. "We want people to come to grips with themselves and where they'd like to go," Bukacek said. "We want them to realize they can control their future, and show them how to lake specific steps to realize their goals." , I ' Read ths Want Ads Fa y t tin i,C . on ui ni iff 3I i t i jl r i - u V" j uomer :2301 HSSrcl We're for you in Bare Trap's pumps! Bare Trap's pumps and platforms give yoathst touch cf "dressed-up" that yora casual skirts need. Each of these . styles comes in brown or this kid leather, of course with the burnished wooden platform. Shoe Salon, zH four stores. u Wj I