page 8 daily nebraskan monday, October 17, 1977 EHTEnTfllllUEHT BRIAN BUTLER VOICE AND GUITAR Tuesday and Wednesday Nights, 12 pm October 18 and 19 AT OUR DOWNTOWN LOCATION " Bodtto's 'Let's take a new look at our world' topic of UN official's Lincoln speech Upstairs in the Glass Menagerie 12th & Q 474-6000 48th & Highway 2 483-4129 William C. Powell, a United Nations (UN) official, will speak Sunday at .Lincoln's United Nations Association (UNA) annual banquet. His topic will be, "Let's Take a New Look at Our World." Powell has been involved with the UN since it was formed in 1945, when he was appointed to the' prepara tory commission the General Assembly's first session. In 1946 he joined the UN Secretariat and in 1972 he was appointed director of the press and publications division of the UN office of Public Information. October 24 is the day the UN's final draft was signe by all involved nations. Every year there are banquets commemorating this signing, as close to the historical date as possible. Ralph Garner, president of UNA of Lincoln, said IIJ THE GREAT BUY'W'BUY... JUAREZ is the perfect "angel" for entertaining friends. It just tiptoes through the cocktails ... mixes so quietly you scarcely know it's there. A heavenly bargain too! And your local liquor merchant will assure you that . . . you can take it with you cn n rvTrn His speakers on world affairs are featured at the annual ban quets. "This year we are exceptionally fortunate to have Dr. Powell because he is one who has been with the UN since its inception," Garner said. The UNA of Lincoln has been in existence for 20 years and has always had an annual banquet Garner said the last time such a distinguished guest was in Lincoln for the UNA was in 1957, when Eleanor Roosevelt presented the chapter with its charter. The UNA of Lincoln will pay partial expenses for Powell's trip from money obtained through donations, dues and the price of the banquet. Also on the agenda for the night will be Maurice Tate and Nelle Allpress, who will provide music. Foreign students living in Lincoln also will be introduc ed to those attending. ' Witnesses sought Volunteering pays GOLD OR SILVER IMKWTED BOTTLED BY TEOJILAJAUSCOSA ST. LOUS.MO.aOPflOOf UNL police are seeking the aid of anyone who may have witnessed the assault of a 22-year-old female north west of Love Memorial Library Oct. 11. According to UNL police officer Maureen Knott, the student was allegedly attacked while she walked along the diagonal sidewalk towards Morrill Hall. Knott said the woman allegedly was grabbed from behind and hit in the jaw. . When she screamed, the assailant released her and ran north. She was taken to the University Health Center where her injury was diagnosed as a broken jaw. She currently is under the care of a Lincoln oral surgeon. Knott said police still are unsure of the attackers motive, terming it an unprovoked attack. They are looking for a black male, approximately 5 foot 8 to six foot tall with medium build in connection with the alleged assault', Knptt said the name of anyone supplying information to police concerning the assault would be kept confidential. OMyTampax tampons have an applicator that is flushable f 1 t . 1 tit ana laaaDie 3i MM 7 ' . The applicator on the left is plastic and its manufacturer clearly warns "do not flush!" You can throw it into a waste receptacle, but no matter how you dispose of a plastic applicator, it remains hard, non-biodeadable material indefinitely That is why plastic applicators pollute our land, rivers, lakes and beaches. TheTampax tampon container-applicator -like the tampon itself-is completely disposable and biodegadablc. It is made of spirally wound strips of paper that quickly begin to delaminate and unwind when they come in contact with water. (See the illustration above at the right.) The paper snips are as easy to dispose of as a few sheets of bathroombr facial tissue. What's more, the hygienic Tampax tampon applicator is designed to make insertion easy and comfortable. Slim.smooth and pre- lubricated, it guides the tampon into the proper position to give you reliable protection. Your fingers never have to touch the tampon. In use, theTampax tampon expands gendy in all three directions- length.breadth and width so there is little chance of leakage or bypass. Tampax tampons offer you hygienic menstrual protection widiout the worry of environmental pollution.This is one of the reasons why they are the 1 choice of more women than all other tampons combined. ' TAMPAX. tampons The internal protection more wxmen trust UNL students seeking volunteer work out of the good ness of their hearts will find additional benefits at the YWCA for the goodness of their pocketbooks. The YWCA will award $2 gift certificates to volunteers for each 25 hours of service, according to Betty Dyer, YWCA director of volunteers, Dyer said the certificates are redeemable for a YWCA membership fee reduction or for a discount on any class registered for by the volunteer or a family member.. The student membership fee is $5 a year. The certificates will be valid for one year, Dyer said. However, only- volunteers will be allowed only five certi ficates a year, she said. Dyer said the YWCA board of directors initiated the program to try to "convert volunteer efforts to some thing tangible," adding that she knows of no organization with a similar program. ' Any service volunteer is eligible for the certificates. Service volunteer work includes child care, clerical work, . class instruction and teen advising. -'-- The YWCA has about 50 service volunteers and of those about 20 are UNL students, Dyer said. Bulletins available If deciding which courses to pre-register for is getting ,you down, this may help, ASUN's Academic Policy Com mittee has set up 16 permanent information centers on campus, making all seven college bulletins available at each location. ' According to Bill Armbrust, academic policy commit- 4 a a mAmk:Ar Via infVtvorvr Art4-arc 11 moiti cfi A ante no longer have to run around campus to find a particular bulletin to read about one course. Bulletins can be checked out at residence hall desks, C.Y. Thompson Library, Love Library, the seven college deans offices, the ASUN office and the Interfraternity CouncilPanhellenic office. The bulletins were provided free by the University Publications Office. w Tho Good Neighbor. BJ? ffl ,. Hideaway ft dHWHR US, jcji) ; I