thursday, October 1 1981 page 2 daily nebraskan GUITAR JUNIOR and HIS BLUES BAND October 1-3 Old Stylo Longnecks 75 136 N. 14 B The Collegiate Money 2Iuiz... ifc A $H ffiwnmr'iffllf'ri irtr ininnrni irrnrin n mi i mini &'x " , , r I Problem: It's Saturday night. You have a hot date. You promised to take her I out to dinner. You only have 15C. The bank is closed and you can't cash a check. What do you do? a. Sell vour football ticket b. Cancel the date c. Call the folks to I wirp vnn t.hp mnnpv I - i7 xJ - machine in the Nebraska Union We're making banking easy as WWW m m 3 VJ el: Mational Bank of Commerce Main Bank, 13th & O Parkway Drive-In, Walk-In, 40th & South East Park Drive Rampark Drive - MEMBER FDIC .Tonight at the Zoo" "... some of the tightest, most invigorating music to be heard in some time at the Zoo . . ." Bart Becker Lincoln Journal d. Use h r r y - in, Walk-In, 66th & O In, Walk-In, 12th & P - Accounts Insured to $100,000 472-4250 SERVICE ! V your Bank-In-The-Box I ciim .BANK, Workshop stresses "Iran and the Arab World" is the subject of a faculty and staff workshop that began Wednesday and is continuing today in the Nebraska Union. The prupose of the work shop is "to raise the level of awareness of campus people regarding cultural differen ces,' according to Linda Becker, international stu dent adviser and workshop leader. Approximately 300 stu dents from Middle Eastern Three scholarships The College of Arts and Sciences has applications available for Marshall, Rhodes and Truman Schol arships in Oldfather 1223. card at the 24-hour dvp pu3(aoM pub ?aojja 'aiun no 3av.s pnoo u pao xoa-aiix-ui-Jtua v puv lunooD Suiipaip t& aoj Kiddv puv uoiun BHSBaqaM am ut aaiuaQ folios snduto Aq dots spunj aajsu put; 'sisodap ojroui 'qstia q3 o oq'u.noA 'xoa-aqi-ui-nua qiiv 'o ao q "b jo iuawssBaaquia pub mvd aqi ptOAB noA diaq uub pivo xog -X-UI-MUa V 03N uioaj pjbd xoa-aqi-ui-nuBa JnoA osq p st aaMSUB oajjoo aqj, U9MSUV countries are enrolled at UNL each year. University faculty and staff who attempt to under stand the cultural back ground of their students will be more successful in rela ting to those students, she said. About 80 persons regi stered for the conference, Becker said. Participants are randomly assigned to two groups, and each group is introduced to the culture of the Middle East. The Marshall scholarship is a $12,000 award for two years oPstudy in the United Kingdom. Up to 30 scholar ships are awarded to college c culture One group is taught through a self-study learn ing approach, and the other receives the same informa tion through a slidetape program. Both approaches nave been used in similar workshops across the coun try and have been well-received, Becker said. For research purposes, an evaluation is taken follow ing the workshop, and again three to four weeks later to determine retention of con cepts, she said. available seniors who have not reached their 26th birthday by Oct. 1, 1982. Applica tions are due in the Arts and Sciences office by 9 ajn.Oct. 5. The Rhodes scholarship is a $5,500 award for study at Oxford University in Bri tain. The scholarship lasts for two years, but may be extended for a third. Thirty two scholarships are awar ded in the United States to seniors who are unmarried and between the ages of 18 and 24 by Oct. 1, 1981. The candidate must have graduated with a bachelors degree before October 1982. Applications are due to the Arts and Sciences office by 9 ajn.Oct 5. The Truman scholarship is available to college sopho mores who will be juniors in 1982-83. The two-year scholarship provides $5,500 each year. Fifty-six scholarships are available for U.S. citizens and nationals. The candidate must be pursuing undergraduate fields of study which will lead to a career in govern ment. Applications are due in Oldfather 1223 by Oct. 14. sfa staff The Student Y will spon sor Career-Planning today at noon in the Student Y, Ne braska Union 1 1 7. There will be a discussion with Dee Simpson-Kirkland. There will be a Campus Scout meeting tonight in the Nebraska Union lounge at 7:30. The Ag Engineering Soci ety will have a meeting this evening in Agricultural Hall 116. Alpha Gamma Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma are sponsoring a college-opoly marathon from midnight Sept. 29 to noon Oct. 3 in the Nebraska Union. All pro ceeds will go to the Ameri can Cancer Society of Ne braska. Students interested in the Washington Center for Learn ing Alternatives internship program for spring semester 1982 should make an ap pointment with the Coordi nator for Experiential Edu cation, Oldfather 1218,472- 1452 by Oct. 5. The Non-Traditional Stu dent Association will have its weekly luncheon tomor row in the union. Room will be posted.