The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 11, 1983, Page Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Daily Ncbrcskan
Tuesday, October 11, 1C33
IM-IL'Gbinidleinito Hnwest taffiie ftoto'e,
Pago 2
By Steele Thomas
A group of 80 UNL students are investing in the
future.
They are not working manipulativcly with stocks
and bonds, instead they are helping to share
children.
These students are counselors for the Nebraska
Human Resources Research Foundation, a private
non-profit research laboratory designed to develop
human leadership. Each counselor la matched with
a school-age child who he will help in developing
good leadership qualities.
Dave Ditman, associate director of the founda
tion, described the counselors' participation as an
"investment-reinvestment process." The counselors
invest their leadership qualities in the children in
the hope that the children will then re-invest these
qualities in their peers, he said.
The return on the counselors' investment may
come in various forms. Cal Strong, a UNL junior
business major, said the program has made him
aware of relationships and how4o deal with them.
Mike Larsen, a senior accounting major, said his
reward is watching the child grow, even though the
results may not be evident until hb counselee is in
college or working. Larsen also said the program has
challenged him to be the very best he can be.
The counselors are also rewarded when their
counselees begin using their leadership ability. Shari
Olsen, a junior majoring in elementary education,
said she felt successful when her counselee
defended a girl that some of her friends were talking
about.
Todd Kelley, a senior marketing major, said he
thought that hi3 eleven-year counselee was begin
ning to use his leadership ability when he suggested
activities for the foundation's retreats.
The counselors usually meet with their counse
lees once a week. They may go out to eat, see a movie,
attend a football game, go for ice cream or have a
picni.
"It doesn't matter what we do, it's the quality cf
the time we spend together," Olsen said.
Strong said he encourages his counselee to call
him to talk about anything that's bothering him. He
said his counselee recently asked his advice on how
to ask a girl for a date. Kelley said he helps his
counselee with math.
The foundation, located at 501 N. 10th St, con
sists of seven projects, including PALS, which works
with the physically handicapped, and a program
with the Nebraska School for the Visually Handi
capped in Nebraska City.
pie Childs-Juniors-Teenage program begins
working with children in grade school and con
tinues through high school
Counselors in the Family project develop rela
tions between children in large families.
The Lakeview Elementary School project grew
out of concerns that the children there were not
receiving individual attention.
The foundation formed the Leadership Develop
ment project in response to an increase in the dro
pout rate at Lincoln High SchooL
P -j VG 'fv v-v.-. :
ill Vissy mqg&t. .cty
NSA OFFERS YOU A
HZAVY-HITTI.G CAREER OPPORTUNITY
IN TNI FOLLOWING DISCIPLINES:
ELECTRONIC
ENGINEERING
Thar or opportunities in
a variety of research and
development projects
ranging from individual
equipments to very
complex interactive
systems involving large
numbers of '
microprocessors, mini
computers and .computer
graphics. Professional '
growth is enhanced
through interaction' with "T
highly experienced NSA. x
professionals and Jhr'ough , '.
contacts in the industrial
and academic worlds. - - -tFacities
for engineering . ;
analysis and design . ...
automation are among the
kest avaitc&l.
To find cut more , . ,
cbout fSA career..
eppertunitist,
tcheduts. en interview .
through your collje
''p-scement effke. Fr '
cJJiiicnd informatien
COMPUTER
SCIENCE . 1
At NSA you'll discover one '
of the largest computer'.,
installations in the world
with almost every major '
vendor of computer
equipment represented.
NSA careers provide
mixtures of such disciplines
as systems analysis and
design, scientific
applications programming,
data base management
systems operating
systems,, computer
networkingsecurity, and
graphics.
MATHEMATICS
You'll work on diverse
agency problems applying '
a variety of mathematical
disciplines. Specific
assignments might include '
solving communications
related problems, : -performing
long-range '
mathematfcal research or
evaluating new techniques
for communications '
security. . f ; - "
TKS' REWARDS
AT USA
NSA offers a sc'sfy acid
benefit program that's
truly competitive with -private
industry. There are
assignments for these who
wish te travel and ,
,-abundant good living in the '
Baltimore-Vashinrjton area '
for these who wish 'te stay
close te home. '
Countless cultural, V
historitcl, recredtionol end
educottonoi opportunities
are just mtftutes owoy
from NSA't convenient
sutiurlwa' jaeetitri. '
HIT
fi the NffltSsncI
Security Agency,' .
write ta National
Security, Atrscy,;
Attn: M322, Fert
George' G. Meod,
Maryland 2C755.
GO F0.1 IT ALL
(3
'The '
National
:i iJsJL.y- -Lli'-rAfrcncy-'- -,
An Equal Cportwnify EmpWyer, .U.S.. Ci:r-sh'p Cequirfd.. ''
A
.On cMispi!3 Twrif ilin Occi.r 17, i l w3
National and international news
from the Rcuter News Report
American geneticist
wins medicine prize
STOCKHOLM American geneticist Bar
bara McCIintock on Monday became the first
woman to singly win the Nobel Prize for Medi
cine, receiving the 1G33 award for her dhcovr
ery of mobile genetic elements, the Karolinska
Institute said. McCIintock, 81, received the
award for work she did on DNA in' the late
1940s and early 1950s.
Soviet crops still in fields
MOSCOW Heavy rainfall has severely dis
rupted the closing stages of the Soviet grain
harvest, and Western farm experts said Tues
day the crop total may be affected and that the
Soviets may need to buy more grain from the
United States and other Western grain
markets. Normally, all Soviet grain harvesting
is completed by mid-October. But this year,
several million acres still need to be cut in
northern and eastern Kazakhstan and west
ern Siberia.
Shamir takes office
JERUSALEM Yitzhak Shamir took oOce
Monday niht as Israeli prime minister after
winning parliamentary backing for his coali
tion of riht-wing and religious parties. The
Knesset voted 60 to 53 to confirm the 67-year-old
riht-winger as successor to Menachem
Begin.- . . . ' .' ' '
Shamir took office amid economic jturmoil
and warned the nation to expect tough auster
ity measures.
The Tel Aviv stock exchange has closed to
avoid panic selling. Foreign-exchange dealing
was suspended for several hours while banks
marked down the value of the shekel about 5
; percent against the U.S. dollar.
Mian trip not affected
WASHINGTON The deaths of top South
Korean officials in a bomb blast in Burma left
U.S. officials shocked and saddened Monday,
but a White House spokesman said it would
not affect President Reagan's plan to visit
South Korea and Japan next month. However,
the apparent attempt to kill South Korean
President Chun Doo-hwan, who escaped the
explosion because he arrived late for a cerem
ony at the Martyr's Mausoleum in Rangoon,
was expected to heighten security concerns
among Reagan's trip planners.
The bombing has the second act of violence
to hit a nation scheduled to be visited by Rea
gan on an Asian trip in November. The first was
the assassination of Benigno Aquino in Manila
on Aug. 25. Reagan later canceled planned vis-
its to the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand,
citing official duties in Washington.
Gunfire echoes in Syria
DAMASCUS, Syria Gun battles, appar-
ently between rival Palestinian factions, broke
out in central Damascus Monday night. Local
residents said they believed the fighting was
between opponents and supporters of Palesti
nian leader Yasser Arafat. Witnesses said
Syrian internal security forces has sealed off
the areas but were not intervening in tht fight
ing. It was the first time that fighting in the
revolt within Arafat's Fatah, the largest of
eight groups in the Palestinian Liberation
Organization, had spilled over into the streets
of Damascus.
Earlier, near Tripoli, Lebanon, a pro-Arafat
" guerrilla was killed and three civilians were
injured in a clash between Palestinian guerrilla .
factions, the Palestinian news agency, Wafa,
' said -
Ice iraps;40 Soviet ships
KIOSCOW forty' Soviet ships, including I
; icebreakers; are trapped in thick ice in the '.
Chukotsk Sea north of Siberia, the government
daily Izvestia reported Tuesday. It said the '
ships were caught at the. beginning of Octcb er .
when a sudden cold encp froze the Arctic
watere and blocked normal autumn channels.1
The-icebreakers 'had tried to force a'pirrr.-e :
through' in' both, eastern. and v;c:tcrn Crcc- :
tions in the past fr.v d-ys but f:.'. ;d, the rc:-;;:t '
sid. The cr-:v,j cf the trc r;;i lI' - j : re 71.t-
ir.g fcr warmer vrethcr, the p: - ;f .