j DAZZLE THAT "SPECIAL SOMEONE" WITH A DIAMOND! Put It In Layaway For Christmas Now At AND SAVE 20 on Most Diamond Merchandise! , Mcl The Rrwdkrt . . . Vrtr IKamond" : IIBPIQOECEY'B Centrum Lincoln Monday thru Friday 10-9 Saturday 10-5:30 ;'; Sunday 12-5 . M.:.,,.1, : " " " ' "" " " COLOR KINKO'S CONVENIENT C (( 7:30 am - 9 pm (( J 7:30 am -9pm r H J CsWEDNESDAY TJI 1 (( 7:30 am -9 pm (( J 7:30 am - 9 pm (( J rtl 1)1-0 LI KU 7:30 am -6 pm (( LI Tl -)) SATL'RDAY W HI L U 1(( ya5rrTpST Iff I U COPIES BINDINGS PASSPORT PHOTOS SELF-SERVICE COPIERS 13th & It and 48th & Vine f--T a!!N k Susie's iX FLOWERS "Big enough for all your floral fH needs, small enough to cars," i$M 232 Gateway North g 466-0424 . llf "WEDDINGS ARE" OUR SPECIALTY" iSTrie Silk Bouquets that look I Mil 2nd smell liks Fresh! 01 Your completa wedding flowers if 1 v booked July 1 Sift thru July 23. j 1 ML Also Featuring . . ' 1 ; Sill: -Tress & ' Plapts f Enrollment increases in teacher programs is first in decade By Mark Davia ; For the first time in more than a decade, en rollment in teacher-education programs is increas ing. But James OUanlon, dean of UNL's Teachers College attributes the nationwide growth as a simple issue of supply and demand. In an informal poll of officials from 45 member institutions of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, enrollment was reported to be on the upswing. OUanlon said UNL enrollment was leveling off after a drop from the peak of 4,200 students in the 1960s to about 2,300 students last fall. "It's a simple issue of supply and demand," OUan lon said. "For example, there was a tremendous ' decline in math teachers until students became aware of the job possibilities Another example he sited was an increase in foreign language classes creating a need for more teachers in that area. In a study conducted by the University of Illinois, UNL teacher-education programs were rated as number one in the nation, OUanlon said he could not predict how this would effect UNL's future enrollment. "Potential students have listed it as a reason for coming here," O'Hanlon said. "But there will be no way of finding out the ratings effects until a study is conducted. Legislation increasing teacher salaries has been passed in a few states. This was listed as one reason for teacher-education enrollment increases in the AASCU poll. Similar local legislation did not pass last year but O'Hanlon said he still had hope for its passage. Nebraska's teachers salaries are in the nation's bottom 10 percent, OUanlon said. Compared with Nebraska's top 10 rating in standardized testing, graduation percentages and literacy, which is ironical, OUanlon said. The value system of Nebraska is education orient ed," OUanlon said. Residence halls . . . CaEtiaissd Cross F&2 1 Television viewers in the residence halls will soon have access to another channel KBGT (Channel 8), also called "Big 8 TV." The independent commer cial station, which originates from Albion, carries old movies and sports. Schumann said a special antenna will be used to bring the channel into the residence hail rooms. Neihardt Residence Center will get new, durable windows "that should last 30 to ' 40 years" when installed, Schumann said. Besides replacing windows which are more than 50 years old and in poor shape, the new windows offer easy maintenance and energy efficiency, he said. In Love Memorial Cooperative for Women on East Campus, four new bathroom facilities are being installed. Two will be completed by this fall, Schu mann said. Norma Weigert, coordinator of accounting and payroll for university housing, said funding for any -major renovations comes from bend fund monies created for improvements in housing and other "auxiliary enterprises" such as the University Health Center. According to Zatechka, housing has budgeted about $300,000 per year in the last two years for major renovations, with fire safety additions consti tuting an additional $250,000 per year. Summer is the best time for major renovations because the residence halls are largely unoccupied during the summer, Zatechka said. Schumann said summer wear and tear on the halls, despite popular belief, is probably less than what occurs during the regular school year. He said the many youth groups who use the residence halls In the summer are usually carefully chaperoned and "just arent hers long enough" to create much of a problem. A figure of 10,000 people "would be conservative" for estimating summer occupants, Schumann said. About 120 groups, with member numbers ranging from less than a dozen to more than 1 ,000, are using the halls thb summer, Zatechka eeid. This b "far, more residents than last yssr, ho s aid. Veljsjt estimated that 50 students have occu pied Sehrnrin and 43 female students haw occu pied Lovs lleinorial Cooperative this summer. ' Dolly NcbrcRkon Off The Wire National and international news from the Reuter News Report 40 So'utii Africans seised in protests PARYS, South Africa Police fired tear gas at angry blacks Monday in the second day of protest against rent and tax hikes in a black township 50 miles south of Johannesburg a police spokesman said. Ifr said 40 demonstra tors had been arrested in the nearby township of Tumahole on such charges as public vio lence, theft, looting, arson and burglary. He said four policemen had been slightly injured in the unrest which began with a march Sun day by 1,000 youths. They dispersed after warnings from police, hut some regrouped and began hurling stones. The trouble continued Monday morning and police said they used tear gas twice to chase protesters from make shift roadblocks. Ortega heads tlw ballot MANAGUA Daniel Ortega, leader of Nica ragua's leftist Sandinist government, has been chosen as the government's presidential can didate in elections set for November 4, sources said Monday. Ortega, the 39-year-cld coordi nator of the three-man ruling Junta, was selected by the Sandinist assembly and his candidacy will be announced officially Tues day, the sources added. They said candidates for the 90-member Constituent Assembly to be elected November 4 also had been chosen and would be presented to the council organizing the elections later this week. The elections are the first to be held in Nica ragua since the Sandinist revolution swept to power in 1 870, ousting the right-wing dictator ship of Anastasio Somoza, Opposition parties have charged that the Sandinists hold an unfair advantage in the poll because of emer gency measures in force which impose restric tions on the opposition's activities and estab lish press censorship. The government has said such measures are necessary while Nicaragua is under attack from rightist rebels in neigh boring Honduras and Costa Rica. The restric tions are being lifted during campaigning for the elections. Greeks battle pollution ATHENS A poisonous cloud of industrial waste hanging over Athens has reached the danger point and industrial production and car traffic in the capital will be cut to combat the pollution, the Greek government said Mon day. Press reports said several hundred peo ple, mostly aged, had been made iU by the cloud and many had been hospitalized. The Planning and Environment Ministry ordered 73 factories in the Athens area to cut production by 30 percent for two days. Half of Athens' cars will be banned from the city and its environs Tuesday and Wednesday, it said. The cloud of industrial waste hanging over Athens, Piraeus and their suburbs has become a regular feature of the capital, causing serious damage to ancient monuments. About orte third of Greece's nine million people live in Athens and its suburbs, and about half the country's industry is situated here. China 's army opens ears PEKING China's army newspaper started a letters-to-the-editor column Monday asking for suggestions on army reform, the New China News Agency said. The Liberation Army Daily launched the column with six readers' letters, some of which suggested changes in promo tion and a discussion on whether military organiiaitons should engage in civilian busi ness, the agency reported. The paper wel comed comments on anything from political and military work to national defense research, although published letters would not neces sarily represent the views of the editors, the agency said. China's present leadership is redirecting the emphasis of th 3.2 millon-strong People's Lib eration Army. Under Mao Tsetun: the army was a guardian of leftist ideology, five current philosophy is to build a modern military force based on discipline and skill The ccvcrnnreiit recently passed a new military service law aaned at creating a more proftcsonal army and rttetrodi2c.bg the system of rzzte ar.d decorations thti had been blr-hd under OrClrlML OUlViCVJIMC WITH A DIAMOND! Put It In Layaway For Christmas Now At SOnQDICEY'S AND 11 70 on Most Diamond Merchandise! Mcl The Rrwdkrt B . . . Vrtr IKamond" SB RQ DEWEY'S Centrum Lincoln Monday thru Friday 10-9 Saturday 10-5:30 Sunday 12-5 COLOR KINKO'S CONVENIENT c2 CMQNDAY) 7:30 am - 9 pm 7:30 am THURSDAY 7:30 am v SUNDAY 12-5 3th 4 R 0 TUESDAY ; 1 WEDNESDAY "Jj 1 7:30 am - 9 pm (( I ISDAY T j COPIES BINDINGS PASSPORT PHOTOS SELF-SERVICE COPIERS 13th & It and 48th & Vine fucker. Jut 17. 1934