The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 22, 1984, 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.

    Pago 2
Monday, October 22, 1834
Daily Nsbrskan
Career center director lauds
new interview bidding system
By Jcnn Njffcler
D&Uy Ni trail n Stiff Eeportrr
The new bidding system used
for scheduling on-campus job
interviews is better than the pre
vious first-come, first-serve meth
od, the director of UNL's Career
rianning and Placement Center
said.
Gerry Phaneuf outlined the
changes in the philosophy of the
center at a recent ASUN senate
meeting. Those changes include
new registration procedures for
interviews with personal data,
academic record and computer
referral forms; a career oppor
tunities bulletin; more seminars
and workshops; and Increased
student awareness cf the center.
Phaneuf told the senators that
Job hunting Is never easy, but
using the center can lessen the
worry.
"Walking down the hall and being
able to talk to IBM, AT&T, Gen
eral Dynamics and Rockwell In
ternational all in one afternoon is
fantasy. It's not going to happen
in the real world," he said.
A
mj emu
! n Tl T!f If rt fa T i" p-f " ?
4 B n kut 4 .
1
NATURE'S CHOICE GRANOLA BARS
Carob Chip Bar, reg $1 99 now $1.49
w i
J
Es.SS OCT 21
r
0
mere ho s?wt food s ras a bargain
rj 2537 RANDOLPH LINCOLN NE 63510 475-9069
f p-nj r-p" t nw yf ipss irn - j1 ap"7? " T1
tLuJ A Tir kM un mvol 3m Li a-i lwd .-i-jj Sujoi akw
I
M
u
u
fl
11
n
N 0
0
a
p
The new system, which gives
applicants 500 points a week to
bid on the interview they would
most like to participate in, elimi
nates the long lines that the pre
vious system created, Phaneuf
said. Bidding takes less time than
waiting In line to sign up for
interviews. It is fairer, he said,
because it lets more students par
ticipate. Max Larsen, candidate for the
state Board of Education, also
addressed the senate during its
open forum. Larsen, who preced
ed Gerry Meisels as dean of UNL's
College of Arts and Sciences, said
economic independence in Nebra
ska demands a quality education
system, including continued
teacher certification.
Senators also discussed the
possibility of relocating the Cul
ture Center to the recently-acquired
Commonplace building at
333 N. 14th St. ASUN President
Mark Scudder said the building
would not house only the Culture
Center, because it is designated
for use by all student organiza
tions, to be allocated by the Union
Board.
The
finishing touches
are at
fl
V u is
m i- r a
U
FISH NET HOSE GARTERS
BLACK CAPES HATS
INDIAMA JONES SAFARI
it HATS WHPTE CAPES
RED CAPES & KEYSTONE COP
HATS SPARKLE TOP HATS
SOMBREROS BUNNY EARS
it GYPSY EARRINGS it GYPSY
WIGS it GYPSY BANDANAS
it CLOWN HATS it GLOVES
NUN COSTUMES PIRATE HATS
HANDCUFFS it EYE PATCHES
TIES it GIANT BOW TIES NUN
COSTUMES it PIRATE HATS
HANDCUFFS EYE PATCHES
it BOW TIES it GIANT BOW TIES
TIES BLINKING BOW TIES it
SQUIRTING BOW TIES WITCH
HATS CAT EARS it BOW TIES
it MOUSE TAILS CAT TAILS
CREATE YOUR OWN
I i Mi 3 My
.if M ei is f fs I I L-l 111 is V- f I -V I
v m m ar ; t i m i ar i i i n -v i 'rf i
V I V- 1 B III
rf UT Y A UT M
i i ii i tr i s i iFj I i
M
WYAAm
: ! !
TiAi
v
o
National and international news
from the Eeutcr News Report
Eeagan will fire ofieialo
connected to CIA manual
WASHINGTON The Reagan administration wiU fire any
U.S. official found to have taken part in preparing a CIA man
ual that instructs Nicaraguan rebels on political assassination,
a top White House aide said Sunday.
"I think the president has made clear that if there were U.S.
officials involved in the development of this and the approval
of it, then they ought to be fired," National Security Adviser
Robert McFarlane said.
An internal CIA probe cf the matter, ordered by President
Reagan, should be ready in "a wCek or ao," ahead of the Nov. 6
presidential election, McFarlane said. Although Reagan vowed
that any official, no matter how highly ranked, would be sub
ject to dismissal, McFarlane said it appeared that any US.
involvement was at a low leveL
The manual, which gives detailed advice to UJS.-backed Nica
raguan guerillas on political blackmail and assassinating
selected officials of the leftist Sandinist government, surfaced
last week after it was leaked to the press. White House officials
have disavowed any support for the manual, which would
appear to violate a 1031 presidential executive order barring
U.S. intelligence officials from conspiring to "engage in as
sassination." Disclosure of the manual prompted Democratic presidential
candidate Walter Mondale to call for the dismissal cf CIA
Director William C&sey.
Sen. Paul Lssalt, a close friend cf the president, said the
issue was inlikdy to hurt Reagan's re-election bid.
"You can't be held responsible for every activity that's
occurred in every reach of the government," said Laxalt, a Nev
ada Republican.
Feiraro faces new financial Most
NEW YORK Geraldine Ferraro's campaign, already stung
by a story about her parents' 1944 arrests, grappled Sunday
with the impact of two new article about past campaign fund
ing and her husband's real estate dealings.
In New York the Long Island newspaper Newsday reported
that a man officially listed as an organized crime figure had
raised nearly $49,000 for the Democratic vice-presidential
candidate's first congressional campaign six years ago. News
day also said that her husband John Zaccaro's family real
estate firm had financed more than 00 percent of a business
complex owned by a man who served eight months in jail in a
labor racketeering case.
In Philadelphia, the Inquirer reported that Zacc&ro had
represented a reputed organized crime figure in the sale of two
buildings in New York City's Little Italy.
"These stories will have no impact on the candidate, but they
will take time away from the campaign," Ferraro's chief spo
kesman, Francis O Bnen, told Reuters. Tha Fernxo campaign
has been gambling that the stories will net est wid? circulation
and create a last-minute negative impression in the oincb of
voters.
The strategy evidently paid off late last week when the
national newspapers and broadcast companies generally Ig-
nored reports on Ferraro's past by two publications owned by
Rupert Murdoch, the Australian press magnate, whose rajor
American dailies hsve sided strongly with President Reagan.
Thursday, Murdoch's New York Post reportedthat her parents
had been arrested on charges of numbers cfgirr.iLlr.g in 1944
when she was 8. Fcrraro told reporters it was the first time she
had heard of the uresis and said she would not comment
further on the matter.
U.S., Israel to.ctioetios
TEL AVIV. Israel tJndersecrtarv nf Ft
cost arrived here for talks Sunritavrm inint I ? R .Tr1i www.
tion in Latin America. His visit coincided with reports that the
Sandinist government in Nicaragua, which ths Untied States
blames for inciting leftist unheav&l in rVntrrJ Avrira. was
considering re-estaocsmng ties with Use Jr.vL-;
The Sandanists. who are SMtioathetic to the Pr 'r-.tir.ians.
broke relations with Israel shortly after winning power in the
1 979 revolution. They have accused Israel of supplying arms to
rightwing U.S.-backed rebels in Nkarasua and ncigSiboring
Central American countries. Israeli leftist hsi-e long opposed
Israeli arms sales to rightist forces In Lain America and
accused the former rlghtwinj? Likud government cfactins as a
lackey in the region for the United tir,t.cx
mm deny akopaee vlolctiaii
j. STOCKHOLM A senior Soviet official bm far the first time
drtsid lUoscow's version of an incident in xrhich Sweden says
aviet nghter aircrrt violated its &Jrspsc and ts2sd a civil
urr.TheSlshnepsperPesNTctcrEKdpub'
pned an interview with V&diia fc-isdin, deputy chief to the
toternmu&na! division ofthe Soviet Cemunk: Vtirfs Central
Oommittec, tn which he denied that the Sai?t plsns cssae
closer than 31 mll tn n
awedissi c
metal 31
ft . , ' v v uwi &. wait..
rer brt tnm Sov-1 Au- Force exercises to tsil an
Tt I T , . Vntttt en board fersevsrd rr.ir.
uts ever
wed-
i