Monday, December 3, 1C34 Pcgt)2 Daily Nsfarcsksn Job fount CcuXaisd rc3 Pig3 1 Building contacts also Is an important process during the job search. Summer jobs, intern ships, volunteer work and ficld experience course work are help ful, Cardinal said. It Is helpful to maintain contacts once they are made, he said. A targeted employ er may not have a Job at the time, but if the job seeker is willing to tide, his time for the career he wants, he should maintain con tact with the employer, he said. Abo, past contacts also may have ideas or can refer the Job seeker to ether prospective employers. Cardinal said the job seeker should develop a strategy to ap proach that employers that will help keep the applicant in the employer's mind. An effective, or ganized and neatly-done resume, effective cover letter, smooth inter viewing techniques, as well as follow-up letters help the appli cant to "stand out." Applicants who have a genuine Interest in the prospective company will haw little problem in interviewing, he said. Keserching gives the inter viewee the background to tell the employer what he knows about the company and shows he to interested in the company. A weH-wriiten, errorless resume and cover letter are essential in getting a chance to interview. The applicant is signing his own death notice when he gives the employer a poorly prepared resume or appli cation letter, Cardinal said. Cardinal stressed that the career planning process is an ongoing one. The job seeker should continually re-evaluate himself and re-explore the career fields to be more effective in the job search, he said. . Anne Kcpcra, coordinator of advising at the Cc"o of Arts and Sciences, said art3 and sci ences' majors generally face dif ferent problems than students in other colleges. Because of their more liberal education background, ats and sciences majors may not have a clear idea of what they want, Kopera said. The self-assessment and career exploration processes are major steps for arts and sciences majors in obtaining jots, she said. In self-assessment, the arts or science majors learn the educa-. tion they acquired can be trans ferable to practical sl'Ilj. They learn they can show prospective employers that they know var ious skills such as research tech niques, she said. The career planning process should begin as early as possible, the exports said. Centered ca Pegs 3 I lift -m f ' J y "TV i- rra; v::.:n.ta Yen. vA i 3 h::. tiilXi -J. JJ3V Setting it Straight 7 The unsigned editorial in Fri day's Daily Nebraskan was writ ten by Mona Koppelman. . . r -i--rr-- gnn-i.n-i.rr --ii - i--t-,-ii flam MMMMWllMaiMIMMMlMMMBM"""''"' ' " Wlfc Itia "BOUT-PAV'T-lGnE" Signs . Cent thrOoV mory r.vsy! First-q?x!ity lenses in designer frsnxs st HALF the pces you'd psy ctsevvhere. . iI CLASSY Cs from t-vK ji-ji . from ) iJ) yJ L'J ) lO THE . : OifiHI . D0?JT PAY f0"E . . . 1,050 frames to chcccs from. Fsshicn end crxSty from Hz!:tca, CI . civcndiy end Yves Sslt Losxnt. OPTICAL SHOP 333 N. 12lh 477-3347 Mon., Tuw., Wwl.. FrL: 10-5. Thurs.: Noon-3, Set: 10-1 Omaha: 325 N. 72nd Stret Mon. Sat.: 10-6. Thurs. until 8. S51-1S33 Omaha: 1323 Jackson Street Mon.-Fri.: 7:45 a.m.-4:S0 p.m. 344-0219 illiillllliliilililiilliilililii jj '"'v y '-C'v K ... ... 9H '1 '. ; . n It k 3 ' its 3 nr:i f i If- V 1 i ft vJ Li KD j .. L' J U liCli n n s IJ'l!" . n 15. rrfe JU. I , 8 Sf M T I St 3-1 i ! . irif SCCX ,'JI jm mf. mm mm tm jw rl B H " I " i 1 - ' f I 217 NSi 4 f ' f Jt H "J B'J'S National and international news from the Renter News Report out film tisyctiimg eensMas LAUSANNE, Switsrhnd Countries that boycott the Copies wiH not hd banned ftrcr.i competing In future games, but they will no longer be allowed to Bznd o'tZzizh such a3 judges and referees th3 Ir.tcrr.dicad OSTipic Ccnmittce decided Sunds. XJJS. jisdso oficinted tX ths 1C30 Hocccw Oterjcs dppJte a U.S.-kd boycott arid Est Bloc oScbb went to th3 Lea MSss Ganea despite th3 15-nrticn communist boycott 1:1 by the Covict Union. IOC President Juan Antonio SsKisrcnch te'd s nrv3 confer ence the IOC had conceded it could not prevent pcllticd boy cotts of the gamss. IOC Executive Board member Kich-rd Pound of Cansda, who helped di fit the resolution, s?id: 7e felt sanctions would have ended up punishing the wrens Peo ple, the Ethkiea." The resolution stt.udxd Soviet charge that the Los Angeiea Genres crt;anhcr3, and the ICC itself, had fii!:d to comply with the Olympic Chsrter in t?ln3 the 1034 Pound said no East Bloc delcgstes hsd spoken ein&t the resolution. But it remsined to be seen whether the Soviet Union would msintdn its campaign to have the 1033 gsmes removed from Seoul, South Korea, with which it hns no diplomatic ties. The resolution reiterated thst the IOC fully supported the Seoul organising committee. Began baclis olcT7ed defenoa fundo WASHINGTON Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said Sunday that slower defense spending growth should be includ ed in the package to curb America's huge $210 billion budget deficit, now being prepared by the White House. But he acknowledged that President Resn has made no find deci sion on the issue. Reagan hm consistently ergued that defense spending must continue to rise snd last week his spokesman, Lsrry peakes, quoted him es ssiying that defense cuts could undermine the forthcomins U.S.-So1et t&&2 on arms contrcL At the same time, two Mdsis echoed Regan's call, suggesting that a deficit reduction package that did not include defense might 'be mlht be irapossMe to sell to Congress. Newly-elected republican Senate Mfority Leader Robert Dole told NEC television that he thinks Resn will have to include defense in a pa.cica.ge of spending cuts. Regan ii the first member of the budget "core" group, now working on a package to freeze some spending at current levels and cut other pro gams, to state his views on defense spending publicly. Among the other members, Budget Director David Stockman also favors slower defense spending growth. But Defense Secret sr C&srssr Weinberger wats the full $233.7 billion budget for Rational defense in financial 1CSS, a figure set tentatively last August The financial 1088 budget, which sets out spending and revenue estimates over several years, will be presented to Con gress carry in 1085. 200,00 ro against NATO feeo - MADRID About 200,000 people demonstrated in at least 12 cities Sunday to demand Spain's withdraws! from NATO and the removal of 133. military bases, local government offi cials and eyewitnesses said. About 35,000 protesters formed a mile-long human chain on a Madrid street, lining up to spell out the words, "NATO No. Bases Out Neutrality." Protests were also held in Barcelona, Valencia, Cadiz, Leon, Toledo, Jaen, Granada, Santander, Valiadolid, Murcia and Las Palmas in the Canary Islands. Police reported no incidents. The protests were called by 70 left-wing groups, including disarmament organisations, the Communist Party and mem bers oi tne ruling fcocioit Party's left wing. Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez has pledged a referendum in 1CC0 on NATO pi membership and favors staying in without joining its military structure. The Socialist froze military integration when they took office in 1SS2. oeeiis rebel mdtto esc! w ;5Si4cT SAN JOSE, Nicaragua Niearasuan o&DOSttion 1 Arturo Crui his proposed uniting with anti-government rebels to draw up a plan to end the armed conflict in Nicaragua, poEucai sources said Sunday. ine sources SM Cni2 m.t.rf ths nwtnftssl r & rlrd-dsmr at the Office f f.h fisilvT.a Kr?rt K"ra PVM-v n!f ht.. forum attended by leadens of Niearagaa's main two rebel groups and Crua, whose Democratic Coordinator opposition alliance Boycotted Nicaragua's elections on Nov. 4, proposed a "coher ent political plan" involving other nations in the region but did not elaborate, the sources said. The boycotted the elections last month saying the kit-wing S&ndialsta government had failed to provide conditions for free and fair poU The government in Managua is fighting a 15,000-strong guer rilla army that has received anas and financing from the Uni ted States. The sources added thrt AHifn raguaii Democratic Forces, said at the meeting his rebel group . would seek renewed help from Washington, which cut off aid to the rebels last summer. ucoi