Page 6 Daily Nebraskan Friday, October 17, 1986 UOOOUUOOOUOOOO UNIVGKSITY i t t V u J , ,-Hfo IA '- Halloween is Coming! Get Your Halloween make-up, balloons, novelties & arrftneamnntt IP 'I 17 Of C V' A 474 3702 M 1 18 N. 14th m blki. touth of Nebraska Union Cj oooooooooooooo W 1 w lilt"1 ' If They Won't Tell You About It, Then You Know It Host Be Great. Purple Passion. Out of the bathtub, into the can, and onto the shelves of your favorite store. Discover it for yourself. Bcttld (or World Widt Dutilled Product Company By Btvmgf Ccnceptt . St Uuu Me 63108 15 Procf Li 09 .e;E iF ;E iC JC iC lO iPjC dktko vf- ?w -. tr j r '.is V- V Are those long walks to class wearing on your feet? Dr. Paul Klawitter and Associates of Ambulatory Foot-Ankle Clinic say: THINK OT YOUR FOOT FUNCTIONING VERY SIMILAR TO THE FRONT END OF YOUR CAR. When your car's out of alignment The tires wear out Uneven stress is placed on the frame The steering wheel begins to shake Soon the car functions so badly, you can't drive it THE MISALIGNED FOOT DOES THE SAME THING. Pressures develop and trouble starts immediately Bones move against bones Ligaments become stretched Soon the entire alignment of your entire body is faulty SYMPTOMS OF FAULTY FOOT FUNCTION localized foot pain then bunions, corns, and calluses before long, pain in the knees hip pain, leg cramps back pain and even neck pain-headaches fatigue YOU JUST HURT ALL OVER! WHAT CAN YOU DO? Call Dr. Paul Klawitter and Associates at Ambulatory Foot and Ankle Clinic for free consultation or exam through the months of October and November. We are not listed under podiatrist in the yellow pages but 'r ( under physician D.P.M. ,-r,t 1J 4413 Famam Omaha, Ne. 600 N. Cotntr Suite IIS 4&S-C219 vf J v-V - Ml Dropping like flies Richard WrightDaily Nebraskan UNL students wait in the drop line Thursday outside Administration Building 110. Friday is the last day to drop classes or change a class to passno pass. Emergency food for Lincoln 's Hungry Groups strive to cut hunger HUNGER from Page 1 munities as well as state and local governments. Their goal is the ending of hunger in Nebraska and worldwide. Julie Sterner, coordinator of Nebraska Shares said they formed last fall to solve the surplus grain problem while feeding people. She said they are pres ently working toward becoming a per manent group. "We are planning on introducing some new amendments into some upcoming farm legislative actions," Sterner said. "We are planning on being a lobbying group." Sterner emphasized that the group believes domestic food programs are underutilized in the United States and the improvement of this is one of their goals. Nebraska Shares also plans to make people aware of the hunger issue and how it affects Nebraska. Schroeder said the CWS is involved in helping countries improve their sys tems of wells and pumps. In Beatrice, the Demster Pump Company produced $20,000 worth of wells for Madagascar. Balby folmes don't bust bliss Children not linked to marriage failure, sociologists report Researchers at UNL say fears that children will ruin a marriage are ou'rblown. UNL sociologists Lynn White and Alan Booth agreed with other re searchers that children can cause marital unhappiness, but say the reason more unhappy couples with children show up in research among parents may be because couples with children stay together longer. "The presence of children has a braking effect on the divorce pro cess," the researchers found in a national sample of 1,535 married men and women. The results of their study were published recently in the Journal of Family Issues. "Children don't necessarily lead to unhappiness, but they do lead to continuation of unhappy marriages," they said. White and Booth said the "braking effect" of children on the divorce process means that there will be more unhappy couples porportion ately in a sample of married couples with children than in a sample of childless couples, who are more likely to act quickly in changing their marital status through divorce. In other words, the parent popula tion retains unhappy marriages longer than the nonparent popula tion. In their studies, the researchers found that children may produce some changes in marital relation ships that make the marriage itself somewhat less rewarding. Couples spend less time together and more time with their children, for in stance. They have more financial problems and they have more dis agreements about who should do the housework. The traditional division of labor the wife cooks and cleans while the husband shovels the walk is also a factor that reduces the marital happiness of mothers, al though husbands respond more positively to it, the researchers found. "While these factors suggest that in some ways having children may change marriages so that they be come less satisfactory," the re searchers cautioned that "children may be personally rewarding to one or both parents and overall have a positive effect on individual happi ness." However, the "braking effect" on the divorce process is a factor that has to be considered in surveys of marital happiness. Unless it is taken into account, White and Booth said, "the negative effect of children on marriage are exaggerated." White and Booth said that their survey revealed that there were no divorces among respondents who had a first baby between 1980 and 1983, significantly different from other categories with older children, in which the divorce rate ranged from 6 to 9 percent. The two concluded that at any given level of marital happiness, people who intend to start a family are significantly less likely to get a divorce than those who already have families or those who postpone hav ing children. Even when limiting their analysis of 1980-83 divorces to the 2 1 percent of the respondents who said they were considering divorce in 1979, the researchers found that "of those especially divorce-prone respond ents, the people with a new baby again stand out as having delayed the divorce process. "Children may not prevent a divorce and they certainly don't prevent thinking about it. They just cause people to move more slowly toward marital dissolution." White and Booth suggest that some marital difficulties can be reduced by recognizing and planning for the likely changes in couples' lives when they have children. "Making standing arrangements for having the child spend time with a relative or baby sitter, for example, can give parents time alone together at home and reduce the disruption of marital communication associated with the presence of children," they said. This little piggy went to market. Poor Piggy. This little piggy stayed home. Poor Piggy. THIS LITTLE PIGGY WENT F.A.C.ing 3- 10 p.m. Police Report Tuesday 10:36 p.m. Football ticket reported stolen. Wednesday 12:34 a.m. Person in Cather Hall reported receiving nuisance phone calls. 8:46 am. Stereo reported stolen from vehicle parked in area 3 parking lot by Harper Hall. 10:16 a.m. Billfold reported stolen from Andrews Hall. 2:48 p.m. Cash reported stolen from Pound Hall. 5:48 p.m. - Backpack reported stolen from Neihardt Residence Center. 475-2418 122 No. 11th