mm Students use center to find employment INTRODUCINGTHE UN-L STUDENT DISCOUNT 15% WITH STAFF I.D. FULL-SERVICE MUFFLER SHOP "MUFFLERS "BRAKES "SHOCKS { | “No Muff Too Tuff" l 466-8777 J 2701 NORTH 27TH BhhhhhhbI CAREER from paae i tended to be prett' suong under me Reagan Administration, he said. "Will that be true alter the November elections, who knows?" Lyn Rickerisen, a senior advertis ing major, has already used the Career Placement Center to get an intern ship. She’ll graduate in May 1989. Rickertscn said she will use the center to try to get a job as an account executive with an advertising agency. “I hope to make between $18,()(X) and $22.(XX) (per year)," Rickertscn said. “That’s a guess.” David Norris, a management ma jor, plans on graduating in August 1989 Norris said he plans to use the Career Placement Center to help lo cate employment. Norris said he expects to make about $21,(XX) annually. He said he based that figure on w hat he has heard from others and help from his older brother, who is in finance. Kirk isn. ckcnatt a sei at a* , ,r:al suenu 'Viuioi ••am he is using me Career Placement Center to new him locate a job alter he graduates inis 'semester. Kreikemeier. who said he expects to earn in the upper $20,000 area annua ' said the center has neon ver\ f.ciplul. ic Career Haccmem vomer reail' provides a wide selection ol companies to interview with. Krcikemeier said. “It makes the job interviewing process a lot easier Rom! sau) stutici ts nece u; be aware o. what arc realistic salarv expeuauons when thev gooui to look lor employment. More information on salaries is available at the Career Placement Center. 230 Nebraska Union. AVERAGE MONTHLY SALARY OFFERS Bachelor's Degree Candidates By Curriculum I;or Number of Offers Average S Offers %Changein$ Ail Types of July July July July Offers from July Employers1988 1987 1988 1987<987 Accounting. 5,264 5,478 52,01 U 51,812 10.9 Business Admin. 1,285 1,788 1,772 1,701 4.1 Marketing & Disi. 1,327 1,852 1,757 1,697 3.6 Economics. 603 697 2,051 1,970 4.1 | Chemical Engineering....1,139 1,070 2,584 2,487 3.9 J Electrical Engineering * (incl. Computer Engrg.)... 3,920 4,527 2,474 2,410 2.7 | Computer Science. 1,389 1,894 2,276 2,197 3.6 | Mathematics. 304 352 2,237 2,162 3.5 * - - --Q N E KX% ^ UNLStudentsf\ All tickets Tickets: $13, $9 V 1/2 price J A Mul Amenta Arts Alliance Program with the support of the Nebraska Arts Council and the National Kndowment for the Arts && I I Q 11 A K T E T Z?ac4: for a third time, the string quartet that foretells the future, leads you through the music of today, tomorrow and the 21st century! M SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 y UNL Studentsl'N q All tickets ^ Tickets: $10, $8 1/2 price J | A Jclinck Memorial Concert and with the support of the Nebraska Arts Council and the National Hndowmcnt for the Arts «3*£> O I FELD BALLET A classical ballet company with a contemporary flair, Feld combines flawless technique with D modern imagination! TWO PERFORMANCES! A ; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 8pm N SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 8pm C HC UNL Students! A E AH tickets Tickets: $15, $11 V 1/2 price J A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program with the support of the Nebraska Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts, _ For Tickets Call 472-3375 (Monday - Friday, I1-5pm) I Your life could be taking a different course. The University isn’t your only option. •Offering over 20 courses of ’For over 100 years. 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Lincoln, NE 68508 Lincoln School of 474-5315 Commerce A Junto* Comoro oI Bu^nnoo __ Are You Losing | Money On Your Checking Account? j You're not getting the most for your money if you're not earning interest on your checking account or if you're still paying to write and order checks At First Commerce Savings, you’ll receive: •INTEREST PAID on Student Accounts •NO Minimum Balance Requirement (However, $100 initial balance required to ? open the account) I •FREE introductory standard order •FDIC insured up to $100,000 •Student I.D. required Stop in today or call one of our three convenient locations t4g First Commerce imSavings South Downtown East 483-2868 474-5331 467-4411 40lh ic South 11 til & P 66th & O Ml Mill K A First Cimtrnrrrr fmluftn’nl Loan (■* Invcstmrnt Crim/uuiy FDIG South African dissident asks students to help anti-apartheid cause Bv David (». Young Staff Reporter Economic sanctions severely j damage the white South African government, but there’s even more that could be done to stop Apartheid, according toTshenuwam Simon Fari sani, South African dissident and Dean of the Evangelical Lutheran church in the country. About 250 students heard Farisani’s speech Friday at Nebraska Wesleyan University’s McDonald Theater. Farasani received a standing ovation at the end of his hour-long lecture. A half-hour question and answer period was then allowed. “I call on you tochangc the altitude and the policies of your administra tion,” he said. “They aren’t doing nearly half enough to help us in South Africa. I ask you to divest immedi ately.” Farisani attracted international attention in November 1986 when he went on a hunger strike while in a South Atman prison. His strike was motivated by the fact that he was being held without charge. Farisani was released Jan. 30, ll)87. During the speech, Farisani gave graphic descriptions of the horrors he witnessed during his four periods of imprisonment by the South African government. “They undressed me, attached electrodes to my cars, and pul a can vas sack over my head,” he said. “In the late afternoon, they transferred the electrodes to my legs, my knees, and then my genitals. When I landed in the hospital, I had a broken rib, perforated ear drums and open wounds.” Though Farisam is no longer al lowed to enter white South Africa, he has continued his struggle in the past year by speaking before groups in 44 of America’s 50 states. Stressing that punitive sanctions arc a good way to help black South Africans, Farisani downplayed the See FARISANI on 7 Libraries successes, future supported by UNL administration “SeeUBRARY'onl No one should believe for a moment that because we are low in one area that we are going to rob from another area to make up for it," Kahlc said. The administration is very suppor tive of the libraries and do w hat they can to help he said. “We continue to shoot at a moving target,” Kahlc said. “As we increase, so do other institutions, some faster, some slower.”