! Starkey’s Pizza 1 Large Pizza 1 Medium Pizza 2 cokes 2 Cokes only OK only i $7.11 $5.95 \ Can 477-1211 For Free Delivery7 Expires October 31, 1988 Our Recharged Cartridges Are: *100 guaranteed *Free pickup and delivery *Recharged with a factory like method Hewlett Packard, Laser Jet, Apple, Lasewriter, Corona, QMS, Wang, Cannon and many others For all you guys and gals who are SHORT on money and LON O on hair—Bev Miller our newest barber/stylist is offering a $6.00 haircut if you bring in your student l.D. I There are some things that students I I take seriously. I Mind and body are the two things we take the most seriously. Now that you've got your mind on a daily regimen, it's time to work on your body. Save $35.00 on NEW MEMBERSHIPS Now thru Sept. 30th with monthly payments of $15.00 (without Nautilus) $19.00 (with Nautilus) You can swim, join aerobics, lift weights or play racquetball. Step across the border on Thursdays. Icico Salad $3.25 Nachos $1.75 Blue Margavitas $1.25 Corona and Dos Equis $1.25 11:00 A.M. -1:00 A.M. I | (Lower level of the Gunny i Building) t—. I II! iifiliii di'f ' >■—— I I I I I I I I I I I I i Students take their own tem oerauire and examine their throats m a mirror. Diagrams near the minor show the difference be tween« normal a&d infected throat how totsJcecS of cok »omats and sore throats. Aftair the self dentslo bad^c. symptoms tad 7m mm '|p ^ Counseling on campus Programs help minorities adjust By Jana Pedersen Staff Reporter Minority students who need help adjusting to campus life don’t have to go far to find it The Multi-Cultural Affairs office provides the Minority Assistance Program and Student Opportunities Services, which are minority student services. To be eligible for the state-funded Minority Assistance Program, stu dents must be undergraduates and U S. citizens. The main emphasis of the program is to provide counseling services for personal problems to career choice problems, according to Vaughn Robertson, assistant director for multi-cultural affairs. He said most of the students who need his help have financial aid prob lems or tutoring requests. But, Robertson said, he also deals with students who have problems with roommates or homesickness. He de scribed his counseling work as “trouble-shooting ” “I try to help the students make the adjustment from high school to col lege,” he said. Student Opportunities Services is a federally-funded program for 350 UNL students who have a below average GPA or ACT score. Prefer ence is also given to low-income, physically handicapped or first-gen eration students, and applicants are interviewed before they are accepted to the program. The focus of this program is to help students to succeed academically and “to leach them how to help tncm selves,” according to Jimmi Smith, director of multi-cultural affairs. Services offered through the pro gram also include academic, personal and career counseling. Many of the minority students who seek counsel ing feel like they are alone in their problems and, according to Smith, it is the job of the program to help them realize that they arc not unusual. One of die ways Smith helps mi norities combat loneliness is to con vince them to become involved in campus activities. “We try to advocate for more in volvement for the racial minority student and for the lower income white student within the entire com munity," he said. Robertson agreed that students need to become involved in other activities. “I try to remind them that they should have balance,” he said. “Out of the classroom activities arc just as important.” Additionally, the student program provides special counseling for first generation students. Because the par ents of these students have never received a four-year degree, they may not be able to understand the prob lems their sons and daughters face. “If there’s a communications bar rier, it’s our job to expose the first generation student to different sup port bases,” Smith said. Special sections of University Foundations, Math 100 and English ISO are also offered through the pro gram. In developing the program, Smith said 100-level math and Eng lish composition courses were identi fied as areas which were causing minority and low-income students stress. These special sections were created to help alleviate the problem. “All of the students in our sections are capable. We just bring it out of them,’ ne said. “The basic goal is to keep them in school,” Smith said. “The key to growth is wanting to change and then taking the steps necessary to help you grow in a constructive way ... if we get people trying, something’s going to happen.”