EDEE SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR rllCC STUDENTS WHO NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE Every Student is Eligible for Some type of Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. • We have a data bank of over 200,000 listings of scholarships, fellow ships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding. * • Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. • There's money available for students who have been newspaper carriers, grocery clerks, cheerleaders,'non-smokers etc. j • Results GUARANTEED ( Al , For A Free Brochure | j ANYTIME _(800) 346-6401 J Incidents likely related Vandals puncture several tires By Jerry Guenther Senior Reporter The Lincoln Police Department does not have any suspects yet from at least 54 confirmed reports of tire punctures that occurred in Southwest Lincoln over the week end, a police officer said Sunday. Sgt. Dave Hamly said most of the tires appear to have been punc tured sometime' after midnight Friday and before 3 a.m. Saturday. The vandals did most of the damage between A Street and Highway 2, and from 13th to 27th streets, Harnly said. About six other unconfirmed cases of tire punctures also have been reported, Harnly said. Police believe all the incidents are related because the tires were ail punctured with what appears to have been a small knife or ice pick, he said. Randy Pavey, interim manager at T.O. Haas Tire at 13th and South streets, said he knew of at least 15 people who came in Saturday to have their tires replaced that were all punctured in the same way. Pavey said the tires were struck in the sidewall, making them just about impossible to patch. T.O. Haas Tire, which normally closes at 1 p.m. on Saturdays, ex tended hours so people could gel their tires replaced, Pavey said. I We've extended our back-to-school I prices until the end of October! I Hurry in and save! I ✓ These prices open only to Full time students, staff and faculty 'Individually priced merchandise also available 'Prices valid for specific packages only. 'All payments must be made In The Computer Shop. * Personal checks, cash and Mastercard or Visa are accepted. ’Optional linage Writer 11 printer with cable for $465 with Mac Pac #1 Macintosh SE 20 Meg Hard Drive Standard Keyboard Microsoft Word 4.0 $2,020 Macintosh SK/30 40 Meg Hard Drive 1 Meg add. memory Extended Keyboard ImageWriter II Printer Cable Microsoft Word 4.0 $3,950 1 • S20 optional Supply Kit with Mac Pacs #1 & #2. Includes a 10-pack of Sony Diskettes and a Mouse Pad 9j • $25 optional Supply Kit with Mac Pacs #3 & #4. Includes mouse pad, 500-sheet box of computer paper, 1 printer ribbon, and a 10-pack of Sony diskettes. t I The Computer Shop I University Bookstore, Lower Level - Nebraska Union 472-5785 Hours M-F, 8 am - 5 pm ni i vsnuuvsiv from rage i Hitchcock says the United States at that time was aware of what was happening, but chose to do nothing about it because it was not in its interest to interfere in the food proc ess. He says the United States was propping up the government that it wanted there for political reasons. “I was on my own. Even though what I was saying from the standpoint of human rights was correct, and from the standpoint of the people I was working with was torrect, the political implications were sensi tive,” he says. mu.iu.ucK aisu spcm a year in a small village in Botswana in Africa. While there, he worked on the issue of land rights for the bushmen. The bushmen were being affected negatively by land reform programs sponsored by the World Bank and in part by American tax dollars he says. According to Hitchcock, the World Bank land and livestock proj ect was pushing for the land to be divided into large ranches, enhancing conservation, wildlife utilization and use of the land. That meant the bushmen on the land would have to move. Hitchcock says he helped get land set aside for them to continue to live a pastoral existence. When he arrived in the small vil lage, the people asked him to help them get tenure rights to their land, he says. The first time they came to him, one of the things they wanted was a school for the village, he says. Hitchcock says he got the school started, getting schoolbooks, and paying for the teacher himself. “It was a small private school that has now been taken over by the gov ernment,” he says. The people wanted health pro grams, so he arranged for a mobile health unit to make medical visits, and a clinic eventually was set up, he says. “I made a difference and that’s the critical thing,” Hitchcock says. In the classroom, Hitchcock is always on the move. He writes a point on the black board, talking and analyzing the issue as he drifts slowly toward the win dow, gazing out as he approaches. Suddenly, he turns, rushes back to the board to write down a new thought. Rod Brandcnburgh, an anthropol ogy graduate student and Hitch cock’s teaching assistant, says Hitch cock is one of the most dedicated professors-he’s ever known. i