NelSaskan Editor News/NSE Editor Copy Desk Editor Sports Editor Arts & Entertainment Editor Feature Editor Photo Chief Art & Graphics Director General Manager Production Manager Advertising Manager Sales Manager Publications Board Chairman Professional Adviser Jana Pedersen, 472-1766 Matt Herek Stephanie Neill Darren Fowler John Payne Robin Trlmarchl Michelle Paulman Brian Shellfto Daniel Shattil Katherine Pollcky Loren Melrose Todd Sears Bill Vobejda, 436-9993 Don Walton, 473-7301 i mv udiiy !Mvurd5r\dM (uoro i^*uouj 15 puDiisriea oy me uinl ruDiiuiiiuns ouaiu, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb 68588-0448, weekdays during the academic year (except holidays), weeWy during the summer session. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1 763 between 9 a m. and 5 p m. Monday through Friday The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Bill Vobejda, 436-9993. Subscription price is $45 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln Neb 68588 0448 Second-class postage paid at Lincoln Neb ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1990 DAILY NEBRASKAN .. m m m m Ilk, ■ Special Moments ■ Wedding & Party Shop ■ __ ; Wedding Invitations 25% Off with coupon. (Please Present Coupon When Ordering) ■ Reception & Party Supplies “ Wedding Floral Arrangements ■ 4005 "O" St. Lincoln 488-0767 . \iinmimii.Mimimmiiii/ 1 4003 "0" Street 488-8628 Mon 10-8 Tues-Thurs 9-9 Fri&Sat 9-5 UNL department receives grants, By Cindy Wostrel Staff Reporter and Matt Herek Senior Editor The University of Nebraska-Lin coln’s department of Special Educa tion and Communication Disorders has received two grants totalling more than $153,000. Stanley Vasa, professor for the department, said the first grant, for $77,436, will help train teachers, sponsor a statewide conference for teaching assistants, sponsor a news letter for teaching assistants and their school districts, and finance the de velopment of materials for seminars. The competitive grant is renew able for three years, he said. “We’re really excited,” Vasa said, because this will allow the depart ment to continue the work they have been doing. Each year of the project, the de partment will have 10 stipends for teachers who will help train teaching assistants. The first year, the stipends will be used in North Platte, Vasa said, and in the second and third years the stipends will be used in other Nebraska cities. The department will sponsor con ferences in Kearney and Omaha for the assistants, he said. The depart ment also produces a newsletter four times a year for the teaching assis tants and the school districts that hire them. The grant money also will go toward a three-quarters staff member who will work on the projects at UNL, he said. A second grant of $75,597 will help support full-time UNL students who major in speech pathology or early childhood special education. The project is designed to meet the need for well-trained personnel to serve preschool children with handi caps, said Marilyn Schcfflcr, co-di rector of the project and assistant professor of special education and | communication disorders. I he uniqueness of the grant is that it trains people in the fields of early childhood special education and speech pathology to work together, she said. The six graduate students in the program will take classes in both programs in order to have inter-disci plinary training, Schefflcr said. The grant provides $ 1,350 for tui tion expenses and S475 a month for living expenses for four early spec ial education students and l or two speech pathology students, she said. Hungary Continued from Page 1 CBA administrative assistant Chris Gray said J. Clay Singleton arranged the Hungary program while in Eu rope last summer to search for univer sities with student-faculty exchange programs. Gray said CBA also has student exchange programs with Oxford University in Great Britain and Scn shu University in Japan. But those programs focus on undergraduate students, leaving a lack of interna tional opportunities for UNL gradu ate students, she said. Hamilton, a graduate student, said the summer study program will en hance personal and career experiences in the expanding overseas markets. “I hope this will open the door to new opportunities for graduate stu dents to study abroad overseas,” she said. “This program will help interna tionalize UNL’s MB A program,” she said. Gray said CBA’s student-faculty exchange program will be enhanced further by hosting a Hungarian ex change student sometime during the 1990-91 school year and by this sum mer’s visiting professor Henri Hucgel of Dijon, France. Hucgel will teach an international business course, primarily for MBA students,during the second five-week summer session, Gray said. I SATURDAY, JULY 14th 10-6 _ ilBi rnrr • posters • cam • wttoms S ritEX • prize DftAWiHCScMMiuM^iMt) (OMKS i—rr Catt Park piaxa w *°° M Vn 'iTTT0 **** T-SHIRTS; MXER SHORTS. POSTERS t MORE. _(E—1 Pill Location Only)-- ~ -- 500 OFF I Any pizza 475-6363! NAME_I ADDRESS_I DATE_ | $1.00 OFF 1 Any pizza ordered 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 475-6363 | NAME_ ADDRESS _ |l_DATE.-J C.P. TAYLORS mem And A1 Nightingale Sang when Britain yearnedfor “Love and Laughter and Peace Ever AJter* July 6-12 AT • PM July 15 TPM MATINEE 1 JOHNNYCARSON THEATRE IN USD CENTER J