ASUN to hand out franks By Becky Becner Staff Reporter University of Nebraska students are invited to kick off the football season by going to the first tailgate party of the year. The Association of Students of the University of Nebraska will sponsor the tailgate party, general studies sen ator Made Byars said. The tailgate party will be next to Broyhill Fountain before the start of the North Texas football game. Byars, the event organizer, said the tailgate party would start at 11 a.m. He said he encouraged everyone to attend. ‘‘Everyone—students, alums, fans, visitors — anyone who shows up on Broyhill Fountain between 11 and 12 will get a free hot dog and Pepsi,” he said. Byars said this year ASUN was going to give away prizes at each tailgate party. He said a drawing would be held around noon for a $25 gift certificate to Schlotzsky’s Restaurant, but he did not know what prizes would be given away at other tailgate parties. Jones interviews in Arizona i-rom staff reports Lee Jones, executive vice presi dent and provost of the University of Nebraska, was considered for the top post at Northern Arizona State Uni versity, an Arizona official said. Jones traveled to Flagstaff, Ariz., last weekend for interviews, said Suzanne Pfister, assistant director for public affairs for the Arizona Board of Regents. Pfister said Jones was in a group of seven finalists for the job of president. He was eliminated from consideration when the Arizona search committee narrowed the list to five. The search is to be completed some time this fall. Moeller Continued from Page 1 her to teach the teaching methods that helped her younger students to leam. “It doesn’t really matter what you teach, it’s how you approach it. You model what you learn.” • “We learn through 90 percent of what we do and 10 percent of what we read.” Moeller often demonstrates the ef fectiveness of method teaching to ter college students during the first day of class. During the class period, she speaks entirely in German, using maps ami objects to help the students under stand. At the end of the class period, students not only understand the day’s discussion, they remember it. Moeller said she recently started the first Nebraska elementary meth od-teaching program at Eastndge El ementary School. The classes were taught by one of her UNL students, who helped the first-grade students leam math and science using the Spanish language. “Kids say Tm gonna leam this,’ and by colly, they do,” Moeller said. Moeller set up the program with the help of Lincoln Public Schools and the principal of Eastridge Ele mentary School. Moeller said method teaching would be finding its way into other elementary classrooms. All of the UNL graduate students who have taken ter methods classes have found job positions intheirfield. Teachers, using this type of teach ing, can involve students in the educa tion process, she said. “You can create a community in each classroom that individually al lows everyone to feel like a member,” she said. AIDS Continued from Page 1 this could cause a big mess." Tetreault said that besides giving people an inaccurate sense of securi ty, the HIV-negative cards could prob ably be forged and duplicated. “You have that problem with any kind of ID,” she said. ‘There’s always someone trying to create a phony one.” Tetreault said a HI V-negati ve iden tification card wasn’t the best avenue to security. “For piece of mind, the best thing for a person to do is to minimize the risk factor,” Tetreault said. “That means to either not engage in the behaviors that put people at risk or to protect themselves if they do.” Tetreault said she had no figures on the number of AIDS cases at UNL, but she said a 1991 nationwide study estimated that one in every 500 col lege students was HIV-positive. That number is probably much higher today, which makes the intro duction of the HIV-negative cards quite untimely, Tetreault said. “Right now, there ’ s a gap between having the information about safety and incorporating it into peoples’ lives,” she said. “The main thing is to get preventive practices worked into daily routines so a card like this won’t be needed.” Thursday Evening Special 8 to 10 PM \^