Tidball Continued from Page 1 said. Through ETS, Mendoza Gorham works with sixth-grade students and adult students who are or will be the first generation in their families to attend a university or college, she said. Participants also must meet cer tain income guidelines. But con trary to what many people believe, she said, the program is not minor ity-based. Mendoza-Gorham works one on-one with students and coordi nates programs that are educational and cultural, she said. Students learn which prepara tory tests to take and how to fill out college applications and financial aid forms, she said. The program also involves a summer on-campus mentor pro gram in which students can explore career ideas and options, she said. “The students can really get a feel for the field they’re interested in,” she said. Both Upward Bound and ETS are known for being extremely suc cessful, she said, and she stays in contact with the students she works with after they exit the programs. “I see them on campus,” she said, “and some of them work for me now.” Students in mock city tackle real-life issues By Tonya Cross Staff Reporter There’s a place two UNL profes sors send their students every semester to help them apply what they learn in the classroom to real-life situations. t That place is a town called Libcrtyville. It appears in the Nebraska East Union one day each semester, when UNL professors Lcverne Barrett and Bill Watson bring together their AgLcc 202 classes for an impact exercise. In Libertyvillc, each student is as signed a role and a specific area of interest, such as the City Council or the PTA. Students must play the part they are assigned, and some of them even come in costume. “Not all the students know each other,” Barrett said, “It makes it inter esting for everyone.” He said students must try to gain support for their issues and also learn how to manage the available time. A town reporter adds intrigue by snooping around for any kind of dirt, he said. Some students face difficulty in try ing to rally support for their cause from people who have heard bad things about them. “Gossip goes rampant,” Barrett said, “What do you do when you’re gossiped about? Do you lose your in fluence?” Christy Davis, a sophomore agri cultural education major, said the ac tivity emphasized getting along with people and their personality styles. “You can sit in a classroom and inhale all this information, but you need to experience it, too,” she said. Nick Toberer, a junior agricultural science major, said the class taught students about organization. “The activity made those people stand out who would be leaders and who wouldn’t,” he said. After the mock city, students rate who was the most influential and what issues were most important. Theteach ers then evaluate what the students have done. “It’s a lot of fun, exciting, tiring and stressful,” Barrett said. glMRNMNNHMRPNI J^PE/a YA YA Yrt ■ I ■jEEufllD k E3 *71 Sun block Tanna Kinnaman/DN' Fiji fraternity members play a game of basketball outside their house Tuesday. From right are Matt Dill, freshman architecture major, and Scott Mazuka, freshman business and advertising major. -—————————— the Daily NeLraslcan %s G uide to Holy Week Sc Easter Ch urc KS ervices _ Jiik. HARVEST COMMUNITY CHURCH k Sunday Worship at 10:30 a.m. W Meeting at Everett School at 11 th & "B" St. ^up-to-date music* friendly people* relevant messages St. Mark's on the Campus (Episcopal/Anglican) 13th & R Maundy Thursday: 7 p.m. Eucharist Good Friday: Liturgies 8 a.m., Noon, 7 p.m. Easter Eve: 11 p.m. Vigil & Eucharist Easter Day: 10:30 a.m. Choral Eucharist THE EPISCOPAL s CHURCH — i WELCOMES YOU! BELIEVERS FELLOWSHIP with drama & music 10:00 a.m. Be our guest for breakfast 8:30 a.m. Youth Complex Bldg, on State Fair Park Road (east of Devaney Sports Center) 464-2162 Maundy Thursday April 4 10:00 PM The Lord’s Supper Saturday-Sunday April 6 - 7 Easter Vigil 11:00 PM “Faces at the Cross’ Service of Tenebrae 12 Midnight First Easter Celebration 12:30 AM Breakfast - $2 EASTER SUNDAY April 7 *10:30 AM Morning Worship Holy Communion Join Us for Easter Week at University Lutheran Chapel "Pressing Toward The Goal" (Phil. 3:14) "THE LAST SUPPER" Dramatic Presentation Thursday, April 4th, 9:00PM "FEEL THE NAILS" Good Friday Service Friday, April 5th, 9:00PM Easter Festival Celebration ? Sunday, April 7th, 7:00AM & 11:00AM (Easter Breakfast at 8:30AM) University Lutheran Chapel 1510 Q Street (N.W. corner of 16th & "Q"), 477-3997 The campus and young adult ministry where Christ is worshipped and proclaimed in an atmosphere of celebration and praise! A ministry of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod New senate will learn at ASUN meeting Tonight’s ASUN meeting will fo cus on the future, as a new senate learns the rules and procedures of the Association of Students of the Univer sity of Nebraska. Eric Marintzer, new ASUN presi dent, said previous ASUN members, including senators and first vice presi dent Steve Korell, would go over pro cedures for meetings and passing leg islation. “This will be a kind of orientation meeting for members — one where senators will be given a chance to learn,” he said. Marintzer said that, as in most years, the senate had few returning members. He estimated that 28 to 29 new ASUN members were elected, with only four or five returning. “The impression I’m getting of the new members is that they’re excited,” he said. “It’s good to see that they’re so anxious.” —KaseyKerber Career handbook to be in the hands of creative students By Joshua Gillin Staff Reporter Students who need some extra cash for the summer and want to exercise their creative muscles should get out some paper and a pen. Geri Cotter, acting director of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Ca reer Services Center, said NU had been approached by Academic Publishing Services Inc. — an Atlanta-based pub lishing firm — to design and distribute a handbook to help college students find jobs after graduation. The two categories open to student contributions are designing the publication’s cover and writing an es say addressing the question “Why should corporate America recruit Uni versity of Nebraska graduates?” Both categories are open to UNL, University of Nebraska-Keamey and University of Nebraska-Omaha stu dents registered for at least six hours. Both essays and cover designs must be submitted to the Career Services Center, 230 Nebraska Union, by 5 p.m. on April 15.