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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1966)
Page 4 The Daily Nebraska.. Monday, October 24, 1 966 AUF Beat-Dance To Solicit Money AUF-Beat Dance Oct. 29 will Initiate the All Univer sity Fund's annual charity drive to solicit money for five national organizations. The dance will be held in the ballroom and the Pan American Suite of the Ne braska Union from 9 to mid night. Tickets may be pur chased for $1.00 at a booth in the Union or from AUF workers, Jennifer Marshall, special events chairman said. Five booths, resembling carnival stalls, will be con structed in the ballroom and Pan American rooms . At one of the booths students can smash old records do nated by the KLMS radio station. The booth will be supervised by KLMS disc Selection Officer Of Marine Corps To Visit Tuesday The Marine Corps Officer Selection Officer, Captain C. J. Johnston, will visit the University of Nebraska campus on Oct. 26-27. He will be located in the lower level of the Nebras ka Union from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to interview stu dents in Marine Corps Of ficer training. Freshman, sophomore or junior men may qualify for the Platoon Leaders Class which provides a second lieutenants commis s i o n upon graduation from col lege. Seniors may apply for a 10-week Officer Candidate Course after graduation. Both programs offer a choice of duty as a ground officer or Marine pilot. Junior and senior women may apply for a position as a Woman Marine officer. Interested students should inquire immediately, be cause an early application results in higher pay and a better chance at qualifying for the program desired. jockeys, Miss Marshal said. Two combos, the "Chan cellors" and the "Gestures" will provide music for the dance. B i g Man On Campus (BMOC) and Activity Queen will be announced at t h e dance, BMOC will be se lected by a popular vote of students attending the AUF Beat Dance. The ten finalists, who were chosen by an AUF in terviewing board are Den nis Richnafsky, Abel Hall; Rodney Bock, Cather Hall; Bill Rose, Cather Hall; Bob Bonahoom, Beta Theta Pi; Tom Penney, Alpha Tau Omega. Lyle Knutson, Farmhouse Jack Guggenraos, Delta Up silon; Dick Weerts, Kappa Sigma; Gary Gray, P h i Delta Theta; Paul Matt, Sigma Chi. Activity Queen candidates are sophomores who were nominated by campus or ganizations. Seven finalists will be announced in t h e Daily Nebraskan Wednes day. An AUF interviewing board will select the Activ ities Queen on the basis of scholarship, participation in University activities and in terview performance, Miss Marshall said. AUF has set a goal of $6000 to collect in its char ity drive which begins with the AUF-Beat Dance and ex tends to Nov. 22, Miss Mar shall stated. The solicited funds will be divided among contri buted to Radio Free Eur ope, USO, National Mental Health Association, Ameri can Cancer Society and the Tom Dooley Foundations. A student poll determined the organizations which will receive the funds. AUF representatives four from each living unit will collect money from the res idents and sorority and fra ternity pledges will solicit money from Lincoln stu dents Nov. 20, Miss Mar shall said. Are you discontented enough to work for G.E.? Does water pollution bug you? Or smog? Does it concern you that some places in the country never have enough teachers? Or nurses? And when you read about the growing pains of a developing na tion, do you wish you could do something? You can. Thousands of General Electric people are helping to solve the problems of a growing, changing world. Generating more (and cheaper) electricity with nuclear reactors. Controlling smog in our cities and pollution in our streams. Using electronics to bring the teaching skills of an expert into many classrooms at once, the trained eyes of a nurse into many hospital rooms at once. If you're not content with the world as it is . . . and if you have the brains, imagination and drive to help build a better one, we'd like to talk to you. See the man from G.E. during his next campus visit Come to General Electric, where the young men are important men. 7fagress k Our Most Important "ftoduch GENERAL ELECTRIC SMOKING EFFECTS . . . survey to find out how much students understand. Questionnaire ... Effects Of Smoking Well Understood? How well University stu dents understand the effects of smoking will be the sub ject of a questionnaire to be distributed in campus living units in November, according to Dr. S. I. Fuen ning, director of the Uni versity Health Center. An educational program about smoking then will be carried out in the living units, and a re-test will be given in April to determine if the educational program had any effect, Fuenning said. "This is not an anti smoking campaign," he stressed. Reliorn Speaks; Subj iect Viet Nam The write-in peace candi date from Nebraska for the U.S. Senate, Rev. Tom Re horn, will address a Univer sity audience Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Nebraska Union small auditorium. The subject of his speech will concern U.S. involvement in Viet Nam. Rehorn's ad dress is being sponsored bv Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). The survey is part of a program fininced through a $15,000 grant to the Uni versity from the U.S. De partment of Health, Edu cation and Welfare. The purpose of the smoking sur vey and similar studies is to measure the effective ness of health education programs outside the class room. "We have been exploring how we can promote health education other than in the formal, didactic course," explained Fuenning. The major portion of extracur ricular health education so far has been the House Assistants program. All fraternities, sororities and cooperatives have a health assistant who is trained in first-aid and health education. The mon ey from HEW also will be used to measure the effec tiveness of the assistants type program. The smoking survey will be conducted through the health assistants. "This as a new concept as applied to a university community," said Fuen ning, "although similar pro- N, ' mm grams have been tested in Indian communities and in the Watts area through the Office of Economic Oppor tunity." Similar studies have en joyed some success, accord ing to Fuenning. Will the Nebraska health education experiment re sult in smoking habit changes? "I really dont know," Fuenning said. "We'll just have to wait and see." Ag Union Offers Knitting Lessons Free knitting lessons will be held Oct. 24, 31, Nov. 7, 14, 21 and 28 at 4:15 p.m. in the East Union lounge, according to Jan Binger, chairman of the Campus Life committee. Interested girls should bring yarn and a pattern to the first lesson. Beginners and expert knitters are welcome. Free to College Students 25? to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda tion, tells which career fields lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other what starting salary you csn expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor tunities in Selling," will be mailed to" you. No cost cr obli gation. Address: Council on Op portunities, 550 Fifth Avc.,Ncw York 36, N. Y, NKH-10-24. liy?! DATING 1 2 I oRlN I V FJ I SCHOOL- I U J OUR CLOTHES I ""' 1 WILL MAKE I T, YOU BLOW ((. f 111 H n n Id jL, ' ' ' r tl wll 11 ssUl li ; ,c Lambs Wool V-neck Sweaters 1 rPlHl fTheone-and-only Public Health Program Aids Instruction In Many Curricula The University pub lic health program is being developed to meet educa tional needs of students in many curricula. Students in the College of Pharmacy and Teachers College already are taking public health classes and plans are set to offer the instruction in other areas. Heading the program is Dr. Joe F. Sills, who holds a Ph. D. degree from the University of North Caro lina. Nebraska is one of only a few universities in the U.S. to establish a com munity health education program, a program which will provide instruction in community health through out the campus. The pro gram is a recommendation of the American College Health Association. Dr. Samuel I. Fuenning, medical director of the University Health Center, terms the program "an in tegral part of the entire University health program." He said community health education is "an important objective of the over-all health program. It fits well with our other essential goals, those of environmen tal health control and the early identification of in jury and illness." Sills, chief of the Univer sity Community Health Education and Training Di vision, said the program was established to provide public health instruction in dentistry, law, agricul ture and home economics, arts and sciences, business administration, medicine, engineering and the Gradu ate College. Sills and his staff will design the courses, with staff from the particular college concerned. The program encom- SNOOPY AND TfrUE RED BARON by Charles M. Schulz Iff a war story filled with raw drama, romance, guts, and tears. And there's a pic ture of Snoopy on every page. $2 at your college bookstore Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. Tuu-iengin Vy I J ( novel ! h i tn : I passes environmental health, communicable di sease control, organization of public health services, bio-statistics, and commu nity health program meth ods. Under way is a research project to determine the effectiveness of the student health assistants program. Sills said each organized house at the University has a health assistant, who functions fn a liaison capa city between the house and the Student Health Center. Each assistant is given an hour's orientation a week, including first aid instruc tion. The students are also used to encourage other students in their house to seek preventive medi cal help. An evaluation of the pro gram, to determine how it is working and how to se lect assistants for maxi mum effectiveness, is un der way. The program is High School Debaters Participate In Clinic About 200 Nebraska high school debaters attended a debate clinic at the Univer sity Saturday, according to Cathie Shattuck, president of the University Forensic So ciety. The students participated in workshops and heard lec tures and a model discus sion and debate. Miss Shattuck said that the clinic covered the topic: Resolved: That the United States should limit its for eign aid to non-military as sistance. This is the subject that the debaters will be attack ing or defending throughout this school year. Miss Shat tuck termed this a "kick off session" giving the stu dents ideas on seeking sources and cases to back their arguments. Navy Capt. Arthur C. Mul len, professor of naval sci ence, discussed foreign mil itary aid, and Dr. Ernest Kuhn, professor of econom ics, spoke on economic aid and development. Saturday morning a dem onstration panel discussion READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS P.rmurt lor Uh ! .Ill f.u Int. tm. eilet.rlM: (1 sd. rumiac w, week t. eeek moM b. ,.M lor hefor. InerH... CI .d. rumrt", (or more thai oot week will pild weeklr. nrnmat lor To lce cUuMea aaverUwment rail tkt Valnrdlr of Nekraaka at 4TM7U art oak far tha allr Nebraakan .Hleea or mi to Koom 11 h tt. KrtlS! Pleoao attempt lo lce reur ad Jurlnf tbooo kaora. "mr,i MISCELLANEOUS PAT'S TYPING SERVICE Reasonable rale Phone Pat Owen 423-20M WANTED: Two people to ride to Colo, rado and (hare two-bedroom accommo dationa at Boulder Travel Lo d it 43S-66M alter . CIXJSE OUT: Better sheaffer TounulB Pene 33' off. Unlveraltr Bookature, Lower-level. Union. WANTF3D: Roommate to (hare line Apt. in 11th and O vicinity. Reason able rent. Call 4M-46. Ayn Rand'i "New Paacism: Rule by Connenwii" (apeech) played, diacuaaed Sunday niiht 7-10 p.m. Free. You muat have read "Atla Shruued." Wil liam Sleen, 320 No. 13tb. Riders to the Colorado fame. Share lu expenses. 7D9-303S evenlnas. FOR RENT Present roommate cult school ned one man. Cookln, TV, shower, :jn per month. University approved. 477 26J. Spaces available: Rainbow Trailer Court, nati-way Between Eaat end City cam pus. 1801 Adams, 4:15-3417. for rent: ' 32' Travellt Trailer. Rainbow Trailer Court. 1801 Adams, 436-3417. Private apartment will accommodate 1 tour men. 47742M. NUe furnished apartment. 1 blocks Iron campus. MS. 423 497. four lovely funushed roma. Air condi tioned. Couple. Jl" Froet-frea refrtt erator. 432-2403. FOR SALE 1HM Corvette, 200 Actual Miles, Only IWWO. 4SB-7401. 345 Witherbee Blvd. IPC! Corvalr convertible. 4 speed excel lent mechanical condition. W3-4291 after 4:30. ACCEMSORIKS: TFJ.ESCOJ'E FOR KALE 4" Altazimuth retractor Unltron. Star diaaonal, Erecllns prism system. He luxe rack and pinion, aun-proiecilns screen end sdditUmal eyepieces of 4mm, Smin, and 40mm. 37x lo 101. Unused condition. Write Box 127, Hum boldt, Nebr. partially financed through a grant from the U.S. Pub lic Health Service. Sills said it is hoped that before too long the Univer sity will be able to offer a bachelor's degree in pub lic health. Plans are also being made to develop a teach ing health museum in the Univeristy State Museum in Morril Hall. A staff member would toe assigned to the museum to teach health and public health concepts to elemen tary and secondary school students from across the state. Educational television al so might be used to beam the health museum instruc tion throughout Nebraska, Dr. Sills said. He said the community health division also hopes to set up conferences in Lincoln for professionals in the field, such as pharma cists, and community leaders. was held at University High School, with critiques given by Mrs. Edward Bodoken of Iowa State University. In the afternoon, students divided into discussion groups of six to ten mem bers to practice an exercise in discussion and analysis. A demonstration debate on the foreign aid topic was given in the afternoon. Dick Sherman and Terry Hall of the University affirmative team debated Mike Flaher ty and Loren Miller of Iowa State University. Miss Shattuck said that the national debate topic for the year is chosen by t h e board of the National De bate League. Dr. Donald Olson, Univer sity debate director, con ducted a workshop-seminar on case construction for visiting debate coaches. Un iversity debate students crit icized the high school dis cussions. Miss Shattuck said that the interest seemes "very high," with the attendance being greater than in pre vious years. She said that this was a good chance for the high school students to background the debate top ic for their later contests. The clinic was sponsored by the University speech de partment and the Nebraska High School Activities As sociation. V'W convertible 1M0. New cnslne. imo. 488-2780. Resulatloa slz pool table. Four cue' bails, racks. 477-1114. 1965 590 Motorcycle. Excellent Condition. Leavin- town. Must sell. 7M-2W4. BOOKS SCIENC&FICTION by Asimov. Brsd bury. Heinlein. sic. GREAT SPY NOVEL: "Quiller Memorandum". Lin coln's NEWEST bookstore, 320 No. 13tk (South of Mrs. Lutz'si EMPLOYMENT Excellent part time lob. Car necessary. Call . 432-44f anytims.l WANTED One mole student to live in ond work port-time for room and wages. rrtftrobly Pro Mad, Prt Vtt, Pro-Dental A-4 SMALL ANIMAL H0SPTIAL 2780 South St. 423-4912 EXCITING POSITIONS FOR MALI STUDENTS Applications now arias accented far peelUeas part lime witk anator Ba ilee eerncratlen. Yeusf mm II years cr ever want. Ia I learn l AI K PROMOTION MABKETfNO TKCHNIOUE IAI,K MANAGEMENT Apply I p.m. Tuaadar Na, Uth, Mr. Ramsay