Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1962)
Page 4 I. " Dr. VVeslev Micrhenry (left) confers with Bong Park and Yong Bok Choi, during visiting Korean educators, (from left) their tour of the University campus. Dean Yong Chin Oh, Don Sun Lee, Sung Korean Educators Warn: Understand Communism By Sue Hovik Americans must open their, eyes more widely to Communism and under stand it. This warning was given to Americans by Sung Bong Park, vice principal of a Middle School in Korea and one of four Korean edu cators who visited the Uni versity last week. He explained that much American blood was shed and over a million Korean citizens and soldiers died in the Korean War in order to stop he Communist aggres sion. "There appears to be a feeling in America of want tag co-existence between Communism and D e m o c- racy," "he laid. "This can't be done because of the Com munist's aggression and DAILY NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS LOST University graduation tin with ME -62 initial. Lost on campus. Can HE 2853. Ask for F. S. Askari. FOR SALf 1961 flvrtonc Suburbanite 17" TV. Utile used. David Gustavson. HE 3-2533. WANTED One sir! who smokes Viceroys. Flower. PERSONAL Are you capable? I need someone to handle business while I go to parties nd establish credit references. Free mental ability test and motorcycle. Pre fer rock 'n' roll type person with nimble fingers. Interested in doing home typing? From -S call GR7-52U ext. 115. After t. call OR 7-6751. nn ryi n w ro s n T? w Vj sLajwai mm VaMssT iimnruiii"r1 L-jJVr A mm tLaJ -J 1 lJ 'I ' 'HERE AT NU . . their aim of taking over the world". Sung Bong Park explained that South Koreans are face-to-face with the Com munists in North Korea. He said that perhaps Amer icans are too far away from this to understand it exactly. Three things about the U.S. especially impressed the educators. They were amazed at the tremendous size of the c o u n t r y com pared with wbat they had expected. . Sung Bong Park said that they landed in Alaska and have since met many Amer icans. "They were all very kind and generous and al ways welcomed us whole heartedly," he said. This is typical of the attitude of Americans toward foreign ers, he said. Another facet of Ameri can life which impressed the Koreans was that the older age people were still working and looking for em ployment. These and other impres sions caused them to change the impression of the United States that they had gained through the American mov ies. Sung Bong Park be lieved that Americans seem merciless to people in other countires, due to i m p r e s sions gained from American gangster and cowboy stor ies. Your Good w TOP v wv Sung Bong Park noticed that the Americans are thinking people, and that their attitudes are always towards improvement. He said that Americans will try to improve the smallest things to make them more easy to handle. ' The Korean educators also found that the students in the U.S. are very diligent. Don Sun Lee, school super visor for the provincial gov ernment, said that even the Korean student here is studying very hard. He be lieves that this is very use ful for the future of the' world. The Korean group also includes Yong Chin Oh, dean of the college of edu cation, Kyung Book Univer sity; and Yong Bok Choi, curriculum officer for the Korean ministry of educa tion. They are in the United States to study the use of audio-visual materials in teaching. Builders Openings Applications are due Wed nesday from students apply ing for Builders chairman and assistant , chairman positions. Interviews are scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 20. Any person who has been a member of Builders for at least one se mester is eligable to apply. Application blanks are available in the Builders of fice, Student Union 342. htick e Sure and First here Yo rices for Your Located! in The Daily .Nebraskon Project Plans Expand i (Continued from pagg 1) ies. Each step ol the ex periment was mathemati cally computed, with exact , numerical and percentage results. , Dr. Hall noted , that ' NHRRF has,. usually on an annual basis, invited out side consultants who are nationally recognized r to evaluate its program. Some consultants have been: Max Houtchens, chief clinical psychologist, Dept. of Medi cine and Surgery for t h e Veterans Administration; Dr. Joseph L. Fisher, pres ident of Resources for the Future, Ford Foundation; and Maj. William E. Mayer, psychiatrist of the Medical Field Service School, Brook .Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam- Houston, Tex. Gains The real gains that the Foundation produces, ac cording to Dr. Clifton, are three the benefits to stu dents who participate and learn, the benefits to t h e community such as the icounselees in Lincoln w?To participate in the five divi sions of Foundation, and the benefits of research, such as in the boy's dormi tory experiment. "Our research is a com bination of procedure plus the evidence that it works," said Dr. Clifton. One currently planned project of the Foundation is a follow-up the tracing of graduates of the p r o gram to find out how it has affected them and their accomplishments. The prot ect, scientifically con ducted, would take several years for completion. Already, the Foundation has begun contacting 5-ear graduates of the program. Human Relations One wife, isolated on a military post in Alaska, re ported that application of Project-developed principle had greatly improved hu man relations among wives on the post. Five men, graduates of the University ROTC pro gram, also applied these principals. All the young offi cers have received recognition for their outstanding work with men, "earlier than ever before in the history of their units." In 1958, "Childs Project on Stop After Finals $ . at Will Mebroslca Union (now Junior Project), one of the divisions of Lincoln Project, undertook a year long experiment in consid eration how it can be shown to others, how to de velop it in children. . An ac tual laboratory expert ment was set up to chart each response of each par ticipant in the program. The control group was a rapid-learner group In a public school. Specific re sults showed how consider-, ation was developed in a much higher degree than in, the control group. "We demonstrated that with this method, such po tentialities could be meas ured. We have used this as a technique since that time," said Dr. Clifton. The Foundation is a co operative effort of the Uni versity and a group of local business and professional men. These men act as trus tees of NHRRF helping determine policy, make ad ministrative decisions, and providing special expert ences , for the group such as speakers, trips, and con sultants. The trustees han dle the financing of Lincoln Project. Five Divisions There are currently five divisions of Lincoln Project in which Universitytudents serve as counselors, and youthful members of t h e Lincoln community are counselees. The counselees, depending upon their age and situa tion, are members of Childs, Junior, Teenage, Family, or Orthopedic projects. The objective in these projects is to develop a relationship between the counselor and counselee. The counselor seeks to pro mote the personality growth of a counselee. The coun selee is selected as a test of what he can become through this relationship. While some youths par ticipate in another project when they become older or in a different situation, there is no opportunity for , the development of a "pro fessional counselee." Each project determines individ ually who its counselees shall be. The Communications proj ect maintains contact with , alumni and parents of the university students, and the Make eceive Used Diplomat Question? U.S. AlI (Continued from page 2) omy of his country, with all of our 'aid, may not win the race against economic and social dis- 'integration. For we talk of accomplishing, in five . or ten years, or at most a .generation, economic revolutions the magnitude of which took generations and centuries in Europe and Japan ... by the most extravagant con- ' struction, our moral responsibility as a state stops' somewhat short of qur capacity to do con structive good, beyond which limit we now are. "Outer space may be manageable. From there in is the problem. I sus pect that the answer may lie in reducing the size of the.problem, for it is be yond ours, and anyone else's, wisdom or wile." The author of this let ter, this needle shower of intellectual acid, is by no means a seured "agin'er." He is a posi tives, affectionate personal ity, .normally bubbling with life and ideas. But his training was in t h e classical school of diplo Special Functions project at tempts to improve the ef fectiveness of special meetings that serve various purposes of the program. In explaining the overall basis of NHRRF, Dr. Hall stated, "No man can rise above, or escape the effect of human relations which are the invariable ingredi ents of personality growth." Friday, ASTT Bud Holloway Tickers $1.50 couple on sale by Jr. IFC representatives. Finals! B oolis macy, ' In w h i c h the strength and welfare of the United States was the first and last considera tion, in which the search for the hard core of truth in any situation was rig orously divorced from sentiments. He has spent half a lifetime in "back, ward" countries, in their spreading seas of crowdeJ pain and passions. He appears convinced that we shall suffer harsh retribution for having, in our disrespect for history, in our lack of humility before the eternal human tragedy, carelessly ex panded our world-wide en deavors to an ungovern able magnitude. Dlst. 19S2, Hall Syndicate, Ins. I All Rights Reserved Meetings Appointment cards for pay ing fees , will be distributed Wednesday through Friday of this week by members of the Student Council. All students who turned in their work sheets by Friday musty pick up an appointment card dur ing the three day period be tween the hours of 8 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. A Council repre sentative will be on duty dur ing the noon hour. The ap pointment card pick-up desk will be located in the art gal lery lounge located at the left of the crib. it Kosmet Klub .workers will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Student Union. The meeting will concern ad sales for the Spring Show program. DPS Jan. 19 MDLILS