I Monday, May 1 4, 1 962 fhe Daily Nebraskan Page 3 1 77T 0 sTt m H jT 'B STT U-CUB Wit (I Viv -arm B r II nm-mrm ai B BLSXJFBB, AJtgM,B lb JlJB &65BislM'd JU &B M ust Expand Its 'Duties l By JIM MOORE In. a speech at the Student Council meeting Wednesday, newly-elected Council Presi dent Don Burt explained his program for the coming year. "The Council must realize that it has not reached a stopping place. It must ex pand its functions in public relations and public issues as well as re-define responsi bilities in faculty and stu dent interest areas," said Burt. The president believes that the lack of interest and in itiative within the Council is In part due to a lack of re sponsibility of the members. He feels the "Council should make more efficient use of many powers so that every one will be working contin ually." In reviewing what he calls "Policy Projection" for the coming year, Burt feels that a definite financial program must he submitted to the Board of Regents to solve the problems of the Council in this area. "No project is more vital if we expect to progress, he said. Council Associates Further elaborating h i s Projection) Burt delved into the fields of representation bers so that more time could ana ituaent Council Associ- be spent developing new pro Dr. Fuenning Says 'Fitness' Facilities Inadequate at NU This is the third in a ser ies of stories on physical fitness. It 'concerns "fit ness" facilities at NU. By TOM KOTOUC "Even though a few out lets exist at the University for physical activity, these facilities are inadequate for the University as a whole," says Dr. Samuel Fuenning, medical director of Student Health. "They are inadequate be cause only a small percent age of the student body can or do participate at a given time or day," he said. A Daily Nebraskan tabula tion points out the fact that only 240 students can use University athletic facilities at a given time excluding varsity facilities. If you have the facilities In a large variety, students make use of them voluntar ily and profitably, as proved by the 90 per cent use of the vast facilities at Purdue Uni versity, said Fuenning. At Purdue, a building as large as the coliseum was built for extracurricular ac tivities. It has five pools, fa cilities for indoor sports rang ing from fencing to judo, Dr. Fuenning explained. AF Academy The Air Force Academy has such extensive facilities that the entire corps can work out at its leisure at the same time, with seven pools, 50 tennis courts, several foot ball fields and a five-floor gymnastic building holding everything from voile yfcall to trampolines. "If we feel that students at the University need to be bet ter physically fit than they are, then we need to increase the facilities here." said Fuenning. A review of University fa cilities shows students have handball, pingpong, bowling, pool, basketball, tennis,, squash, paddleball, volley ! ball, horseshoes, badmintton, golf driving and gymnastic equipment. "However," noted Ed Hig genbothem, University intra mural director, "the Univer sity does not have too good outdoor facilities for individ ual or small group exercise, other than tennis and horse shoes." "Facilities in general are NEBRASKAN WANT ADS JOB OPPORTUNITIES Ambulance attendant needed. Free room. 7s apply cU 432-S53S. FOR SALE 49 Dodge. door rrawiubly priced. Call CA j-Stii evenings. One set at American encyclopedia. Valued at MUOOB. Will sell lor $300. Will runush bookstand. CU45-4(W. MHarler Davidson. Sport.'. il W. O.. lot It 412-7774. 1S60 50X1 1 bedroom Melody Home. BoiK-m Stereo, disnwasner. auoarium. Carpeted. Like new, exceptionally fine borne. Phone Wahos CI 33732 or CI M25i for awantmrat. Owner, ISM" lsetU-900. New brake awl enine. Excellent condition. 47.S nip. MM. GA -12 after . I960 HGA Koadster, wire wheel and . white w. Call HE S-4X3 Between p.m. It I p.m. small and individuals must share them with the varsity and men and women's physi cal education classes," he added. "Many universities our size have huge concrete slabs which can be adapted into a multiple of uses from tennis to basketball," Higgenboth em said. But how can the University student stay physically f i t now, with the existing physi cal facilities? 'Choose a Sport' Warren R. Guild, M.D. of Peter Bent Brigham Hospital j of Boston says: choose a sport in which stamina, not speed, is the object avoid ing short spurts of work. And pursue it with regu larity, not merely on week ends. A half hour a day of exercise for six days a week will get you in awfully good shape, and it will reduce your susceptibility to the degener ative diseases. And this from a physician who himself took up mara thon running at age 31. Dr. Samuel Fuenning, medical director of Student Health suggests that out of season, many athletes find 10-15 minutes of certain kinds of exercises helpful in main taining fitness. Phys Ed Not Enough "A physical education class which meets three times a week will simply not supply enough physical activity," said Fuenning, who criticized the belief of some coeds that t"?o years of physical educa tion classes are all that are necessary for physical fit ness during their University days. Dr. Dudley White, the car diologist who attended form er President Eisenhower, rec- ommmends in a recent Life magazine that an individual get the equivalent of five miles of walking or riding a bicvele each day. "It is well to remember that for a healthy person, sore muscles, fatigue and breathlessness can be elim inated by instituting a pro gram of gradually increasing regular exercise. Becoming used to exercise, not by avoid ing it, is the way to expect to be free of those unpleasant symptoms," says Dr. J. Ros well Gallagher, M.D. in "The Medical Care of the Adoles cent." "The best insurance against coronary disease is exercise lots of it," says Howard B. Sprague, M.D. Boston heart specialist. "By walking at least two miles a day you're building up an accessory circulation for that inevitable coronary. It mav mean the difference between a fatal and nonfatal attack." ! ates. "The representation sys tem should provide a well-informed, active leadership which will initiate programs which will benefit the stu dent body." The new president feels the "primary purpose of a representation system on this campus should be to provide leadership in the Council as a whole. The attempts to provide such leadership can never be met by living unit or college representation be cause both have the supposi tion that leadership is equal ly distributed." T rectify this problem Burt would like to see a plan which would continue over a three to five year period. "Student Council- Associates could be a selective group and be re-organized to serve in relaying information to and gathering opinion from the student body," said Burt. Continuing, Burt empha sized that "allowing Associ ates to be actual members of Council committees with more responsibility would create an awareness of Coun cil activities. Lower House Also, the Associates might develop into a lower house and could take over many of the present council's activi ties, thus developing their leadership potential and lift some of the administrative burden from Council mem- )ampuA ahndaA PROFESSOR WALTER KRAUSE of the University of Iowa will lecture on the "Al liance for Progress" at 7:30 p.m., 232, Student Union to day. He will also lecture at 3 p.m. in 209-B, Social Sciences, on "Changing Views on Economic Development." ir ir AAUP public symposium on "The Future Shape of the Uni versity" will be held Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. in Love Library auditorium. The discussion will be led by Graduate Dean Roy G. Holly and Dr. James E. Miller. ALL AG PICNIC will be held Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. on the grounds east and south of the Ag Engineering building. A 4 KNUS radio will announce com plete election returns Tuesday at a p.m. coverage will continue until all races are decided. Richard Mauls by and Jim Pace will head the election night team. ? OTA PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE Book Project will meet for a planning session Tuesday at 4 p.m. in the Episcopal Chapel at 13 & R. i r r CADENCE COUNTESS try outs will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Military and Navy Science Building. Any freshman or sophomore girl available from 7-9 p.m. for practices Tuesday may try out. ir -a A SKI TRIP PARTY for those who went on fhe Stu dent Union trip during se mester break and those in terested in going next year will be held at 7 p.m. Wednes day in the Pan American Room. Movies of last year's trip will be shown. i & CORN COBS will sponsor a smoker in the Student Union for all freshmen who are in terested in becoming Corn Cob workers. The smoker will be Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. grams and modifying old ones." Commenting upon the fu ture of such a program, Burt suggested that "although any such program is at least three years away, eventually Council members might be elected at large from the Uni versity community on the basis of leadership potential and political views. The de velopment of political parties would be a natural outgrowth of such a program." The new president feels that the activities committee should be the "guardian of campus activities, making sure there is no overloap of function, ecouragmg new organizations and checking to see that each organization is worthwhile in fact as well as on paper." Burt, in charging the pub lic relations committee with their responsibility, said that "for the Council to be effec tive, it must be respected, and to be respected it must be known, not only on cam pus, but in the community and the state. If we are to succeed in public issues we must have knowledge of the level of campus opinion." Public Issues Commenting upon the re cently organized Public Is sues committee, Burt said "the public issues area rep resents our biggest challenge and our greatest opportunity to expand the concept of stu dent government. We must take stands on is sues at all levels, and we must try to' involve the stu dent body as a whole. The Council could have taken a stand on urban renewal in Lincoln, an issue which di rectly effects the University, for example." Concluding, Burt summed up by saying, "I am extrem ely excited about the concept of student government. I look forward 3 the opportunity of helping to guide the Student Council to a new level of achievement and significance." Peace Corps Seeks Rural Applicants Pearle F. Finigan, Nebras ka director of Agriculture, has been asked for "advice and assistance" to reach peo ple in farm and rural com munities with the story of op portunities in the Peace Corps. The request came from Peace Corps Director R, Sar gent Shriver who reported mat opportunities are imme aiateiy avaiiaoie for men and women over 18 years of age who have had successful farming experience. College graduates, including those with agricultural de grees and those who have majored in other fields who may know how to farm are needed. The volunteers will be dr ing a variety of iobs. includ ing the operation, care, main tenance and repair of farm ing machinery, handling, feed ing, breeding and manage ment of livestock and poul try; soil conservation; build ing farm structures; care and operation of dairies and dairy equipment ana maintenance and repair of diesel engines. Countries that have re quested farmers include: In dia, Malaya, North Borneo and Sarawak. Philinnines. Thailand, trust territories in the South Pacific, El Salva dor, Columbia, Bolivia, Chile, Brazil, Venezuela and Jamai ca. Finigan indicated, "Nebras ka and other midwest states should be fertile ground for recruitment of volunteers with farming experience." Applications can be ob tained by writing to the Peace Corps, Washington 25, D.C., Attention Agricultural Division. PTP Mass Meeting People-to-People will hoH a mass meeting of all its members Wednesday, May 16, at 7 p.m. in the Student Union. t , Applications for next year's officers and commit tee chairmen will be avail able and plans for the com ing summer and fall will be discussed. A National Defense Fellow ship for comparative litera ture in Germanic languages has been awarded to Univer sity of Nebraska senior, Linda Schelbitski of Strang. The three-year fellowship is to the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colo. The $2,000 fellowship increases in worth by $200 each year providing satisfactory progress is made toward a doctoral degree. Miss Schelbitzki was also announced Thursday evening as winner of the "Scena Han-sen-Curtis Prize," a $50 cash award presented to an out standing senior majoring in German. Also on Thursday evening she was initiated as a new member of Phi Beta Kappa and on Tuesday was cited at the University's Hon ors Convocation being among the top three per cent of her class schol&stically. She is al so a member of Delta Phi Alpha, honorary German so ciety. The University chapter of Sigma XI, national science honorary society, initiated 149 associate and full members and installed new officers at its annual banquet. New officers installed wera D. D. Miller, president; C. B. Schultz, vice-president; Leslie Hewes, counselor; D. I. Cook, treasurer; T. B. Thorsen, sec retary; and J. V. Drew, as sociate secretary. All are Uni versity faculty members. The new associate mem bers included 44 undergradu ates and 61 graduate students. Full memberships are being extended to 44, including 30 graduate students. Prof. William H. Foxwell, engineering mechanics, spoke on "Engineering Materials," and 10 former presidents of the chapter were honored. Vreeland Awards Given Three University students have won a total of $1,000 in the annual Vreeland Awards. Robert Nelson, Frederick Gaines, and James Purtzer will receive the awards on Friday. The Vreeland Awards are given to students majoring in English, art and music who have shown exceptional cre ative ability in their fields. They are presented through the bequest of the late Fran cis William Vreeland. Robert Nelson of Fairbury, a music major, will receive $300 for his music composi tion, "Woodwind Quintet". Frederick Gaines of Grand Island, an English major, will receive $300 for his short stories. James Purtzer, of Lincoln, will receive $400 for his art in ceramics and painting. Francis Vreeland not only provided the prize money through his bequest, but also provided for the University paintings, scripture, draw ings and other works of art from his collection. SENIORS-GRADUATES-JUNIORS Invest-Protect Your Education Get a Better Job Permanent - Summer Circulate Your Availability Write for Brochure S-6 Employment Counselors, Inc. 33 West 42 St., New York 36, N.Y. FOUND Pair contact feme in pink case. Found in front of Temple on Taesday. Contact Daily Nebraskan Office. LOST Sicma Delta Taa pin PE dept Contact 32-7K. REWARD!! I fold sweater at Dorotny FOR RENT Furnished apartment. Two or three bow close te At. Available June 10. Phone 4341 900. W NTFD-J student U share furnished borne with graduate student for sum mer session. Near campus. Phone 43S-4731. RIDCRS Rider wanted en route to San Francisco. Leaving after commencement. Call ISI. Harvey Ladeholt. Wanted Rider to Detroit, Michisan or points a route. 432-670S. PERSONAL Bring a date or come star. Bring ecn and pie, but Include yourself at the Sprint Flint. Friday. May 1. Picnic and dancinf with the Mark IV Combo. See THE SEA GULL by Anion Chekhov Opening Wednesday, May 16 and running through Saturday at Howell Theatre. All perforrnances begin at 8:00 p.m. Presented by the University Theatre. Bos Office, 108 Temple Open sJaily 8:00 .m.-5:0O p.m. Phono 432-7631 ext. 3263 ' 1 Admission $1.50 GMvtcherfe Gui Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes de Don't watch while driving (LggG3 OSAfewdorYts" Now that we have learned the how of girl watching, let's consider a few safety precaution. They are presented, not as strict rules (since some experts with highly de veloped eyeball control enjoy watching while running the high hurdles, for example), but merely as friendly suggestions. 1. Don't watch while driving. 2. Don't watch ( ( t!s f .imiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiMUnniiww "i ' f liissir'" .-.r-.-r .T iar iitimir ' ''iiii'sssfaMsiisiiiwisiiisiiwiii CfMtt til tint! SMks "triiilir tkmik (in tokaeci tiitii tisL See the difference! With Pill Mall, you get that famous length of the finest tobaccos money can buy. Pall Mall's famous length travels and gentles the smoke naturally . . . over, under, around and through Pall Mall's fine, mellow tobaccos. Makes it mild ... but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! while drilling teeth (dental students only). 3. Don't watch while removing tonsils (medical students only). 4. Don't watch while mixing chemicals in the lab. 5. Don't watch girls who are engaged to the captain of the football team. Our final suggestion is a do, not a don't. Taste Pall Mall so smooth, so satisfying, so downright smokeablet Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste! So smooth, so satisfying, so dovvTiright smokeable! Cai.Ca fnM tf Sit .timsrnn ey This id bind on tin book. "The Girl Wilchit'l Guide" Text Copyright by Oonald J. Sawi Brining CowrigU by Wat Osdiai. Raj(itd by praiuiM f Hirpw t Irelbn, Ciamamgyt n mi m 11 in y I V VK" "f t v ; v 1 ' I i r