The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 18, 1963, Page Page Four, Image 4

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    Page Four
Summer Nebraskan
Tuesday, June 18, 1963
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AEOLUS The Greek God of the Wind is shown with
Dr. S. I. Fuenning and Richard Rush of Chicago, Aeolus"
creator. .
'Aeolus' Demonstrates
Process of Breathing
Another major exhibit
of
the health galleries of the
University of Nebraska State
Museum will go on display
for the public this Thursday
A large plastic bust of a
man, named "Aeolus" (Greek
God of the Wind), has been
specially made for the mu
seum and donated by the Ne-
Union Plans
Holiday Tour
The Nebraska Union is
sponsoring a trip to Chicago
over the 4th of July weekend
for any interested University
students, staff or faculty
members.
The tour cost of $42 pea
person includes round trip
train fare, meals on the train,
insurance, three nights at the
Palmer House Hotel, trans
portation from the train to
the hotel and return and tours
of the South and North sides
of Chicago.
The South tour will include
the University of Chicago, Il
linois Institute of Technology,
Lloyd Wright homes, Hull
House and the Lake Front.
The North Side tour will fea
ture the suburban Bohai Tem
ple, Northwestern University
and more Lake Front views.
Tour members may choose,
at their own expense, their in
dividual entertainment dur
ing the three full days in Chi
cago. Suggested activities include
the International Trade Fair,
the baseball game between
the Cubs and Philadelphia, a
visit to the Art Institute or
the Museum of Science and
Industry.
"Mary Mary" and "Milk
and Honey" are currently on
the theatrical list, and "Cieo
parta" and "Lawrence of
Arabia" are also showing. In
the music area, the Ravenia
Festival and the Grant Park
Concerts are featured.
The group will leave Lin
coln at 12 a.m. July 4 and
return at 12 a.m. July 8.
Educators Meet
At Nebr. Center
The nation's top leaders in
elementary education assem
bled at the University yester
day for a 3-week workshop
seminar. Dr. O. W. Kopp, chairman
of the department of elemen
tary education and seminar
instructor, said the Nebraska
Center choice for tlw meeting
establishes it as a major cen
ter for the continuing educa
tion of elementary principals.
Dr. Marion Cranmore, im
mediate past president of the
national Department of Ele
mentary School Principals, is
attending the meeting along
with several other outstand
ing elementary educators in
the nation.
Discussions on professional
qualifications, subject matter
in mathematics and science,
and" job diwrsity will lead the
agenda.
Dr. Kopp said the workshop
will be attended by elemen
tary principals from Nebras
ka and all adjacent states.
S&ILLAWKISi ACTIO!!!
(
MICKEY 5PIUANE
MIKI HAMMe 1F ;r ,
- SHIRLEY EATON
UOVD NOLAN HY GARDNER
I vw- l jr - "5
braska Tuberculosis Associa
tion.
The exhibit is a highly com
plicated device wired for
sound to show and explain
the process of breathing and
the intricate neurological tim
ing of the diaphram and oth
er coordinating muscles.
Dr. Kenneth Rose, curator
of the Health Division Of the
Museum, said man normally
breathes from 16 to 18 times
a minute, but, in Aeolus the
rate has been reduced to six
times a minute to make it
easier to see what happens
inside a lung.
The plastic man and all
electronic equipment accom
panying the device was made
for $7,500 by the Richard
Rush Studio in Chicago.
The viewer will be shown
the path of a breath of air
on its life-giving journey from
intake to the tiny alveoli
where the exchange of oxy
gen and carbon dioxide be
tween air and blood takes
place.
In addition to the large
model of the man s respira
tory system, the exhibit in
cludes an enormously magni
fied model of an alveolus and
another of lung tissue filled
with plastic to reveal its
structure.
The exhibit will be assem
bled and displayed in the
Mueller Health Gallery and
will be put into operation
Thursday morning for public
viewing.
Museum hours: Sundays
and holidays, 2 to 5 p.m.;
Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8
a.m. to 5 p.m
Foreign Film
"Eve Wants to Sleep" is the
second feature of the Summer
Foreign Film Series and it
will be shown at 7 p.m.,
Thursday, in the Nebraska
Union Auditorium.
Filmed in Poland, the film
is about a charming, penni
less young girl who finds her
self involved in a merry-go-round
of unbelievable inci
dents of comedy, satire and
fantasy.
SAC Tour Is Today
A tour of the Lincoln Air
Force Base will be held this
afternoon from 3 to 8 p.m.
The bus will leave the "S"
Street entrance of the Nebras
ka Union at 3 p.m. An escort
from the Information Office
will meet the bus at the main
gate to begin the tour which
highlights the flight line, a
trip through a KC Tanker,
visits to maintenance shops,
the fire station, craft shops,
and also a visit of the air
chamber for jet training.
A dinner at the Officers
Club will follow the tour at
4:45 p.m.
Museum Hours
Morrill Hall, the Univers
ity museum, has extended its
visitation hours.
In addition to the regular
8-5 p.m. Monday through
Saturday and 2-5 p.m. Sun
day hours, the museum will
now be open on Monday,
Wednesday and Friday eve
nings from 7-9 p.m.
ww
COMING SOON
55 DAYS AT PEKING"
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New Direction and Vigor
HT 2 Jf5 &
EDITORS NOTE: In last week's
Summer Nebraskan. we ran the first
two parts of an artirle entitled.
"Classics Are Returning to the Class
room." The story which follows Is
the third and final section of the
story which was written by Nancy
Ostberr for the School of Journal
Ism's depth renoi-tlic class. This
week we are dealluc with the cur
riculum study vb Is belnjc con
ducted at the University throuirh
grant from the Woods Charitable
Fund.
During the summer tf
1961 a small group of the
state's ablest elementary
and high school teachers"
responded to a grant from
the Woods Charitable Fund
and came to the University
of Nebraska to write a cur
riculum that would give
new direction and vigor to
the teaching of English.
The story of their success
is only beginning to be told.
It was an operation rooted
deep in the dynamic con
servatism of the state and
founded in the leadership of
one man who believed that
every child should have the
opportunity to become ac
quainted with truly good lit
erature. He is Dr. Paul Ol
son, an associate professor
of English at the University
of Nebraska, now on leave
at London doing research
on Chaucer at the British
Museum.
The unassuming brown
volume which contained
the results of that sum
mer's work was a local
product that was to attract
the nation-wide attention of
scholars and educators. Re
quests for the study contin
ue to come in at the rate
of several per day, and it is
now in its fourth printing.
English department offi
cials also feel that the suc
cess of the local study was
a major factor in landing
for Nebraska the choice
federal plum of a $250,000
grant as one of the six Eng
lish curriculum centers in
the nation. (The others are
located at Northwestern
University in Evanston, Il
linois; Carnegie Technolog
ical Institute in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania; Hunter Col
426 Register
For All-State
Another r e c o r d-breakine
year' has been recorded for
the University's All-State pro
gram as 426 high school stu
dents have registered for the
three-week course which be
gan last Tuesday.
John Moran, general direc
tor of the fine arts and jour
nalism course, said the final
tally may show an increase
of 50 students over last year.
It also looks like one of the
biggest percentage increases
we ve ever had, he said.
More than 75 of the students
are given full or partial schol
arships by towns and civic
organizations and clubs, Mor
an said. He added that nearly
every Nebraska county is rep
resented in the All-State en
rollment. The All-State course is held
each year at the University
to give Nebraska high school
students the opportunity to
work closely with University
professors in art, speech,
music and journalism.
Students selecting the art
sequence are, for the first
time, using the New Nelle
Cochrane Woods building
studios.
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DOORS OPEN
JAMES and DORIS
Aitred Hitchcock's
htuaSMsT IWf Itiwal
COLOk
1t ST.
evisQ English Curriculum
lege in New York City;
University of Minnesota in
Minneapolis; and the Uni
versity of Oregon in Eu
gene. Oregon.)
More startling, and per
haps more rewarding, are
the results which have been
obtained in actual class
room teaching. Lecture ma
terials in literature, lan
guage and composition for
each grade K-12 were pre
pared during a second
workshop session during
the summer of 1962.
Starting Point
When the classics are
used as a starting point for
composition, the results are
unlike any that teachers
have had before.
First grader Debra Bow
yer, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Austin Bowyer of Lin
coln, proved this with her
story about "The Short
Necked Giraffe."
"Once upon a time there
was a giraffe who had a
very short neck. It was so
short that he could not
reach the leaves on the
trees. So he went to the zoo
keeper. He asked the zoo
keeper if he could chop
down all the trees. But the
zoo keeper said he could
not do that. So he went on.
By and by he came to the
elephant. He asked the ele
phant if he could chop down
all the trees, but he said
he could not do that. So he
went on. By and by he
came to the beaver. He
asked the beaver if he
could chew down the trees.
But the beaver said he
could not. So the giraffe
went back to his cage. Just
then the zoo keeper came
to see him with an idea.
So he gathered lots of
leaves and put them in the
giraffe's cage. The more
leaves the giraffe ate, the
longer his neck grew until
he could reach the leaves
Union Activities
TODAY
Air Force Base Tour and Dinner
3 to 8 p.m. Meet in the "S" Street foyer
News Forum
3:15 p.m. Room 232
Bridge Lessons
4 p.m. Indian Suite
WEDNESDAY
Summer Artist Series
Joe and Penny Aronson, ethnic folk singers 8 p.m.
Indian Suite
THURSDAY
World Affairs Preview
Department of State Briefing Team 2 p.m. Ballroom
Foreign Film
7 p.m. Auditorium
MONDAY
Duplicate Bridge
4 p.m. Indian Suite
Cinema '63 Raisin in the Sun"
6:30 and 9 p.m. Auditorium
KUON-TV
TODAY
5:30 Previews of Freshman English
6 IK) Evening Prelude
:30 The Ragtime Era "That Lone-
sump Road"
:W Beyond the Earth "Applications
el (Gravitational Tbeory"
The Face of Sweden "The En
terprising Society"
s:IN Dynamics of Leadership "Be
havior In Groups"
:m What in the World
8:00 Perspectives : Birth Control
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 19
6::t0 Previews of Freshman English
fi lm Evening Prelude
KM Dr. Posln's Giants "Galileo Gali
lei IIM4 to 10421"
7:fio The Ragtiem Era "That Lone
some Boad"
1:30 From the Ancient Past "Passing
EpfM'hs: Family Life"
K:0 Heir-Encounter "Psychology f
Freedom"
K .'lii Tennessee Williams with Elliot
Norton '
m Casals Master Class "Brahms
Snnata In F"
11:30 Your T'nlcameral
THURSDAY. JUNE 20
5:.ll) Previews oi Freshman English
(:M) Evening Prelude
fi:3i Keif Encounter "Psychology of
Freedom"
12:45
FRIDAY
KAVr ICH
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STARTS FRIDAY
Two Hitchcock Hits!
John rnrsyrh. J7, 5V,i H 1 Refreshing Cold Milk
Shirley JTM 'jl f i ."
MeeLoln. TZ V'" L.. I MffiC A C Bte 11. y
on all the trees."
Some of her classmates
wrote poetry:
I run in the sun. It is fun.
Down, down, Yellow and
brown.
The leaves are falling
over the town.
"Literature becomes ex
citing when it is taught as
a separate subject," en
thused Debra's teacher,
Mrs. Virginia Hamilton.
"The controlled vocabu
lary of a Dick and Jane
reading skills book is a
necessary tool, but It is not
very stimulating to . the
child's imagination,1' com
mented Frank Rice, co-director
of the Nebraska Cur
riculum Center. He added,
"We want the grade school
child to hear highly imagi
native reading so he can
see why he should learn to
read." .
Dr. Rice and his col
league, C. J. Simpson, were
the two Omaha teachers
who did independent re
search on a program for
teaching advanced Ameri
can literature in. high
school. Later their, w t r k
was incorporated into the
experimental curriculum
for Nebraska. .
Mrs. Hamilton's first
grade class responded to
the reading of literature
first by oral tape recording
of their own stories, and
later by writing (printing)
them themselves.
Writing Philosophy
The philosophy, as stated
by the curriculum writers,
is this: "Children learn to
talk by imitating the
speech which they hear.
They learn to write if
they learn at all by
imitating what they read.
Great writing, given the
qualities of greatness with
in the student, fosters good
writing by example."
In other words, it is the
philosophy of this group
This Week
7:00 Dynamics of Desegregation
"Violence. Vengence, and Vigilante"
7:3(1 Beyond the Earth "Application
of Gravitational Theory"
8:00 The Science and Engineering Tele
vision Problems In Micromo
lecular Chemistry"
:00 Flaherty n.d Film "The Louis
iana Story"
FRIDAY, Jl'NE 11
6:30 Previews of Freshman English
6:IW Evening Prelude
6::l University News
7:00 Social Security in Action
7:i Faculty Viewpoint "The Case
for Chastity"
8:0(1 What In the World
:! Tennessee Williams with Elliot
Norton
:ll The Face of Sweden "The En
terprising Society"
8:30 University Arlllst series: Recital
with Larry Lush
MONDAY, JVSF. t
English
l:Sft Previews of Freshman
6:00 Evening Prelude
0:30 Dynamics of Desegregation
"Portrait of a Violent Man"
7:00 Perspective: The Ameriran Con
servative 8:00 Rarkynrd Farmer
0:00 University Artists Series: Recital
with Ravnan
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lllf TECHNICOLOR JSKSSi McDONAlD'S MENU
WZ PLUS
ftl c""! i i"fIMY 100 Pure Beef Hamburgers
'Vfl4 - !.. Ia Tempting Cheesburgers
V If""'! rF"'"' Old-Fashioned Shakes
that the creative child will
become an even better
writer by being exposed
to the work of the masters.
In keeping with the
state's dynamic conserva
tism the curriculum would
allow teachers due free
dom, and yet avoid chaos
by setting up a few simple
guidelines..
It would be a grogram
that is -both sequential and
consequential. That is, on
each level there is a defi
nite .set., of skills to be
mastered rather than re
peating from last year.
However, the secquenccs
' are guaged according to
ability rather than an ar
bitrary grade level. And to
be consequential, the stu
dent should know he is get
ting somewhere. "He ought
not to feel the confusion of
Alice In Wonderland."
. What has brought about
these changes in the direc
tion of teaching English
Why are the classics com
ing back to the classroom?
Much of the credit must
go to the National Council
of Teachers of English
(NCTE) which two years
ago issued a scathing report
on the condition of English
in the schools and then set
out to do something about
it.
Agencies and Men
Credit must also go to the
various government and
private agencies which have
financed the undertaking,
as well as the men who
have believed in it.'
Perhaps the timing is al
so a factor. James R.
Squire, executive secretary
of NCTE, noted that it
takes 30 years to re-train a
NASA Spacemobile On Exhibit
. The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration
"Spacemobile" will be on
campus through Wednesday.
A space science lecture
demonstration and discussion
of the Nation's space pro
gram for peaceful purposes
will be held in the Union Au
ditorium at 9 and 10 a.m. and
2 p.m. Wednesday.
The fifty-minute demon
stration conducted by exper-
Union Announces
Bridge Activities
Free bridge lessons for be
ginners and those who are
"experienced, but needing
help will be given on Tues
day afternoons, starting to
day, at 4 p.m. in the Nebras
ka Union Indian Suite.
Duplicate bridge sessions
will be held on Monday after
noons at 4 p.m. In the Indian
Suite.
The Nebraska Union Bridge
Tournament will be held on
Tuesday, July 23, and will cli
max the summer bridge les
sons and duplicate bridge ses
sions. There is no entry fee for
the tournament and it is open
to all members of the Univer
sity staff, faculty and stu
dents. ' Summer
Nebraskan
j Telephone 477-8711, ext. 2434,
i2435
, n T.,..H r,li
The Dally Nebraskan la published each
Tuesday during the Summer Session.
STAFF
Editor Linda Jenwna
Business Manager Sbari Johnson
generation of teachers. The
last extensive change in the
teaching of English, he ex
plained, occurred during tha
thirties. At that time, ideal
istic teachers were imbued
with the more extreme pro
gressive notion that chil
dren should be educated
only in terms of their im
mediate needs. Lay people
termed this phase "how to
get along"; educators call
ed it "adjustment to the en
vironment." Additional momen
tum was given to the
change, according to Rice,
who helped direct the cir
ciculum study, by the de
mand for increased excel
lence in the scientific fields.
This, he explained, spurred
the humanities to create
programs of acceleration.
Squire believes that we
are now in the middle of
the change. Much of it is
still on the leadership level,
and much of it is still re
stricted to the "bright
kids" and the schools that
have money. But is is hoped
that eventually all levels
will benefit.
For this reason the Uni
versity of Nebraska study
ranges from kindergarten
through the 12th grade. Its
planners believe that each
student must have a solid
background every step of
the way if he is to be able
tf read the classics, many
of which are by nature
more difficult.
Perhaps it can be best ex
pressed by the curriculum
planners themselves:
"Perhaps it is better that
a student read the great
and half-understand than
that he read mere pap and
master it."
ienced science educators will
answer five basic questions:
(1) What is a satellite?
(2) How does it get into or
bit? (3) What keeps it in orbit?
(4) What good is it, and
what does it do?
(5) What are the, present
activities of the NASA, the
results of these programs and
plans for the future.
Authentic space models il
lustrating the numerous
NASA space projects will be
on display in the Union Main
Lounge through Wednesday.
SUMMER
NEBRASKAN
WANT ADS
LET ME CHANGE YOUR FACE
S"-,,?1"'0 ur8m will make you
look like your favorite -television or
movie star. Mrs. Lela Jones f Bn8.
ton said: I was amazed when I looked
in the mirror and saw Gary Coopw."
" money down. Easy life payments
SALESMEN!
''"""c'S' l""n" ,nr .W turnover
;.r,.--' tZ, 'Lum. m my nd then
refund !KW, when it collapses six weeks
later. Sell same home many times.
Kree insurance, disguises, and bail
REWARD
J?- ?, gTg blu? your n"- dear
lei .! L',I!LLteeth are "nt? Also
lost false teeth, autoharp. and TV
aerial somewhere downtown.
WANT AD
nJt "le: Grman m,l1 LIWU. Comi
-TV -""""cui, convenient 20.000
miles o6.oo. Call Snnner. 53 Set.
leek Quadrangle. 432-8853 after six.
, AT
STEVEN'S
10
DISCOUNT
To All Students
ond Faculty
ON ANY MERCHANDISE
IN THE STORE
Wofche.
Diamonds
Watch Bands
Tronsistore
Record Player
Cameras
Portable TV
Watch Repairing
Tape Recorders
Remington
Typewriter
YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
NO MONEY DOWN
TAKE ANY PURCHASE
WITH YOU
in
Open Thursday
Until 9:00
f
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