The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 14, 1964, Page Page 2, Image 2

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Page 2
Campus
Without
By Diana Goldenstein
The "Big Man on Campus"
or the "Female Activities
Jock" may believe that they
are indispensable to campus,
but each summer they are
proved wrong.
Summer' activities and re
sponsibilities represent pro
nounced changes from the
academic year in some areas
of university life.
A significant shift in re
sponsibilities is seen in Stu
dent Union programming, ac
cording to Richard Scott, as
sistant Union program direc
tor. Student Union programs,
which are the responsibility
of students working on eight
separate committees during
the winter months, are taken
over by two individuals dur
ing the summer.
Scott and John Carlisle,
Union program director, plan
the Union's summer events.
The 'Summer Artist Series,
the Summer Cinema Series
and Union bridge lessons are
among the summer responsi
bilities of the two men.
The enforcement of dormi
tory regulations is transferred
from the Associated Women
Love Library Staff Prepares
Supplementary Book List
Humanities Reading
Room
Reynolds, E.E., BOSSUET.
Jacques-Benigne Bossuet was
truly a son of France and in
his life was reflected the life
of seventeenth century
France. Long considered one
of the world's foremost author
ities in literature and religion,
thli book gives a view of
Boussuet's life and his influ
ence upon the regime of Louis
xrv.
Byrnes, R.S., ed., THE
QUEENSLAND CENTENARY
ANTHOLOGY. This collection
of short stories, poems and
essays has a common bond
in the nationality of the au
thors and the patriotism
which is evident in the selec
tion. Not only are the repre
sentative works pleasant
casual reading, but they are
also a cross-section of Austra
lian thinking and literary
achievement.
Wallace, Carlton, THE
COMPLETE BOOK OF COL
OUR PHOTOGRAPHY. An
excellent source book in the
field of color photography,
the title above is also a good
Sivede's
Coffee Shop
Lonches-Snacks
'When Campus
Friends MeeC
KOfT TO
nm. looxnon
W ON SALE!
Prairie Paradox
Nebraska land
its Beauty
Thft magazhw Is a "must" for every Nebraskan. Pro
duced by the School of Journalism Depth Reporting
Project, it tells the story of Nebraska's beauty. Fif
teen pages of full color. Twelve exciting stories
about thi magnificent beauty of Nebraska. A trea
sure chest in stories and pictures. Read it. Enjoy it.
Send to:
Depth Rsport No. 3
School f Journalism
University of Nebraska
ONLY $1.09 fit COPY
r " 1 :
Please send me copies of "Prairie Paradox", I
a
Enclosed is f '....to cover cost. J
a
J Name.
, ...... (
J Address '
i
-
Life Continues
'Activities Jock?
Students during the academic
year to student assistants
who are regular University
staff members, according to
Miss Mary Holman, director
of Pound Hall. "There is no
student government in the
summer and I sometimes
help the assistants in enforc
ing the rules," she said.
The University newspaper
also represents a change
from winter to summer
months, according to Curt
Siemers, student activities co
ordinator. The SUMMER NE
BRASKAN, which is under
the authority of the School of
Journalism, during the sum
mer, is distributed on Tues
day each week. Only journa
lism students are staff mem
bers. The editor and business
manager of the Summer Ne
braskan are journalism ma
jors who are serving their re
quired internship on a news
paper staff.
The DAILY NEBRASKAN
is distributed four days a
week during the winter
months and is under the au
board. Any University stu
dent is eligible to become a
staff member of the DAILY
NEBRASKAN.
review for the experienced
photographer and a valuable
aid to the beginner. Various
theories involved are dis
cussed as well as shutter
speeds, light meters and oth
er techniques necessary in the
activity. (Published in Lon
don.) Hughes, Graham, MODERN
JEWELRY; AN INTERNA
TIONAL SURVEY, 1890-1963.
A profusely illustrated and
fascinating coverage of the
field of jewelry from the
craftsman's viewpoint. A
short text sets the pace, but
the major portion of the book
is devoted to photographs of
all the various styles of jewel
ry which have been designed
in the last century.
Science Reading
Room
Maxwell, Gavin, THE
ROCKS REMAIN. Those who
delighted in Maxwell's RING
OF BRIGHT WATER will
welcome its sequel, which de
scribes later events at the
West Highland cottage of Ca
musfearna. Three new otters
and Dirk the deerhound have
come to live there, and Mr.
Maxwell has taken a wife.
Publicity deriving from the
first book brings many visi
tors, welcome and unwel
come. Much of the second
book is as charming as its
predecessor, but several chap
ters of unrelated events mar
the story.
Sandstrom, Gosta E., TUN
NELS. The author, who has a
passion for tunnels, presents
a fascinating history of t h e
techniques of tunnelling. Men
ventured underground to seek
safety, to obtain water, to ex-
Panhellenic and Interfra
ternity Council are about the
only student activities that
continue to function during
the summer, according to Sie
mers. These two organiza
tions are preparing for rush
week which will be held late
this summer.
An organization which func
tions during the summer as
it does during the academic
year is the Foreign Students
program, according to Leslie
Sheffield, foreign student ad
visor. The program is de
signed to serve as the pri
mary contact between the
students and the United
States Immigration and Na
turalization Service Office in
Omaha, said Sheffield.
The group is making
plans for a reception honor
ing graduating foreign stu
dents August 7 in the Student
Union. This is becoming a
traditional event, according
to Sheffield.
Other functions of the for
eign student program include
assisting the students in ob
taining housing and granting
work permits for the employ
ment of the students.
ploit mineral wealth. They
sought ways to attack fort
resses whose walls could not
be scaled and to create easier
travel routes through moun
tains and under bodies of wa
ter. This book is a skillful ac
count of subterranean con
struction in ancient and mod
ern times. ,
Social Studies
Reading Room
Pflanze, Otto, BISMARCK
AND THE DEVELOPMENT
OF GERMANY. Tracing the
development of the German
state from 1815 through 1871,
the author shows the role
which Bismarck played in de
veloping a unified Germany.
Pflanze describes primarily
internal developments within
Germany, rather than foreign
relations.
Sterling, Thomas, STAN
LEY'S WAY; A SENTIMEN
TAL JOURNEY THROUGH
CENTRAL AFRICA. A fas
cinating account of Central
Africa today by a writer who
has read much about Henry
Stanley's travels in Africa
during the late nineteenth
century. Thomas Sterling
spent the greater part of his
childhood in Nebraska.
Leuchtenburg, William,
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
AND THE NEW DEAL. This
readable book brings the best
oi contemporary scholarship
to bear on American history
between 1932 and 1940.
Hofstadter, Richard, ANTI
INTELLECT U A L I S M IN
AMERICAN LIFE. Winner of
the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for
non-fiction, this book is a criti
cal inquiry into anti-intellectual
attitudes in the U n i t e d
States. Hofstadter describes
the gap between "eggheads"
and the rest of the population,
and shows how this gap has
been decreasing.
Youth Is the only season
for enjoyment, and the first
twenty-five years of one's
life are worth all the rest
of the longest life of man,
even though those flve-and-twenty
be spent in penury
and contempt, and the rest
in the possession of wealth,
honours, respectability.
George Borrow
quentins
!if ,- on the campus j
I 1229 R Sh ' 432-3645
I JULY CLEARANCE V " zO I
"' SALE OF I f JL'r ''' 1
COOL FASHIONS jrf$K 1 I
FOR SUMMER bVWh i
! SCHOOL
; AND SUMMER
RECREATION j fi j fj, I $
COMPLETE STOCKS IN 4 lrr I
SIZES 5 THRU 16 11 A I f
COMFORTABLE PRICES lU j
Summer Nebrnskon
PICTURE BY JUDY KOEPKE
.COLUMBIA This blimp sailing over campus was in
Lincoln last week as a part of a tour to the cities where
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. has plants. There are
only two blimps in the Western Hemisphere; the other
one is now at the World's Fair. The maximum speed of the
blimp is 57 miles an hour. It will hold a total of seven.
Careful Drivers Rates
Started For Under 25
By Edward Mason
Several insurance com
panies have started to s e t
rates according to juveniles'
driving records, Lincoln
Municipal Judge Richard 0.
Johnson said.
' This policy should encour
age good driving. A driver,
especially one under 25, will
be careful to guard his driv
ing points, since their retain-
ment will mean lower insur
ance costs, Johnson said.
Drivers under 25 have high
er insurance costs, because
they are in the driving group
which has more accidents.
Insurance companies are
now taking the d r f v 1 g
record of each applicant and
charging him according to
his driving record. That Is,
if a driver has had several ac
cldents, his insurance costs
will exceed that of a good
driver of the same age. This
new policy is an attempt to
reduce insurance costs of
good drivers who are in the
high rate accident category.
Insurance companies have
started this policy over the
last few months, and most
of them now have the policy.
According to the Continental
Insurance Company of Oma
ha, 1,200 new classification
ratings will be initiated by
January 1, 1965.
"There are three kinds of
drivers who appear before
me in court. There are those
who can't drive, those who
don't know the laws, and
those who won't obey the
laws," Judge Johnson said. ,
There are people who are
physically not able to drive.
They have poor reflexes or
need glasses., There are
people who get their driver's,
licenses and forget the rules.
They are the "don'ts." The
people who cause the most
trouble are those who will not
obey the laws they know,
even though they are physical
ly able to drive.
It is the last group where
most of the reckless and bad
drivers come from, he said.
The new policy, insurance
for careful drivers,' s h o u 1 d
motivate a few of the
"won'ts" to drjve more care
fully. WATCH & CLOCK
REPAIR
2 day tervicel
Student Frfceit
DICK'S WATCH SERVICE
IN CAMPUS BOOKSTORE
gum milium 111:11111. miiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii minimi iiiiiiiniiiiiiii
1 NEA Holds Workshop j
I t
Children
ChUdren from a "reading family' tend to progress much
faster in developing reading abilities than children from
tfmSes who dTnXake reading a habit, an Oklahoma edu-
cator declared here last week.
Dr. James May of Tulsa, Okla., spoke at a three-week
workshop for 30 Midwest elementary school principals at
KUON-TV
To Present
India Show
The Indian Experiment
makes its debut tonight on
KUON-TV.
The contrast and conflict of
India today are captured as
villages and large cities are
visited to see the customs
and climate of a country that
is proud of its legacy b u t
eager for the future.
This series will depict many
ways of life-from the history of
ancient battles to the strug
gles of refugees seeking new
lives in India. The country
has great respect for time
honored mores and religious
beliefs, but it is eager for to
morrow and wants to be a
living, active part of the pres
ent. Channel 12's schedule this
week:
TODAY
5:30 Fashion Sewing
6:00 The Kyle Rote World
6:30 We Care: "How Daily living Fits
Into Family Life"
7'00 Cultures and Continent: Angkor
the God King" Tonight you journey
to the recently discovered city of
Angkor in the ancient kingdom of
Cambodia, It waa the greatest met
ropolitan complex in the world of
100 A.D. Here, the state was ruled
by moral rather than legal codes
and kings were worshipped as gods.
See the rich heritage of the pres
ent Cambodian society In tonight's
program.
7:30 The Indian Experiment (Debutes
tonight!) India has six-hundred mil
lion inhabitants and is the largest
democracy in the world, yet it is
more mystic than modern.
6:00 Antiques: "Pine Furniture"
f:30 Portrait: Polar Expedition: "Byrd:
Th Pole in a Day"
6:00 News in Perspective
WEDNESDAY, JULY U
5:30
6:00
Eastern Wisdom and Modern Life:
"The Tao in China" Taoism's in-
n i ui n m TtiutHhiKm . . .
6:30
7:00
The Green Thumb: "Dahlias"
7:30
This World of Credit: "Financing
Installment Pure Bases services on
Credit"
-n, CI r "
8:00
S:30
Of People and Politics
It is a lime ot conventions ana
campaigns and a time of hard work
and tension. This series from Na
tional Educational Television is one
of the first programs to capture the
excitement of an election year. To
night's program looks at the Negro
voter of the North the South, and
the border slates and asks, how
will his vote affect the political
9:00
University Artist Series: "Recital
with Ravnan" Mr. Ravnan plays se
lections irora uneg, nieuxw, ana
Chopin.
THI BSD AY, JULY If
5:30 Cultures and Continents
6:00 Dr. Posin's Giants: "Dmitri Mende
leyev" Dr. Posin's approach Is
sometimes humorous but his aim
is serious. With the help of colorful
illustrations and a cat. Minerva, he
talks about the giants of science. To
night: Dmitri Mendeleyev, the shag
gy blond Russian who dassilied
the element is a periodic table
6:30 At Issue
7:00 Painting and Finishing: "Interior
Wail Painting". This series which
debut tonitht features guest ex
perts who demonstrate painting and
finishing skills.
7:10 Science Reporter: "Survey of Space
s' Antiques: "China" Collector and
dealer George Michael talks about
the qualities of English china and
also present fine point about
American china.
S:30 Elliot Norton Interviews: "Jerome
Hines"
9:00 Pathways: "The Pathway of Com
merce: The Tigris and Euphrates"
Dr. Alan Pickering, pastor on the
University of Nebraska campus, Is
also an authority on the influence
ot the a eient near oast on con
temporary religion.
f:30 Eastern Wisdom and Modem Life
FRIDAY, JULY 17
5:30 The Green Thumb
6:00 Eliiot Norton Interviews
:30 University News with Bob Van Nest
6:45 Social Security in Action
7:00 Music from Ohio Stat
7:30 Science Reportes
6:00 Circus!
f :00 N.E.T. Drama Festival: The Kill
ing of tht King" Hugh Ross Wil
liamson call his play a "play-documentary."
MONDAY, JULY W
1:30
6:00
Portrait: Polar Expedition: "Byrd:
The Pol In a Day"
Music from Ohio State
Fashion Sewing
Lotus Island: 'Special) A North
7:00
German Television report depicts
the conflict between Buddhism and
Marxism in a Buddhis nation as
the Ceylonese try to preserve their
own nationalism from the fores of
outside powers.
1:00
(:00
Backyard Fanner
N.E.T. Drama Festival i Th Kin
Ing of the King"
PkA.R.ft.PRlCSS
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Tuesday, July 14, 1964
Read More' j
May is an elementary school
principal and president-elect
of the National Department of
Elementary School Principals,
National Education Associa
tion (NEA).
"National surveys tend to
show that children are read
ing better and reading mora
than ever before in history,"
said Dr. Mary Scott, curricu
lum specialist for the Depart,
ment of Elementary School
Principals (NEA) Washing,
ton, D.C.
"However, the ever increas.
ing demands for better read
ers places an ever increasing
r es p o n s i b i 1 ity upon the
schools," she added.
"Reading is a mental proc
ess which requires the efforts
of a highly-skilled teacher us
ing a combination of teaching
methods," according to Dr.
Muriel Crosby, assistant sup
erintendent of schools, Wil
mington, Delaware.
"While a basic text is help
ful to some teachers, the
teaching of reading must be
left to the full creative abili
ties of the teacher utilizing a
variety of professional tech
niques," according to Crosby.
One of the most important
problems facing the elemen
tary school principal and
teacher today involves the
evaluation of "reading p a n
creas," said Dr. O. W. Kopp,
chairman of the University's
department of elementary
education and workshop co-or-dinator.
Such materials should
be analyzed objectively on the
basis of developing a sound
reading program.
The workshop was spon
sored by the Department of
Elementary School Principals
of the NEA, the Nebraska De
partment of Elementary
School Principals of the NEA,
the Nebraska Department of
Elementary School Principals
and the University's Teachers
College. It marks the second
annual workshop for elemen
tary school principals at tht
University. Kopp said it is an.
ticipated that the University
will continue to grow as a cen
ter for the study of problems
of elementary school princi
pals in the U.S.
Lincoln's Finest
INN
1011 2nd Street
West Lincoln
presents
US choice
Top Sirloin
$975
PHONE 435-9818
after 4 P.M.
'ROM $139JT0 $1000
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