Tuesday, July 11, 1967 University of Nebraska No. 5 r 1. J 9 : .) ::..:'..,' "I v' ;'-'r W "" "4TT'X"" Homemakers Unlimited a specially designed and equipped mobile unit is used for helping handicapped homcmakers orient themselves to a new way of life. NU's Mobile Unit Helps Orient Handicapped Homemakers By Jane Palmer NU School of Journalism Imagine trying to wash dishes in a wheel chair with counters six inches too high and no place for your knees. Or imagine facing a row of buttons with only one hand. Problems like these face 4,600,000 physically lim ited p e o p le in the United States whose activity is house keeping, 12 per cent of the na tion's 40 million homemakers. An additional 320,000 are so severely disabled that they are unable to keep house at all. Little arrangements in housekeeping that we take for granted are a perpetual both er to the handicapped person. We stoop and reach for pans on a bottom shelf, or we stretch for package of cereal on top of the cupboard. Set Culture "Our culture is set up for people without any limita tions," said Dr. Lois O. Schwab, of the family econom ics and management depart ment of the University of Ne braska College of Agriculture and Home Economics. One of Dr. Schwab's respon sibilities is a van equipped to show how homemaking can be made easier and safer for handicapped homemakers. Sponsored by the Nebraska Heart Association and the Uni versity of Nebraska, the van travels on a county-to-county program, to help disabled per sons, doctors, nurses, therap ists, public health organiza tions, rehabilitation coun selors, the medical auxiliary, builders and health agencies. The unit illustrates how minor changes can make a big dif ference for a homemaker. , "A change of environment can change a physically dis abled person to a physically able one." Dr. Schwab said. The unit has a mockup of a kitchen with counters 30 or 32 Inches from the floor Instead of the usual 36. Space under a lowered sink makes it easy to do chores while seated, and there is enough room to get the arms of a wheel chair under it. The range has a single row of burners with controls at the front so a sitting person doesn't have to reach across a hot burner or pan for the controls. Grassland Exhibits Vary Mead, Nebraska is the site for the Third National Grass land Field Day July 12-14, according to P. H. Cole, Uni versity of Nebraska Extension dairyman. Cole is chairman of the Educational Exhibits Commit tee for the Field Day. Ex hibits will be displayed at the University's Field Labratory there. Displays will range from "Producing Forages for Prof it" by the University of Ken tucky to "Ultrastructural and Chemical Relationships Be tween Alfalfa Leaf Chloro plasts and Bloat" by Iowa State University, Cole said. Eight Universities, including Nebraska, will have exhibits Cupboards are shallow, and the doors are used for stor age space inside. Miss Alice Burton with the mobile unit, explained that the shelves are adjustable and that some have lazy su sans so there is less reach ing to the back. Many of the shelves pull out "so you don't have to stand on your head to see what you have," smiled Miss Burton. Miss Burton, whose title is consultant in homemaker re habilitation, showed how pans are stored on their sides so that each may be lifted out without struggling. She also showed how a home maker in a wheel chair would be able to add an extra two feet to her arm's reach by using long-handled tongs for household work. The homemaker with only one hand can be aided by equipment specially designed for her. There are one-handed rolling pins and flour sifters. Cutting boards securely hold vegetables to be cut, and a large suction cup holds a mix ing bowl steady for mixing. The homemaker can also be helped if all the counters are the same height and ad joining so that she may slide the things that she needs and eliminate lifting. The mobile unit also shows how the bathroom, the place of accidents for many dis abled persons, can be made safer. Sturdy, specially de signed grab-bars beside the tub and the toilet allow the handicapped person to get up and down safely without as sistance. Hand Shower The tub is equipped with a seat and a hand shower with a head that looks like half a phone. The shower head is on a flexible metal tube so that the bather can use it while seated in the tub, or it can be hung on the wall at the usual height. Water controls are at the side of the tub to eliminate reaching through the water to adjust the temperature. All these features help to make the disabled person safer and more self-sufficient. Dr. Schwab explained that research in housing and home making activities have made it-possible for persons who might have been "shut-ins" at the Field Day. Others are Oregon State, Purdue, Texas A&M, Missouri and Tennessee. Non-university exhibitors in clude the American Potash In stitute, American Society of Animal Science, Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and the U.S. Weather Bureau. The TVA exhibits will be on "Nutrient Deficiency Symptoms in Forage Crops" and the Weather Bureau ex hibit will be on "Weather Data Collection and Dissemi nation, Services to the Public with Emphasis on Services to Farmers and Ranchers." The Nebraska Crop Im provement Association will have an exhibit on "Pure Live Seed." to become relatively indepen dent. Architectural barriers are being removed, handicapped persons are offered training for independence and house hold equipment has been adapted to the handicapped. Dr. Schwab said that even though these advances are being made, many problems still remain for handicapped persons due to the way build ings are constructed. Revolving doors, steps, curbs, steep inclines and nar row doorways are impossible for '-a person confined" to -r wheel chair to conquer. . In Omaha, health agencies are campaigning to alert ar chitects, engineers, draftsmen and contractors to the prob lems of the handicapped and aged when designing build ings and facilities. Dr. Schwab said that many buildings in Lincoln are to tally inaccessible to the han dicapped person. "They couldn't get in the building if they had to," she said. ' Specifications The American Standards As sociation has developed this detailed set of specifications to serve as a simple check list in planning buildings for use by the public: 1. Public sidewalks should be at least 48 inches wide and 60 inches are needed if wheel chair traffic is heavy for pass ing. If a walk is sloped, the grade should not exceed five per cent, or one foot of rise for 20 feet of length. 2. If doors open onto walks, there should be a level plat form at least five feet by five feet. 3. The handicapped need more parking room either at the end of a row or in a diago nal or perpendicular stall 12 feet wide. If a passenger ar riving and leaving space is at curbside, the curb should be ramped up to the sidewalk Program Designed To Attract Physicians Omaha The University of Nebraska Medical Cen ter will participate in a nation-wide program to attract more physicians to the specialty of anesthesi ology. Dr. John R. Jones, pro fessor .of anesthesiology, has received a $42,552 grant to inaugurate a training program in anesthesiology. The grant will enable the College of Medicine to dou ble the number of residents in anesthesiology from two to four. The United States Public Health Service awarded a total of one million dollars in grants to 29 teach ing hospitals in 21 states and in Puerto Rico for the program. Congress authorized the National Institutes of Health to increase it" sup port programs in anesthesi ology, including funds for clinical training. The recipients of the grants, including the Uni versity of Nebraska, are all J. and any inclines between the parking space and the build ing needs ramps in place of, or in addition to, curbs and steps. 4. At least one primary en trance to a building should be ground level or ramped to be usable by individuals in wheelchairs. A doorway must have an unobstructed open ing of at least 32 inches in order to be accessible by dis abled persons. Thresholds should be flush with the floor or offset no more than one half inch. 5 Ramps should rise not more than one foot for every 12 feet of length and have handrails 32 inches from the surface on both sides. Ideally, the handrails extend one foot beyond the top and bottom of the ramp. Long ramps and sloped walks would have lev el platforms for rest and safe ty every 30 feet. 6. Stairs should be made safer with rounded nosings, sloping risers handrails on both sides mounted 32 inches above the front edge of the stair tread, and step risers no greater than seven inches. Other more minor building features can be adapted to help the handicapped person. Drinking fountains that are both hand and foot operated and which have a spout not higher than 36 inches from the floor are more accessible. Those in wheel chairs us ually cannot reach switches and controls or telephone coin drops mounted over 48 inches from the floor. The deaf and blind person also need to be considered in planning buildings. The blind need raised letters or num bers for identifying rooms. Warning signals must be both audible and visible. Signs, lights and hazardous hanging objects should be at least sev en feet above the floor. accredited teaching hos pitals with anesthesiology residency programs. According to Dr. Fred erick L. Stone, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, there are "scarcely enough anesthesiologists for daily surgery throughout the United States." In addition, he said, the services of the anesthesi ologist are being required for patient care outside the operating room to supervise post-operative care, to administer an algesic techniques in the relief of pain suffered by chronically ill patients. The grants provide sup port for up to three years of full-time training, lead ing to qualification for ex amination by the Amer ican Board of Anesthesiol ogy. Candidates for the pro gram must have received their Doctor of Medicine degree and completed an internship. Low Income Countries Are Topics of Institute By Ronald Schuett NU School of Journalism Low income countries of Asia, Africa and Latin Amer ica are losing their ability to feed their people, said Lester R. Brown, guest speaker at the conference on World Pop ulation and Food Crisis at the University of Nebraska Cen ter for Continuing Education Thursday. Speaking to about 100 per sons, Brown said that world grain consumption now runs ahead of production and most of the available grain goes to those nations which can afford it, not to the low-in-come nations which need it most. Sharp population increases, mostly in the less developed countries, are reflected In a fast-growing demand for grains for human consump tion, he explained, while high per capita incomes, mostly in the developed countries, generate a rising demand for grains to be used for feeding livestock. Brown is administrator of Second Roundtable To Feature Kansan The second summer ad ministrator's roundtable lun cheon featuring W. M. Osten berg, former superintendent of schools in Salina, Kan., will be held at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. July 18 at the Uni versity of Nebraska Student Union ballroom. The luncheon, sponsored by the University and the De partment of Educational Ad ministration, is open to t h e public and reservations may be made through the Sum mer Sessions Office. Ostenberg, presently the vice-president of the Nation al Bank of America in Sa lina, graduated from Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kan., and received his Master's de gree from Colorado Stat College of Education in Greeley. A teacher of English, speech and journalism in Eureka, Kan., Ostenberg lat er became the principal of the high school and super intendent of the public schools. He also became dean of the junior college in Cof feyville, Kan. Bethany College presented Ostenberg with an Alumni Award in 1956 and with an honorary doctorate of educa tion degree in 1962. Past president of Kansas State Teachers Association, Ostenberg was also president of the Kansas Council on Economic Education and president of the Kansas Association of School Admin istrators. Ostenberg was also a m e m b e r of the first Euro pean Flying Class room spon sored by Michigan State Col lege visiting many European countries. Applications Due For Institute Applications from college faculty members who wish to participate in an educational media institute must be sub mitted by July 15, announced Clive C. Veri, University of Nebraska Teachers College staff member. The institute, sponsored jointly by the University and the U.S. Office of Education, is designed for college teach ers interested in up-grading their instructional skills. Through federal support participants will receive an allowance to cover their ex penses at the institute, less travel. The initial sessions of the institute will be held at the Nebraska Center Aug. 28 to Sept. 1. Other sessions will be held periodically during the year at times convenient for most participants. To be eligible, applicants must be a member of a col lege or university teaching staff. Application forms and in formation are available from Dr. W. C. Meierhenry or Veri at the University of Nebras ka Teachers College. the International Agricultur al Development Service in Washington. He coordinates programs of technical assist ance and training to low in come countries and is an ad visor to the Secretary of Ag riculture on the world food and population problem. Self-Help Programs Low income countries must concentrate on agricultural development to feed their own people, he said. This will require changes in present agricultural practices in these countries, he pointed out, and will consequently affect the customs and traditions of their people. The more developed coun tries must be prepared to change their own habits and traditions if thsy expect less developed countries to change theirs, he said. The more developed coun tries must make adjustments, find new programs and make some sacrifices to meet the mounting food crisis, he said. "Food shortages (sym toms of which are rising food , .i l-ir l..i ..I W. M. Ostenberg Senators Will Lead Conference Key Nebraska senators serving on the Education and Budget Committees will par ticipate in the Nebraska As sociation of School Adminis trators Conference Thursday at the Center for Continuing Education. The conference, which cen ters upon matters of educa tional legislation in Nebras ka, will begin at 9:30 a.m. with Senator Lester Harsh, chairman of the Education Committee, speaking on "Legislation Killed in Com mitteeOut of Committee." Senator Calista Hughes will tell about bills affecting edu cation that have reached the floor but may or may not have passed. The luncheon speaker is Senator Richard Marvel, chair man of the Budget Committee, who will speak on "Finance at the State Level." The participants will break up into six discussion groups after the luncheon and mem bers of the State School Board will be present at each act ing as "resource people." . iriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiif tit i if itiiiiiiiiifiiiifiiiiiEiiinfiiiiiiiiiif niiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiTiiiifiiiiiiifiuiiii viriiirimifiiinitrr I i I Inside You Will Find I 1 DR. ASA J. DAVIS Visiting associate professor of history at NU tells of contrasts between U.S., European, 1 and African universities Page 2 I 1 NON-RESIDENT STUDENTS University of Nebraska rates near the bottom in the Big S on total percentage of non-resident students in attendance the reasons and possible solutions Page 2 I i ETV Resume of the history of Nebraska educational television including University station Channel 12 and I the outlook of ETV in the future Page 3 BuiuiiiHiiiiiiiniuiiuiuuiuiuiuuiiuiinuiiuiiuniuuuiiiiiuiiiuiiiMuiiuuiiiiuiuiimiuuuiwuiiiiiuiii ! trices, less food for the poor n the low income countries, economic instability, political Instability and violence) can be a threat to world peace and to stable democratic gov ernment," Brown said. The transition from tradi tional agriculture to modern agriculture, which required centuries in the western world, must be completed quickly In the developing re gions, he said. "Achieving a satisfactory balance between food and people will not be easy. Sel dom has history required that so much change be com pressed into so short a peri od of time," Brown said. Bennett Dr. Ivan. J. Bennett Jr., the second speaker at the insti tute, said most Americans see medicine as a highly scien tific profession, but fail to recognize agriculture as a scientific discipline worthy of study and respect. Most Americans think that they could become knowl edgeable about agriculture, he noted. It is considered a sim ple process of growing plants that anyone could learn. The failure of a low income coun try to produce an adequate food supply is therefore at tributed to laziness, he said. Dr. Bennett received his M.D. Degree from Emory University and is presently a member of the Board of Sci entific Advisors of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, the National Board of Medi cal Examiners and the Exe cutive Committee of the Di vision of Medical Science of the National Research Coun cil. He is a deputy director of the C'ice of Science and Technology in the Executive Office of the President and chairman of the President's Panel on the World Food Sup ply. Adjustment Needed A major social adjustment is needed, he explained, along with increased yields per acre of land and improved methods of transporting these grains. Funds alloted to internation al assistance must form a long-term commitment, he stressed, and not be subject to renewal each year or to political pressure. The American people must be made aware of the world food and population problem and have confidence in their governments efforts to solve it, he said. Gordon O. Pehrson, the third speaker at the institute, stressed private indus try's role in world food pro duction and economic devel opment. Calling himself an optimist, Pehrson said that the eco nomic recovery from the de pression of the 19308 didn't seem possible at the time. The United States' aid to Europe nnder the Marshall Plan was also cited as an unqualified success in restor ing the European economy. Mr. Gordon is a vice presi dent of International Miner als and Chemical Corpora tion in New York. Large amounts of private capital invested in low income countries by American cor porations are aiding the mod ernization of these countries, he said. Corporations are co operating with governments because it is in their best in terests to do so, he said. iiitli