Tuesday, July 18, 1967 Poge 2 Summer Nebroskan Cast Chosen for 'Loosebough Continued From Page 1 Appearing in t h e leading role as Lieutenant Lawrence Loosebough is Clint Jake men, graduate student from Fremont His companions on a mistaken flight to the moon are: Sergeant Elder wood, Mike L. Messmer, senior from Kansas City; Sergeant Finney. David Peterson, Lincoln junior; and Sergeant Sokolski. Wil liam Turek, senior from Ge neva. ''Earth people in the fan tastic comedy are T.V. commentators and army personnel. Huey Rowe-An-derscn. graduate student from Baton Rouge, La., will be seen as "First T.V. Face." The "Second T.V. Face" is Everett Lawton, Syracuse senior. Sara Chris tiansen, a junior at Lincoln Northeast High School, will appear as a W.A.C Sergeant- Her commander, role of Jan Johnson, grad Colonel Robbins. is the oate student from Portage, Wis. LL Loosebough. the "first mate on the moon" in this improbable comedy, soon finds other groups are join ing him and his men in set ting up a hardly manage able colony on the satellite. Leading a group of glam orous Russian . actresses turned spacewomen is Com rad L u d m i 1 1 a Krepkina, played by Sara Boatman, graduate student from Peru. Members of her par ty are: Anya, Mary Meckel, Lincoln senior; Natasha, Linda Essay, junior from Alliance; arid Olga. Pamela Moore, senior from Tulsa, Okla. Leading a party of U.S. Air Force Women to the moon ' is LL Betty Burns, played by Cberylene A Schick, junior from Grand Island. Members of the W.A.F. party are: Soe El len, Linda Bawcom, gradu ate of Lincoln Northeast High School; Henrietta, Ja lie William. Wood RJver graduate student; and WO ma. Rita Benesch, gradu ate student from Omaha. Adding to the confusion on the moon is a group of Russian spacemen, led by Major Ranevsky, played by Don Mohr, graduate stu dent from Bessemer, .Ala. His companions are Dmitry, Phil Kite, graduate student from Auburn; Fyodor, James Sellmeyer, graduate student from St Louis, Mo.; and Vladimir, Marcus Arm strong of Lincoln. Field Day Held Early Concord, Nebr. Beef Field Day at tbe University of Nebraska's Northeast Station here is being held today, a month earlier than usual, because experimental cattle have made such good gains. Walter Tolman, sta tion beef researcher, said. One set of heifers and one f steers will be ready for njarket by Field Day, which will begin at f p.aL, be Tolman summarized the ictur experiments to be re ported: "Corn silage, supplemented with soybean meal, was fed . to one lot of heiiers, while another lot received silage supplemented with urea. Soybean meal gave a slight ly" higher gain, but costs fa vored the urea supplement slizhtly. Steers were fattened at two different levels of alfal fa ta lage, wUa and with out additional protein con centrate. Dae lot of mixed steers and heifers received full com teed on pasture. An other" lot will receive so corn until brume pasture becoBe$ short or dry. Log of heifers were fed ratio with three different c-omlJLnations of alfalfa hay and com. The rations were supplemented with vitamin A. minerals and stilbestrol, but nut with protein. A ratability judging con test to be held at the Field l)ky wiU give stockmea i opportunity to estimate the effect f rrerficish ea car cass value, Tolmaa ssid, since some f the beliefs used bj tbe alfalfa hay and con tests will be too fat by July XI. lir. Frank Eater. Chair man of the University of Ne braska Animal Science De partment, will discuss the place of cutability selection in a stockman's overall pro gram of producing the most oeeiraUe possible beef lor consumers' tables. 4 It' t'A .v 4 v - f ' 1 Dr. Ilarold C Craia (above) directs tbe cast and tells them what positions to take as be blocks tbe scenes for "Loosebough tbe First." Below, members of tbe Russian dele gation are about to kill each other to one of the final scenes. Nebraska Steak Display Wins First at Convention A Nebraska display ti tled. "High Quality Steaks Don't Just Happen." was awarded a blue ribbon rat ing in tbe 1967 communica tions contests held annually by the American Associa tion of Agricultural College Editors. Announcements of tbe awards were made July 10 on tbe University of Ne braska Cast Cinpai. bere the Association held its national meeting. The blue ribbon display was a cooperative effort of the Visual Aids Section of the NU Department of In formation. Bart Stewart and Clifford Hollestelle, NU visual aids specialists beaded up the project Runners-up with red rib bon ratings were in five classes. A iisplzy prepared tor the National Grasslands Confer ence being held in Nebras ka, also developed by tbe Visual Aids Section, re ceived a red award Several wstkiy press ser vices of the Department of Information, spearheaded by Dan Lutz, Grant John son and Mrs. Janet Huf.b, assistant Extension editors, were among tbe red rib bons, as well as the entry in magazine press services also authored by Johnson Program Awarded An educational television program tilled "Fashion 18C7-1967" produced and hostessed by Mrs. Janet fiuss and a series of slides on tbe home economics journalist photographed by Richard Dudls, photograph er. Department of Informa tion, also rated a red rib bon. Tbe agricultural editor of the Kansas Ctry Star was cited July 12 for bis ot standing contribution to ag riculture. Boderkk Tstb bull received tbe Renbca Brigbam Award. Tbe Reuben Brignam award presented at the ; closing banquet Wednesday 1 evening if given annually i to a person ia the fields of agriculture or home eco nomics who It tot an active AAACE member but who has contributed to either field through information. J .on j. - H I ' - It was first presented in 1947 and is named for the late Reuben Brigham. pio neer agricultural college and USDA editor and found er of the Division of Infor mation Programs of the Federal Extension Service. Turcball b e g a n bis Jour nalistic career as a report er for tbe Kansas City Star and then held many posi tions on the Weekly Star Farmer, tbe Star's farm publication. He became ag rirnltsra! editsr for the daily paper in 1961 where bis job includes a report on the grain trade, coverage of important agricultur al events and writing the Star's editorials on agricul tural topics. This year's Award recipi ent has been honored by many organizations. He re ceived the first National Grange iward in i&cogni tion of distinguished and outstanding service to agri culture of the nation and was honored by lite Kansas State Farmers Union for Service to Kansas Agricul ture and tbe Farm Family. Honorary Degrees He holds honorary state farmer degrees from the Kansas and Missouri Fu ture Farmers, in addition to an honorary American farmer degree from the Fu ture Farmer of America. Tumbull is also an honor ary member of tbe Univer sity of Missouri Agricultur al Alumni organization an recognition of service to the SUMMER; When A ic Hj fc iws) Fact' utVKTuY Turks to THOUGHTS Cf Q,0f$ . nun ti ii ii (L Ona block north of Vina on 27th Easily nccessibls from W ond Pear Sts. HOME OF THE CHUBBY STEAKBUBCLR the First' 'A "9 K f - " Or 7 s I university and to agricul ture. Turcball is currently serving his second term as president of the .American Royal Livestock and Horse Show in Kansas City. He has also been president of the American Agricultural Editors' Association and the Farmers Club of Great er Kansas City. The editor is a member of the Newspaper Farm Editors of America and tbe agriculture committee of tbe Kansas City Chamber of Commerce where be serves as chairman of tbe balanced farming subcom mittee. Over 350 agricultural col lege editors, their wives and children from across the nation attended the con vention. AAACE is composed of agncuitural and home eco nomics information work ers from the Land Grant Colleges and Universities of the 50 states and Puerto Rico. U.S. Department of Agriculture Informa tion specialists and aspoci a t e members including those representing tbe agri culture news media. Its lo ta! membership is about 550. The home of Big Red Ccnipus Service 17 t Vint 1 J UfiM: J nn Iff Specialization Has Become A Block in English Language By Mary Ia Wallace The following was written for a NU School of Jour nalism depth reporting class. With an estimated one million words in the Eng lish language, the average educated man uses three out of a hundred words and may recognize only as many as six in a hundred. Even the best educated barely know one out of ten words in the language. Why this great discrepan cy between the words we could use and the words we can use? In one word, specializa tion. Specialization is the title awarded to the burgeoning growth of modern scientific studies. Each scientific field must borrow, adapt, com bine, coin or create new words to describe its ob jects, concepts, qualities and forms of action, says Mario Pel of Columbia Uni versity in his book, Lan guage of the Specialists. Fields divide into sub fields, and they divide creating then- own special languages with their own specialized meanings, until they specialize themselves completely out of the lay man's comprehension, says Pei. Dictionary Help And does the average man meet the challenge with the latest comprehen sive dictionary? He does not He cultivates the specialized vocabulary of his own occupation and ienores the language jungle of tbe rest of the world's specialists. Or at least he tries, although it comes at him daily In newspapers, magazines, radio, television, Iii Short Course Homeiiiakers Receive Vacation, Education Nebraska homemak ers will get a "Vacation with an Education" at a Homemaker's Short Course, according to Ethel Saxton, University of Nebraska dis trict extension supervisor. About 40 women have reg istered for the coarse July 18-31 at the Nebraska Center for Continuing Edu cation. Tbe course is de signed to stimulate, devel-. op, train and cultivate the borne maker so she can im prove tbe quality of ber borne, ber community and the world she lives in. This is the first year such a course has been offered and it is sponsored by tbe Nebraska Council of Home Extension Clubs and the University of Nebraska Co operative Extension Ser vice. Miss Saxton said Univer sity cf Nebraska faculty members will teach courses in Nebraska history and lit uataiiHiriMttaMiiiiAii&taiM i x 1 iwmi i iK- j,:..tcii;,Hc;i.c&Li:r:-i: Zl Apprmrrd tmr Yetermnr Ednemtimn ESRCLL XOIY FOB A CAREER Pi BLSLYESS Private Secretarial Professional Accounting Erecutfve Secretarial Business Administration Stenographic AeoooDting General Businew Sfbraitei Oldett and Mo Modem Bumnem CoUegt LINCOLN SCHOOL OF C03EHERCE 1S21 C Street 43ZS31S Lincoln, Nebr. even street corner conver sations. "Specialized languages are increasing so fast that only specialists can under stand specialists," says Dr. Robert L. Hough, assistant dean of the University of Nebraska College of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Hough believes that part of the cause for this situation is the natural ten dency for specialists to create an in-group, out group atmosphere with their own private language. On the other hand, there are the newer sciences such as psychology and sociology that try to improve their academic image by emulat ing the hard factural ter minology of the basic sciences with a specially created jargon of their own. The result? Very little communication, but a lot of pretentious polysyllables about relatively simple con cepts. '"A good science writer should write like Heming way," Dr. Hough said, "short paragraphs, short sentences, active voice. The scientific journalist must erase the idea that it is im possible for laymen to un derstand scientists," Hough pointed out Growth Problems What specialized lan guages are posing the big gest growth problems to day? As the cold war grows hotter and tbe space race hastens, more military and space operations make the daily news. Vocabularies In these allied fields range from ABC (Atomic, Biologi cal and Chemical weapons) to Zero G (weightlessness). erature as well as the po litical economic situation of the state. There will also be classes offered in public speaking and youth commu nity problems. Each aome maker will attend a two hour class in the morning and one in the afternoon. Evening activities include a poetry reading by Mrs. Joyce Urbaura and a con cert by tbe Duane Shulz family of Lincoln. There will also be a Centennial Style Revue. Homemakers will be tak ing tours of the State Capi tol. Sheldon Art Gallery. Mueller Planetarium and Morrill Hall and the Ne braska State Historical So ciety. At Sheldon Art Gal lery there will be a display of prints from the Library of Congress. Miss Saxton d thee were pecia'!y obtained from the Nebraska Public Library Commission. IJtijJB-' mm mi m " " , J According to Language of the Specialists, these re lated languages are a con glomeration of words de rived from classic mytho logy (Project Apollo), ab breviated terms (Radio De tection and Ranging), and classic language roots (strategy from Greek). Counterbalancing man's drive to dominate man and space is the growth of the medical profession and the science of biochemistry. Medical terminology is as old as Hippocrates and as new as tomorrow. The Fath er of Medicine used words like "cranium" and "pha rynx," but "streptomycin" was brand-new to the last generation. Fortunately, with the leaps in medical knowledge, has come some increasing sophistication in the laymans understand ing. Biochemistry, like medi cine, owes most of its termi nology to the ancient Greeks methyl, for ex ample, is from Greek methy (wine) and yll (wood). As the chemistry of life becomes more important to man's struggle to gain con trol over himself, abbrevia tions like DNA for deoxyri bonucleic acid, or ACTH for adrenocorticotrophic hormone become vaguely comprehended house hold terms. Computers In the language of corn put e r s, well-understood household words like "gar bage." "dummy", or "ad dress" take on new mean ings. This could be part of the reason that, according to Language of tbe Special ists, the new field of com puter science is plagued with ambiguous words and misconstrued terminology. Even scientists in a new communications - related field could not resist set- Nebr. Delegation Attends Council A delegation of ten Ne braskans will attend the an nual meeting of the Great Plains Agricultural Council at College Station, Tex., Aug. 3-. Arnold Heerwagen. range conservationist of the Soil Conservation Service who is stationed in Lincoln, will speak on "Prottems of Management of Ranch Op erations to Adjust to Fluc tuating Forage Yields." Other Nebraska delegates include: Dr. Howard Otto son, director of the Univer sity of Nebraska experi ment stations; Dr. John Adams, director of cooper atve extension; Heasty I Reesman, state director of Farmers Home Administra tion; Charles Brodersen and Robert Zink. ASCS; Dale Jaedicke, SCS; John MueMbeier, council secre tary; Ed Finigan. FCIC; and Keith Myer, SCS. "V- i add inurett to a beautifully impk dftafre an4 ft matching diamond wedding ring. Decidedly and delightfully feminine, it Is a set of unusual grace ad contoured for perfect alignment on Irs finger. ZSatlrttfoB 1129 "V STREET wuoemxat jeweicm twaactm gem uxicn Serving Lincoln Sine 1905 tine ud esoteric terminology where "garbage" is mean ingless computer informa tion, "dummy" is repeated ly used storage words, and an "address" is a comput er memory location. For those of the ln-group these terms are easy to understand. But even a background in classical lan guage is little help to the out-group in the world of COBOL (Common Business Orientated Language), FORTRAN (FORmnla TRANslation), and UNI. VAC (UNIVersal Automatic Computer.) What's being done to help the layman understand the specialist? "Journalists are definite ly waking up to the prob lem, and that's a hopeful sign," Dr. Hough stated, "but the problem is never ending. Even broader edu cations can only teach the non - specialist enough to know he's ignorant." The answer to the grow ing nnderstandabllity gap, Dr. Hough feels, may be schools to train journalists in the specific scientific fields. "We need writers who aro trained well enough to thor oughly understand the scientists," he said. "Writ ers who can then adequate ly and understandably ex plain the scientist's ideas to the laymen." This type of specialist, he believes, can splice the broken communications link between scientists and the people whose lives they work to improve. Conferences To Be Held Economics of swine pro duction and causes and treatment of pig scours will be two of the principal top ics discussed during a pair of swine conferences here Aug. 3. The Seventh Annnal Ne braska SPF Swine Confer ence and Eighth Annnal George A. Young Confer ence for Veterinarians on Advances la Swine Repopu lation will meet Jointly on that date Veterinarians convene for the Swine Repopulation Con ference Aug. 2 and will join the Specific Pathogen Free (SPF) swine pro ducers and co-operators for their conference Aug. 3. SPF swine are raised un der stringent sanitation and disease control conditions to make swine raising more profitable and also to fur nlsh animals for research. New Travelers Cafe ond Motel 4040 Crkffcr MigWray Opto 24 Karri UmrIimm Oi iltghCy cafvf of